1997-10-02 - Re: Forwarded mail… (fwd)

Header Data

From: “Brian B. Riley” <brianbr@together.net>
To: “Jim Choate” <cypherpunks@ssz.com>
Message Hash: 8454c29f1e3e81dc535076c7a1eaf374cfd936953b33e7a695b6cb7bea08dde4
Message ID: <199710022252.SAA29198@mx01.together.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-10-02 23:07:42 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 07:07:42 +0800

Raw message

From: "Brian B. Riley" <brianbr@together.net>
Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 07:07:42 +0800
To: "Jim Choate" <cypherpunks@ssz.com>
Subject: Re: Forwarded mail... (fwd)
Message-ID: <199710022252.SAA29198@mx01.together.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



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On 10/2/97 2:35 AM, Jim Choate (ravage@ssz.com)  passed this wisdom:

>Remember: A gun is like a finger, just point it at what you want to 
>hit.
>
>I have met hundreds of great shots in my life, there are many 
>people forwhom this sort of behaviour would not be delusional. My 
>grandfather (who you'll hear more about in a minute) used to 
>delight us as small kids by lighting matches stuck in wood fence 
>posts with a .22 pistol from about 50 yds. My cousin from Louisiana 
>likes to shoot squirrels (if you can callit that) by passing the 
>bullet just in front of their nose, causes lung hemorraghes and 
>they just fall off the limb. Me, I always miss or blow theirteeny 
>little head off, it's apparently a game of 1/4 inches. I work with 
>anex-gomer (ie USMC) pilot who is quite phenomenal with his .357 
>Desert Eagle,his groupings are just about an inch at 25 yds.  

   None of these targets shoots back ... none of these targets pump up
much adrenaline. I would never call myself a great shot (I did qualify
expert at both rifle, M-14, "A" course and pistol, .45, 1911A1), and I
can tell you of making several 25-35 yard snap shots in the jungle at
moving shooting targets with the adrenaline driving my eyeballs
through the roof ... but they were exactly that, pure reflex, center
of body mass shots, under max pressure. I must in all fairness recall
the other three to six shots each time that could have gone anywhere
and probably did.

  The point is, "shooting to wound" is a dangerous delusion! *no one*
can predict what a bullet will do when it enters the body. The rule I
have always followed is don't take out your gun unless you are going
to use it; don't use it unless you intend to kill. Makes decisions
much easier on that basis.
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Brian B. Riley --> http://www.macconnect.com/~brianbr
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