It’s not right to politicize tragedy.
But after a madman drives a truck through a crowd in Nice, France, killing 80+ people and wounding over 200…
How can you keep saying it’s because of guns?
It’s not right to politicize tragedy.
But after a madman drives a truck through a crowd in Nice, France, killing 80+ people and wounding over 200…
How can you keep saying it’s because of guns?
There’s talk these days about stripping away particular rights of American citizens, all in the name of “safety” and “saving lives” or what have you.
It’s curious tho why only one particular right is discussed as worthy of stripping away.
Should people on a terror watch list be allowed to attend a suspected radicalized house of worship? Why allow them to congregate at all? Why is a person suspected of planning terror allowed to have a Facebook or Twitter account to spew hate and network with other terrorists? If the pen is mightier than the sword, shouldn’t we go after Tweets instead of guns? “Like” or “share” if you agree.
We should also allow the FBI to have unfettered access to their emails and tap their phones so we can ensure they aren’t planning the next massacre. Being on this secret list is reason enough; it shouldn’t require the lengthy process of obtaining a warrant from an obtuse judge. I say quarter a cop in their homes for extra security.
Indeed. The Founding Fathers never envisioned “assault rifles”, nor did they envision the Internet – or Pokémon Go (and the intensive technology that enables it). And if the Internet can be used as a gateway for pedophiles, to enable child pornography, sex trafficking, terrorist plotting, and all manner of other atrocities well… why aren’t those rights being stripped?
Why just this particular one? Why is this particular one acceptable?
If some person is so potentially dangerous, why aren’t we locking them up? Why aren’t we just executing them on the spot?
I know I’m going to an extreme, but it’s the direction this thinking points towards.
Tell me folks… where does it end?
When it is enough?
And why isn’t it already too much?
The KR Training July 2016 Newsletter is up and available.
Lots of great classes on tap this summer and into the Fall, including an extended stay by Tom Givens.
Wear suncreen, drink water, and we’ll see you on the range.
I honestly do support peace, communication and compromise.
But I do so not from a position of virtue singling or that these ideas are morally superior. It’s because I truly understand how much violence and hatred suck. I’m talking screaming, blood spatter and bodies ‘suck.’
Unfortunately, we have two contributing problems to the third. One is that ‘peace’ has become a not just a moral issue, but a moral superiority one. “I’m better than you because I believe in peace.’ Two is that this position has expanded into cowardice and inaction. That is someone who uses the excuse of “I believe in peace” so they don’t have to step up or confront something that is spinning out into extremes and heading towards violence.
The third problem is bullies. See in a peaceful, non violent world, the bully is king. He can be as pushy, demanding, vicious and violent as he wants and nobody can stop him. Or to be more precise, nobody will stop him. It’s a win for the violent bully.
That’s what happens when people think that peace is a morally superior position. First, they forget that the negotiating table is the option that sucks less. Second they’re at a loss when someone realizes the inherent weakness of their unpreparedness and exploits it. Third, they’ve lost sight of negotiation without the ability to back it up is begging. Fourth, way too often they start crossing the lines too. (Different tactics, but very much the same strategy and goals.) That last leads to the fifth problem, which is they see no reason not to become bullies themselves.
That works until the shooting starts.
I’d kind of like to get back to the negotiating table with the understanding that peace is not a virtue, it’s survival. Because the alternative is really really ugly.
– Marc MacYoung
What are you doing July 31, 2016?
Can you get yourself to Nashville, TN?
If so, you should attend the Hebew Hogger 2016!
This is a unique tactical conference in that it has no live-fire events. In the wake of the Orlando terror attack, the importance of skill sets tangential to firearms utilization have been heavily underscored…but how do you get, “those,” skills? This conference will help you learn, earn and hone those important, “soft,” skills that can, and will, save lives. Topics include performance paradigms, criminal psychology, threat identification, edged weapons defense, emergency medical skills, legal issues, and more. AND IT’S ONLY $100!
You can read all about it at Dr. Sherman House’s blog
Look at the presenters:
And it’s only $100
Unfortunately I can’t make the event, but bah gawd what a deal!
Some of the top traininers out there. Talking about some of the most important stuff out there. Yeah I know… gunz and ammo and #pewpewlyfe. All that’s good, but I can tell you that the soft-skills being taught at the Hogger are going to do FAR more towards keeping you safe on a daily basis and throughout your lifetime.
And it’s all going to a good cause.
There’s video going around about a fight that broke out at a Mexican restaurant, apparently over salsa.
This is apparently the original video/posting.
There’s a few important lessons we can learn from this video in terms of keeping yourself safe.
First, bad things can happen around you, suddenly, without warning, and without your direct involvement. Yet, you’ll be affected. It’s important to admit and acknowledge this reality of life.
Second, don’t worry about WHY something is happening. It’s very natural that the first thing to pop into your head is trying to figure out WHY this bad thing is happening. Trouble is, it will consume you, you won’t be able to come up with an answer, so it will continue to consume you. Meantime, the bad thing continues to happen and you continue to be at risk. You can think about WHY later on; right now, you need to do all you can to respond to the situation and make yourself safe. Put this into practice in your daily life. It’s difficult at first, but the way to do it is when things happen, if you find yourself asking “why it this happening?”, recognize you’re asking why, defer asking why until later, and shift gears to deal with the immediate situation.
Third, every time you walk into somewhere, identify all the exits. There were two obvious exits in the restaurant, but both were blocked by people fighting. You know where there’s another exit? Through the kitchen. Yeah fine, the kitchen is “off limits”, but in a case like this? I’m heading for the kitchen and out the back door. People backed away and felt trapped because they couldn’t get to the obvious exits. So be sure to identify all possible exits.
Fourth, this is not a time to get involved. In a case like this? My choice is to leave immediately. Head for the back, head for a non-blocked exit, and get the hell out of there as quickly as possible. Once I’m out and safe, call the police. Even if I got somehow “involved” (e.g. I got hit by a flying chair), I cannot let that draw me into this bad (and stupid) situation — this is not my fight, this is not a good thing, this is not something I want to be involved in, this is not something worth dying over or going to jail over when the cops show up.
Make these decisions ahead of time. Have your plan NOW, so when stupid shit like this erupts suddenly and unexpectedly and you find yourself caught up in it, you can proceed in a manner that maximizes your safety.
People fucking die.
– Tom Araya, Slayer
During a June 27, 2016 concert in Pratteln, Switzerland, Tom Araya – singer and bassist for the band Slayer – had this to say during his stage rap:
Is it true that every household has to own a rifle or a gun? No? I thought everybody was supposed to have a rifle or a gun in their home. It’s not right? How else are you gonna defend your country?
Where you are in the world, you need to protect yourselves. Not from each other, but from invaders. And you know what I’m talking about, right? You should be aware of your invaders — people that come here to do you harm. It’s not right. You should be able to protect and defend your country. That’s the way it should be everywhere. ‘Cause when you don’t have anything to protect yourself or your fellow countrymen, what happens? People fucking die. They do! Don’t they? Yeah. You can see it going on.
I’m not gonna name names, but you can see what’s going on in other countries. ‘Cause they can’t protect themselves. And that’s what I’m talking about: being able to protect yourself and your fellow countrymen and your fucking country. I’m being serious, man. This isn’t a fucking joke. You know, it really sucks to know that other people die, because you can’t protect them. That fucking sucks.
Video here:
(h/t Blabbermouth)
Had an eye-opening practice session a couple days ago.
Karl’s trying to push me on some things (in a good way), and one is taking my performance up a notch. This was the first time I got to live-fire it, and it was full of learning.
Started off with my normal carry rig and shot the Rangemaster 3M Test, which I think is just a great, quick diagnostic. Shot it 3 times (first was totally cold), and times were in the high 8 seconds, which is about par for my performance. What I was happy about? Performing to my known level cold, instead of having to warm-up to it — which has been my norm for a while. What was I unhappy about? My time to first shot ran in the 1.6-1.8 range, which is slower than I want – I want to be consistent in IWB concealment draw from my normal carry rig (not like an IDPA gaming concealment rig) at 1.5 seconds (or less). I know what I need to do, I just need to get my body used to it. I think the thing I did at the end of this session may help me. The other thing was being slow on the reload: 2 seconds just sucks. I could really improve my 3M performance.
I then shot the 3 Seconds or Less drill one time just because. Did fine, until the final weak-hand and I dropped one. Ugh.
But that was the end of that. I just wanted to shoot these to see where I was with things.
The real work was taking off my carry rig and putting on the USPSA production-class gaming rig.
Karl wants me to work on getting a 1.0 second draw. Start at 3 yards, don’t worry about scoring, just make 1.0 and get a hit somewhere (anywhere) on cardboard.
I spent a while working that at 3 yards, then moved to 4, then 5, then 7. I was mostly at 3 yards to get the handle on things, and only moved back as I felt comfortable. I didn’t spend a lot of time at the other distances because ammo and time, and mostly they were “to see” how it went.
It was eye opening.
I think my fastest period was like 0.88, and it was on cardboard but I think a Charlie or Delta (don’t recall). I could get in the 0.9’s and get on paper. If I wanted to get in the A-Zone I did have to get a bit more sight picture – didn’t have to be textbook perfect, but I had to get SOME sort of index. If I had everything right (didn’t muff the draw), got some sort of acceptable sight picture, etc. I was pretty consistent in the 0.95 – 1.05 range. If something muffed, then something would blow: the time, the target, something.
For sure, as distance increased I had to be a little more sure on the sight picture, but interestingly I found that if I had a good body index/alignment and the draw was right, I could still hit 1.0-ish at 7 yards and A-Zone just fine. That is, it felt really no different at 3 or 7 yards what I was doing or seeing, and the key was my body index and having a solid and repeatable “drawstroke and presentation”.
A few other things?
Getting VERY aggressive on the draw. When you hear that beep, MOVE!!! Like you’re on fire. This easily made a 0.1 to 0.3 second difference, and the difference between making the 1.0 par time or not.
To help with the draw, it’s all about consistency. Getting that movement pattern to be repeatable, efficient, etc.. So you can just “drop you hand” and boom, it’s all right there.
I found that if I was trying the proper 4-count drawstroke, it was slower. If I basically smeared/skipped through step 2, I was a lot faster — and still got my hits.
So what to do in dry work for this?
Work on reaction time to the beep, and getting a solid and consistent draw, that has some sort of sight picture/index (with further distances being more picture perfect). And in doing this, working on index. I recall some Duane Thomas article on this somewhere; I’ll have to go find it again.
I expect this should help with my concealment work too. 🙂
Oh and I need to do a little Dremel work on this gaming holster. It hits the mag release button just right. So when I get aggressive and really get after getting the gun out from the holster, I draw… and my mag goes flying. 🙂 Not good.
Anyways, eye opening for sure. I’ve got work to do.
Shootings at schools are different. These events are acts of execution, not battles. They are no different from the guillotine, one lined up after another and sent to the next world.
And they are that way for one reason. Capacity.
The above comes from an article “I Am An AR-15 Owner And I’ve Had Enough“, written by Daniel Hayes. It was posted to Facebook by a friend of mine, and he found the article interesting and requested the opinions of gun-owner friends on it. While I commented on his FB posting, I wanted to post and expand upon my comments here.
Mr. Hayes says “these events are acts of execution, not battles”. I agree. He says it’s because of capacity. I disagree.
He was able to push people away from him with long bursts of gunfire and barely give his victims a chance to take that split second, when he was reloading, to leap on him and tear him apart.
For those who haven’t fired an AR-15, you can’t underestimate the importance of this. Extended magazines are the reason the San Bernardino killers were so brash and confident in the attack they carried out. They knew that no one could get near them, that there would barely be a moment when they would be vulnerable to an unarmed person grabbing them and stopping them.
Give me three 100 round drum magazines and I could hold my whole block hostage for a day. Give me thirty 10 round magazines and someone will be able to stop me.
Mr. Hayes is saying capacity is the problem. If we could just force people to have to reload more often, we could stop these things from happening, because that would give us time.
Here’s a promotional and marketing video from SureFire, a manufacturer of 60-round and 100-round magazines for AR-patterned rifles. In this video, they take a fully automatic rifle (i.e. something highly regulated; that doesn’t get used in “mass shooting” despite media and politician hysterics and misinformation) and perform a demonstration; it’s useful to use a full-auto rifle for this demonstration because it takes the human-performance element out of the equation (no tired fingers). They use standard 30-round magazines and fire 200 rounds — it takes 37.51 seconds. They then use SureFire’s 100-round magazines to fire 200 rounds — it takes 18.50 seconds.
The numbers and performance speaks for itself. And SureFire is flat-out promoting that increased magazine capacity allows one to put more rounds downrange in less time.
One of my mentors and teachers, one of the best defensive handgun instructors in the world, Tom Givens of Rangemaster, stresses that the reason we prefer larger capacity firearms isn’t so we can shoot more – it’s so we can reload less. Why would we want to reload less? Because if you have to reload, that means you are out of the fight for however long it takes you to reload the gun. In a fight for your life, those seconds matter, so the less you have to reload, the less you’re out of the fight.
So, having to reload slows you down and takes you out of the fight – SureFire and Tom Givens both acknowledge it. Kinda sounds like Mr. Hayes has a point, eh?
However, I would assert Mr. Hayes is looking at the problem from one side. I’d further assert he’s failing to properly promote the solution he really seems to be putting forth.
Mr. Hayes states a key factor in capacity is that the killer is able to walk around without fear — with safe knowledge that no one will fight back:
They knew that no one could get near them, that there would barely be a moment when they would be vulnerable to an unarmed person grabbing them and stopping them.
He continues saying the solution is to make these (would-be) killers fear:
There’s a saying that goes “when seconds count the police are only minutes away.” It’s meant to enforce the truism that we are all ultimately responsible for our own defense when the chips are down. But what it really reinforces is the importance of time. Time matters immensely when you’re defending yourself. You need time to do so. You need opportunity. Ban magazines over ten rounds. Give potential victims time and opportunity and in giving them that time we will deter murderers from attempting these mass shootings. They will fear that they won’t be able to kill enough to make their point before they are crushed by their chosen victims. They are cowards. Give them reason to fear.
Emphasis added.
Now let’s look at the whole of what Mr. Hayes is putting forth.
He’s saying if magazines had reduced capacity, that would necessitate more reloads, which would create more time-gaps, and in those time-gaps – people could fight back.
People could fight back.
Fight back.
So really, what Mr. Hayes is saying is fighting back is the best way to stop these things from happening.
Whodathunkit?
Well, it may seem obvious to me (and maybe you) that fighting back is the best solution, but we’ve become a society where “violence is never the answer” and where the response to rape is to pee on your attacker or just teach him not to rape. So there are people out there that cannot fathom fighting as a solution.
But time and time again, it’s been demonstrated that fighting back works – and is THE best solution.
So Mr. Hayes, I’ll agree with you there: we need to enable people to fight back.
Enabling people to fight back starts by helping people overcome mentalities of helplessness. Thinking that someone else (you know, like a group of guys with guns — probably AR-15’s with 30-round magazines) will be your savior – or worse, that it’s someone else’s responsibility to save you, instead of your own. Because two big things our society suffers from these days are displaced responsibility and learned helplessness.
Mr. Hayes suggests that during a reload, people could jump on the shooter and tear him apart. Well, if you have no mindset of violence, of fighting, of “tearing people apart”; if you have no skills in unarmed combat; if you have no weapons on you or knowledge of how to use them… how in the world are you going to jump on someone and tear them apart? You will not suddenly rise to the occasion with the knowledge and skill of the War Gods; you will descend to your training. If you’ve never had any training, if you’ve never considered fighting, if you think “violence is never the answer” then it will continue to be your answer.
So the first thing we need to do is get people to realize that fighting back is key.
All the time-gaps in the world don’t matter if you don’t have the wherewithal to take advantage of them.
I’ll agree that rushing someone with a rifle could be a losing proposition. What would I prefer? My own tool, that can enable me to stay behind some sort of protection, while still “rushing” the attacker – you know, like my own gun. Ceasing restrictions and prohibitions on where I can carry it. Gun-free zones obviously aren’t; or at least, the only people that heed it are those who obey they law and aren’t a threat to your personal safety. These mass killers prefer gun-free zones because they know people won’t or can’t fight back.
And in fighting back, I want to ensure I can fight maximally. I don’t want to be out of the fight, so I want as much capacity as possible. Capacity works both ways: it helps us good guys too. Keep watching the SureFire video:
Q: Is that something you would have liked to have had on your last deployment?
A: Absolutely. To get that many rounds downrange on target is vital to winning the fight.
Last I looked at Tom Givens’ student incident data set, of the 65 cases there were no reloads, but a couple cases did end with an empty handgun. The range of shots fired goes from 1 to 12. Reducing capacity could have very well cost these innocent people their lives because you can’t fight with an empty gun; or if they could have reloaded it, those 3-4 seconds they were out of the fight for the reload could have been fatal. I mean, if Mr. Hayes thinks a reload is enough time to “leap on him and tear him apart”, again, that can work both ways and enable good people to be “torn apart”.
So you see, increased capacity works for preserving life as well. It very much enables us to stay in the fight, and go home to our loved ones. Just ask the police that you count on to come save you, if they’d prefer a 10-round magazine or a 30-round magazine. You want them to preserve your life, don’t you?
High-capacity magazines are not the problem, and banning or reducing magazine capacity will not solve the problem.
Mr. Hayes suggests we should crush these evil people and give them reason to fear. I would agree – so let us work towards that end. Abridging the law-abiding does not achieve this; enabling the law-abiding does. Work to enable the law-abiding.
We will make better progress if we start from where we agree and work with open minds and open hearts, than to start from where we disagree and drive the wedge even further.