mikeh, on 2010-December-18, 08:59, said:
Wait a second.....I don't understand your argument.
The gun-lovers argue that having a gun makes one safer. This can only be if one is going to use it in response to threats of violence. Carrying a gun but being unwilling to use it when threatened sort of defeats the purpose, don't you think? What kind of deterrent is it if one has been trained to NOT pull it when there may be a risk that pulling it will anger or frighen the person who presents the threat?
And it seems that you recognize that pulling a gun in response to a threat is a stupid thing to do....which appears to be the consensus of virtually everyone who has actually studied the subject in real life as opposed to getting their understanding of gun use from hollywood.....in hollywood, good guys generally hit their targets, with handguns from 100 feet while falling through the air while being shot at by dozens of bad guys armed with automatic weapons....good guys are about 100,000 times as accurate as bad guys.....altho the good guy is often wounded, the bad guys are always killed.
Undergoing training in the use of guns does not equip anyone with the ability to alter the emotional state of an assailant...other than in a detrimental way through pulling the gun...so I don't see how your post makes any sense at all. In addition, my posts about the effect of adrenalin (and stress in general) applies to people who have undergone police training...including certifies marksman.....the only people who undergo more intensive training in firearm use are the military...and don't get me started on the implications of military training, and the psychological reshaping of personalities involved therein
So training ordinary citizens even to the standard of police officers won't solve anything.
First off, can we move away from "gun-lovers" and "gun-nuts", please?
I did not say one should carry a gun but be unwilling to use it. I said if one is going to carry a gun, one should be capable of rational decision as to when to use it.
Pulling a gun in response to a threat may be a stupid thing to do. It may not. It depends on the threat.
Hollywood is bullshit, and we both know it, so let's leave that out of the discussion, okay?
There is more to gun training, IMO, than "the bullet comes out here, so make sure this end is pointed at the target."
But here's a simple question: Do you have the right to defend yourself against aggression? If so, why should you not have the tools required to do so at least to match the level of aggression against which you're defending?
BTW, the police won't defend you, unless they happen to be around and see what's happening.