Americans
Are Preparing for When All Hell Breaks Loose
Once thought
of as a fringe mind-set, the prepared citizen movement is gaining traction in a
world shaped by war, the pandemic and extreme weather.
Thomas
Gibbons-Neff
By Thomas
Gibbons-Neff
Thomas
Gibbons-Neff reported from Leesburg and Orlando, Fla., and participated in the
minuteman training described in the article. The New York Times paid to take
the class.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/09/us/prepared-citizens-guns.html
April 9,
2025, 5:00 a.m. ET
Ten men,
some wearing camouflage, others in vests loaded with ammunition for their AR-15
rifles, gathered under the morning shade of oak trees in Central Florida last
month. They were there to learn marksmanship tactics common among Special
Operation forces and elite law enforcement units.
Their
instructor, Christopher Eric Roscher, an Air Force veteran, introduced himself
and then led the group in prayer.
“Lord, you
would use them as assets, to be protectors in this world, in a world that’s
full of evil,” he prayed.
The men
gathered around him were not soldiers, police officers or right-wing militia
members. They were mostly civilians, including two pilots, a nurse and a
construction company executive. The class’s title — Full Contender Minuteman —
even referred to the civilians turned soldiers of the American Revolution.
In a world
shaped by war, a pandemic and extreme weather, more Americans are getting ready
for crisis — whether it’s to fight a tyrannical government, repel an invading
army or respond to a natural disaster.
They are
known as prepared or professional citizens, part of a growing number of gun
owners who are adapting their mind-set to uncertain and polarized times. And
rather than being part of more fringe “prepper” culture, they are growing more
mainstream, catered to by companies ready to offer them the tools and training
to be ready.
The
traditional aspects of gun ownership — such as simple target shooting — are
increasingly being shelved in favor of topics like radio and medical training,
night-vision shooting, drone reconnaissance, homesteading and military tactics.
“We are
looking at a growing number of companies who are broadening the appeal and
normalizing self preparedness and the tools needed to enable it,” said Kareem
Shaya, the co-founder of Open Source Defense, a startup working to normalize
gun culture in the United States and invest in new companies in the civilian
defense industry. “Five or 10 years ago, we couldn’t have done what we’re doing
because there just weren’t enough startups in the space. We’re seeing it
accelerate in real time.”
Prepared
citizenry and the more familiar practice of “prepping” share some
characteristics, though preppers are more focused on getting ready for
long-term self-sufficiency — keeping chickens, growing a vegetable garden and
storing supplies in bulk. Prepared citizens want to be ready for sudden
calamity.
The concept
emerged for Mr. Roscher, 35, as he watched Russia invade Ukraine in 2022.
Ukrainian civilians were flooding the streets with little ability to defend
themselves.
“It really
hit home for me,” he said.
Mr. Roscher
began teaching firearms classes after leaving active duty in the Air Force and
started his own training company, Barrel & Hatchet Trade Group, with his
business partner Tyler Burke in 2020. Barrel & Hatchet also has a YouTube
channel, an Instagram account, a podcast and a gear store.
Their
programming is a mix of firearms reviews, training tips and lists, and lessons
in being mentally prepared for a disaster. In the past year or so, Mr.
Roscher’s turn toward Christianity and prayer has also attracted a receptive
audience and clientele.
Mr. Roscher
recently produced a video he called “Things We Need to Remember, for the Dark
Chapter Coming,” which highlighted his belief that some societal flashpoint is
near, whether it be from attacks led by drug cartels, possible terrorist
sleeper cells spread across the United States or an economic downturn.
His
monologue, which also detailed a vivid dream of a nuclear blast, sounded almost
like a sermon.
Mr. Roscher,
like other veterans or former law enforcement officers in the prepared citizen
community, said he started teaching to pass on his knowledge to regular people.
His work is
not limited to in-person training and even draws from global conflicts. A video
on his channel exploring drone combat in Ukraine and how the technology can be
used for civilians in the United States was shared on an Appalachia-based
Telegram messaging channel for prepared citizens in early March, sparking
interest among those in the chat.
“I gotta
find a group to train with,” one message in the group read, lamenting that
their choices for training cadres were limited to local militias or other
right-wing fringe groups.
“Try Barrel
and Hatchet if you’re in Florida,” another message said. “They’re trying to
recruit.”
Josh Eppert,
40, was one of those recruits. During the pandemic, he found a group of people
he liked shooting with and received much-needed instruction from Mr. Roscher
and his team.
“If I’m
gonna own this stuff, then I want to become proficient with it — not that
there’s any illusions of becoming Rambo or anything like that. It’s just I
enjoy the challenge,” Mr. Eppert said.
Wearing
camouflage, a chest rig loaded with AR-15 magazines and black-and-white Adidas
sneakers (he forgot his boots at home), Mr. Eppert spent the minuteman class
shooting from barricades, practicing pistol draws and learning a new way to
store ammunition on his belt.
The drills
were framed around how students might need to act “on the worst day of your
life,” Mr. Roscher said, so target shooting often took place after 25-yard
sprints.
Mr. Eppert’s
AR-15 rifle had a close range sight, a flashlight and a sound suppressor, or
silencer. Some students had infrared lasers on their rifles for night-vision
shoots, a class Mr. Roscher also teaches.
And though
Mr. Eppert has a less gloomy outlook on the future than his instructor, he
stressed the need for self-reliance, especially with the enduring threat of
deadly hurricanes across the state.
“Am I
putting a bunker in my backyard?” he asked, jokingly. “I don’t have plans for
any of that, but I think it’s important just to be smart and be able to take
care of things.”
On the other
side of the tactical training spectrum from Mr. Roscher’s Barrel & Hatchet
is Ben Spangler, a former Army officer who has run an Instagram account called
@tacticalforge since 2023. His short videos explaining military infantry
tactics like patrolling and setting up ambushes and observation posts get
hundreds of thousands of views and are widely shared in the prepared citizen
world.
He also has
an Etsy page where he sells training kits with maps, protractors to plot
navigation points, compasses and field guides. Old military instruction
manuals, once a forgotten staple of Army Navy surplus stores, have had a
resurgence among the prepared citizen crowd.
“They’re
usually quieter, because they’re usually more of an observer, or they’re asking
questions,” Mr. Spangler said of his customers. “They’ll go on hikes, they
maybe go to the range a few times, or they’ve got a core group of people that
like doing that stuff. But it’s not a militia in any sense of the word, but
usually those folks, when they don’t have that military background, they’re
just looking for information.”
For decades,
fear has been a significant driver of gun sales, but what separates the
prepared citizen from an average gun owner is community. Whether it’s Barrel
& Hatchet training classes or groups in North Carolina or Colorado that
spend days in the woods, hiking and preparing defensive positions to train for
notional invasions or societal collapse, prepared citizens like to collaborate
and find strength in numbers.
Thirty-five
miles southeast of the minuteman course, Danielle L. Campbell, 43, picked up a
pistol at the Orlando Gun Club and fired into a paper target a few yards away.
Protect Peace, the community-focused group that she helped found in 2023, would
not define themselves as prepared citizens in the same way as Mr. Roscher’s
cohort, but they share much of the same DNA.
“I started
training after my assistant was killed by a stray bullet,” Ms. Campbell said,
sitting in a lounge chair at the shooting club. “Before that, I always had
guns, but I never trained, I never took it seriously.” Her colleague was killed
during a robbery in 2017, and she started firearms training soon afterward.
Protect
Peace serves as a community outreach group for dozens gun owners in Central and
Southern Florida, where instead of preparing for a chaotic future, they are
helping local communities affected by gun violence.
Ms.
Campbell’s group helps provide medical trauma training; distributes naloxone,
an overdose reversal drug, in impoverished neighborhoods; and hosts community
shooting events attended by dozens of gun owners. She is also working to get
members of the group amateur radio licenses so they can communicate in an
emergency.
“Part of the
reason why we do it is to really form a community,” she said. “We had a public
defender, a police officer, state troopers, all kinds of people. It was just so
welcoming and inviting. I think that’s where this whole concept was born.”
Thomas
Gibbons-Neff is a national correspondent for The Times, covering gun culture
and policy.
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