Originally posted by Donegeal
Sorry, but you are wrong. A gun is considered deadly force, not a disabling force. We are not trained to wound.
OTOH, not using HP in war is actually beneficial in war. Take the M-16 design for instance. The M-16 is not designed to kill, but to wound (thus the small calibur of bullet). The thought of this is that a wounded soldier takes 3 enemy combatants out of the fight. One is the wounded soldier and the two that it takes to carry him off the battlefield. The small calibur passing through someone to hit a second target is something that I never thought about and is another way that the M-16 is an effective weapon in war.
Sorry, but you are wrong. A gun is considered deadly force, not a disabling force. We are not trained to wound.
OTOH, not using HP in war is actually beneficial in war. Take the M-16 design for instance. The M-16 is not designed to kill, but to wound (thus the small calibur of bullet). The thought of this is that a wounded soldier takes 3 enemy combatants out of the fight. One is the wounded soldier and the two that it takes to carry him off the battlefield. The small calibur passing through someone to hit a second target is something that I never thought about and is another way that the M-16 is an effective weapon in war.
I missed it first go around about the "disable", but yes thats a myth like firing a warning shot.
Like back in my day, I carried a .38 revolver Model 10 "K" Frame (Combat frame). I believe it was called a Trooper model. Anyhoo, in 1979 the State of Maine allowed 3 weapons to chose from for lawmen to carry as firearms, a .32, .38 or .45. It was a bit later that they started allowing .357's.
The round I carried basically "ramped up" my stopping power from a .38 to what would be equivalent to a .357 leadball. I also carried a very sweet weapon to help pursuade folks to cooperate, a 6 cell Kel Lite, Bigger head than the Mag Lites.
I reckon ya cant use them anymore, though
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