1/You said it too, you just didn't want to say it as clearly as I did.
Right above, you say it again.
2/What is wrong with not taking the shot if it is questionable? The cartridges he condemned were perfectly capable of cleanly taking game as long as you worked within thier parameters. Just as his favorite cartridges he needed to work within thier parameters, too.
3/Poor shot placement is the culprit then. Not the cartridge.
He should have left it at blaming the shooter...Or the bullets if they came apart.
4/That is a ridiculous comparison. It has no bearing on the topic at all.
A .22 is not a 30-06. Using any of the cartridges I mentioned is not a "It can be done, but it's not recommended" situation. All of those cartridges are perfectly capable big game cartridges.
5/If it's less than ideal for the rifle/cartridge combo you have, you shouldn't take the shot. This is pretty simple ethics.
6/Nothing wrong with being "over gunned" at all. Nothing wrong with the cartridges Keith chose to use at all. Where
both of you go wrong is by suggesting that perfectly good big game cartridges are inadequate to hunt with- Which was proven over and over again by the amount of meat piled up by hunters worldwide using cartridges Keith considered inadequate.
1/ God, now you've got a degree in psychology from the 'University of Jel'
2/ Nothing, and nothing was ever said or implied along those lines. The point in question was basically the difference in preference of caliber and bullet size between two 'pros from the past'. The emphesis from the Elmer theory was on the end result
if the option was to take a less than ideal shot.
3/ Agreed, and while you may be the greatest shot ever, every shot taken by the rest of us 'may' not have your degree of perfection. For me, if that shot I take doesn't happen to be perfect, then I'm hoping the caliber and bullet size I've chosen will help minimize my degree of error.
4/ Well, than pray tell, according to the "word of Gate" VS the expertise of others,
where do you draw the line? What's good for Jack, may not meet with the agreement of Elmer and what is acceptable for tools and Johnn opting to take the shot, may not meet with the approval of "Gate".
5/ There we argee, to a point but again, who's expertise, experience and abilities to we chose, Jack, Elmer, Johnn or Gate? Same as question
4/. The question now is how many 'Joe Average' hunters in the field exercise that common sence of judgement or 'pretty simple degree of ethics?
6/ Where we both go wrong, thank you

, but I guess that's according to "Gate". I'd be honoured to be considered in the same class of expertise and abilities of "The Man". Never said, either of us, that some of the smaller cartridges were inadequate to hunt with, and again, just that under
some of the less than perfect conditions, there are better choices to get the job done.