If you can place your shot, you probably shouldn't be shooting.
I’m not sure how to take this. If you mean:
- “If you can’t shoot accurately under extreme stress you probably should not be carrying a gun.”
then we are in agreement.
If however you mean:
- “if you have the time to shoot accurately you probably don’t have a need to shoot at all.”
then we disagree.
If that second one is the case then it’s one of those rare occasions suitable for the southern idiom “Bless your heart”.
I’ll leave it to you to decide which of these applies.
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For everyone else let’s assume it’s a case of the often cited “you don’t have time to use your sights in a real world shoot.” Well…that’s undoubtedly true if you don’t train enough to become proficient.
I fully understand that the very high percentage of LEOs that shoot just twice a year to qualify probably can’t place a shot under extreme stress. Bless their hearts too.
But when applied to a proficient shooter that just isn’t the case, even when said shooter is receiving fire.
The main gig right now for my semi-retired self is flying and ironically enough the subject came up this morning when discussing what has to happen to plant a tail wheel aircraft on a short, rough strip so that you can immediately get on the brakes. The problem is by the time you think about what you have to do and do it the moment has already passed. Consequently given the stress and time pressure it *has* to be second nature.
Since both of us briefing the flight in the hangar had a shooting background I used the process of learning tactical pistol shooting and being able to do it under extreme stress as an example as it contains the same “has to be totally second nature” elements - if you are going to be able tp do it as an ingrained almost reflex action under extreme stress and time pressure. The lesson plan strategy is the same for both. You start out with drills to ingrain the critical eye motor loop items until they are second nature.
1) For learning to shoot a tactical pistol accurately and very fast, you start out really slow, focusing on your target while you draw and raise the pistol into your line of sight. You then place the front sight on the spot you want to bleed, and then you *pause* while you align the front sight in the rear sight, and then hold that alignment of rear sight, front sight and target while you release the shot.
2) Eventually the muscles in your hand know exactly how much tension they each have to have to align the sights. When that point is achieved, when you pause, you find the sights are already aligned with the front sight, which is in turn already on target.
That might be a few hundred rounds for some shooters and it might be a couple thousand for others. The point here is that you are learning and then over learning the basics of sight alignment, grip and trigger control until they are second nature and require no conscious thought.
3) At that point you start picking up the pace, shortening the pause until it is just to a very small fraction of a second while you confirm the front sight is on target. *But* you also take care not to sacrifice accuracy either. In other words you maintain the basic fundamentals of grip, sight alignment and trigger control, while shooting at speed.
4) In the real world that very small fraction of a second pause is still to ensure the front sight is on target but it’s also used to assess the need to shoot. For example, you’ve just delivered a double tap or a controlled pair center of mass and since the assailant hasn’t went down you are transitioning to the head for a failure to stop shot. As you recover from the recoil of the second shot and bring the front sight to where the head should be, you’re already noting whether the assailant is going down or not.
That’s only happening because the grip, sight alignment and trigger control are all ingrained responses that require zero bandwidth. That is absolutelyvital as under extreme stress, and particularly when receiving fire, you have very little bandwidth to work with and all of it needs to be focused on strategy and tactics, not remembering to place the front sight on target.
LEOs shooting only twice a year to qualify are never going to reach that level. That’s unfortunate as the vast majority of LEOs don’t take shooting seriously enough to bother to get any better. Worse, since they met a (very low bar) community standard by successfully qualifying, then then make the logical fallacy of misidentifying themselves as “qualified” tactical shooting experts.
People devolve to their lowest level of *fully mastered* training under extreme stress and for shoot twice a year LEOs that invariably is something akin to pointing their duty weapon in the general direction of the assailant and shooting as fast as they can. Bless their hearts.
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Last time I saw the data on it, 80% of officers in officer involved shoots did not use or remember using the front sight. They literally were pointing their duty weapon in the general direction of the assailant and mashing the trigger as fast as they could.
In short, the “bless your heart” comes from using that unfortunate reality for 80% of LEOs as a justification for statements like “your sights are useless in a gunfight” or “things haven’t too fast to use your sights in a gunfight” or “you don’t have the time motor skills to align your sights in a gunfight”. said “if you can place your shot you probably sho
I disagree. It’s a training and a skills deficiency. Period.
It’s why LEOs in most departments miss about 80% of the time. It’s fortunate (for them, not innocent bystanders) that they have some combination of sovereign immunity, department attorneys and department provided liability insurance to cover the liability of all those misses skipping around the neighborhood hood looking to tag innocent bystanders.