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- Oct 22, 2014
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- 15,143
A lot of the guys I’ve taken are former LE and Mil and are excellent tactical marksman. They can quote ballistic data at a high level, off memory. Then they blow it several times because they can’t get all their chit together, get on the animal in time and execute a good shot quickly. Too much fiddling around.
The military, regardless of “level” is by and large abysmal at shooting skill.
To be clear, I am not saying or speaking to laying prone and shooting what amounts to benchrest at long range. I’m talking about killing on demand and short to medium ranges.
Then there’s Fudd who just bought his ammo at Walmart on the way into the field. But damn that dude can get that old gun to his shoulder and whack a critter fast. He’s spent his lifetime on deer drives in the eastern hardwoods. He don’t know a damn thing about ballistics, doesn’t care. Bullets are bullets, but he’s spent a lifetime getting on target fast and making a “good enough” shot. He’s lethal, in his own way. He’s still a rifleman! Just a different skill set.
I haven’t seen that. Just like with the military it is a rare hunter that is actually skilled. By and large they suck too.
Everything is relative.
Very true.
My experience is that the myth of the military being good at shooting, and good ol’boys being good at killing are both false.
Someone being military, even a sniper, so they’re good at shooting, is objectify not true.
Also-
“Beware the man with one gun, he knows how to use it” is just as false. More like “beware the man with one gun, he doesn’t know much about anything, but will tell you all about it”.
In my experience hunting the country the vast majority of “woodsmen” wound and miss just as many animals as everyone else. Yes, there are exceptions, but generally those are only in a very narrow set of circumstances. I.E., they are only good at 30 yard running deer offhand, or 60-80 yard stand shooting, etc. I don’t know that I’ve actually ever met someone hunting or on a range that was a classical rifleman from 0-300 yards from standing, sitting, kneeling, prone, etc. To do that requires practice and by and large, hunters do not practice.
Now give me a guy who can do both, and I’ve said it before, he’s an assassin.
That is very true.