HansGruber
Ronin
You’re beginning to see my point.The odds of ever having to use a gun in self defense are incredibly low. The odds of having to use a gun in self defense and it resulting in more than 3 shots fired are astronomically low. So why carry the speed strip? In fact why carry a gun at all ?
I wonder why it is that every instructor, that I know of anyway, teaches that multiple hits to the upper torso is the fastest way, under duress, to stop a threat ? Oh yeah, barring immediate demobilization by shutting down the CNS, massive blood loss is the fastest way to immediately stop a threat.
And I didn’t say I’d immediately go for head shots—I said, if necessary. I doubt it would be. As for the speed strip? I’m completely cognizant of it being, at best, a talisman. I’ve just always been in the habit of carrying spare ammo no matter what the platform that I’ll still do it, because I can.
The thing is…by simply carrying a firearm, I am far ahead of the curve in a self defense incident (which, as you correctly point out, is a pretty rare beast in and of itself). The fact I am trained, practiced, and have the mindset to use the firearm puts me even further ahead of that curve.
Putting hits on target? The situation where that fails—in a non-LEO self defense shooting—is a unicorn. Sure, it can happen; but the fact is, it almost certainly won’t. Most stops are psychological, not physiological—put a hole in someone, and they’re probably gonna stop what they’re doing…put a couple holes in them, and it’s almost guaranteed…no matter how big the holes are.
Now, none of this should be taken as “everyone should carry a .22”; that’s not my point. Carry what you like; if a .500 S&W makes you feel warm and fuzzy—CARRY IT—just be sure you can hit with it, OK?
FWIW, I used to be on the other side; carried a .45 (or a .357 mag); all others are lesser, only big holes matter. Then I took a good, hard look at the data from real self-defense shootings…and admitted I was wrong.