bluegrassarms
Member
Does it matter much? Or do you consider walking around town being "actively engaged in a combat mission?" But to answer the question it was my experience (and admittedly my military training is woefully long ago) that the condition of carry would be dictated based on a number of factors.
And what would those factors be exactly?
Yep, probably about as often as you do off the ship.![]()
Really? you think the chances of being mugged on a Coast Guard vessel are about the same as off the ship and you have the gall to lecture on statistics? lol.
Again, if we play the numbers then why carry at all? You don't b/c the odds are against ever needing a firearm. but if you do carry you are taking the position that you need to be in a given state of readiness, and the situations one would encounter in that position are almost all situations that will happen extremely fast and without warning. Again, completely unlike most military or even LE situations.
If you are worried about being mugged enough to carry, then the question isn't "well you have little chance of being mugged" but "given that I see the mugging threat as real how should I carry to deal with that situation".
that is completely unlike military carry, which is why your analogy is flawed and non-contributive. The situations for which they carry C3 aren't the same as those anticipated by a civilian carrying concealed, and when they DO anticipate situations that are more similar (high probability of actually using their weapong) they carry C1.
--snip of a bunch of irrelevant stuff--
yes, never miss a chance to be condescending on a message board built on mutual respect.
Well there I have some really bad news for you. IME more officers carry C3 off-duty than on because they get to choose how they carry. A small yet significant percentage of U.S. LEOs carry C3 when on their own time, even when mandated to carry C1 on duty. Why? Because they think it fits their situation better.
not bad news so much as news that doesn't respond to my question or the question at hand really.
So since the vast majority are required to carry C1 it's possible/probable that some few of them carry C3 off duty that somehow supports C3 carry in some way when the vast majority are still choosing C1?
But of course that wasn't my question. My question wasn't what those C1 on-duty people do, read it again. it was what do the C3 on-duty required people do when off duty. You cite situations that aren't applicable to civilian concealed carry, like carrying while in uniform on a naval vessel or on base, but what those guys do when they become civilians and carry is what is applicable.
If even the C3 required guys are carrying C1 in vast majority it tells us something far more useful than just citing that their service manual requires C3. It tells us something b/c they are specifically trained in C3 yet choose C1. Given that C3 is more intensive from a training standpoint in most cases (depends on weapon) what chance does the average accountant or electrician have when a soldier or cop trained in it still thinks it is too cumbersome or slow for concealed carry?
Personally I don't care if anyone carries C3 or whatever, but if you're going to cite cases where C3 makes sense at least site comparable situations to civilian concealed carry.