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Moderator: carlson1
If you're in a firefight, assume you will be hit. Mentally accept that fact and plan how to continue the fight until you win. Being shot should make you angry rather than fearful and more determined to defeat your adversary so that you can survive. In the end, survival is the goal. Anything that contributes to that is beneficial to the outcome.WWII also provides an ultimate proof of the concept of psychological stopping power. On autopsy, from one to three percent of deceased soldiers were determined not to have been wounded at all. They had apparently died just from the effects of psychological stress.
“I was told some years ago that FBI had a training program of some manner, one focus of which was ‘just because you’re shot doesn’t mean you’re dead.’ It was an effort to counteract by training the natural response to being hit, which is to collapse regardless of whether the wound is physically incapacitating or not.”
I have personally carried on a conversation with a patient who had taken a 9mm bullet right through his heart. This conversation took place while he was laying on the gurney in our trauma room, being prepped to go upstairs for surgery to save his life. He wasn't even bleeding dramatically because he was suffering a pericardial tamponade. That's where the two holes in the pericardium (the tough elastic membrane enclosing the heart) seal up and the heart bleeds into the space between the pericardium and the heart muscle itself, eventually squeezing the heart enough to make it stop pumping. Incidentally, he also had a fractured right humerus from another bullet strike. He was quite alert and oriented to time and place.....and considerably bummed out because he knew that the outcome was going to be eventually deleterious to his personal freedom to move about in public.“Knock-down” power is a term also sometimes used to describe a firearm’s capacity to incapacitate an attacker. But, we know that no firearm has literal “knock down” power. Given Newton’s Law about “equal and opposite reaction”, if a firearm had power enough to knock someone down, discharging it would generate a recoil which would knock down the person firing it.
Nope, that would have been too tough for them to comprehend.The Annoyed Man wrote: They should have stayed home and watched Sesame Street.
I remember stories about our guys fighting in Somalia back in the early 90s. Many of the bad guys there didn't get a lot to eat, and the GIs called them "skinnies". The 5.56mm ball ammo tended to zip right through them if it didn't contact bone. Thus they had a lot of little holes in them and would keep coming even though they very possibly died later from blood loss. There are just so many variables.gthaustex wrote:Any FMJ ammo is generally going to cause less damage and have more penetration than JHP ammo. The stories from those vets don't surprise me.