Archive for category Self-Defense

Armed citizens in “active shooter” scenarios

In his article in the Moultrie Observer, Adventures of Pistol-Packing Peter, Dwain Walden writes:

Do I want to be in a restaurant, at a ballgame or in a church with pistol-packing Peter? How do I know he can safely handle a gun?

There’s a popular bumper sticker that says: “Gun control is hitting what you aim at.” That’s a cute saying. But within that short sentence is a lot of unintended food for thought. Handguns are not that accurate in the first place. You’ve got to be really good or really lucky at hitting a target at any distance with a handgun. So if you are not hitting your target, you are hitting something else. Now let’s just say someone charges into the church and starts firing away. (It happened recently but it’s not a regular occurrence.) If someone is packing a gun, could we be sure that he could take out the assailant without hitting three or four deacons?

Handguns are less accurate than rifles, it’s true, but combat handguns are more than accurate enough to hit a human-sized target at the distance at which defensive situations typically arrive. This makes sense, since they were specifically designed for that purpose! Any handgun that did not have sufficient accuracy to accomplish the task of consistently hitting a person would not have much success in the market.

Of course, that doesn’t mean that people don’t miss, but the statement, “You’ve got to be really good or really lucky at hitting a target at any distance with a handgun,” is loaded and incomplete. It is difficult for most people to hit a 3″ bullseye at 50 yards with a handgun, but I reckon that in under an hour I could teach anybody to hit a human-sized silhouette target at ten yards. I shoot IDPA competitions, and I often see novice shooters hit moving targets, pop-up targets, and so forth, all while under the stress of competition, and with surprisingly few misses. They are usually not very fast about it, but part of using a handgun defensively is knowing its capabilities and yours, and it seems that people can often judge whether a given shot is safe to take or not.

Carrying a handgun is a pain in the ass. Guns are big, heavy hunks of metal. Concealing them requires changes to your wardrobe. They are uncomfortable and press into your side and poke you. You can’t sit or lay certain ways because they will press into you. What I’m getting at is that few people will choose to carry a gun casually, and the kind of person who makes the commitment of carrying a gun is exactly the kind of person who is also likely to take the time to train with his or her weapon and to know his or her capabilities.

But we have all heard stories of police officers, hunters, or victims of crime who panicked and started firing wildly, resulting in a very high miss-to-hit ratio, so what about that? “If someone is packing a gun, could we be sure that he could take out the assailant without hitting three or four deacons?” Here’s what I say. 32 people were killed in the VA Tech massacre. Let’s say that someone in the first classroom that Cho went into had a gun and began wildly returning fire. Let’s say that person hit and killed four innocent students in addition to Cho. Congratulations. 28 lives have been saved. 13 people died at Columbine. If a private citizen had stopped them while killing four innocents, perhaps 9 lives would have been saved. Should we keep counting? Even in the case where the good guy misses and kills innocents, which is a definite tragedy, chances are that the total count of victims will be lower than if the bad guy was not stopped.

The argument that people should be disarmed in crowds because they might miss a bad guy and hit an innocent seems fallacious to me. It seems to be saying, “I would rather be shot at by a person who intends to hit me than a person who intends to hit someone else.”

The proposition that an armed citizen would make an “active shooter” scenario worse just doesn’t hold water. No matter how bad a shot the armed citizen is presumed to be, he or she is still very likely to kill fewer people than the active shooter. Add to this the fact that “active shooters” very often break off their attack or even commit suicide the first time they are confronted with resistance. Finally, even if the armed citizen is completely impotent, at the very least, he or she will draw the “active shooter’s” attention and fire away from everyone else, for which the average non-gun-carrier should be thankful.

As a real-world example of this, consider this case, from College Park, GA:

Apparently, his intent was to rape and murder us all,” said student Charles Bailey.

Bailey said the gunmen started counting bullets. “The other guy asked how many (bullets) he had. He said he had enough,” said Bailey.

That’s when one student grabbed a gun out of a backpack and shot at the invader who was watching the men. The gunman ran out of the apartment.

The result of the incident is that one criminal is dead and the other is expected to be arrested soon. One of the innocent women was shot in the crossfire, and is expected to recover. As Issa points out over on Right to Bleed:

I wonder if anti-gun people will point to the injured woman as proof that “guns are bad”. I see this as an extremely effective case of self-and-other defense, though. One woman was injured, but 10 lives were probably saved. The college student was effective in killing or running off the men intent on doing harm, and 10 people are alive and not raped. That’s a success, and this man is a hero.

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“Semiautomatic rifles a ‘hazard’; seizures are up”

I came across this article from the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel.

They can kill from more than four football fields away, shred police officers’ vests, fire up to 75 bullets at a time – and they’re increasingly showing up in criminals’ hands.

Last year, Fort Wayne Police seized 31 semiautomatic rifles, compared with two in 2003, the last year of the federal assault weapons ban that limited the sale of the rifles. The seizure increase and more reports of criminals using the rifles concerns Fort Wayne Police Chief Rusty York.

Here we are in the second paragraph, and the author has already mixed his terminology. A semiautomatic rifle fires a single shot for every pull of the trigger, and loads the next round without any manual operation of the gun, such as working a lever. There is absolutely nothing sinister about semiautomatic rifles. They have the word “automatic” in their name, which conjures up images of fully automatic rifles, but they are not the same thing. Full-autos continue to fire as long as the trigger is held down. Semi-autos fire a single shot for every pull of the trigger.

The author continually refers to “semiautomatic rifles” as if they are some special thing, but really, he might as well just be saying, “rifles” and leave it at that. It would be like complaining about problems with “fuel injected cars”.

The author then refers to the federal assault weapons ban (AWB) that “limited the sale of the rifles.” Actually, no it didn’t. The AWB specifically limited rifles that had certain cosmetic features. It is true that all of the rifles banned by the AWB were semiautomatic. That’s because fully automatic rifles are already heavily-regulated and nearly-completley banned for civilian ownership by a different law. But the AWB did not apply to semiautomatic rifles in general; only to some specific models and to guns having certain cosmetic features.

So, the police seized 31 “semiautomatic rifles”. This could be nearly any rifle, from a target-plinking .22 caliber to a deer rifle.

“The fact that we have these relatively cheap, assault weapon-type firearms out there, it’s not only a hazard to the public, but in particular to police officers,” said York, who supports renewing the ban. “It’s proof that they continue to get into the hands of irresponsible people.”

Then take them away from the “irresponsible people” and leave me the fuck alone, please.

“It’s a weapon of war, not of sport,” York said. “I’m sure it will be a political battle, but the officers are out in the street fighting that battle every day.”

Actually, semiautomatic rifles are not weapons of war. Not even a little bit. Every state-run military in the entire world issues full-auto or select-fire battle rifles to their infantry. Not a single one uses semiautomatic rifles. Semiautomatic rifles are explicitly civilian in every way.

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Condoleezza Rice college student interview – two takes

Here’s a great example of the inherent conflict involved with being the Jack-Booted Liberal.

Massad Ayoob is a noted firearms trainer and writer. In December of 2006, I attended his Lethal Force Institute class—40 hours of intensive training on the legal, moral, ethical, and practical parameters of the use of firearms in self defense. To the right, you can see a photo of me and him, taken at the end of the class.

I have a lot of respect for this man. I look forward to his blog entries on self-defense and firearms-related topics. I read his magazine articles with gusto. But he’s also a law-enforcement officer, and I have a hard time agreeing with many of his political opinions. That conflict is exactly what I wanted to capture when I started this blog.

In his blog post, Why Condi was my candidate, Massad discusses a YouTube video in which, at what appears to be an informal event, Condoleezza Rice is asked questions about U.S. policy on torture, Guanatanamo, and such topics. Massad is vigorously complimentary of Condi’s answers and disparaging of the person asking the questions, saying:

Recently, a clueless lad took advantage of a question-answer session when Ms. Rice was speaking at a college campus, and tried to trickbag her with a question about government-sanctioned torture. Watching the video on YouTube, I was struck with the kid’s pompousness…and couldn’t keep from smiling as she dissected him, handing him his butt on a verbal platter.

It’s funny, because to me, the student sounds civil and respectful, and it’s Condoleezza who seems pompous.

She starts out with, “Unless you were there, you can’t know what it was like.” The implication that I take is that since I wasn’t there, I’m not qualified to question the decisions that were made. And since nobody else was there either, neither are they. So, in a rhetorical fait accompli, Condi has negated the ability of nearly everyone to question the decisions that were made.

She then calls out a report that concluded that Guantanamo was “a model medium-security prison.” “Did you know that,” she asks. When the student responds, “Were they there for interrogations,” she cuts him off, saying, “No. Just answer me. Did you know that?” “No, but I think that changes nothing,” he answers. “Well, if you didn’t know that, maybe before you make allegations about Guantanamo, you should read,” she says.

If you already agree with the things the American government and military did in Guanatamo, then perhaps this sounds like a powerful point. Condi might seem to be saying, “Here is a piece of information that you have not considered. It should change your opinion.” But I have doubts about torture and the legality of what was done there, and to me it sounds like, “If you have not considered every single piece of information that I can bring up on this topic, then your information is incomplete and you are not qualified to discuss this with me.”

But that’s actually irrelevant, because it turns out that the report that Condi is referencing had a little more to say than just, “it’s a model medium-security prision”. Scott Horton, writing for Harper’s Magazine, says:

(3) Rice insists that no one was tortured at Guantánamo. She cites an OSCE report that called it a “model medium security prison.” But, as the report’s author stressed, this was a characterization of the physical facility. How about the treatment of the prisoners? On that score, the OSCE had a different conclusion: it was “mental torture.” The Red Cross did complete two studies of detainees at Guantánamo, and Condi’s characterization of them is false. The first report concluded that the treatment of prisoners, particularly isolation treatment, was “tantamount to torture.” The second examined the use of the Bush Program and concluded it was “torture,” no qualifications. Rice was furnished copies of these reports. Did she take the time to read them?

From this perspective, the student’s question, “Were they there for interrogations,” seems even more relevant. Although he has not read the report in question, he accurately pegged the flaw in Condi’s argument, and if he had read the report, he would have known that and maybe been able to press the point. Condi won this particular point because she attacked an area of the student’s ignorance, not because the facts supported her.

Here’s the video, for those who are interested.

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The police are not here to protect you (specifically)

True story. Names have been changed and gender pronouns have been androgenized because they really don’t matter. Recently, someone I know called the police let’s call this person Pat. Pat was calling the cops to report that s/he was concerned for hir safety. S/he believed that s/he might be in danger from a person who was known to own firearms.

The officer who answered the phone asked whether the threatening person was currently present. Pat said no. The officer then said that, it being a Friday night and all, their officers had higher priorities than this situation. “Are you kidding me,” Pat asked. “This person has been threatening me and harassing me, and now s/he said that s/he is coming over to my house. I know that s/he has a gun. That’s not a high enough priority for you?”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Outsourcing my violence

One of the arguments against gun ownership goes something like this: “Given that we have the police and the military to protect us, why do non-police and non-military citizens need guns?” I have several answers to that question, but here is the one that I feel most viscerally.

The fundamental role of the police and the military is to do violence, or to use the potential to do violence, to accomplish societal and political ends, such as the reduction of crime or defending the country against an invading military force. I believe that it is immoral to expect another person to do violence on my behalf if I am capable of, but not willing to do that violence myself.

Ultimately, one thing that keeps me “safe” from crime is acts of violence or the threat of such acts against criminals and potential criminals. In as much as I reap the benefits of that safety, I feel morally obligated to participate in creating that safety. Since guns are an effective means of doing that, I want access to them. I am capable of defending myself. If I were to rely solely on others to keep me safe, I would feel like I was leeching off the system and not living up to my personal standards for how I want to contribute to society.

Putting violence exclusively in the hands of the government has practical down-sides as well. Very few of us are currently directly involved in the creation of our own food. In keeping with the specialization that occurs in large civilizations, we have outsourced the creation of food to a few of us. This means that there is a vast distance between the production of the food and its consumption. Because we are disconnected from and unaware of the processes that produce our food, those processes can evolve in a direction that we would not tolerate if we were more aware of them. We end up eating food that is worse for us, or that destroys the environment in its production. By putting guns exclusively in the hands of the government, we would be doing the same thing for the ability to do violence, with similarly disastrous results.

The food production analogy is not perfect. If I don’t like the way that food is produced, I can grow my own. But giving guns exclusively to the government would be like saying, “Only the government can give you food. You can’t have a backyard garden. You can’t raise a pig and slaughter it yourself. You are not allowed to own hoes and rakes and seeds.” For a government to deny its citizens one of the most fundamental human rights–the right to feed themselves–would be inhumane. The right to effectively defend one’s self, with violence if necessary, is no less a fundamental human right, and it is no less inhumane for a government to deny its citizens access to firearms.

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