Performance Shooting, Games, and Combat Simulation Content. Nerd, gun, gear, training, and leadership stuff. The occasional nuanced take. Opinions are my own.
First live fire with the @WerkzHolsters concealed rig. Worked a bunch of stuff on a pretty heavy volume day. Draw live is 1.3ish at 10. Dry fire will continue until performance improves.
I'm a Jumpmaster. I've jumped out of a lot of airplanes. I've planned and executed a lot of jumps and airborne training exercises. I commanded an Airborne unit. Here's some stuff I noticed about the DPRK Paratrooper Training images.
Sad? Yes. Horrible? Yes. Disgusting? Yes. Evil? Yes - war is always evil. Wrong - sure. War is always wrong.
Illegal? Violation of LOAC? No. Not at all.
Killing enemy combatants simply for being enemy combatants is how wars are fought. Destroying the enemy's military (killing
A Russian soldier remains motionless, resigned to his fate, as a Ukrainian FPV kamikaze drone circles overhead, scanning for the perfect angle to strike.
"Never carry one in the chamber."
I hate this debate. If you're concerned about an ND while carrying concealed, you're untrained, ill-equipped, lacking in experience, or a combination thereof.
You're untrained because a trained person can confidently draw from concealment
This is how I dry fire. It's not perfect, but it works for me. I'd say 80% of my "shooting skill" gains happen in dry fire. 10-15 minutes a day will make you better than 97% of gun owners.
An officer is expected to be a Captain at 6 years of service. An aviation officer is expected to fly. A continuity mission isn't what you think it is. BAH at Belvoir for an O-3 without dependents is $3,783 per month. VA loans are a thing. Stop this shit.