Once again, I agree wholeheartedly. I'm merely repeating what the guy said.bdickens wrote:smyrna= wrote:With that said, the instructor encouraged the good shooters to NOT score a perfect score. He said that if he ever ended up in court, he could honestly say that the person in question was not a perfect shot. Not sure if that would help in a defense or not but that's sure what he said.
A justified shooting is justified shooting and an unjustified one is unjustified. If anything, having greater skill could only help you in the case of allegations of recklessness.
I would say his class was for the most part what I expected and he only said a couple of things like that that my "waste filter" caught and I had to examine for what it was.
The sad thing is, I called three other places before I committed to a CHL class and based on my conversations with the three others I can assure you that I would have needed hip waders to attend their classes if you catch my drift. There is something about firearms that brings out the bravado and tall tales in some people and I avoid those folks like I avoid some car salemen.