Sat down at the keyboard and...I don't have much to say. Time goes on and some verities endure. As a society, we learn little and learn it slowly.
The derp rolls on. "Point shooting" keeps showing up as some wonderful new idea, instead of a discredited notion two or three generations old. Yeah, look, okay -- if you're fighting at grappling distance, at knife-fight distance, you're liable to be wielding a firearm in a way not too different to a knife or a fist (and with all the risk that entails); but you have that firearm and it has sights so that fights can be waged at a much greater distance whenever possible. Run away! --And get enough distance use your sights if you have to engage.
U. S. politics is, has been and will continue to be a sideshow crossed with a soap opera. It's nothing new -- Jefferson and Hamilton started spatting as Cabinet members during George Washington's first term as President. Come to think of it, each man, one time or another, expressed concern that the other would be the end of this country, and subsequent politicians and their followers have kept up the chorus. Oh, do be concerned; do support causes, parties and politicians you think will be best, and do keep watch on and protest those that worry you. But don't fall for the apocalyptic rhetoric; the closest this country has come to that end was the Late Civil Unpleasantness Between The States, and look at how it lined up: the breakaway States promptly formed their own federal government and the wider socioeconomic issues map without much effort into a conflict between Jeffersonian South and Hamiltonian North. There's a necessary tension in our system of government. It's not broken, that's how it works.
The media is in the business of selling your attention and will do nearly anything to get it. Cross this with politics and you get a Mencken quote:
"Civilization, in fact, grows more and more maudlin and hysterical; especially under democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere combat of crazes; the whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary."
Understand this, and don't let yourself be herded.
In 1978, when I went to the police academy, isosceles was THE shooting stance, Point Shooting was the way and Rock & Roll was king. In 1987, when I became a firearms instructor, Weaver ruled and “front sight - press” was the mantra and Rap was in its infancy. Now, the top earning acts are all legacy (70s) acts.
ReplyDeleteEverything is cyclical and comes back around. Most fashions now look like they were stolen from the early 1960s.
Using the sights isn't a fashion. It's what works.
ReplyDelete"Point shooting" was a fluke, hitting faster and better has always been in style.
ReplyDeleteAre they promoting point shooting as a replacement for sighted shooting, or as a supplemental skill for short range quick reaction shooting? "Fast is fine, but accuracy is final"-Wyatt Earp
ReplyDeleteEven if you're shooting from Two or Three, there's a physical or visual index on the gun.
ReplyDelete^^^ What she said.
ReplyDeleteIn my (rather limited, non-professional nowhere near Queen Tam's) experience...
ReplyDeleteThe people who perform best in a point-shooting incident are the ones who have mastery of and proficiency at using their sights. Familiarity with the gun and intimate knowledge of how and where it 'points' is integral to that experience.
That being said, I also agree with Roberta: in a CQ fight with a firearm, DISENGAGE! Get some distance, then sight and fire as god and Colonel Cooper intended.