If you shot someone with your .22lr, the media would still call it "high powered". If it was a rifle, you would be a "sniper", pistol, it would be "concealable", in between, it would be an "assault rifle".
View attachment 45750Does social work include squirrel defense. the things can be viscious, and if you get enough of then together you better hope your .22is beltfed full auto.
Actually... You're NOT gonna shoot someone in your house in Canada... Bad guys have too much rights here and YOU gonna go to jail. Handguns here are only for shooting range fun. I would use a baseball bat, metal bar/telescopic stick or even a shotgun with rubber slug long before using my handguns... You don't want to kill someone, your job is to "control" the bad guy until the cops arrive. I think (and it's my personnal opinion) that martial arts are the best self-defense method available here... Im not talking about air roundhouse kick in the face... But a good armlock technique is really effective (to control a single opponnent at least). Okay you could be attacked by more than one person but you think shooting everybody is the solution? We can't use taser here but i think it would be an effective weapon for home defense. So forget about any handgun caliber for home defense/self defense... Just enjoy your handgun at the range and if one day someone break into your home and you're gonna use your handgun for self-defense... You gonna grab something you trust in your safe, and im pretty sure youre not gonna take that (insert 22lr pistol brand here)...
Don't know what world you live but you do know it is lawful to use firearms for defence in Canada when it is supported by the totality of circumstances.
I know you can use firearm for self-defense.. But the problem is to define the "totality of circumstances". You can't just shoot a man because he is in your house or in your garden.
Back in the day (early 80's ), I got to shoot a Berretta Minx in .22 short at an after party ( branding cattle owned by an LEO ). Surprisingly noisy with a bit of muzzle flip, and no accuracy.
Poker table gun IMO.
I tend to think more along the lines of Ruger Mk's 1 - 3 as far as size and ergonomics. The real pocket pistols are parlour guns, minimal useful usage IMO.
Agreed, we would be accountable for every round. And some clever defence lawyer might well try to argue that "if you only felt it necessary to slightly wound my client with a single round, I suggest that he wasn't in fact posing a deadly threat." Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Geo's mod 71 would fit nice in your pocket......Reliable and accurate too.
Geo's mod 71 fit the pockets of a lot of Israeli security officers (and assassins). A number of armed hijackers, shot two or three times with accurate fire in the chest or head, died immediately. Google them for yourself, there are plenty of examples to find.
Nobody I know of ever took the 950B "Minx" onto hijacked aircraft, possibly for good reason, though I have several that are surprisingly accurate. They have no ejector, which is a big problem in any FTF or FTE situation. The model 71 definitely went there, quite successfully. The bad guys died holding all kinds of guns in bigger calibers, they died promptly, they stopped immediately, and the operators of the Beretta M71 didn't complain about wanting bigger calibers. In the hands of a skilled operator, these are tremendously effective firearms.
In American statistics, 90% plus of "firearm involved" defensive situations, as others have pointed out, are simple "brandishment" -- the firearm is deployed but not used, the surprised bad guy(s) depart the scene without asking "hey, what caliber is that?" and everyone is pleased with the outcome. At the point that a trigger gets pulled, we have examples of people continuing to kill with a Police .38 Special round in their forehead, and we have people collapsing and dying almost immediately from a .22 LR to the upper arm. Adrenaline vs. shock, rage vs. belief.
If you can hit what you're aiming at, you have a self defense gun. If you consistently miss under pressure with your Magnum, you are a threat to bystanders, neighbors, family and of course yourself. Luckily, as others have pointed out, this is a moot point for the vast majority. Given legal storage requirements and common sense, it's a discussion for the mall ninjas.
+1 on the knife recommendation, anyway. Drunk or high burglars (the majority I dealt with were under the influence of something) will recognize a knife, and its consequences, a lot more quickly than they can process and appreciate a firearm. The knife is a more effective threat, less likely to need to be used against an impaired (and still dangerous) criminal, and much more socially acceptable. Safe storage = keep one under your bed and one near the door. You are very unlikely to make the news with your knife and that is a good thing.
20 years ive worked on the ambulance.
in those 20 years ive had several opportunities to see first hand what different caliber guns do to people who are on the wrong side of them.
from everything ive seen i can tell you "I" would not use a 22 for self defense unless i had nothing else at my disposal.
you all can argue energy and reliability and whatever else you want but at the end of the day im the one that has to come and plug the holes and i get to see up close and personal what the holes do.
and my ass isnt gonna use a 22 for anything other then gophers or paper punching.
have a conversation with someone whos been shot with a 22 and listen to them complain all the way to the hospital about how much it hurts and then tell me that youd want to be using that round if your life was on the line, nope, no thanks.
when i think of using a 22 for self defense the first thing i think of is growing up shooting gophers on the farm and watching the odd one crawl 20 feet to his hole with 3 or 4 ill placed rounds in him. if a little gopher can take multiple rounds and still make it out thats not saying much for the lethality.
and yes, head shots, ive too have seen a butcher drop a cow with a 22 short in one shot from 1 foot away.
ive also seen people live through catching a 22 round to the brain bucket (ive also seen people die from them) but very few died instantly.
sorry to jump in with a dose of reality to this theoretical conversation, just thought it should be said.
Geo's mod 71 fit the pockets of a lot of Israeli security officers (and assassins). A number of armed hijackers, shot two or three times with accurate fire in the chest or head, died immediately. Google them for yourself, there are plenty of examples to find.
Nobody I know of ever took the 950B "Minx" onto hijacked aircraft, possibly for good reason, though I have several that are surprisingly accurate. They have no ejector, which is a big problem in any FTF or FTE situation. The model 71 definitely went there, quite successfully. The bad guys died holding all kinds of guns in bigger calibers, they died promptly, they stopped immediately, and the operators of the Beretta M71 didn't complain about wanting bigger calibers. In the hands of a skilled operator, these are tremendously effective firearms.
In American statistics, 90% plus of "firearm involved" defensive situations, as others have pointed out, are simple "brandishment" -- the firearm is deployed but not used, the surprised bad guy(s) depart the scene without asking "hey, what caliber is that?" and everyone is pleased with the outcome. At the point that a trigger gets pulled, we have examples of people continuing to kill with a Police .38 Special round in their forehead, and we have people collapsing and dying almost immediately from a .22 LR to the upper arm. Adrenaline vs. shock, rage vs. belief.
If you can hit what you're aiming at, you have a self defense gun. If you consistently miss under pressure with your Magnum, you are a threat to bystanders, neighbors, family and of course yourself. Luckily, as others have pointed out, this is a moot point for the vast majority. Given legal storage requirements and common sense, it's a discussion for the mall ninjas.
+1 on the bat recommendation, anyway. Drunk or high burglars (the majority I dealt with were under the influence of something) will recognize a bat, and its consequences, a lot more quickly than they can process and appreciate a firearm. The bat is a more effective threat, less likely to need to be used against an impaired (and still dangerous) criminal, and much more socially acceptable. Safe storage = keep one under your bed and one near the door. You are very unlikely to make the news with your bat, and that is a good thing.



























