about the author

Illinois Certified Concealed Carry Firearms Instructor, NRA Certified Pistol and CCW Instructor, Firearms Legal Consultant, Firearms Expert Witness - Fraternal Order of Police, and Illinois Licensed Private Security Officer. Specializing in semiautomatic handgun training and consulting. Mainly serving law enforcement personnel, attorneys, judges, business executives, private individuals with heightened security concerns, and licensed firearm dealers. Authority on firearms statutes, ordinances, regulations, related criminal laws and court rulings. Other services include firearm valuations, pistol conditioning and trigger/action enhancements. Service area encompasses northwest Indiana, southwest Michigan, and Chicago. Former Cook County Treasurer contractor and Illinois Board of Regents member.

EMAIL: BPETRIGGER@ATT.NET

Monday, June 17, 2019

ARMED AND DANGEROUS?

This post is especially intended for novice and/or infrequent shooters, and particularly those who recently bought guns for protection in the wake of burgeoning violent crime, Covid, political/governmental instability, etc.

The “Dunning–Kruger Effect” is a bias in which people mistakenly over-assess their cognitive ability. It's related to “illusory superiority,” in which people overestimate their own qualities and abilities in relation to those of other people. Lacking sufficient self-awareness or gravitas, people fail to accurately evaluate their relative knowledge or expertise. Therefore, they assume they’re competent although they’re really not. In essence, they don’t know that they don’t know! The bias can become especially dangerous in connection with firearms ownership, carry and use of force. Simply because someone has a license to possess or carry a handgun, doesn’t necessarily mean that he/she is functionally capable. Think carefully about this and the following realities …

Be self-examining … your abilities and judgement aren’t bulletproof.

A gun is not bling or a panacea.

Extreme safety and efficient gun handling are basic prerequisites.  

Shooting at static paper targets is not akin to real life self-defense shooting.

Your marksmanship proficiency should be at least on par with local law enforcement qualification standards. If below that, you’re probably below functional adequacy. 

"Micro-pistols" have inherent limitations and hazards. While they may offer good concealability, you’re likely to have “micro” effectiveness with one in a real life, dynamic, self-defense incident.

Don’t assume you actually know what you’re doing after having taken a 2-hour gun intro course or watched a few YouTube videos narrated by some “tacticool” dude posing as a Navy SEAL or Jason Bourne.

Your Walmart-like or large group “Concealed Carry for Dummies” course didn’t realistically or functionally prepare you for the true perils of gun use. You have no idea what you’re doing! And what’s worse, you probably don’t realize it or are in denial. And because you’re now handling and carrying a deadly weapon, you’re especially dangerous.

Even though you might have rudimentary or even significant marksmanship and gun handling skills, that doesn’t mean you’re “good enough.” Unless you fully understand all relevant criminal and firearms-related laws, especially those relating to justifiable use of deadly force, you could easily wind up in jail. That would be awfully bad in normal times, but in today’s COVID-19 environment it could be a veritable death sentence.

Even if you’re solid in terms of safety, handling, marksmanship, and legal knowledge, you’re almost certainly lacking adequate strategic and tactical prowess.

You better get very serious, professional instruction and training. Incidentally, unless proof of significant proficiency can be clearly shown, it’s likely that a prosecutor or plaintiff’s attorney will shred you in a potential criminal or civil proceeding.  

Have I wounded your fragile ego? Too friggin’ bad. Or think this article doesn’t apply to you? 90% probability it does. 

You’re armed, and dangerous! Let … That … Sink … In.

©2019-2024 Bruce Edenson. All rights reserved. Issue update 1/1/22.