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Yo Tim!
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JustWait[_2_]
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jan 2012
Posts: 2,333
Yo Tim!
On 7/29/2012 2:03 PM,
wrote:
On Sunday, July 29, 2012 1:47:38 PM UTC-4, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , dump-on-
says...
On 7/29/12 12:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012 07:42:55 -0400, X ` Man
wrote:
Surprised you don't know this, since you "qualified" with a pistol
"about a dozen times." What was your qualification about? Didn't it
include safe handling?
The side arm was never much of a priority in most military training.
Your regular soldier was not going to get one anyway. They were just
for people who would not usually have a rifle.
If you are an MP or SP you should get extra training and I assume
officers get some training but from my experience the officer's
training is somewhat superficial too.
I was in ordinance, working for a CPO who was on the USCG pistol team
for a while so we all got more than the usual pistol training. I
sought out as much as I could get and actually got a lot of range
time. I also wanted to know how to maintain everything in the armory.
I would have thought that proper "safety training" would have been a
priority. When I took my training, I spent the first few hours in class
with an instructor who showed us a safety video or two, and then spent
the rest of the time showing us how to handle the firearm, how to field
strip it, how to unjam it, how to remove stovepipes, how to store it, et
cetera. We didn't even get to the range until halfway through the second
lesson.
Maybe the instructor thought you were slow.
My dad taught me gun safety before I was 10 years old. Shot a .44 mag when I was 9. Started helping reload back then.
It's sort of weird to think about a 60+ year old needing gun classes. I guess some of those yanks grew up with lace on their underwear.
My Dad taught me all the gun safety I needed. "Never touch another mans
gun, unless you intend to fire it, never fire a weapon unless you have a
target you need to destroy"... He didn't say it quite that way but I am
not gonna' put it the way he did
Anyway, when I was about 12 he took
me to a friends pond. The friend was a fire arms instructor (active
duty) at the time and we fired a bunch of weapons, a couple years later
I took second in a scout competition...
Tim, when I asked my dad why we didn't have weapons in the house, why he
didn't teach me to shoot he simply said. "Scott, I saw too much of what
they can do in the war, and I don't want them in my home"... I never
questioned him beyond that...
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