"There is no news in the truth, and no truth in the news."
"The revolution will not be televised... Instead it will be filmed from multiple angles via cell phone cameras, promptly uploaded to YouTube, Tweeted about, and then shared on Facebook, pending a Wi-Fi connection."
I'm not fat, I'm tactically padded.
Tactical Commander - Fast Action Response Team (F.A.R.T.)
For my feedback Click Here.
Click: For anyone with a dog or pets, please read
"There is no news in the truth, and no truth in the news."
"The revolution will not be televised... Instead it will be filmed from multiple angles via cell phone cameras, promptly uploaded to YouTube, Tweeted about, and then shared on Facebook, pending a Wi-Fi connection."
I have always been very nervouse at public ranges. Good job saying something. You have to keep your eyes open to everything going on around you. I was able to join a private club a few months ago and the people are both knowledgable and safe.
I mean no offense, but this is poor reasoning. Driving is statistically dangerous because you do it so often and for such long periods of time. The actual rate of accidents to time spent in a vehicle is pretty low. There's no actual data to compare to, but I'd bet that shooting two lanes over from a group of inexperienced shooters is much, much more likely to result in an accident if you did it for the same length of time.
The fact that we don't do if for long is probably what limits the actual number of incidents.
I think the reason we all get the creeps around unsafe gun handling is because our brains/gut/instinct tells us we are seconds away from being shot. It's a very real danger, and the less experienced the gun handler the higher the risk.
A few years ago I took the neighbor out to shoot. He's a doc, and a good one. One of the smartest people I know. Midway through his second magazine of missing the target completely (his gun), he turned to me with the weapon pointed at my navel and his finger on the trigger. He asked, "What am I doing wrong?". I stepped to the side while controlling his weapon and made the obvious reply, "you're pointing your gun at my gut". He was appropriately embarrassed and apologetic, but it was very, very close. That was the closest I've come to being shot, and it happened in the first 5 minutes of shooting with an inexperienced shooter. It's high risk.
"It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your ignorance"
Thomas Sowell
www.timkulincabinetry.com
See our reviews below:
http://www.thumbtack.com/Tim-Kulin-C...service/788419
Glad you said something and they didnt take it the wrong way.
This is one prime reason I do not like going to public ranges or even private ones for that matter.
I prefer my own land whit NO ONE around and only those I trust who I know have solid safety practices.
The amount of safety put into modern vehicles gives you a fighting chance in a serious accident.
The inexperienced shooter that goes to the public range has no modern safety put into them nor do you unless your in a bomb squad suit the entire time. This reasoning is comparing apples to oranges.
I was a line gunner (range officer) in the Navy, one of jobs as a Gunner's Mate, and we wore the M9 with a round in the chamber. We basically had the authority of the Captain during qualifying with whatever small arms. I have had numerous Shipmates turn to me with either a jammed firearm or a round in the chamber with their nose picker on the trigger and want to ask a question. I barked orders for them to turn around and place the firearm on the bench with more authority then a USMC D.I. and I have pulled my pistol on a few of them and ready to hit center mass, because people are unpredictable and maybe barking at them while pulling into port and them screwing up on the mooring line detail sparked an interest in ending my life, I have no idea. I was lucky that I never got shot and that they all just had questions or jam problems.
Public ranges are far more dangerous then you give them credit for. On AR15.com some dude I think in Utah was at the range with his son and a guy and son a few lanes down, kid was shooting and slipped on the chair or slipped while sitting down and put a round of 45 ACP through his skull. That slip could have the round flying towards me or my family. A risk I will not take and have no desire to administer CPR or chest compressions with a kids brains hanging out of his head.
People who do not embrace the safety environment with firearms as we do, make life altering accidents. Those that have shot with me and my kids, know that we have embraced it and have been very proud when I receive compliments on their safety performance. 99% of the population older then my kids have no concept of firearms safety.
Best of luck at public ranges.