ShootDontTalk wrote:Believe what you want about YouTube. Suffice to say that two facts are abundantly clear:
1) There are probably more Glocks carried daily than any other make. Is it the ultimate be-all, end-all pistol? No. I don't know of any other brand that is either. Handled correctly is it more likely to discharge negligently than any other make? No. There are a huge number of them carried by a lot of people with different levels of expertise. The overwhelming majority have no problem with shooting themselves.
2) Firearms do not discharge by themselves. No firearm is foolproof against negligent discharge. Negligent discharge requires intervention by a negligent human. It makes no difference what gun you own. Believing you have a gun that can never discharge if you do something you shouldn't is a recipe for disaster. Keep your finger off the trigger. Always remember that you have an instrument of death on your hip and pay attention whenever you touch it.
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Negligent Discharge requires Negligence. Take away the Negligence, and you take away the discharge. I've holstered and un-holstered a glock to many times to think of a number, and I have never once come close. When handling a firearm, handle it as vigilantly as a snake. Show me a video where a Glock owner is carefully holstering their firearm, and it "discharged" for no reason, and if you find one, I will likely call it a fake.
I know of a lot of "Glocksters," and none have ever had a negligence, accidental, or spontaneous discharge that I know of. That accounts for a lot of people, and a lot of glocks, and a lot of holstering.