I was inspired to finally register here because i found myself agreeing with this thread, virtually every point of the way. I was trained in traditional marksmanship, and I am a part of the old school, and I am finding the new gun culture to be something of a novelty. Whereas those in the old culture learned to shoot the right way, and with old single shot iron sights rifles, these new kids need their high caliber auto loading combat firearms with laser sights just to shoot at paper targets, and many never bother to learn to shoot at all. Whereas the old days where shooting was just a fun hobby, you just dressed normal and shot, every kid needs to dress up as black ops just to punch holes in paper. I learned to shoot clay pigeons, ducks, deer, squirrels, nuisance animals out on the farm, and have taken game. These kids are seriously saying stuff about "zombies", and it almost hurts to hear.
The old school learned to shoot practically, not to live up to their favorite video games. I bought an M1a as a nice auto loading deer rifle, not some street sweeper M4 I'll never use. For a self defense pistol, I choose my good old model 10, which is also a fantastic target pistol, knowing a shootout is unlikely, and probably against one assailant if I do, not a big combat auto loader with 500 rounds for the army of ninjas coming to get me.
I see rationalization for all this combat stuff all the time. The guys who are lying to you, and not themselves, know they won't be clearing their house with an Ak47 with thousands in gear bolted on, they just wanted it as a fun gun. The dangerous ones, the ones this thread is about, are the ones without self honesty, the ones who are looking for 100 terrorists to burst into Walmart, the guys hoping a bank will get robbed nearby so they can shoot it out with them, the Paul Kersey's of the world eager to get into some fight with the "bad guys". I've seen people try to explain that they use an 11 inch barrel AR15 for hunting hogs or deer, when .223 is inadequate in full barrel rifles. They buy things they don't need or can use, then invent reasons to own them.
Is carrying a gun a good idea? If we didn't think so, we wouldn't be on a forum like this. But than again, the sane ones realize that one good gun and an awareness of surroundings will be enough for what we realistically can run into. Is dressing up and arming up to take on an entire gang head on addressing a realistic scenario? Again, its the question of self honesty. If you like dressing up and having fun, you are actually safer than the ones who actually believe hundreds of dollars worth of "tactical gear" is going to save you from some unrealistic and unforeseen event.
To make a note of where I stand, I believe the same. I have no problem with the guy waltzing down main street with an AR strapped to his back. He is his own man, he is carrying what he wants, not hurting anyone, and no matter how rediculous he looks its not my place to say so. I have no problem withe the gun, or even the clothing. It is the mentality those things tend to reflect that disturbs, and sometimes scares us.
I have no problem with people carrying body armor or long guns personally, but the public sure seems to have a problem, which becomes a problem for all gun owners. To make matters worse, many people who dress and carry over the top do so to gain negative attention on purpose. As said before here, they aren't wearing "tactical" gear discreetly, its an "in your face" look at me attitude. If a good citizen wants to carry four handguns, and can act normally, well, perhaps we can't really say anything. But almost every person who does so, does for the wrong reasons and with the wrong mentality.
Simply put, it is not the gun that is carried, or how many, but the attitude that comes with it. The retired LEO carrying a Glock in his waistband and a pocket revolver back up is not the problem, but the guy carrying a pocket auto loader openly trying to get the attention and make trouble for the police, is. If a jewelry supplier wants to carry a short shotgun under his coat because he is at high risk for robbery, and wears a IIIa vest, he is not the problem. The guy carrying a decked out super cool AR-15 on his back to rile people is.
I come from the country where this kind of stuff isn't bad. The people who dress up as cowboys have cow manure all over their boots and they smell like pregnant horse urine, because they are real cowboys. The people wearing camo are just over excited deer hunters, in a land where the first day of the season is a holiday. The freaks get chased out, and into your cities, and anyone who tires to act and dress like a freak gets a good verbal tune up from the local sheriff's office. Half the trucks you see have a 30-30 and a shotgun in the back window.
But for those people who don't live out here, I can't imagine pulling off some of that stuff. Walking down the street with a long gun for no reason? Dressing like a cosplayer for your favorite video game, but with real guns? Living a fantasy of fighting off invisible threats that borders on neurosis or even psychosis?
Sorry to go on like this, especially as a new poster, but this kind of stuff really gets my ire up. Enough of these people will make all gun owners look kooky, and give the grabbers a better chance to actually win legislation by hurting public opinion.
The old school learned to shoot practically, not to live up to their favorite video games. I bought an M1a as a nice auto loading deer rifle, not some street sweeper M4 I'll never use. For a self defense pistol, I choose my good old model 10, which is also a fantastic target pistol, knowing a shootout is unlikely, and probably against one assailant if I do, not a big combat auto loader with 500 rounds for the army of ninjas coming to get me.
I see rationalization for all this combat stuff all the time. The guys who are lying to you, and not themselves, know they won't be clearing their house with an Ak47 with thousands in gear bolted on, they just wanted it as a fun gun. The dangerous ones, the ones this thread is about, are the ones without self honesty, the ones who are looking for 100 terrorists to burst into Walmart, the guys hoping a bank will get robbed nearby so they can shoot it out with them, the Paul Kersey's of the world eager to get into some fight with the "bad guys". I've seen people try to explain that they use an 11 inch barrel AR15 for hunting hogs or deer, when .223 is inadequate in full barrel rifles. They buy things they don't need or can use, then invent reasons to own them.
Is carrying a gun a good idea? If we didn't think so, we wouldn't be on a forum like this. But than again, the sane ones realize that one good gun and an awareness of surroundings will be enough for what we realistically can run into. Is dressing up and arming up to take on an entire gang head on addressing a realistic scenario? Again, its the question of self honesty. If you like dressing up and having fun, you are actually safer than the ones who actually believe hundreds of dollars worth of "tactical gear" is going to save you from some unrealistic and unforeseen event.
I'm old school. If someone wants to carry five handguns, an AR, 140 rounds of ammo, taser, 50,000 lumen flashlight, a sword cane and a LAW, go for it. I think most of us pack lighter, but whatever makes you feel secure is fine with me.
"Tactical" is a term so over-used and misused for marketing that it's practically meaningless.
To make a note of where I stand, I believe the same. I have no problem with the guy waltzing down main street with an AR strapped to his back. He is his own man, he is carrying what he wants, not hurting anyone, and no matter how rediculous he looks its not my place to say so. I have no problem withe the gun, or even the clothing. It is the mentality those things tend to reflect that disturbs, and sometimes scares us.
I have no problem with people carrying body armor or long guns personally, but the public sure seems to have a problem, which becomes a problem for all gun owners. To make matters worse, many people who dress and carry over the top do so to gain negative attention on purpose. As said before here, they aren't wearing "tactical" gear discreetly, its an "in your face" look at me attitude. If a good citizen wants to carry four handguns, and can act normally, well, perhaps we can't really say anything. But almost every person who does so, does for the wrong reasons and with the wrong mentality.
Simply put, it is not the gun that is carried, or how many, but the attitude that comes with it. The retired LEO carrying a Glock in his waistband and a pocket revolver back up is not the problem, but the guy carrying a pocket auto loader openly trying to get the attention and make trouble for the police, is. If a jewelry supplier wants to carry a short shotgun under his coat because he is at high risk for robbery, and wears a IIIa vest, he is not the problem. The guy carrying a decked out super cool AR-15 on his back to rile people is.
I come from the country where this kind of stuff isn't bad. The people who dress up as cowboys have cow manure all over their boots and they smell like pregnant horse urine, because they are real cowboys. The people wearing camo are just over excited deer hunters, in a land where the first day of the season is a holiday. The freaks get chased out, and into your cities, and anyone who tires to act and dress like a freak gets a good verbal tune up from the local sheriff's office. Half the trucks you see have a 30-30 and a shotgun in the back window.
But for those people who don't live out here, I can't imagine pulling off some of that stuff. Walking down the street with a long gun for no reason? Dressing like a cosplayer for your favorite video game, but with real guns? Living a fantasy of fighting off invisible threats that borders on neurosis or even psychosis?
Sorry to go on like this, especially as a new poster, but this kind of stuff really gets my ire up. Enough of these people will make all gun owners look kooky, and give the grabbers a better chance to actually win legislation by hurting public opinion.