austin wrote: So how does making fun of me prove you are an expert at recognizing "expert" advice?
No one is making fun of anyone. Didn't you notice that I posted a link to a news report stating that Jeanne Assam fired 10 rounds in the act of stopping the rampage shooter at the New Life Church? I did this in the interests of presenting a fair argument, even though that particular data point supported your position more than it did mine.
Sure, I presented a somewhat extreme example of a "scenario" that you hadn't covered in your somewhat catagorical statements. Chalk it up to a little sarcasm and a little tongue in cheek.
BTW, if terrorists can emulate the final scene of Clancy's book "Debt of Honor" where a 747 was intentionally crashed into the Capitol Building during a special joint session of Congress, they could also think to start shooting up shopping malls as depicted in his later novel titled, "The Teeth of the Tiger". So the scenario I set forth was neither original with me nor was it outside the bounds of the possible, IMO.
Interestingly, in the novel, the terrorists attacked several malls in different parts of the country at the same time. The attacks in "gun free zones" (i..e. "may issue" states) resulted in many casualties. But the attack in Utah was nipped in the bud by armed citizens, just as the one in the DC area was stopped by Jack Ryan Jr. and an "associate",both of whom happened to be armed (though only one was fully legal).
austin wrote: How do you KNOW the experts are right or just full of bull?
I'd rather learn from trying things out in realistic training than read what some "expert" has written.
The "realistic taining" that you describe may be terrific in developing high level shooting skills. Things like being able to shoot at moving targets, shoot while moving yourself, shoot one handed, or with your weak hand, learning to seek cover and other related skills are certainly good to have in any real world confrontation.
So I say, the more training the better.
If I didn't have certain physical limitations to deal with, I would do more of this stuff myself, because IMO besides being valuable as training most of these exercises are a heck of a lot of fun to do. As it is, I do what I can, which is not as much as I would like.
austin wrote: If you want to read gun magazines, I have stacks and stacks of them, too. I can mail them to you if you'd like. I have little use for them now days.
The thing is that the training scenarios themselves are only as realistic as the judgement of the person who created them. So while the training scenarios might be great for developing the skills needed to deal with multiple psychos attacking you and yours, I do not think they have very much to teach us as to the types of threats we are likely to face, where and when we might be likely to face them, and how criminal attackers actually act.
For this, I happen to believe that studying actual case histories of armed citizen threat encounters and shooting incidents is most valuable. These are historical accounts of the "real world". They are not contrived, as training scenarios inherently must be. They are recounted and analyzed by "experts", whose analysis may be astute or faulty (for which the reader can judge for himself), but the historical aspect is what it is in any case. Other sources are media accounts of such encounters, though these require more effort on the part of the reader to separate fact from sloppy reporting. It's usually necessary to read multiple accounts of the same incident to get an accurate picture.
So I'm saying that if you want to know what happens in the real world, study what happens in the real world. I believe it is inaccurate to mischaractrerize or belittle this aspect of "training" by dismissing it as simply liking to read gun magazines.
austin wrote: OTOH, anytime you want to bring yourself or a whole squad and try some things out with realistic training against an adversary and open yourself up to the real world, PM me. I am free most weekends. I love to train.
Yeah well 5 or 10 years ago I might have taken you up on your "challenge". These days, unfortunately, I'm not up to it. But I say enjoy yourself while you can, because it won't last forever. And as to how it relates to the real world, pardon me if I am skeptical for the reasons I have cited above. For one thing, it's not very often that I travel with a "squad". I live in Texas, not Kandahar.
FWIW, a couple of years ago I did one week of volunteer work with The Minuteman Project. We were divided up into 3 man observing teams, working mostly at night. Some of our posts were only accessible via 4WD and were as much as 4 or 5 miles from the nearest road. Forget cell phone service or 911. It was very obvious to me that out there like that, we were on our own. Our only outside contact was via GRS radios.
So you know what? I carried my night sight equipped Colt Commander with 3 extra mags and a couple of 20 round boxes of Federal Hydra-Shok ammo besides. (The rule was "no long guns", or I would have brought along my Mini-14.) I figured there was no telling who or what we might run into out there. Just instinct on my part.
As it happened, the whole week turned out to be a pretty quiet and peaceful affair.
austin wrote: Until you do the realistic training, you will have a very, very limited skill set and understanding and will have the biases that go with it.
Better study the "real" real world once in a while so you don't get too wrapped up in some fantasy.