timmy wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 7:33 am
Not a bolt action, but given the constraints, I would vote for a .22 rifle.
Building on my earlier comment, I have two .22 rifles. One is an old Marlin lever 39A, and this is a very fine gun. The other is a children's model "Cricket" single shot bolt action that I originally bought for shooting with the grandkids when they were little. I have mounted a 1" tube Weaver 4x scope on it. It is quite small, about 760 mm long overall, and quite accurate. It has a plastic stock that's unaffected by weather and I shoot both high velocity and reduced noise loads, which fire a 1.3 gram projectile at 15 ft-lbs / 20 joules. The duplex reticule in the scope quite handily compensates for the low noise loads at the high velocity zero point of 50 yards.
This gun, though somewhat crude and having little esthetic appeal, is compact, stone-reliable, accurate, and quite usable. I would choose a handgun for the other pick on the two gun limit, if called upon.
But more in keeping with the exact parameters of the video, for a centerfire bolt rifle, I'd keep my Finn M39 Mosin. It is accurate, it fits me and I shoot it well, and I have plenty of supplies for it stored away. Sorry, RFI 2A, but the M39 makes the most sense, as the video author alluded to a different time when great limitations were imposed. This would seem to mitigate against reloading and call for something that could take the rigors of a rough life, remaining useful for many tasks.
If the parameters were lifted to remove the bolt action requirement, I think an SKS would be selected instead. It would fit a "Ukrainian scenario" best and still do almost everything any other long gun could do.
Speaking in this vein, consider this debunking of a popular "un-quote":
https://www.factcheck.org/2009/05/misquoting-yamamoto/
I have read Prange and Goldstein, and they are respected historians whose views carry a lot of weight for me on this. Yet, in a large country of varying geography (as opposed to a "small island," where things didn't work out so well), Afghanistan seems to show that a widely armed populace should deter rationally considered aggression.