If it is not a concern, then that should be the end of the #####ing and criticism of having a manual safety on a firearm, such as on an M&P pistol.The use of positive safeties is not the issue of concern.
Let's recap briefly here. You attribute the member's death to a magazine disconnect in your earlier post - an anecdotal instance where I suspect you are not party to the investigation that followed, and where the root cause was determined by the Force to be a member who was left side strong armed with a handgun with right side strong controls.The issue first and foremost is the belief that magazine disconnects/disco is in fact a safety device. The anecdotal instances of officer survival do not directly link the positive outcomes to the disco itself. Other factors were and are involved which influence the situation.
And then, without missing a beat, you dismiss numerous recorded instances of a magazine safety saving an officer from being shot as being "anecdotal" and criticize those instances as not being directly related to the positive income in those instances. Well, I suppose that by sheer chance if there had been no magazine disconnect when the bad guy pulled the trigger on the officer's weapon, the round that would have been in the chamber would have misfired. Or maybe he would have missed while standing a few inches away from the officer. But in my books, possibilities like that are hardly credible alternative reasons for why those officers survived.
Can I ask if you've ever been through Depot, the JI, some other police academy, the military's CP Operator course, or any other similar military or police training? Or are you a civilian all the way?To rest full faith that a disco is a life saver would be ignoring the obvious.
I don't know of ANY training within a police agency or Canada's military that teaches students to rely fully on a magazine disconnect, manual safety, or any other safety device. And if you had ever been through any of those courses you would not suggest that is what is done. More to the point, the fact you suggest police/military are trained to place "full faith" on a magazine disconnect - or any other safety feature - is both erroneous and misleading.
Most people, on the verge of losing control of their weapon - believe it or not there is always somebody tougher than you out there - would prefer to take their chances with surviving a beating rather than one to the head from their own firearm.The fact that a disabled firearm due to mag ejection is useless for all involved proves it is of as much value to the good guy as it is to the bad guy. If this were a math equation the answer would be =equal. Which means there is no gain or benefit.
Most people who do carry weapons for a living rather than theorizing, would prefer that few extra seconds to go to one of their weapons while the bad guy tries to figure out why the handgun isn't firing. Or to have their partner engage the bad guy with HIS weapon - before they are shot, not after. As far as that goes, their partner probably prefers to have to deal with a bad guy armed with your non-functioning handgun, rather than with a fully functional point and shoot device. And in many of the recorded cases where a magazine disconnect has saved an officer's life, that is exactly what has happened: the officer had an opportunity to use another weapon in that few seconds, or his partner took out the bad guy.
It isn't theory and it isn't a math equation with a null outcome - it is a repeatedly recorded fact.
Perhaps in your world. In most other peoples' world, it includes a trigger being pressed by a finger when it shouldn't be.Safety devices are designed to prevent inadvertent discharges due to loss of control or foreign objects.
You should be trying to make that argument to police officers who are alive today because of that device, not to us. If you can prove it to them, then I guess I'll buy in.Furthermore, the intended purpose of the disco is a liability by design.
Bull.With the potential for such dire consequences, how or why anyone would believe that the possibility for this device to save ones life outweighs the very real possibility of this device to cost one their life is foolish. Cases of such events are hardly common place or compelling enough to warrant the use of magazine disconnects as a benefit. They are an answer to a question that has never been asked.
Ayoob and at least one other writer have investigated this in the past, numerous times. No doubt at least in part because of the hysteria some display about magazine disconnects, as well as the usual requirement to write a column once a month. Illinois and other agencies who armed their police with magazine equipped weapons looked at it as well.
I have yet to see any published article or related review that concluded that as many or nearly as many police lost their lives due to a magazine disconnect as those who were saved by it. In fact, it wasn't even close. The numbers overwhelmingly favoured police who were saved by the device over those who were shot because of it. Ayoob concluded his one article by saying that the danger was primarily in the mind of chairborne commandos who had no training or service in a force armed with a handgun with a magazine disconnect, and he doubted any of them could give specific instances of an event where an officer was shot due to a magazine disconnect. I suspect he was accurate in that conclusion.
And you - deliberately I expect - miss the point that we haven't invented the perfect human being yet who will never make a safety error, nor the perfect cop who can never be disarmed, no matter how big or how many his assailants.Your comment regarding my seatbelt analogy has missed the point. Again, you are correct, seatbelts save lives when someone screws up.
Again, the beauty of it is that if you actually do carry a handgun for self defense rather than simply theorizing about it, you have ample handguns out there to choose from which do not have a magazine disconnect. Therefore, you can rest easy.
Why are you so passionate about the perceived ills of a magazine disconnect - do you actually know a police officer or soldier who was injured or killed because of one?



















































