Any legal information I may post is general information, and is not legal advice. Such information may or may not apply to your specific situation. I am not your attorney unless an attorney-client relationship is separately and privately established.
Interesting about the Karate. My punches are with a straight wrist, just like doing fist pushups. But I still like the Glock grip angle better than Sig/1911/Beretta.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
Any legal information I may post is general information, and is not legal advice. Such information may or may not apply to your specific situation. I am not your attorney unless an attorney-client relationship is separately and privately established.
" La rose est sans pourquoi, elle fleurit parce qu’elle fleurit ; Elle n’a souci d’elle-même, ne demande pas si on la voit. » Angelus Silesius
"There are problems in this universe for which there are no answers." Paul Muad'dib
This is one of those things I’ve diddled with over the last few years. I never much cared for the Glock angle, but when I started running handguns fairly seriously about five years ago, I started paying more attention. From the avenue of pure, slow fire accuracy, all the major pistols, at least in my stable, shoot about the same. From my daily 92, to G17, M&P, VP9, P320, or PX4. However, what I have noticed is that it requires me to slightly adjust how I grip each pistol. I don’t grip a 92 how many instructors teach, that’s just not how the gun fits me. Glock is another story.
And I’ll probably shoot any credibility I could have when I say that I’ve really only ever run th first Glock I ever bought, a Gen 3 22, which has been converted to 9mm for several years. The smaller pistols like the 43x are just another bag of cats.
I think it's possible to be indifferent to it.