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June 13, 2010
- by Bob Owens
I spent a recent weekend at the
Wake County
Firearms Education and Training Center, taking the NRA’s
Personal Protection Outside the Home (PPOH) course. It is a
handgun shooting course that focuses, strangely enough, on defensive
shooting outside the home, out in the “real world.” Roughly
one-third of the students in the class were NRA instructors of one
kind or another. All of us had concealed carry permits.
After a Saturday morning in the classroom, we spent Saturday
afternoon and all of Sunday morning on the firing line.
We shot from contact distance (so close the targets were singed by
burning powder), out to a maximum range of ten yards. We engaged
most targets between 3-5 yards, as would be typical in most
scenarios one might encounter. Drills were fired using single shots
and double taps, to the rarer “empty the gun” drills. Targets at the
indoor range were engaged under normal lighting conditions to nearly
complete darkness, where all we could make out was the rough
silhouette of the target three yards away.
It was mentally and physically exhausting, but well worth it. We
walked away from the experience with solid training under our belts
and a wide range of new training exercises to employ. Several
members of the class were back again the following weekend to
receive their instructor ratings for this course, the most advanced
defensive pistol course the NRA offers.
While we were completing our second day course of fire, there was a
concealed carry class (like the one I
wrote about for
PJM two years ago) taking place in the other classroom at the
range. When we came off the firing line and came back into the lobby
between the classrooms, they were taking a break from the lecture
portion of the course. Many students seemed to be suffering from
lesson-inspired shell shock. The amount of practical carry
information and legalese being thrust upon them in one day’s time
was intense, and several looked like they had simply had enough.
Within an hour, it would be their turn to exit the classroom and set
foot upon the range for the rather minimal shooting qualifications
our state requires.
They would spend roughly 1-2 hours on the range completing a
prescribed course of fire under the watchful eyes of their
instructors. They would not be graded upon how quickly or accurately
they placed their shots on target, but upon a far more basic
criteria: did they employ their handgun safely, without sweeping
other students with the barrel of their gun?
A shooter who peppers five shots all over the target over the course
of 20 seconds — abysmally slow by most any measure — would pass the
course just as well as the shooter who put all of his shots in the
ten-ring in a quarter of that time. The on-range portion of the
concealed carry course was designed to make certain the student has
basic safety skills … and that was all. But was that bare minimum of
competence a student needs to pass the carry course range
qualifications “enough” training?
After all, performing simple, measured tasks in highly restricted,
heavily coached conditions is hardly the same thing as mastery of
the skills a carry permit holder may be called upon to employ in the
real world. People don’t stand still and wait for you to shoot at
them, and you won’t be able to raise your hand and have an
instructor clear your weapon if you have a failure to fire.
Collectively, our PPOH class had fired hundreds of thousands of
rounds of ammunition, and more than 1,600 over the weekend’s
training alone. We knew from our our experiences that the students
completing the carry course would not likely finish a single box of
shells that day and that many would probably not fire their guns
again in the weeks, months, and years ahead, even if they attained
their permits and even if they decided to carry a handgun
frequently.
As shooters, students, and instructors, this concerned us.
Don’t get me wrong — I doubt anyone in our class would be
comfortable being called an “expert.” None were competition-grade
shooters, and we had quite different styles. Most were old-school
practical marksmen who methodically carved ragged holes dead-center
in the middle of their targets. Their draw was a bit slower, their
posture rigid, and their magazine changes were on the slow side
because they would rather pocket empty magazines than drop them.
Their approach revealed years of range time carefully honed using
classic stances, and it worked for them.
Some of us were faster on the draw and quick on the trigger. We
didn’t concentrate on specific shot placement as much as getting
several shots on the torso of the target quickly. Our magazines
clanged off the floor as we dropped empties and reloaded with full
mags as quickly as possible, crouched low behind cover and mimicking
the more combat-minded practical schools of shooting more recently
in vogue.
Of the eight shooters in our class, only one shooter was truly
marginal — an older man with shaking hands who couldn’t master his
Glock’s magazine release, nor keep from jerking the trigger when he
got nervous. While he was the least talented of our group, he was
still far more capable than the law required.
As we reassembled in our classroom to pick up our PPOH Basic and
Advanced certifications, one of the instructor/students asked our
senior course instructor whether or not he felt there should be more
stringent requirements regarding the shooting skills and safe
gun-handling of concealed carry permit holders. Our state’s
concealed carry course is far less stringent than some, even as it
requires more knowledge of the law than others, including states
that don’t require any sort of permit or competency testing at all.
It was a question that pained him, and he took time to carefully
articulate why he didn’t think carry requirements should be more
exacting, even as he advocated more training for all.
Everyone seems to remember the clause in the Second Amendment about
the “right to keep and bear arms,” and it was because of this right
that he had a hard time suggesting that we needed a more complicated
or intensive permitting process. At the same time, there is a clause
in the Second Amendment that details that our nation’s security is
derived not just from having the right to arms, but from being
“well-regulated.”
That phrase, uttered in the context of the time in which it was
written, did not mean we needed more laws and regulations. It meant
that shooters must be well-trained. Skilled shooters with access to
familiar arms are liberty’s insurance. A man who owns a gun but who
does not develop and keep honed his competence is not participating
in the martial pursuits that the Founders envisioned as being
necessary to the security of a free state.
In the end, he felt everyone should participate in training, but
that it shouldn’t be legislated. We should all have the right, but
if we choose to exercise that right, it is our individual mandate to
seek out the training and the competence on our own.
We have the right to carry weapons in most parts of this nation.
But will you chose to do so responsibly?
Bob Owens blogs at
Confederate Yankee.
* * * * *
I have a Texas Concealed Handgun License
(CHL). The training involved 8 solid hours of classroom training
devoted to law, conflict avoidance, interacting with the police to
avoid getting shot during a traffic stop, and many such topic
dealing with law, safety, non-violence and duties of the license
holder.
A separate session of the course involved
completing the forms for FBI background investigation, fingerprint
processing and photos.
Only then did we go to the range and fire
about 45 rounds at a silhouette target at various distances. Passing
score was a certain number of center of mass hits. Any safety
violation or failure to follow a range command was an instant
disqualification.
After a long wait for administrative
processing, I received my CHL, good for 3 years. As I recall, the
training cost about $130. and the CHL cost about $140, but both were
discounted, the training because I took it at a
range
where I'm a member and the
CHL because
I'm a disabled veteran.
So, at that point, I could have stuck my
CHL and pistol in my pocket and walked around for 3 years. But I've
always had an echo in my head of my father's advice: "If you're
going to do something, do it well." I go to the range fairly often
and practice for proficiency, accuracy and safety. I'm not a
competitive shooter, I'm not a quick draw, I can't shoot from the
hip, but I can use each of my weapons properly, safely and with
deadly accuracy.

I'm not saying I'm great. I'm a decent
shot, the Air Force gave me and a lot of other people the "Small
Arms Expert Marksmanship Ribbon". But I keep practicing and reading.
Thing is, it's my choice. If it was a government requirement, I
would be almighty pissed, and instead on an enjoyable hobby, it
would be an unendurable burden. So I am against increased
government-mandated training.
On the other hand...
I see people at the range all the time with
$1,000 pistols, blasting at paper targets 10 feet in front of them.
Some of their bullets actually hole the paper. It's strange that
someone would spend a thousand bucks on a tool and not learn how to
operate it correctly. I hope these are not CHL holders. I don't
believe they are, because that type of accuracy would not pass the
CHL test. If they are, and you ever see them being mugged, the
safest place to take cover would be directly behind the mugger.
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