Quote Originally Posted by Cecil Burch View Post
This is from DB. Since he is not happy with the internet in general, he asked me to post. Apparently a bunch of people have been blowing up his phone wanting his input about this.



My observation about the encounters and shootings not being what they envisioned was that the problems themselves were chaotic, often difficult to assess and had a lot of weird variables and ancillary issues. The actual “shooting” part of the solution was usually fairly simple and not horribly taxing if we were to replicate the marksmanship problem on a one dimensional paper target on a range. The chaos was the why to shoot, what to shoot at, and most importantly when to shoot and when to stop.
For most people they envision a front door kicked in, robbery at an ATM, or something like that. Cops envision similar stuff. Robbery at 7-11, gun pulled on a car stop, etc. Some are that simple. Most end up being some sort of crazy dynamic that just spirals into utter chaos. The force application then needs to get very fundamental at that point and as simple and clean as possible. “
Have to reply with quote since one can only Like once. So much to unpack in so short a paragraph.