Thanks.
Pretending you speak for the masses must make you feel important.
It’s common use of the English language in this case.
Thanks.
Pretending you speak for the masses must make you feel important.
That is not true.
When you are about to hand a rifle to another, do you close the bolt while simultaneously decocking the rifle before handing over the rifle with the now-closed action and lowered striker? (I hope not, but many people do that, mindlessly, and that is the practice which provoked me to start this thread.) The individuals doing that are so accustomed to 'easing the spring' as a matter of routine they forget where they are or the possible reason(s) why they've done it. It isn't the decocking of the rifle that is unsafe, it is the habit that they're created; the habit causes them to completely ignore the safety rules, and they decock the rifle regardless of the muzzle direction and regardless of the fact that they're about to hand off the (now-closed and decocked) firearm to someone else, who is now obliged to open the action again.
Decocking can be done carefully, and safely (should one choose to do that), but I would also argue that - generally - we should wish to encourage a strict and mindful adherence to the four rules, and that - generally - we should wish to discourage the creation of any habit that disregards the four rules.
Me, I have no problem with 'easing the spring'. My concern is with the creation of any habit that disregards the four rules. Generally, when one dry fire practices, one has the firearm at eye level, pointed in a safe direction, and a visual focus on the front sight, in accordance with safe-handling rules (including #3). Certainly, it is possible to condition oneself to store only decocked firearms, and to decock them only in accordance with safe-handling rules (including #3), but that is not what you see in the real world. Regularly, in the real world, I see individuals decocking striker-fired rifles with the rifle in a lowered position (and not shouldered); the sights are not on any particular target; the individual has no awareness of what he is doing (or failing to do), beyond the fact that he knows he is 'easing the spring'.
Who would decock their rifle to hand it to someone else? This thread is stupid
I didn't know I was decocking my rifle to hand it over to another person. I thought I was decocking my rifle to put it away. Who would decock their rifle to hand it to someone else? This thread is stupid
The only reason I'm aware of the practice is the fact that people are doing it. They're well-intentioned, they believe they're doing the right thing, they're completely unaware of the four rules, and therein lies my concern - as a community, what are we teaching new people?
It seems pretty clear that many of the posters in this thread explicitly reject the four rules (for example), instead just doing whatever they want whenever they want.
The only reason I'm aware of the practice is the fact that people are doing it. They're well-intentioned, they believe they're doing the right thing, they're completely unaware of the four rules, and therein lies my concern - as a community, what are we teaching new people?
It seems pretty clear that many of the posters in this thread explicitly reject the four rules (for example), instead just doing whatever they want whenever they want.
The only reason I'm aware of the practice is the fact that people are doing it. They're well-intentioned, they believe they're doing the right thing, they're completely unaware of the four rules, and therein lies my concern - as a community, what are we teaching new people?
It seems pretty clear that many of the posters in this thread explicitly reject the four rules (for example), instead just doing whatever they want whenever they want.
My motivation in starting this thread was to assess how widespread - or popular - 'easing the spring' continued to be (in the CGN community, at least) so that information could better inform my teaching.
Thanks for coming out.