hypothetical fact said:
There are martial arts techniques to push the gun to the side and punch the attacker in the face.
Yes, and they need years of practice to get to the stage where they're more dangerous for the attacker than for the defender. And even then they're never a sure bet. And, of course, a physically weaker defender will be at a disadvantage, whereas even a weak person can, with practice and correct technique, use a firearm.
hypothetical fact said:
Your hypothetical situation is also flawed in that you assume your feint will work, you assume they won't see through it and shoot as you reach for your gun because NRA propoganda went to your head and you think that you're a hero not a victim.
NRA
propaganda has nothing to do with it; indeed, my exposure to the NRA is limited to Michael "Creative Edit" Moore's interview with Charlton Heston. But the key thing is that it's not a feint; many, if not most, people keep their wallets in their strong-side back pocket, and most trained shooters carry their gun on their strong-side hip. With a practiced draw, there's nothing to see through, and no time to see through it in.
But of course the delivery matters too; the key is to make the attacker feel that they have the advantage (which, at that point, they do) and to make them feel secure. It's not just a case of "I'm getting my wallet - oh whoops, it's a gun", it's a case of selling it in an effective way.
hypothetical fact said:
You also fail to think that when the criminal gives up and you holster your gun, he can just pull his gun back out and shoot you now that he knows where your gun is.
Er... who said anything about holstering up as soon as the crim "gives up"? As long as the criminal is a threat, the sights remain on them. The gun only goes back in the holster once the criminal is either secured, neutralised or far, far away. Thus my emphasis on calling the police as soon as practical.
hypothetical fact said:
Finally we have the problem that if it all goes arse up and you shoot him, he will survive long enough to shoot back. Movies may tell you that gun instantly kill but they actually give the shot person more than enough time to kill the shooter before bleeding to death.
They can do, certainly, and most fatal gunshot wounds kill by exsanguination, but that's where the training comes in. Until you are proficient in not just firing a gun on a range, but using it tactically, you shouldn't carry it. Until then, it's a liability rather than anything else.
As you rightly say, there's generally no such thing as a one-shot stop. There are a number of drills intended to maximise stopping power - the Mozabique drill being a classic - and of course calibre selection is a major consideration, but shot placement is key. That's why you never shoot to wound, or fire warning shots; leg shots look good on film and in a courtroom, but they're ineffective and difficult to shoot accurately. The aim is to neutralise the threat, and while "neutralise" is often seen as a euphemism to avoid having to say "kill", it is a specific and warranted distinction; shooting is to neutralise the
threat, not the person. Yes, it often means the attacker will be killed, but it's not the aim.
I seem to have drifted somewhat from the point, so here it is: enough accurate fire to centre mass will put an attacker down quickly enough to prevent return fire. If it doesn't, chances are they're chemically assisted and unlikely to leave with just a wallet anyway.
hypothetical fact said:
I also enjoy the paradox in being trained to use a gun safely, unless you bring a wall of bulletproof glass around a gun is never safe.
I use guns safely. The guns themselves are not safe, but the uses to which I put them are. It's not as contradictory as you think.
And, of course, there's no such thing as bullet
proof glass. ;-)
hypothetical fact said:
Cars and families that can't raise children have the purpose of continuing society with the side effects of ruining a small proportion of their user's lives. Guns have the purpose of destroying society with the side effects of giving people a false sense of security; as evidenced in your belief that a gun will help you rather than give a criminal a much better reason to shoot you before you fight back.
Guns have, fundamentally, the purpose of sending a projectile downrange. More specifically, they have the legitimate purposes of hunting food, shooting cardboard targets, controlling animal populations, and defending people against other people. The side effect is that they, like cars or bottles or knives or sticks, have the potential for abuse.
The problem is that guns have become a very emotive subject, so people have trouble approaching them rationally. Show a person a gun and their reaction will, in many cases, be visceral rather than considered.
On reflection, though, a gun is ultimately just a tool. A murder may be committed with any weapon from a fist to a gun to a bomb, but the fundamental crime is still murder.
And that, more than anything else, is the main thing. Why not address the real issue, rather than the means to it? Murder is illegal; is that not enough?
hypothetical fact said:
Finally of couse people that pick up guns are no longer victims, they become a danger to themselves and everyone they percieve as a threat, out of thought or heat of the moment.
And that is why training and vetting is essential. Force-on-force training with induced stress is vital to establish a quick and accurate decision-making process, to minimise the risk of collateral damage. I'm in favour of tighter controls on firearms, but I believe the option should be there for those who put in the effort.
Oh, and Silver - let me remind you, I'm British, living in the UK and Sweden. Please don't address me as if I were American. ;-)