Concealed Carry Ladies Pants ??
Replies
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heiliskrimsli wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
What do I have to be terrified of. I have the means and training to respond to whatever threats cross my path.
More importantly, I have the will to respond, which means I'm unlikely to have to resort to the means.
Exactly this. People don't call me terrified if I have smoke alarms and a fire extinguisher in my house, a jack and a spare tire in my car, a lighter and some waterproof matches when I go hiking, or a helmet when I ride my bicycle or motorcycle.
It's simply being prepared for the fact that something could go wrong and having the means to do something about it.
I find it strange that people are terrified of law abiding, peaceable citizens being armed.
Especially with concealed carry when they very possibly interact with some ordinary person every single day who is carrying a gun and they don't even know it. Like when someone in person tells me how scary they find it that people can just walk around carrying guns and I'm standing there thinking "You don't seem to have wet your pants."10 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
What do I have to be terrified of. I have the means and training to respond to whatever threats cross my path.
More importantly, I have the will to respond, which means I'm unlikely to have to resort to the means.
Exactly this. People don't call me terrified if I have smoke alarms and a fire extinguisher in my house, a jack and a spare tire in my car, a lighter and some waterproof matches when I go hiking, or a helmet when I ride my bicycle or motorcycle.
It's simply being prepared for the fact that something could go wrong and having the means to do something about it.
I find it strange that people are terrified of law abiding, peaceable citizens being armed.
Especially with concealed carry when they very possibly interact with some ordinary person every single day who is carrying a gun and they don't even know it. Like when someone in person tells me how scary they find it that people can just walk around carrying guns and I'm standing there thinking "You don't seem to have wet your pants."
It's definitely a fine line from a PA/PR perspective. On the one hand you don't want to have her/him freak out, on the other, you want to sensitize to the reality. Especially in the instance that most commonly occurs and the person talking is one of 2-3 out of more than a dozen who coincidentally isn't carrying a gun.
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heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Quick question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
The safety on a Glock is a smaller trigger that exists on the trigger. Glocks are straight up made to go "BANG" when you pull the trigger. Draw. Aim. Fire.
Thing about guns is, they can be trained with just like any other self defense tool. You do it until it's muscle memory. But here you are, once again giving advice about firearms when you don't know the first thing about them. You have your assumptions, which are wrong, and clearly indicate that nobody should be paying any heed to what you have to say on this topic.
Maybe you ought to leave the concealed carry discussion to people who know what they're doing.
Even people who are trained and carry them daily and are in instances danger day to day (police officers) make mistakes due to fear for life.
I gave an example and if you're saying it could never happen, then you have better faith in people who conceal/carry than I do.
Like martial arts, many scenarios are given to defend against. Works great in a dojo. Different story when it's on the street.
The vast majority of cops don't train anywhere near as much as I do.
You can be a better driver than a police officer or amateur racer, but can the general public say the same?
Training does make the difference and I'm sure you'll agree, but the training SHOULD emulate actual scenarios and not just choreographed ones. Kinda why I like boxing and jui jitsu. More real time training rather than choreograph.
Most cops have far less firearms training than you seem to assume they do. I've seen cops brag about firing fewer than ten rounds a year.
People who are just into firearms will generally shoot a few hundred rounds a week. Lots of us take courses where you're going out into an exercise area and targets are presented to you such that you do not know where they're going to show up or when. We do outdoors, indoors, around cars, in the dark, and practice for all kind of conditions.
We're the people you see getting called nutjobs by the same people who say that untrained people shouldn't carry firearms. Though if I'm at the range and some cops show up, I will generally leave unless I know those cops, because the most unsafe firearms handling I have ever seen were cops at the firing range. You should be wishing that cops were as invested in training as my "gun nut" friends and me.
This stemmed from my POV that a knife may be easier to carry, easier to unsheath and use, and can be deadly IF the person has some decent training with it. If it was totally useless like some have said, then why do they even bother teaching it to Marines and Special Forces? No one HAS to have that fitness and ability to use a knife. If someone snuck up behind you, grabbed you in a choke hold, reaching back and just stabbing several times in just their leg or torso would more than likely have them let go. It doesn't take extensive training to do that, just learning how to be reactive. AND you now have some blood evidence to be able to possibly catch the predator if they are a repeat offender and are in CODIS.
Point was, there are options. Again, in my first response I believe to be SAFER, is to run where it's safer. Even if that means having to go out of your way to do it. Last thing ANYONE WANTS is a confrontation.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
There are several reasons. Knives are quieter than guns with a silencer. Knives don't rely on ammo. Knives always work - no potential for a jam or misfire. Knives are useful independently of being a weapon.
Knives aren't ranged weapons unless you've got a hell of a lot of skill in throwing them. They require more training and physical ability than a gun to use effectively. They don't 'create distance' the way guns typically do. They are not nearly as effective for holding someone at bay while you escape or call for help.
If I'm in a choke hold, I was taught to protect my neck and break the hold first. Then go for a weapon/strike/flee depending on circumstance. If I go for any weapon immediately, I'm giving the attacker a chance to break my neck, damage my trachea, or if it's a sleeper hold possibly put me out before I can bring any weapon to bear.
BTW - if there's enough interest for this to continue, perhaps it should be split off and moved to the Debate forum?3 -
stanmann571 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
What do I have to be terrified of. I have the means and training to respond to whatever threats cross my path.
More importantly, I have the will to respond, which means I'm unlikely to have to resort to the means.
Exactly this. People don't call me terrified if I have smoke alarms and a fire extinguisher in my house, a jack and a spare tire in my car, a lighter and some waterproof matches when I go hiking, or a helmet when I ride my bicycle or motorcycle.
It's simply being prepared for the fact that something could go wrong and having the means to do something about it.
I find it strange that people are terrified of law abiding, peaceable citizens being armed.
Especially with concealed carry when they very possibly interact with some ordinary person every single day who is carrying a gun and they don't even know it. Like when someone in person tells me how scary they find it that people can just walk around carrying guns and I'm standing there thinking "You don't seem to have wet your pants."
It's definitely a fine line from a PA/PR perspective. On the one hand you don't want to have her/him freak out, on the other, you want to sensitize to the reality. Especially in the instance that most commonly occurs and the person talking is one of 2-3 out of more than a dozen who coincidentally isn't carrying a gun.
I never tell them. I can't see that going well. I usually say "You have probably encountered people today who were carrying concealed, who were entirely polite to you and you never knew they had a gun at all."heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Quick question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
The safety on a Glock is a smaller trigger that exists on the trigger. Glocks are straight up made to go "BANG" when you pull the trigger. Draw. Aim. Fire.
Thing about guns is, they can be trained with just like any other self defense tool. You do it until it's muscle memory. But here you are, once again giving advice about firearms when you don't know the first thing about them. You have your assumptions, which are wrong, and clearly indicate that nobody should be paying any heed to what you have to say on this topic.
Maybe you ought to leave the concealed carry discussion to people who know what they're doing.
Even people who are trained and carry them daily and are in instances danger day to day (police officers) make mistakes due to fear for life.
I gave an example and if you're saying it could never happen, then you have better faith in people who conceal/carry than I do.
Like martial arts, many scenarios are given to defend against. Works great in a dojo. Different story when it's on the street.
The vast majority of cops don't train anywhere near as much as I do.
You can be a better driver than a police officer or amateur racer, but can the general public say the same?
Training does make the difference and I'm sure you'll agree, but the training SHOULD emulate actual scenarios and not just choreographed ones. Kinda why I like boxing and jui jitsu. More real time training rather than choreograph.
Most cops have far less firearms training than you seem to assume they do. I've seen cops brag about firing fewer than ten rounds a year.
People who are just into firearms will generally shoot a few hundred rounds a week. Lots of us take courses where you're going out into an exercise area and targets are presented to you such that you do not know where they're going to show up or when. We do outdoors, indoors, around cars, in the dark, and practice for all kind of conditions.
We're the people you see getting called nutjobs by the same people who say that untrained people shouldn't carry firearms. Though if I'm at the range and some cops show up, I will generally leave unless I know those cops, because the most unsafe firearms handling I have ever seen were cops at the firing range. You should be wishing that cops were as invested in training as my "gun nut" friends and me.
This stemmed from my POV that a knife may be easier to carry, easier to unsheath and use, and can be deadly IF the person has some decent training with it. If it was totally useless like some have said, then why do they even bother teaching it to Marines and Special Forces? No one HAS to have that fitness and ability to use a knife. If someone snuck up behind you, grabbed you in a choke hold, reaching back and just stabbing several times in just their leg or torso would more than likely have them let go. It doesn't take extensive training to do that, just learning how to be reactive. AND you now have some blood evidence to be able to possibly catch the predator if they are a repeat offender and are in CODIS.
Point was, there are options. Again, in my first response I believe to be SAFER, is to run where it's safer. Even if that means having to go out of your way to do it. Last thing ANYONE WANTS is a confrontation.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
BTW - if there's enough interest for this to continue, perhaps it should be split off and moved to the Debate forum?
It's kind of like any other serious situation. First, make sure you can breathe. Then worry about the rest of your problems. I was taught the same way, actually.3 -
lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.1 -
alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
I mean, if you think about it, considering we have 300+ million guns in the country and only 600 or so "accidental" (read: negligent) fatalities, that's a pretty good safety rate compared to, I don't know, ladders, pools, or dishwashing tablets.5 -
alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).7 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »MiloBloom83 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
TRICK question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
Fixed it for you.
It's not a trick question. The Glock does have a safety. It's located on the trigger, and it must be disengaged to fire. It just so happens that with a Glock, the act of pulling the trigger also disengages the safety.
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.0 -
scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
4 -
scorpio516 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »MiloBloom83 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
TRICK question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
Fixed it for you.
It's not a trick question. The Glock does have a safety. It's located on the trigger, and it must be disengaged to fire. It just so happens that with a Glock, the act of pulling the trigger also disengages the safety.
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
They have one. The switch for it is on the trigger.
The NYPD currently issues the Glock G17 to all rookies. They limit the magazine to 15 rounds instead of the factory 17, and mandate a 12-pound trigger pull, to match their previous Glock of choice: the G19.0 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Quick question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
The safety on a Glock is a smaller trigger that exists on the trigger. Glocks are straight up made to go "BANG" when you pull the trigger. Draw. Aim. Fire.
Thing about guns is, they can be trained with just like any other self defense tool. You do it until it's muscle memory. But here you are, once again giving advice about firearms when you don't know the first thing about them. You have your assumptions, which are wrong, and clearly indicate that nobody should be paying any heed to what you have to say on this topic.
Maybe you ought to leave the concealed carry discussion to people who know what they're doing.
Even people who are trained and carry them daily and are in instances danger day to day (police officers) make mistakes due to fear for life.
I gave an example and if you're saying it could never happen, then you have better faith in people who conceal/carry than I do.
Like martial arts, many scenarios are given to defend against. Works great in a dojo. Different story when it's on the street.
The vast majority of cops don't train anywhere near as much as I do.
You can be a better driver than a police officer or amateur racer, but can the general public say the same?
Training does make the difference and I'm sure you'll agree, but the training SHOULD emulate actual scenarios and not just choreographed ones. Kinda why I like boxing and jui jitsu. More real time training rather than choreograph.
Most cops have far less firearms training than you seem to assume they do. I've seen cops brag about firing fewer than ten rounds a year.
People who are just into firearms will generally shoot a few hundred rounds a week. Lots of us take courses where you're going out into an exercise area and targets are presented to you such that you do not know where they're going to show up or when. We do outdoors, indoors, around cars, in the dark, and practice for all kind of conditions.
We're the people you see getting called nutjobs by the same people who say that untrained people shouldn't carry firearms. Though if I'm at the range and some cops show up, I will generally leave unless I know those cops, because the most unsafe firearms handling I have ever seen were cops at the firing range. You should be wishing that cops were as invested in training as my "gun nut" friends and me.
I find that extremely hard to believe. I work in law-enforcement and at every agency I have worked out, or known about, officers are required to go to range in the daytime and at night once a month to qualify all of the firearms they use. They even have to shoot a specific score. That is definitely way more than 10 rounds a year. May also do continued trainings throughout the year and intense training while they are at the Academy.
I would go as far as to say that police officer's practice with their firearms far more than they are given credit for.
1 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »bigmuneymfp wrote: »StarvingDiva wrote: »Listen, I would never belittle the efforts of any woman who wanted to take measures to protect herself.
I just think that, unless you are fairly experienced with being in a threatening situation, you want the thing that is easiest to use.
Pretty hard to aim a pistol when you are shaking, let alone unsnap it from your holster that is in the back of your sports bra.
**I don't know too many people who feel comfortable carrying concealed without training.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Just stop posting
So an assailant holding a knife is enough to deter people to listen, but not enough for an assailant to think twice?
Predators don't want a fight. ANY resistance or awareness that they are there, is many times enough to dissuade an attack.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
So some cubicle worker is somehow going to take a knife out of his or her pocket, unfold it, hold it in a meaninful way and tell a bad guy to "back off!" ?
Okay, you might scare off the tweaker that's 20 feet away.
You might feel confident, or invincible because you have that little piece of steel, when you should be running the (kitten) away.
Or, you'll just get cut with your own knife that you clumsily fumbled and dropped while deploying - or stabbed yourself, because the other guy was already ready to do harm. The bad guy is used to getting hit/kicked/punched/stabbed. He's probably lead a life with some violence in it.
Or get dead, because you've now escalated the situation by brandishing but not being willing to use the knife.
Any method you use, you have to drill frequently. Experts I've done training with, retired law enforcement officers, train daily. If you can't deploy and use your method within seconds, well.
My first response to the OP was "run in safer areas, run with someone else, or be somewhere where there's lots of public around".
However, as I mentioned a predator sneaks up on people who aren't aware. ANY WEAPON may be useless if a person is caught off guard.
Fighting is your last resort. IMO it's easier to pull a knife out of a sheath ( if you're trained to use it) and defend yourself, than to unholster a gun, turn off the safety and try to shoot if someone snuck up and put a choke on you.
People won't agree. That's fine, but I don't believe it's any more bad advice than a holstered gun when someone gets attacked without any warning.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Quick question for you.
Where on a Glock is the safety that must be "turned off" prior to firing?
The safety on a Glock is a smaller trigger that exists on the trigger. Glocks are straight up made to go "BANG" when you pull the trigger. Draw. Aim. Fire.
Thing about guns is, they can be trained with just like any other self defense tool. You do it until it's muscle memory. But here you are, once again giving advice about firearms when you don't know the first thing about them. You have your assumptions, which are wrong, and clearly indicate that nobody should be paying any heed to what you have to say on this topic.
Maybe you ought to leave the concealed carry discussion to people who know what they're doing.
Even people who are trained and carry them daily and are in instances danger day to day (police officers) make mistakes due to fear for life.
I gave an example and if you're saying it could never happen, then you have better faith in people who conceal/carry than I do.
Like martial arts, many scenarios are given to defend against. Works great in a dojo. Different story when it's on the street.
The vast majority of cops don't train anywhere near as much as I do.
You can be a better driver than a police officer or amateur racer, but can the general public say the same?
Training does make the difference and I'm sure you'll agree, but the training SHOULD emulate actual scenarios and not just choreographed ones. Kinda why I like boxing and jui jitsu. More real time training rather than choreograph.
Most cops have far less firearms training than you seem to assume they do. I've seen cops brag about firing fewer than ten rounds a year.
People who are just into firearms will generally shoot a few hundred rounds a week. Lots of us take courses where you're going out into an exercise area and targets are presented to you such that you do not know where they're going to show up or when. We do outdoors, indoors, around cars, in the dark, and practice for all kind of conditions.
We're the people you see getting called nutjobs by the same people who say that untrained people shouldn't carry firearms. Though if I'm at the range and some cops show up, I will generally leave unless I know those cops, because the most unsafe firearms handling I have ever seen were cops at the firing range. You should be wishing that cops were as invested in training as my "gun nut" friends and me.
I find that extremely hard to believe. I work in law-enforcement and at every agency I have worked out, or known about, officers are required to go to range in the daytime and at night once a month to qualify all of the firearms they use. They even have to shoot a specific score. That is definitely way more than 10 rounds a year. May also do continued trainings throughout the year and intense training while they are at the Academy.
I would go as far as to say that police officer's practice with their firearms far more than they are given credit for.
I have yet to see a police department that actually requires monthly range time. As far as the "specific score", in Pennsylvania State Police they have to hit a target with 75% of 50 rounds, with a minimum distance of three feet, and 5 of which must be fired from more than 75 feet (but any 75% is a passing score). This is the annual requirement. It's laughable how easy it is. The entire qualifying score can be obtained at a distance of under ten feet per the requirements. A six year old can be taught that level of marksmanship in a month, and some departments require even less.
Pathetic.
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VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?0 -
scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You can buy Gen 3 Glocks in CA.
http://certguns.doj.ca.gov/safeguns_resp.asp
Select Glock on the drop down.0 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).
That's really more due to an overall decrease in violence and crime. What alaskagrown probably meant was that if there are a lot of guns about, violence is more likely to be perpetrated with guns than with anything else. That's definitely true. Why use a knife for your violent act when a gun is so easy to get? Gun deaths in countries without guns are very low (see Japan, UK, Australia, New Zealand). Sure, the murder rate might be similar in another country, but they won't be using guns to do it. That's alaskagrown's point, I think. Imo it's a lot easier to kill someone - including yourself - with a gun than with anything else. Mass stabbings are rarely as deadly as mass shootings. If my country had guns, I'd likely be dead, because I'd have bought one and shot myself during a suicidal state I had when I was younger. As it was, I tried a different method and survived. All the people mocking those not from the US who are baffled need to understand that it's a completely different culture. You think you're defending yourselves, fine. We just kind of think US gun culture is nuts. I'm not mocking you for having your points of view because I understand that you were raised in that culture. So... don't mock us for disagreeing.
OP, it sounds like you got a lot of good suggestions. I hope you never have to put your training into practise.2 -
[/quote]They have one. The switch for it is on the trigger.
The NYPD currently issues the Glock G17 to all rookies. They limit the magazine to 15 rounds instead of the factory 17, and mandate a 12-pound trigger pull, to match their previous Glock of choice: the G19.[/quote]
They offer the choice between the Glock 19, Glock 17 with a 15 round magazine, or the Sig Sauer P229. All 9mm
1 -
scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
A difference without much of a distinction. I had to buy the Glocks to own them.0 -
MarziPanda95 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).
That's really more due to an overall decrease in violence and crime. What alaskagrown probably meant was that if there are a lot of guns about, violence is more likely to be perpetrated with guns than with anything else. That's definitely true. Why use a knife for your violent act when a gun is so easy to get? Gun deaths in countries without guns are very low (see Japan, UK, Australia, New Zealand). Sure, the murder rate might be similar in another country, but they won't be using guns to do it. That's alaskagrown's point, I think. Imo it's a lot easier to kill someone - including yourself - with a gun than with anything else. Mass stabbings are rarely as deadly as mass shootings. If my country had guns, I'd likely be dead, because I'd have bought one and shot myself during a suicidal state I had when I was younger. As it was, I tried a different method and survived. All the people mocking those not from the US who are baffled need to understand that it's a completely different culture. You think you're defending yourselves, fine. We just kind of think US gun culture is nuts. I'm not mocking you for having your points of view because I understand that you were raised in that culture. So... don't mock us for disagreeing.
OP, it sounds like you got a lot of good suggestions. I hope you never have to put your training into practise.
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.1 -
They offer the choice between the Glock 19, Glock 17 with a 15 round magazine, or the Sig Sauer P229. All 9mm
Used to. As of last fall, all rookies are issued a Glock 17 with a 15 round magazine. Existing officers are allowed to keep what they have, or trade in for a 17.
And they mandate a 12 pound trigger pull on all of them. Because the NYPD is nothing if not stupid about firearms.VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
A difference without much of a distinction. I had to buy the Glocks to own them.
And also easily proven false if you visit the CA DOJ site that lists what handguns are legal to purchase in California.MarziPanda95 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).
That's really more due to an overall decrease in violence and crime. What alaskagrown probably meant was that if there are a lot of guns about, violence is more likely to be perpetrated with guns than with anything else. That's definitely true. Why use a knife for your violent act when a gun is so easy to get? Gun deaths in countries without guns are very low (see Japan, UK, Australia, New Zealand). Sure, the murder rate might be similar in another country, but they won't be using guns to do it. That's alaskagrown's point, I think. Imo it's a lot easier to kill someone - including yourself - with a gun than with anything else. Mass stabbings are rarely as deadly as mass shootings. If my country had guns, I'd likely be dead, because I'd have bought one and shot myself during a suicidal state I had when I was younger. As it was, I tried a different method and survived. All the people mocking those not from the US who are baffled need to understand that it's a completely different culture. You think you're defending yourselves, fine. We just kind of think US gun culture is nuts. I'm not mocking you for having your points of view because I understand that you were raised in that culture. So... don't mock us for disagreeing.
OP, it sounds like you got a lot of good suggestions. I hope you never have to put your training into practise.
The absolute fact is that there are more privately held firearms in the US than there have ever been, and deaths from firearms injuries of all types are decreasing. That is a fact. It is not "mocking" you to state the facts.
It is, however, directly insulting to call my culture "nuts" and then derisively pat me on the head with the patronizing "you were raised in that culture". You have been deliberately insulting. I have presented facts.7 -
@southrnchic479 are you getting tired of getting notifications for this thread yet?
Yeah, this thread really got away from the OP.3 -
scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
4 -
stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
Weird... especially since that campus was one of the ones protesting against the new Texas college carry provisions.0 -
scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
All Glock models are available to purchase if you wear a badge or work for Uncle Sam in a law enforcement capacity inside the state of California. Oddly enough these "unsafe" handguns can then be sold to any private citizen who can pass the strict background checks required under both state and federal law. Recently some of the officers have come under pretty severe scrutiny for buying and selling firearms for profit without a federal firearms license.0 -
lsutton484 wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
All Glock models are available to purchase if you wear a badge or work for Uncle Sam in a law enforcement capacity inside the state of California. Oddly enough these "unsafe" handguns can then be sold to any private citizen who can pass the strict background checks required under both state and federal law. Recently some of the officers have come under pretty severe scrutiny for buying and selling firearms for profit without a federal firearms license.
Yup. If the handgun roster is for 'safety' isn't it kind of funny that they allow law enforcement officers to endanger themselves and the public by giving them access to 'unsafe' off roster guns?0 -
lsutton484 wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
All Glock models are available to purchase if you wear a badge or work for Uncle Sam in a law enforcement capacity inside the state of California. Oddly enough these "unsafe" handguns can then be sold to any private citizen who can pass the strict background checks required under both state and federal law. Recently some of the officers have come under pretty severe scrutiny for buying and selling firearms for profit without a federal firearms license.
There are 53 models of Glock pistols that anyone who can pass the background check can purchase from an FFL dealer in California right now. They are not by any means illegal for regular people to buy.
The ones that aren't (Gen 4, which are mostly just updates of existing models), it's entirely because Glock hasn't paid to get them listed yet. None of it has to do with safety. It's about money.3 -
Anyone who compares Japan, NZ or AUS to the US in this or any other debate is an idiot.4
-
MarziPanda95 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
:
I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).
That's really more due to an overall decrease in violence and crime. What alaskagrown probably meant was that if there are a lot of guns about, violence is more likely to be perpetrated with guns than with anything else. That's definitely true. Why use a knife for your violent act when a gun is so easy to get? Gun deaths in countries without guns are very low (see Japan, UK, Australia, New Zealand). Sure, the murder rate might be similar in another country, but they won't be using guns to do it. That's alaskagrown's point, I think. Imo it's a lot easier to kill someone - including yourself - with a gun than with anything else. Mass stabbings are rarely as deadly as mass shootings. If my country had guns, I'd likely be dead, because I'd have bought one and shot myself during a suicidal state I had when I was younger. As it was, I tried a different method and survived. All the people mocking those not from the US who are baffled need to understand that it's a completely different culture. You think you're defending yourselves, fine. We just kind of think US gun culture is nuts. I'm not mocking you for having your points of view because I understand that you were raised in that culture. So... don't mock us for disagreeing.
OP, it sounds like you got a lot of good suggestions. I hope you never have to put your training into practise.
IMO, and coming from the perspective of someone who has shot her fair share of rifles and shotguns and has a smattering of knowledge about the training one needs to be effective with a given firearm, one of the most efficient weapons for killing yourself or someone else, both intentionally or unintentionally, is a vehicle. It happens all day, every day, in countries around the world, and we get the highlights on the news of the murderers who drive into a festival to create terror and mayhem, killing/injuring scores with no training whatsoever, just the ability to rent a U-Haul box truck. The Bataclan is NOTHING compared to what some evil person could do by himself on, say, Lake Shore Drive in Chicago on a day the Bears are playing (it is a lovely sea of orange on both sides as the fans turn out for DA BEARS), or with an odorless accelerant and molotov cocktails in a dark, crowded nightclub or theater, and that is FAR more terrifying to me than any single person with a gun.
9 -
heiliskrimsli wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
All Glock models are available to purchase if you wear a badge or work for Uncle Sam in a law enforcement capacity inside the state of California. Oddly enough these "unsafe" handguns can then be sold to any private citizen who can pass the strict background checks required under both state and federal law. Recently some of the officers have come under pretty severe scrutiny for buying and selling firearms for profit without a federal firearms license.
There are 53 models of Glock pistols that anyone who can pass the background check can purchase from an FFL dealer in California right now. They are not by any means illegal for regular people to buy.
The ones that aren't (Gen 4, which are mostly just updates of existing models), it's entirely because Glock hasn't paid to get them listed yet. None of it has to do with safety. It's about money.
Now even if companies wanted to pay to play in Kaliforniastan there is the microstamping regulations in effect which effectively bars ALL handguns that aren't currently on Roster. I'n not fully sure on this but I believe that guns fall off roster after a few years and none of them will meet the new microstamping requirements to be granted "not unsafe" status. I have a friend who has been looking hard for a gen 4 Glock 19 and he has clued me into all the BS that he's had to deal with.0 -
lsutton484 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »VioletRojo wrote: »scorpio516 wrote: »
Which is why its illegal to buy in California and Massachusetts and illegal to own in New York. They require an external safety.
Glocks are not illegal to own in California at all. I own two.
Did I say they were illegal to own on California?
You said they were illegal to buy. Total rubbish.
What I suspect happened, is you heard about the (totally idiotic, but sadly law) 'handgun safety roster' and completely misunderstood it
There are currently, as of today, 53 models/submodels of Glocks available to buy new in California right now.stanmann571 wrote: »
And yet, the most recent mass attack in the US occurred in Texas and was a mass stabbing.
And according to some witnesses, stopped by a concealed carry citizen!
All Glock models are available to purchase if you wear a badge or work for Uncle Sam in a law enforcement capacity inside the state of California. Oddly enough these "unsafe" handguns can then be sold to any private citizen who can pass the strict background checks required under both state and federal law. Recently some of the officers have come under pretty severe scrutiny for buying and selling firearms for profit without a federal firearms license.
There are 53 models of Glock pistols that anyone who can pass the background check can purchase from an FFL dealer in California right now. They are not by any means illegal for regular people to buy.
The ones that aren't (Gen 4, which are mostly just updates of existing models), it's entirely because Glock hasn't paid to get them listed yet. None of it has to do with safety. It's about money.
Now even if companies wanted to pay to play in Kaliforniastan there is the microstamping regulations in effect which effectively bars ALL handguns that aren't currently on Roster. I'n not fully sure on this but I believe that guns fall off roster after a few years and none of them will meet the new microstamping requirements to be granted "not unsafe" status. I have a friend who has been looking hard for a gen 4 Glock 19 and he has clued me into all the BS that he's had to deal with.
They can stay on as long as they pay the extortion fee to California.0 -
French_Peasant wrote: »MarziPanda95 wrote: »heiliskrimsli wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »lsutton484 wrote: »alaskagrown wrote: »stanmann571 wrote: »
Those statistical claims have been well and thoroughly debunked.
Grin. I know better than to get into a statistics fight with a 2A/gun person. America's known for "fake news" for a reason. But the thing that comes through here is how terrified gun people are of their daily lives... "seconds to be victimized or killed..." "rape, murder, and assault..."
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I view a gun just as I do the tool kit or first aid kit I keep in my car better to have it and not need it than need it or not have it.
Yeah, I know there are a ton of misleading stats on both sides. That's why I don't like getting into statistic fights! The only completely true stat is that more guns=more gun deaths. Who/why/where/could it have been prevented? is pretty constantly up for debate.
That's actually not true.
The number of privately held firearms in circulation has increased steadily for the past thirty years, and the number of deaths (justifiable, non-justifiable, intentionally self inflicted and negligent) related to firearms has decreased over that same period of time. The data are readily available from the FBI (crime) and CDC (deaths).
That's really more due to an overall decrease in violence and crime. What alaskagrown probably meant was that if there are a lot of guns about, violence is more likely to be perpetrated with guns than with anything else. That's definitely true. Why use a knife for your violent act when a gun is so easy to get? Gun deaths in countries without guns are very low (see Japan, UK, Australia, New Zealand). Sure, the murder rate might be similar in another country, but they won't be using guns to do it. That's alaskagrown's point, I think. Imo it's a lot easier to kill someone - including yourself - with a gun than with anything else. Mass stabbings are rarely as deadly as mass shootings. If my country had guns, I'd likely be dead, because I'd have bought one and shot myself during a suicidal state I had when I was younger. As it was, I tried a different method and survived. All the people mocking those not from the US who are baffled need to understand that it's a completely different culture. You think you're defending yourselves, fine. We just kind of think US gun culture is nuts. I'm not mocking you for having your points of view because I understand that you were raised in that culture. So... don't mock us for disagreeing.
OP, it sounds like you got a lot of good suggestions. I hope you never have to put your training into practise.
IMO, and coming from the perspective of someone who has shot her fair share of rifles and shotguns and has a smattering of knowledge about the training one needs to be effective with a given firearm, one of the most efficient weapons for killing yourself or someone else, both intentionally or unintentionally, is a vehicle. It happens all day, every day, in countries around the world, and we get the highlights on the news of the murderers who drive into a festival to create terror and mayhem, killing/injuring scores with no training whatsoever, just the ability to rent a U-Haul box truck. The Bataclan is NOTHING compared to what some evil person could do by himself on, say, Lake Shore Drive in Chicago on a day the Bears are playing (it is a lovely sea of orange on both sides as the fans turn out for DA BEARS), or with an odorless accelerant and molotov cocktails in a dark, crowded nightclub or theater, and that is FAR more terrifying to me than any single person with a gun.
A fair number of single vehicle accidents (car vs. telephone pole on a rural road) are actually suicides. They get written up as if the driver fell asleep, but frequently like "he was cleaning his gun and it went off", it was very intentional.
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