This is what denial can foster

Last night I saw this tweet made by the City of Austin about a male suspect groping females in the area of the University of Texas.

 

A male subject has been groping females in the University of Texas area.

A White or Hispanic male suspect, typically on a bike has approached female victims in the West Campus area. The suspect rides by, parks his bike and then gropes or attempts to lift the skirts or dresses of the victims as they walk past him. In recent cases the suspect has been on foot when approaching victims and no bicycle has been seen.

The suspect is described as:

White or Hispanic male

5’7″ to 6′ tall

Thin build

The suspect sometimes wears a black shirt, black biker shorts, and a black and white bike helmet.

He has occasionally been seen riding a mountain bike.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Austin Police Department Sex Crimes Unit at 512-974-5230 or the Sex Crimes Unit Tip line at 512-974-5095 or Crime Stoppers at 512-472-8477.

Date: 3:52:34 PM 06/21/2011 EDT

 

 

If you have information, please submit it.

As well, submit this to every person, be they in the Texas legislature, or just a private citizen, that thinks crime cannot happen on college campuses. That thinks there’s wisdom is denying the citizenry the ability to protect themselves by their preferred means. That somehow keeping guns off college campuses means people are safer.

Oh but you say, this guy is just lifting a skirt or grabbing a boob… what’s the big deal? Is that really worth shooting someone over? Well, why don’t you ask the women he’s victimized? How about asking my wife, who was sexually assaulted… sure, it was just a boob grab, but her attacker escalated and not too soon after his assault on my wife, he went on to rape a woman.

Tell me you want to deny women the ability to defend themselves.

 

Purchases

Looks like our tube TV is dying and so finally it’ll be time to jump into the world of flat-screens. I pretty much ignored everything in that world because if I wasn’t buying, why pay attention? it would only change faster than I could keep up (and sure enough it has). Of course, it’s still a confusing array of stuff.

Coincidentally, Unc is also looking so I can just take some of the advice given to him. A friend pointed me to a couple of sites: http://www.consumersearch.com/lcd-tv and http://reviews.cnet.com/best-hdtvs/. Happened to go to Costco yesterday for some groceries and detoured through the TV section. I think one of the 40-ish inch models will suffice for our setup. Prices aren’t too horrendous.

Anyone have anything to add? We have Time-Warner Cable and already have one of their HD cable boxes. I don’t have any sort of stereo home theater system, nor do I really want to buy one at this time… just use what the TV provides, and perhaps down the line we can fill in the gaps. We do hook up the Wii and the old PS2, and I’m sure any future consoles will get hooked up there too. Don’t need any built-in stuff like Internet or Wi-Fi or other “gimmicks” like that, that I can tell. The room is fairly well-lit, between sunlight and lamps.

And what else might we need to buy in addition to the TV itself? brackets? stands? cables?

In non-electronic news….

I’m also looking at buying my first 1911 as a birthday present to myself. I honestly have no real desire for a 1911, being quite happy with my plastic guns. But, a 1911 is one of those guns that you just need to have in your collection. Plus, being the 100 year anniversary, I figure this makes a nice time to buy. I’m going to get an STI Spartan because it’s about the best value for the money. STI’s are solid, and it’s a good price and package for a first 1911. I’ll have pics and a “break-in” range report once I get it.

The Will to Prevail

KR Training Assistant Instructor and Houston Police Officer, Justin Galindo, posted the following videos and comments to his Facebook page:

Says Justin:

Interesting dramatized ad for body armor, but actually this a better ad for carrying a backup pistol. Watch the whole thing and you’ll see what I mean.

Then Justin posted this video:

Justin’s comment for the above video:

Contrast the difference between that last video and this one. Body armor is great, but I’d rather have a determined will to prevail and to win.

A good compare and contrast. In the former, she survived through equipment and luck. In the latter, he survived because of equipment, the will to live, the determination to fight and win.

Interesting coincidence. Prior to seeing Justin’s posts I was flipping channels on TV and “American Gladiators” was on. It was the woman’s Eliminator. Both contestants started about the same time, but one clearly was taking the lead and the other was struggling to keep up. The woman in the lead got to near the end where there’s that uphill reverse conveyor belt, and she tried, and tried, but kept failing to get over the top. Despite a huge gap between the two competitors, the other woman managed to catch up and go on to cross the finish line first — she wanted it more, she was determined to finish. Yes the first woman appeared to have physically run out of gas, but you could see in her eyes that she had just given up. Both women were physically spent, but the one that won had the will to prevail and win.

They need education, not ignorance

An 8-year-old boy was shot by his 12-year-old brother.

 

Burnet Police say the two boys were home alone at the time of the shooting. The 8-year-old reportedly located the weapon involved, a .22 pistol. Police say his 12-year-old brother was attempting to put the weapon away when he accidentally pulled the trigger, shooting the 8-year-old in the leg.

 

 

Two things.

First, there’s the question of safe storage, which wasn’t touched on so I can’t speculate.

Second, both children are old enough and capable enough to operate a firearm (obviously). If you are going to keep firearms in your home, you should not just keep them away from your children — it’s a forbidden fruit issue, it’s a safety issue. You need to teach your children safe handling. We teach our children safety issues with electrical outlets, with water/soap and slipping in the bathtub, and just like any safety issue our children do better to be taught how to deal with it than kept ignorant of it.

Very small children should get the Eddie Eagle treatment of “Stop. Don’t touch. Leave the area. Tell an adult.” But older children should receive at least basic safety lessons on storage and handling. Kathy Jackson has a collection of excellent articles on Kids and Guns that I highly recommend you read.

 

Condolences

Matt Billingsley, owner of the Lone Star Gun Range, passed away today. From the LSGR Facebook page:

FOR THOSE WHO KNEW AND LOVED MATT BILLINGSLEY OWNER OF THE RANGE……HE PASSED AWAY TODAY IN A HEAVY EQUIPMENT ACCIDENT. WE WILL HAVE FUNERAL INFORMATION POSTED SOON. HE WILL BE MISSED SO MUCH.

Terrible news. I used to go out to LSGR in its earlier days, and I really liked how things worked there, especially the 25 yard range close to the office where you could shoot, move, use carbines and handguns to work on movement, transitions, etc.. It was pretty nice. I did stop going because some time ago Matt had to put a policy in place where you couldn’t collect brass — I understand why he did it tho, because it was just after Obama came into office, components were in short supply, so some people were picking up every piece of brass they could find instead of just picking up their own, which cut into the range’s ability to harvest brass to resell to help keep range costs lower. I didn’t blame Matt and probably would have done something similar if I was in his shoes. But between that and the fact the range was growing in popularity so I couldn’t practice there the way I liked to (i.e. I needed a range to myself so I could shoot and move, etc.) well… I stopped going. Never was an issue on Matt’s part tho. He always came across as a good, stand-up guy, working hard to build a business, a successful range, and by all indicators he was doing a heck of a job. He was always nice to my kids when we were out there too. Nothing but respect for the guy.

My condolences to his family, friends, and associates.

Perspectives on competition vs. combat

Tim passed along this article on the similarities and differences of civilian competition vs. combat shooting. The author talks about how the two compare in terms of stress reaction, realities of context, and gear.

Tim commented on the article and offered another article with a different perspective. Both give you something to think about.

The take-away for me is you have to know what your reasons and goals are for shooting. Is it competition? is it self-defense? is it part of your job (e.g. military, police)? What are your reasons? All shooting has stuff in common and so most any sort of education and training will help you out (e.g. a novice needs fundamentals of trigger control, trigger control being critical to getting accurate, acceptable hits, which matter no matter your goal/context). But as you get further along you need to train more specific to your context. Non-specific training can be useful (e.g. shooting IPSC still gives you trigger time), but you have to keep it in perspective and ensure you’re still getting specific training.

Funny… I’m reading Practical Programming by Mark Rippetoe right now and the parallels to this discussion are interesting.

Jury Duty

A couple months ago I was summoned for jury duty and today was my day to appear.

I headed down to Austin municipal court, went to the room, signed in, sat down, read a book, and then was sent home. There were 21 cases, and all decided against trial by jury (plead no contest, plea bargain, whatever). So, no one was needed and after about 2 hours total I was home.

Interesting that all of my jury duty experiences have been the same in that regard.

I will say, upon entrance to the courthouse there’s a full screening process, like at the airport only without the abject humiliation. I was surprised it was handled by a private security firm and not Austin Police Department. I of course set off the metal detector. I was wearing a pair of 5.11 covert pants, so more zippers than normal; belt with buckle; steel shanks in the soles of my cowboy boots, and I figure all that just was too much for the detector. Wand me down, off I went. Oh and once again, the spare battery for my MacBook Pro confounds the x-ray operator; happens quite frequently.

Here’s the thing.

I had to fully disarm to go to the courthouse: no gun, no knives, no Leatherman, no nothing. Something felt wrong about being forced to do a civic duty while being stripped of my basic rights.

Another round of classes at KR Training

This past Saturday was another day at KR Training. Two classes, Basic Pistol 2 and Defensive Pistol Skills 1. Not only was the usual crew out there, like the TXGunGeek but a couple of others came out to help with DPS1 like Deputy Jay!

Both classes went alright. The BP2 folks were actually doing quite well for students of that level, and Karl switched things up at a the end of class for a bit of fun shooting steel. I believe TXGunGeek said he had folks shooting a 4″ plate at 15 yards no problem. That’s very good for people at the BP2 level.

In DPS1, it was nice to see a larger number of women in the class, some of which had previously come out for the Rangemaster Ladies-only course a few weeks ago. One of the ladies I knew (Mrs. foo.c), but I wasn’t sure of the rest. I was watching how they shot and asked one “did you come out for the Rangemaster course a couple of weeks ago?” The answer was yes, and the reason it was evident? They had solid fundamentals of grip, stance, and so on. Good shooters stand out from the crowd, so what does that tell you about the crowd?

I must admit, that was one of the harder parts of this DPS1 — fundamentals. DPS1 is not intended to be a fundamentals class but we did end up spending a little more time correcting fundamentals of grip and trigger control than we usually do. I do think the students in class picked up on the DPS1 class material pretty well, but I think a fair number of folks in class would do well to come back and take a class like Basic Pistol 2 where we can focus on fundamentals. This isn’t a slight on anyone, but a sober assessment. We could see it in students: when they would relax and press the trigger, no problem. But then they’d start yanking the trigger, slapping the crap out of it, and wind up hitting nothing. We try to make it clear in DPS1 that as a shooter you are accountable for every round you fire. If now we’re talking a gunfight, you must make acceptable hits, which means hitting the assailant in vital areas as accurately and quickly as possible to stop the fight as soon as possible. Anything less is an unacceptable hit. That means you can’t just blaze away and pray (remember, in a fight you’ll perform at 75% of your worst day at the range). You must have the fundamentals of trigger control solidly down, and if you’re not doing as well as you should be, be honest with yourself and step back to work on those fundamentals. There’s potential for ego to get in the way here… but ego isn’t going to save your life and could cost someone else theirs. Again, this isn’t to say the folks in class were horrible, merely that taking a class that provides instruction on the fundamentals and then working on those particular skills would be useful.

A few things:

  • Slow down and get acceptable hits. If you need 0.5 seconds to (re)verify your sight picture and ensure a smooth trigger press, better to slow down and take that time vs. throwing the gun out there, yanking the trigger, and getting a fast unacceptable hit. Then you have to shoot again, and likely you’ll rush that one even worse because you feel you need to make up for lost time, and it just goes downhill from there taking too much time and not getting the job done. That 0.5 seconds doesn’t seem so expensive now, does it?
  • You will fight like you train. So train like your life depends on it… because it does.
  • Every movement you make is a repetition. Every time you do something, you are training muscle memory. If that’s the case, how should you treat every movement? Make it a useful and worthwhile movement. For instance, when dry firing, don’t rack your slide just enough to cock the action, fully rack it. Don’t build up a “short-stroke” muscle memory, just build up the single muscle memory of full rack.
  • Remember, when doing a reload, first put your hand on your spare magazine to ensure you have one! Don’t risk dumping a partially full magazine on the ground only to find you didn’t have a spare and now you’ve got nothing.
  • One question we tend to ask a student when we check their gear upon arriving at the range is “Do you have a CHL?”. If the answer is no, then we proceed. If the answer is yes, then we follow up with the expectation that they arrived with their gun on their person. Unfortunately some people don’t arrive in a “street-ready” manner: they may not have their gun on them, or maybe they have their gun on but they have it in a “class ready” manner (e.g. using FMJ rounds instead of proper “social” ammo). Folks, YOU do NOT get to decide when you will get into a gunfight. YOU do NOT get to decide when you will be attacked. What if you stopped at the gas station on your way into class just as the place was being robbed and the dude opted to point his gun at you? If you have a CHL, carry your gun — else why did you get the CHL? And when you carry it, carry it in the proper manner; those FMJ rounds don’t stop much and have a penchant for overpenetration… remember what we said about you being responsible for every round fired?
  • Don’t argue with the instructor. If you don’t like what we’re teaching you, you’re free to reject it later. But you came to the class, be willing to hear what we have to say and try what we have to teach — there may be good reason for why we do what we do and teach what we teach. Be willing to consider it, evaluate it. Afterwards, like Bruce Lee said, “Retain what is useful, discard the rest.”
  • If you are not on the line shooting, you should be drinking water and loading magazines. However, while you do that stay near the rest of the class and/or the other group that’s on the firing line. The instructors may have a new skill to teach and class runs faster if they only have to demonstrate it once. Furthermore, if you watch the other group on the line, you’re bound to learn something. One thing you can do is put a bunch of loose ammo in your pockets; while standing behind the line and paying attention you can reload your magazines from the loose ammo and you only need to go back to the tables to quickly refill your pocket. As well, buy more magazines (how many? yes.). I like keeping at least 10 magazines fully loaded in my range bag… tends to make classes and practice sessions run smoothly because I can go and don’t have to spend time (re)loading mags; do that in front of the TV in the comfort of air-conditioning and no time pressures.
  • It’s good to bring extra gear, like ammo and guns. However, circumstances for using that extra gear may or may not happen. For instance, I’ve had numerous classes where folks bring multiple guns and want to switch guns throughout the course. While that COULD be possible, it’s generally not possible because class moves quickly and the time it takes to change your holsters and other support equipment is time-consuming. Plus, to actually change the gun you’d have to go to the other range (no gun handling behind the line) and that again takes time and takes you away from instruction (see above point). So generally, come with a gun and run that one gun. But that said…. if your Glock happens to KaBoom! (kB!), it’s good to have another one handy. Yes, we had a Glock go boom during DPS1… he was using hand loads and the hypothesis isn’t a double-charge but likely the case wasn’t empty (e.g. cleaning media stuck in there) and thus less case volume and thus way too high a pressure. He had another gun in his bag and was able to get back in business without much downtime.
  • Drink water. Use sunscreen. After last weekend’s classes where I wore shorts and my short-sleeved KRT shirt (and sunscreen), I opted to totally cover up this class. While shorts and such are usually OK for me, something about last weekend’s sun just baked me and drained me heavily. So for this class I wore some long pants (actually, BSA Switchback pants), long sleeve white Under Armour shirt and then my KRT instructor shirt atop that. I was fully covered, but all lightweight, very breathable clothing. I did sweat more due to the double-shirt, but overall I felt a lot better because my skin was covered and not baking. At the end of the day I was tired but not drained.
  • I need to learn to put my beef jerky out of reach of thieving dogs. 😉  (it’s my own fault… I keep treating her, I left it within reach, she just helped herself since I wasn’t around to fed her. He he he).

Quote for the day

When it comes to preparing for individual security….

Amateurs think equipment,
Students think techniques,
Experts think tactics.

– John Holschen, Insights Training Center

Gear is fun, but get something that works and run with it (e.g. Glock’s aren’t pretty, but they work and they’re reliable). Techniques help you know what to do with that equipment. But tactics are what see you through the situation.

When you seek instruction, yes seek instruction on gear, yes seek instruction on technique. But too many people stop there. You really have to go to the next level and think about tactics and how to work and think on that higher level.

KR Training June 2011 newsletter — and contest!

The KR Training June 2011 newsletter is up.

In celebration of the 20th anniversary of KR Training, Karl is running a survey with a chance to win an $80 gift certificate good towards any Fall 2011 training class.

Click the above link, take the survey, and enter for chance to win. And yes… take the survey seriously because that will affect what class you might win. 🙂