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June 2, 2019, 06:11 PM | #26 |
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I think the type of firearms used by the women is worth noting. I often see women in gun stores being talked into, by their male friends or the salesmen, very diminutive firearms because it seems much more manageable and many women have small hands. Those aren't unreasonable concerns, but those firearms are often challenging to shoot for even experienced shooters. Would a full-size pistol have made a difference here? Maybe not, but if you're stashing a firearm off body I don't know if you need a snub nosed revolver.
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June 2, 2019, 10:25 PM | #27 | |
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A female friend of mine went to a gun store for a home-defense gun (one that was never going to be carried) and the clerk talked her into a compact, 5 shot revolver. There's no reason to have a gun designed for concealed carry as an off-body home defense gun. All of the compromises (disadvantages) that make sense for concealed carry guns provide no benefit at all for an off-body gun. It's a lose-lose.
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June 3, 2019, 07:05 AM | #28 |
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These ladies had more grit than most people and perhaps more grit than some here. The bottom lines is that they armed themselves, refused to be a victim and took action in their own defense. I will simply tip my hat to them, not criticize them.
This is how it goes down. its not some sort of choregraphed episode for your viewing pleasure. Its stressful, chaotic and basically a mess. Don't be fooled by what you see john wick do on the big screen. it doesn't happen that way.
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June 3, 2019, 07:32 AM | #29 | |
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June 3, 2019, 08:59 AM | #30 | |
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HOWEVER if one is going to bother to prepare to to defend ones self these type of scenarios are worth discussing. There was a lot that went wrong here. There was some that went right as well (simply being armed and prepared to shoot for instance). But there is a reason incident reports study what went wrong and what went right. As, hopefully, none of us will ever be involved in an incident and almost surely we will not be involved in enough to become subject matter experts through experience discussion is vital. In fact these types of discussions are likely a major part of any scenarios considered or practiced in training. |
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June 3, 2019, 09:07 AM | #31 |
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I'm the OP.
Of course there is plenty to learn. It certainly could have gone better.I agree with the comments about buying a gun for off-body carry. Most folks can handle the equivalent of a Glock 19 class gun. Buy that one first. Get the little gun if you decide you need it later. Get the good ammo.Be real careful not to shoot your mom. There is a lot to be said for a 15 rd mag. Pound him till he goes down. All good. Drills in the liquor store and working as a team would be good. Being better prepared for next time would be good. Especially since the Daughter decided to go for a different line of work. |
June 3, 2019, 09:49 AM | #32 | |
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Let me acknowledge that I carry a J-frame revolver having transitioned from a G19. I'll even acknowledge the hypocrisy of my argument. However remember an appeal to hypocrisy is a logical fallacy in it points out hypocrisy rather than addressing the argument at hand. If I must place a reason it has to do with slide manipulation - off hand slide manipulation is a "probably can do" thing by muscle memory. I can do it at the range, and I can do it in training, but feeling in my left hand is intermittent at best. "Every" new gun own who goes into the store and buys a new gun should start with a gun in the G19 class with the possible exception of those considering the EZ Smith and Wesson guns designed to address hand strength issues. I don't care if its the G19 or the myriad of other choices that are in the same class (9MM, high capacity, same rough size). This is the gun he or she should train on and then consider other choices to fit a role different than that class of gun (smaller for pocket carry, revolver for revolver reasons, larger, different caliber, etc.) But you need a benchmark to work from and the G19 class pistol is a great benchmark to work from. |
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June 3, 2019, 10:02 AM | #33 | |
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June 3, 2019, 11:59 AM | #34 | |
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June 3, 2019, 01:18 PM | #35 |
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Well up until .41 the shots were effective and the threat had ceased. When he started to come back they needed to act again but hesitated, and his lateral movement messed them up.
I can't fault them much. They did not have time to lock the door once he egressed and he came back in quickly. |
June 3, 2019, 05:54 PM | #36 | |
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Ok, lets examine this .. These ladies are not going to be helped by anything you are saying here. They are either satisfied with their level of planning, training and decision making.. or they're not. As far as any critique helping anyone else, lets consider that. A person either has a gun on their person or they don't. A person either hesitates or they don't. A person either knows how to handle a firearm properly or they don't. A person is either a good shot or they arnt. A person will make errors in the moment due to stress or they wont. Very few of those issues are going to me remedied by the simple realization that they can happen. Most people are not going to wear a firearm at their jiffy mart job. Most people are not in control of whether or not they hesitate in the face of real peril. Most people are going to commit safety violations when handling a firearm is such a circumstance. Most people are either self motivated to be a decent marksman or they are not.. this video and any critique seen in this thread is not likely to encourage anyone reading it to go out and practice more or less than they already do. So if by saying she mishandled the gun or that she needs to learn to shoot better or that she hesitated or get the good ammo, I am not really sure who that is supposed to help and I am not sure how exactly you expect it to help the reader. A person who is reading threads on a gun forum is very likely leaps and bounds past any criticism you decide to offer in the name of "helping" someone deal with a similar situation. The ladies had a firearm at their disposal, they knew how to use it, they did use it, didnt really hesitate (much) and ultimately caused the robber to leave and they went home uninjured. I say good job. If someone reading this thread is genuinely "helped" by reading the criticism of these ladies in this specific circumstance, I would sure like to hear about it.
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Life is a web woven by necessity and chance... Last edited by FireForged; June 3, 2019 at 06:01 PM. |
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June 3, 2019, 06:03 PM | #37 | |
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Know the status of your weapon Keep your muzzle oriented so that no one will be hurt if the firearm discharges Keep your finger off the trigger until you have an adequate sight picture Maintain situational awareness Last edited by TunnelRat; June 3, 2019 at 06:08 PM. |
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June 3, 2019, 06:26 PM | #38 | |
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I would like to think everyone reading what these ladies did would be helped by this review. all this restates what many say.... get a gun of a duty caliber and learn how to properly use it, AND mentally prepare yourself to do so. |
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June 4, 2019, 06:36 AM | #39 |
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I was not asking if the idea of a discussion forum or the spirit of what discussion forums are intended to foster- helps. I was talking about the specific comments and critiques seen in this thread.
I can accept that the these type of discussions can help.. that is why I have been here for 20 years. That said, there is a difference between thoughtful and productive analysis and what I have seen so far in this thread. I will make an exception for post #25 (good post) and couple others but it seems to go sideways after that. If the specific comments in this thread has helped you.. great. I didn't expect it If thoughtful analysis is the goal, I wouldn't mind seeing it as well as participating in the discussion. I will wait and see. Until then I will simply say (good job) to these ladies and leave it at that.
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Life is a web woven by necessity and chance... Last edited by FireForged; June 4, 2019 at 06:56 AM. |
June 4, 2019, 06:08 PM | #40 |
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I think there is an important lesson here. If your attacker flees secure the point of entry. In this case the attacker broke off and the reinitiated the attack. Successfully repelling an attacker in this moment does not necessarily hold to the next
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June 4, 2019, 06:17 PM | #41 |
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Let's keep the discussion on topic ... which is the incident in the video. If you have personal (as opposed to tactical) issues with what someone else posted, take it to private message.
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June 4, 2019, 06:26 PM | #42 |
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separating from your compatriot or leaving cover to go and lock the door may be a good thing and it may be a bad thing depending on what is happening and what the badguy is doing. I would not arbitrarily suggest that going and locking the front door was automatically the best thing to do.. it may not be. There is always a chance that the badguy returns but how you manage or mitigate that possibility depends on lots of things. Maybe you reload and stay where you are, maybe you move to a more defensible area of the store, maybe you run out the back door, maybe lock the front door or maybe you turn the lights out. What you do depends on many nuances which are currently unknown to us. Should they have locked the door when he left?.. maybe.
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June 4, 2019, 07:49 PM | #43 |
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If you don't lock the door, its definitely a choke point, and if you think your opponent coming back, at least thats the place to open up on them, as opposed to shooting at them all over the store, or something similar. At least you have them pre-sighted and in a fixed place of sorts, even if they are moving.
I get the impression from the video, the extent of things as far as the mom and daughter go is, they had "guns" under the counter, and they figured they were good to go. Beyond that, I dont think they gave it much thought. Hell, just watching a few videos of stuff like this on YouTube would pass more for education and training than they seem to have. At least they would have a better idea of what to expect, and maybe think about it more, and/or take things a bit more seriously. Or not. |
June 4, 2019, 08:24 PM | #44 |
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surface thinking vs dynamic thinking
and when the bad guy suddenly appears while you are standing 5 feet from the door and no cover.. then what? What if he return with help? Is the cheesey little lock on the front door really going to do anything against 1 or more armed and determined attackers who have returned with the intent to commit violence? You must consider how important the task truly is before you commit to it. What exactly do you gain vs risk involved vs the potential for it to get worse. What I am saying is you must weigh this choice within its proper perspective and not arbitrarily assume that its the best thing to do simply because it sounds good. If you are going to leave cover to perform any task, you need to weigh the potential for getting caught in a worse spot that you are already in. Its a basic tactical imperative. Similarly if you have a partner(backup) or simply someone else you are protecting- leaving them, separating from them even when its only for a few moments.. you need to consider how this might work against you or how it may offer an opportunity for your adversary to exploit.
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Life is a web woven by necessity and chance... Last edited by FireForged; June 5, 2019 at 10:02 AM. |
June 4, 2019, 10:03 PM | #45 |
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Locking the front door while the bad guy is just outside the door with a shotgun loaded with 00 buck might not be good plan.
Reloading the handguns might be an excellent plan. |
June 5, 2019, 04:32 AM | #46 |
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I cant quite tell in the vid, but is there a point where the lady is shooting at the bad guy as he is fleeing?
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June 5, 2019, 06:03 AM | #47 | |
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I watch a fair number of these types of videos(like those from Active Self Protection) and for me, most show the chaos that is always present when a ‘civilian’ is faced with this type of situation. Yup, most not like a ‘John Wick’ movie....
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June 5, 2019, 10:00 AM | #48 | |
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exactly
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June 5, 2019, 10:12 AM | #49 |
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June 5, 2019, 10:22 AM | #50 | |
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Well, from the very limited angle that we can see.. it sort of appears that way. BUT!..The fact that he immediately came back could suggest that he wasnt breaking off the attack.. just working another angle. We also don't know if he was still pointing the gun at them or not. A person turning their back might be trying to flee and they might be trying to get to cover so that they can continue attacking you. To fairly judge, we need more information.
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