Commentary (73)
People carry guns? Oh no! And In Woolrich? Fashion couture objections? & Maybe there IS a reason its concealed...and who is 'A'?
Written by reg mathuszHere is a recent article in the "NY Times": New Fashion Wrinkle: Stylishly Hiding the Gun
The article actually isn't bad. For folks that didn't know about the Woolrich Elite tactical line of clothes it was probably informative. They make a great line of clothes!
What I found alarming were the comments. Clearly folks do not realize that *49* States in the Union allow CCW. While some of the states are new and a great strides were made in the 90s and 2000s it is not exactly new. In fact, my home state has issued CCW licenses since the 70s.
One thing is clear -- the folks that came up with CONCEALED carry knew what they were doing. It is really out of sight out of mind! People are quite often not aware that their own state already has and has had CCW laws. I am amazed at how many people I run into in my own state that simply don't know.
A lot of the comments are clearly from folks who are untrained, unfamiliar, and quite frankly afraid of firearms.
Let's look at some of the statements. Well, worded less offensively anyway:
1. "If you carry a gun you are looking for trouble..."
I have legally carried a firearm for 20 years, pretty much every day. I have had zero incidents.
Some might ask 'Why bother carrying a gun?'
There have been a few times that I was glad that I had that I had a firearm. I would rather have it, than not need it.
2. "People who carry guns have an inferiority complex..." (usually referring to one's man-hood)
I think they are trying to say that people have firearms to make themselves feel more manly and potray themselves as "tough." A kind of peacocking, I guess. But it is concealed carry, right? So, you will never know when done correctly. Usually I think this is just said as an insult. That's fine, I don't really care. If that's the best argument (and type of argument) that they can come up with, well, good luck with their future.
Not everyone that owns a gun, sports car, 4x4, pickup, motorcycle, big tv, boat, big house, fancy computer, or drum kit, etc. has E.D.
Some times a cigar is just a cigar.
3. "People who carry guns are paranoid. I can't live like that -- fearing every shadow."
OK. So don't carry a firearm then. But, what's funny is when these folks object to others carrying firearms. Why is that? Read on...
4. "If you have a gun you are more likely to get angry and use it...It will
increase violence."
Hasn't happened yet, and besides -- look who's is being paranoid now? The assumption is that the licensed CCW holder can't control their temper. Why would you assume that? I think that a lot of these folks are projecting and it is probably a good thing that they don't carry a firearm.
If anything I find myself being much MORE conscious of actions/words to reduce the chance of being in an inflammatory situation.
That's right. You must steer clear of an altercation which could result in say a fist fight (and this is something I hear anti-gun people say: "what ever happened to just fist fighting?")
a person that is legally CCW'ing simply can NOT engage in that type of behavior or simply get 'into a fist fight.'
Think of the possible legal consequences of an armed person fighting with an unarmed person. I take this opportunity to recommend that every gun owner read "In the Gravest Extreme" by Massad Ayoob.
5. "People with guns didn't stop....(insert random violent act here)"
Neither did the police. And isn't one of the anti-gun arguments that since police carry firearms I don't need one?
6. "You are more likely to have your gun taken away..."
Some of these studies say that you more likely to have your gun taken away and used against you than if you don't have a gun.
Think about it ... if you don't own a gun you are pretty unlikely to have it taken away and used against you!
Training folks is the key. If you do ever encounter an adversary, hopefully that foe is less trained than you.
I wish people who oppose firearms would take the time to actually learn about them or try one out in a controlled setting.
It is not the law abiding citizen that should be feared. It is the criminal, and they don't bother to get a license or bother with a Woolrich shirt for concealment.
UPDATE: I just found these "reviews"/criticism by Googling the NYTimes article. I think that they objected most to the concept of gun owners trying to be "fashionable." Once again, its all about concealable-- If it wasn't for the NYT article they would still be clueless that the market even existed.
http://www.styleite.com/media/woolrich-gun-pants/#0
The features of the styleite.com page?
- Calvin Klein's Maybe Boyfriend Arrested For Cocaine Possession
- Gossip Girl Recap: It’s Not Who’s My Mom, It’s Who’s My Dad
- 6 Things To Expect During A Facial
- PHOTOS: Crystal Renn Is Back To Brunette For Vogue Mexico
And the fashionista.com featured article today?
- Awkward Poses, Visible Nips, Marabou Slippers and More Awesomeness From the 1979 Victoria’s Secret Catalogue
- Why Coco Rocha Is Pissed about Her Elle Brazil Cover
- and their "Top Story" (their own words): "Has Victoria Beckham Dropped the 'Posh' Act Once and For All?"
Sorry - those article titles crack me up! I am pretty sure that these folks and their readers are NOT Woolrich's target audience. It is interesting that the the NYT article did generate a response from them, including one that actually posted pics of the Woolrich Pants.
So, don't be looking for 'S' & 'B' to be wearing them (ha! not the ammo company). More likely to be something 'A' would wear. (Bonus points if you get both TV show references!)
Lawful gun owners obey laws, criminals do not ... even in Europe
Written by reg mathuszReuters: French gunman's arsenal spotlights illegal arms trade
Europe is often cited as a model for the way things should be and the United States is painted a maverick. Incidents like the France shooter are rare, but one thing is universal - criminals don't follow the law. That is why they are criminals. Placing additional restrictions on the law abiding doesn't curb crime.
From the article cited above:
Already tough French gun laws were tightened further earlier this month with the approval of longer jail terms and larger fines for anyone caught with an illegal firearm.
Amateur marksmen and game hunters must meet stringent criteria to obtain a gun licence including registering themselves with the authorities, proving they have no criminal record, and passing a psychological evaluation. There is also a blacklist of some 18,000 people banned from owning a gun.
The government says there are at least 7.5 million guns in legal circulation in the ownership of the state, amateur gun enthusiasts and hunters. Nobody knows how many illegal guns are in circulation, though experts put the total number of both legal and illegal guns at between 10 and 20 million in a nation of 65 million people.
Merah's frequent brushes with the law would have made it impossible for him to have legally acquired any of his weapons, gun experts say.
"There is no way he could have got these guns legally with his record," Jean-Jacques Buigne, president of the French union of amateur gun owners told Reuters. "It is out of the question."
Most of the guns he got hold of, such as the Uzi machine pistol, are in any case banned in France. The guns he used would have traced their origin back to World War Two, Eastern Europe or a more recent conflict in the Middle East, experts say.
The article finishes with:
"If you don't have a 'Kalash' you're a bit of a loser."
He is not talking about Americans or the United States. He is talking about Marseille.
G&A: Surprising Anti-Gun Celebrities - do you want to support these folks?
Written by reg mathuszThis is a good article on "Surprising Anti-gun celebrities" from Guns & Ammo. I was surprised at a couple of them. Most of them are just hypocrites as they make money portraying characters that use firearms -- usually to save their lives. I guess it is ok for other people not to have firearms to protect themselves as long as you can still have your own personal armed security to protect you.
LINK TO G&A SURPRISING ANTI-GUN CELEBRITIES
Some people will say that these celebrities have the right to their own opinion. This is true. However, I have the right NOT to spend my hard-earned $ supporting them. And I can and will not support them based on their anti-gun views.
Some of them actually openly state they actually want to take YOUR guns away ("door to door")! Not a penny of my $ to them.
Forbes.com article: anti-gun rhetoric just doesn't add up
Written by reg mathuszThis is a great editorial shedding truth on some arguments propagated by the anti-gun lobby -- the anti-gun rhetoric simply doesn't add up.
Forbes.com article: Disarming the Myths Promoted By the Gun Control Lobby
Complete text follows:
"As much as gun control advocates might wish otherwise, their attacks are running out of ammo. With private firearm ownership at an all-time high and violent crime rates plunging, none of the scary scenarios they advanced have materialized. Abuse of responsibility by armed citizens is rare, while successful defensive interventions against assaults on their lives and property are relatively commonplace.
National violent crime rates that soared for 30 years from the early 1960s began to decrease markedly since 1993. Last December the FBI reported that murder and other violent crime rates fell again by 6.4% during the first half of 2011 compared with the same period in 2010. A Gallup poll indicates that “Americans’ preference regarding gun laws is generally that the government enforce existing laws more strictly and not pass new laws.”
Caroline Brewer of the anti-gun Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has reported that “The research we’ve seen indicates fewer and fewer people owning more and more guns.” Yet one can only wonder where they are getting that information. In reality, public support for personal gun ownership is growing. According to Steve Sanetti, president of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade group that represents about 7,000 firearms manufacturers and related companies, in 1959 some 70% of the American public favored handgun bans, whereas today that number has flipped. This support is reflected in the marketplace. Sanetti observes that the $4.1 billion gun industry “has had nineteen months of growth in an otherwise anemic economy.”
Recognizing these positive trends, most states now issue permits allowing qualified law-abiding people to legally carry handguns outside their homes. Unprecedented numbers are becoming licensed to do so, now totaling an estimated 10 million Americans, contributing, in turn, to a dramatic growth in gun sales.
A record of more than 1.5 million background checks for customers looking to purchase a firearm were requested by gun dealers to the National Instant Background Check (NICS) system last December. About one-third of these occurred during the six weeks before Christmas. They had previously recorded a 49% rise in background checks during the week before President Obama was elected in 2008 compared with the same week one year earlier.
The Brady lobby is upset that there has been no progress in leveraging tighter gun control legislation following the shooting January 8, 2010 rampage that killed 6 people and injured 13, including Democratic Representative Gabrielle Giffords. That tragic incident raised serious questions about background checks after it was determined that the accused shooter, having previously exhibited erratic behavior, legally purchased the weapon he “allegedly” used from a store.
The National Rifle Association clearly agrees that guns should not be sold to individuals found to have serious mental problems, although many states fail to provide mental health records to the federal computerized background check system. According to a November, 2011 report by the Mayors Against Illegal Guns (MAIG), 23 states have shown “major failures” in complying, and four (Alaska, Delaware, Idaho and Rhode Island) submit no records at all. (Although murder has been in decline in New York and other major cities for years, a Pepsi and Honda Super Bowl advertisement spot featured New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Boston’s Thomas Menino on a couch calling for stricter government measures to curb illegal gun sales.)
Dennis Henigan, the Brady group’s acting president, told Reuters: “Really it is a national disgrace that the only piece of gun-related legislation to come to a vote since Tucson was this legislation that would have enabled dangerous concealed carriers like Jared Loughner to carry their guns across state lines.” Referring to a proposed “National Right-to-Carry Reciprocity Act of 2011″ (H.R. 822) which has passed the House of Representatives but stalled in the Senate, the resolution would require states to recognize one another’s concealed carry permits the same way they recognize one another’s driver’s licenses. The intent is to eliminate confusion and potential legal problems for traveling gun owners.
As pointed out in a recent paper titled “Tough Targets” released by the Cato Institute, “The ostensible purpose of gun control legislation is to reduce firearm deaths and injuries. But authors Clayton E. Cramer and David Burnett believe these restrictions put law-abiding citizens at a distinct disadvantage to criminals who acquire guns from underground markets since it is simply not possible for police officers to get to every scene where intervention is urgently needed. They also document large numbers of crimes…murders, assaults, robberies…that are thwarted each year by ordinary persons with guns.
A widely-known study conducted by Gary Kleck and Marc Gertz in the 1990s found that there were somewhere between 830,000 and 2.45 million U.S. defensive gun uses annually. A National Crime Victimization Study (NCVS) which asked victims if they had used a gun in self-defense found that about 108,000 each year had done so. A big problem with the NCVS line of survey reasoning, however, is that it only includes those uses where a citizen kills a criminal, not when one is only wounded, is held by the intended victim until police arrive, or when brandishing a gun caused a criminal to flee.
For these reasons, the Cato researchers investigated published news reports which much more often reveal how Americans use guns in self-defense. The data set is derived from a collection of nearly 5,000 randomly selected incidents published between October 2003 and November 2011. Still, the authors also recognize limitations with this approach, since many defensive incidents are never reported by victims, or when they are, never get published. In fact, the overwhelming majority of the successful self-defense outcomes are those where the defendants’ guns are presented but never fired.
Most of the actual self-defense shootings in the Cato study didn’t involve concealed carry licenses, but more typically had to do with responses to residential invasions. Of these, 488 involved home burglaries. In addition, there were 1,227 incidents where intruders were induced to flee the scene by armed inhabitants, circumstances that might otherwise have resulted in injurious assaults including rapes and murders. There were 285 news accounts indicating that the defender had a concealed weapon license, which in the majority of these incidents took place outside a home or place of business. Pizza delivery drivers were common robbery targets.
Whereas gun control proponents often argue that having a gun put people at risk because a criminal will take it away and use it against them, it seems the reality is more often to be the reverse situation. The Cato data contains only 11 stories out of 4,699 where a criminal took a gun away from a defender, but 277 where the intended victim disarmed the bad guy, although the authors acknowledge that these event reports may be printed more frequently due to newsworthiness.
Still, it should also be remembered that the threatened party often has more motivation to fight back than a criminal hoping for an easy score. There were 25 news reports where armed rape attack victims ultimately got the upper hand, and 65 where this occurred in carjacking attempts.
Then there is the argument that more private gun ownership will lead to more accidents because the average citizen isn’t sufficiently trained to use a weapon defensively. While gun accidents do occur, the Cato study indicates that they are the most overstated risks. There were 535 accidental firearms deaths in 2006 within a population of almost 300 million people. Although every lost life is tragic, the proportion is not particularly startling.
On the other hand, Newsweek has reported that law-abiding American citizens using guns in self-defense during 2003 shot and killed two and one-half times as many criminals as police did, and with fewer than one-fifth as many incidents as police where an innocent person mistakenly identified as a criminal (2% versus 11%).
Finally, on the subject of public safety, just how well have gun bans worked in other countries? Take the number of home break-ins while residents are present as an indication. In Canada and Britain, both with tough gun-control laws, nearly half of all burglaries occur when residents are present. But in the U.S. where many households are armed, only about 13% happen when someone is home.
Doesn’t this comparison offer some indication that criminals are getting the message? Don’t you wish those bent on eliminating our Second Amendment rights would also?"
HR822: National 'Right to Carry' Reciprocity Act
Written by reg mathuszFolks have been asking me about this legislation and its impact on CCW'ers. I think that there may be some misunderstanding on its current status. The following is what I recently posted in a thread from MP-pistol.com forum and I thought interesting enough to post here:
Question:
Hey guys I've been wondering about the concealed carry reciprocity act. If I have a concealed permit from AZ does CA.have to.accept it and what are the California carry laws I've read lots but would like to hear it firsthand from some Californians please and thanks ya
My answer:
Are you asking about HR822 The National Right to Carry Reciprocity Act?
Well, it has passed the House but needs to pass Senate. If there are any differences it must then go to joint committee to have those differences resolved. Of course it must then be signed into law by the Presidnet, and even then how it is interpreted by each state (and in states without firearms preemption local jurisdictions interpretation) will have to be seen. How can it turn out? Look at the FOPA and LEOSA where some jurisdictions like NY DON'T honor the law at all.
So, in a nutshell, while a GREAT move your question is a LONG way from being able to be answered. However, the current version of the legislation is available here:
http://thomas.loc.go...12:H.R.822.EH:/
‘The Debutante Hunters’ Wins the Yahoo!/Sundance 2012 Shorts Competition
Written by reg mathuszUsually Yahoo! News is filled with drivel, so Iwas surprised today to read the headline:
‘The Debutante Hunters’ Wins the Yahoo!/Sundance 2012 Shorts Competition
I don't know much about it, but firearms or hunting portrayed by in a positive light (well, I hope so anyway - again I haven't seen it) is a pleasant surprise, especially from Sundance!
...a group of Southern belles who show their good old girl sides while hunting the backwoods, was culled from over 7,000 short films submitted to the festival...
After going on a hunt with her friend Kristy Olson Cuthbert, White knew she had her subject: "This was a world I wanted to explore, where a woman can be feminine, a mother, a daughter, and still be a total badass."
Now, that is truly avant garde!
WA HB1508 - Range Protection Bill needs our help!
Written by reg mathusz
This is an important issue. I personally know of (2) ranges that have been involved with litigation in an attempt to shut them down.
Washington Shooting Range Protection Bill Needs Your Help! |
Friday, January 13, 2012 |
Please contact members of the House Judiciary Committee TODAY! Yesterday, House Bill 1508, a vital shooting range protection bill, introduced by state Representatives Dean Takko (D-19), Tim Probst (D-17), and Kevin Van De Wege (D-24), was heard in the House Judiciary Committee. Due to the short legislative session, this bill needs to be voted on soon, if it is going to pass this year. Shooting ranges are critical to competitive and recreational shooters, hunters, law enforcement, and for individuals who just want to practice for self-defense. Shooting ranges should be both accessible and affordable for everyone. However, expanding populations are encroaching on shooting ranges and threatening their existence. Forty-eight states have recognized the importance of protecting shooting ranges and have passed similar legislation. Hawaii and Washington are the only two states without a range protection law. Furthermore, there are currently several shooting ranges in Washington that are facing legal battles and burdensome regulations, which if not addressed, could result in their closure. House Bill 1508 is narrowly focused on noise issues and would do the following:
Please contact your state Representative today and respectfully urge him or her to support House Bill 1508. You can reach your state Representative at the toll-free legislative hotline by dialing (800) 562-6000. To determine who is your state Representative, please click here. If your state Representative is a member of the House Judiciary Committee and his or her “Yes” vote will be instrumental in ensuring the passage of this bill. Please call AND e-mail your state Representative TODAY and respectfully urge him or her to support HB 1508. You can also leave your state Representative a short message on the toll-free, legislative hotline, by dialing (800) 562-6000. Contact information for the House Judiciary Committee is also provided below: Representative Jamie Pedersen, Chairman (D-43) Representative Roger E. Goodman, Vice Chairman (D-45) Representative Bruce Chandler (R-15) Representative Deborah H. Eddy (D-48) Representative Drew Hansen (D-23) Representative Steve Kirby (D-29) Representative Brad Klippert (R-8) Representative Terry Nealey (R-16) Representative Tina Orwall (D-33) Representative Ann Rivers (R-18) Representative Mary Helen Roberts (D-21) Representative Jay Rodne (R-5) Representative Matt Shea (R-4) |
Modern example of gun registration leading to confiscation
Written by reg mathuszIt is pretty commonly believed by gun rights supporters that the problem of gun registration that it will lead to confiscation (a la Hitler).
Well, it seems that in Canada that is what they have done to a specific rifle that is a .22 modeled to look like an AK. The confiscation without compensation seems to be based solely on the fact it looks like an AK.
And yet the anti-gun folks say that confiscation is not the goal..
Article: Canada raids and confiscates legally registered rifle
"
When Bill C-68, the gun registry bill, was being debated, opponents said registration of firearms would lead to their eventual confiscation.
Now that is happening.
Just before Christmas, owners of certain firearms were informed by letter that their rifles had been reclassified as prohibited weapons in Canada and they must be turned over to police officials.
Failure to comply would mean the weapons would be taken by force and the owners thrown in jail. The reason for the change: The rifle looks scary.
The Armi Jager AP-80 is a .22-calibre rimfire rifle that looks like the AK-47, the Soviet-era military rifle. The fact is the AP-80 doesn’t work like the AK-47, fires a vastly smaller round than the AK-47 and has no parts that are interchangeable with the AK-47.
This change appears to be based on looks.
The decision comes from the RCMP-run Canadian Firearms Centre. Bureaucrats at the centre made the decision to change the rifle’s classification from non-restricted to prohibited without any input from Parliament. A court upheld the decision, but the problem truly is that bureaucrats have been delegated this authority at all.
Hundreds of Canadians who followed the law and registered their legally purchased firearms with the gun registry are now seeing those very same rifles taken away by government order.
It seems odd this would happen just ahead of the gun registry’s demise. But lawyer Ed Burlew, who has represented many people in cases involving the registry, said on my show Byline that police forces across the country appear to be stepping up their raids on the homes of gun owners before they lose access to the registry.
Firearms that are reclassified and seized, like the AP-80, are surrendered without any compensation. When the government takes your personal property, don’t you think it should at least pay you for it?
There is also a problem with allowing the police to decide what is allowed and what is banned while they themselves are enforcing the laws.
We elect politicians to make law and it’s the role of police and judges to enforce the law. This system has it all messed up.
Would we allow this when it comes to traffic violations and let police forces set and change speed limits?
No.
Would we allow the police to decide which substances are considered narcotics and which ones Canadians are legally allowed to consume?
No, and if anyone tried you can bet the media would be up in arms over this.
“Harper government takes hard line against soft drugs,” would scream the headlines.
Where is the outrage over the government allowing police to confiscate private property? It doesn’t exist.
Instead they are chasing a story about a foreign lesbian couple who got married in Canada and are now complaining they can’t get divorced because they do not live here.
Public Safety Minister Vic Toews was asked about this gun registry mess on Sun News Network and defended the current situation.
“It is not a decision that I make as a politician, it’s something that the police and classification experts make,” Toews said.
I’m guessing people who backed the Conservatives over their promise to scrap the gun registry would have problems with this.
It’s time for Toews and the rest of the Harper government to wake up and fix this mess.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it."
Mike Willard of SwampFox Ammo has passed away
Written by reg mathuszI am sorry to report that Mike Willard of SwampFox Ammo has passed away. He made some awesome full power 10mm ammunition that I have written about. He was also a gentleman who helped the shooting community and his customers. May he rest in peace.
http://www.stoudenmiredowling.com/dowling/detailinfo.asp?intProdID=414
William Michael Willard
Florence, SC
William Michael Willard, 50, of Florence, SC, died Saturday, November 5, 2011 at his residence.
Mr. Willard was born on October 10, 1961 in Walton County, GA, a son of the late William L. Willard Sr. and Nancy Ann Seabolt Cooper. He worked for SOPACKO in Mullins for the last nine years and was a member of Union Baptist Church in Marion. Mr. Willard enjoyed spending his free time boating with his friend, Buddy Cooper, taking care of his dogs, and being an avid gun enthusiast.
He is preceded in death by his father.
He is survived by his mother, Nancy Seabolt (Phil) Cooper of Florence; a sister, Pam Willard (Dane) Davis of Florence; brothers, William "Les" Willard, Jr. of Florence and Lynn (Cindy) Willard of Mt. Pleasant; two step-brothers Dale and Derrick Cooper; seven nieces; two great-nephews; and one great-niece.
Funeral Services will be held 11:00 AM Thursday, November 10, 2011 in the chapel of Stoudenmire-Dowling Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Mount Hope Cemetery.
The family will receive friends 6-8:00 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.
Memorials may be made to the Florence Area Humane Society, PO Box 4804, Florence, SC 29502.
Please sign the quest book for Mr. Willard at www.stoudenmiredowling.com.
For those who still wonder what the NRA does:: Twelve Big Wins for Gun Owners
Written by reg mathuszNRA-ILA :: Twelve Big Wins for Gun Owners
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ROTC programs return to Ivy League universities
Written by reg mathuszROTC programs return to Ivy League universities.
About time. The fact that the ROTC programs were banned is outrageous.
My first M16 (A1s!) and only M60 experience was in college Army ROTC.
Thoughts about firearms and the upcoming (9/17) "Day of Rage"
Written by reg mathuszWe received a warning from work that tomorrow (9/17) is supposed to be a "Day of Rage." A day propagated by social networking where anarchist groups are supposed to cause mayhem, violence, and shut down Facebook (how are they going to post updates of the their actions?) Actually, I am ok with the Facebook thing. LOL
However, on a more serious note I live in the Seattle Metro area and for some reason Seattle likes to riot. Remember the WTO? Any excuse for civil disorder. I don't know that anything will happen tomorrow however my coworker just 5 days ago awoke to see 3 cars in his neighborhood in Seattle (Beacon Hill - a nice area) on fire!
In this KOMO News clip you can actually see his car!! There is only one car in between his and the charred remains of another.
The reason for this fire attack? UNKNOWN. That's right - sadly, random violence. And what about tomorrow? I told him that he should think about parking elsewhere tonight.
As we prepare for a "Day of Rage" where self-proclaimed anarchist groups threaten violence and in a City known for it, who knows what will happen. But, I am proud to live in a country which has a Constitution - a 2nd Amendment - and the right and means to protect my family.
We have seen much violence in other countries recently and they are not so lucky.
Pics from the linked article:
Something to think about....
Magpul's Art of the Dynamic Handgun (well, disc 1 so far)
Written by reg mathuszI am in CA, so little firearms-related has occurred for me.
Am I short on content? Yes.�
Still have commentary? Always!
Anyway, I have been meaning to watch the Magpul Art of the Dynamic Handgun for awhile and I just finished the first disc. VERY impressive. I especially like how they stress "dynamic" - meaning that necessity is situationally driven -- there is not a single way that is always right to do things. There is something to be said for consistency and repetition (like tap-rack-bang) however to me they get a big thumbs up for teaching folks to tilt the pistol and if they see that the slide is slightly out of battery smack it shut. hmm...I have been known to do that myself. I like the school of thought that encourages thinking rather than cookie cutter form.
And, less importantly at the beginning of the first disc, Travis says something like "..this is not a joke.." Well, I have that same shirt. Ok, onto disc 2.