Feed&Guns wrote:
You said, "It takes "training" to keep from shooting yourself or others. The safest gun ever made is no more or less safe than the person holding it. It takes a certain skill set that does not come naturally, but is imparted by "training."
The CHL class is not a training class but rather a simple test of, if you can even call it that, marksmanship. Since you say "it takes training" to be safe, and the CHL class is not firearms training, it's logical that you must believe the CHL classes should be harder.
Only to the extent that you put words in my mouth that I neither said nor implied. Now maybe I missed it, but I think the OP posted a title for this thread: "Carrying a 5" 1911 is hard" for a reason. That reason had nothing much to do with CHL class content.
Feed&Guns wrote:Otherwise, it would imply that you endorse licensing a bunch of "unsafe" people to carry concealed.
There you go again. Those are your words. not mine.
Feed&Guns wrote:I don't have to know you or your theories to know what a logical conclusion is...
No, but you do need to know me before you get very successful at putting words in my mouth.
Feed&Guns wrote:...unless you're a typical liberal and therefore live in a world without logic. I assume most people on the CHL forum don't fit that description. I might be wrong.
Now you think I'm a "typical liberal". You see, that is the wonderful thing about the Internet. Anyone can just haul off and insult people they've never met and say things that would never go quite as smoothly face to face as they do when they hide behind a keyboard. You're right as rain about one thing: you might be wrong about several things.
Feed&Guns wrote:I agree that most people don't have the fundamentals down and that training helps improve safety, and even that it's not *entirely* intuitive.
Finally, we agree.
Feed&Guns wrote:I'm sure that Miami cop that shot himself in the leg in that school wished he had "a little more training".
Now you're saying training is a good thing? I thought you said all people need is instinct to be handling firearms.
Feed&Guns wrote:But to say that they're not at all intuitive is equally absurd. We were talking about relatively intuitive guns for new shooters who will either not train at all or train infrequently.
No, you were talking about that. I said there is no such thing as an intuitive gun that will prevent someone from shooting themselves or others.
Feed&Guns wrote:Given that they won't train, which gun is best for their situation. Pretty sure everyone else reading this understood that point.
I wonder how you arrive at that conclusion since a lot more people read this than responded.
Feed&Guns wrote:But if I lost you with that simple logic in the first paragraph, then the other paragraphs surely were too complex.
The word is not "complex", but "convoluted". I'm not going to be snarky about this. If you think this reply is, I assure you, such was not my intent. I'm going to chalk it up to the reality that a lot of times a great many people have a lot of trouble typing out what they are thinking and making it come out right, me included.