The Mind of a Shooter
Mike Watkins, a cop–turned–firearm instructor at the Kennesaw range, put it this way: “If I'm a bad guy, and I know this place has guns, it's not a place I'm obviously going to want to go and do something bad.”
Source: Scientific American
Question 1.: how can a cop say what a 'bad guy' thinks? He is so on the other end of the spectrum from that, thinking he's fully righteous and justified.
Question 2.: what about the suicidal mass-shooter types who usually end up dead, often by their own bullet?
Question 3.: how can you automatically discern who the "bad guy" is to make sure you shoot the "right" person?
Question 4.: why do so many Americans want a fatal solution to situations they don't like? If you're unhappy then somebody needs to die?
Question 5.: how many of you, as individuals, have ever used a gun for self-defense? I don't mean the intimidation factor of a gun; intimidation can be caused by many things. Fatal force is not necessary.
Source: Scientific American
Question 1.: how can a cop say what a 'bad guy' thinks? He is so on the other end of the spectrum from that, thinking he's fully righteous and justified.
Question 2.: what about the suicidal mass-shooter types who usually end up dead, often by their own bullet?
Question 3.: how can you automatically discern who the "bad guy" is to make sure you shoot the "right" person?
Question 4.: why do so many Americans want a fatal solution to situations they don't like? If you're unhappy then somebody needs to die?
Question 5.: how many of you, as individuals, have ever used a gun for self-defense? I don't mean the intimidation factor of a gun; intimidation can be caused by many things. Fatal force is not necessary.
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