You're entitled to your opinion, but teaching everyone to clear their firearms during a ceasefire isn't a bad practice in my books, and hardly breeds unsafe handling practices. Remember, not EVERYONE has holsters, so we use the same rules for everyone during a ceasefire: Clear your firearm, put them on the bench or in your holster, then you're good to check your targets. Also, I never said the guys aren't comfortable with a loaded and holstered firearm in their presence, just they prefer all firearms to be cleared during a ceasefire. Damn, you need reading lessons.
Also, I don't know why you guys are arguing with me. I'm not the one advocating that only "qualified" users should have holsters.
There is no such thing as an unloaded firearm, to think otherwise is what creates the double standard/thinking regarding firearm safety. If your people feel more comfortable with an "unloaded" firearm then they're not comfortable with firearms. An "unloaded" firearm is useless.
Tdc