

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
People are not born with the knowledge or skills required to safely operate a firearm. That is one of the reasons that this forum exists. To help educate people. I am sure that, somewhere in your past, somebody took the time to teach you.stinkbait wrote:I know it's everyone's right to get a CHL, no problem with that... the problem I see is there are people out getting their CHL permit and know not one thing about their handgun. I mean how to load, where's the safety, how to clear a jam. I see this all the time. I think people are believing that once they by a handgun and get the chl permit that they are protected. Which I feel is not the case. In fact a person with no or very little handgun skills, is far more worse off than not having a chl permit at all. Just my two cents at what I see all the time.![]()
Love it. I will use that if I ever see anyone trying that.WildBill wrote:My instructor told me that he had a lady in one of his classes that kept trying to insert the magazine backwards into her pistol. He kept trying to explain the correct way, but she still couldn't figure it out. Finally he told her that if she put it in the wrong way she would shoot herself in the face. She finally got the point and put the magazine in so that the bullets were pointed towards the front.![]()
I don't know if this is true, but it's a good story.
It is not our place to judge other people. A CHL holder who doesn't know anything about their weapon and has never practiced with it may still be able to successfully defend their life against attack. Isn't that the point? Unless you believe that CHL holders are going to draw their weapons for no apparent reason, the likelihood is that their weapon will never see duty except in a life-threatening situation.stinkbait wrote:I know it's everyone's right to get a CHL, no problem with that... the problem I see is there are people out getting their CHL permit and know not one thing about their handgun. I mean how to load, where's the safety, how to clear a jam. I see this all the time. I think people are believing that once they by a handgun and get the chl permit that they are protected. Which I feel is not the case. In fact a person with no or very little handgun skills, is far more worse off than not having a chl permit at all. Just my two cents at what I see all the time.![]()
So what are you planning to do to correct this horrible problem as you see it?stinkbait wrote:I know it's everyone's right to get a CHL, no problem with that... the problem I see is there are people out getting their CHL permit and know not one thing about their handgun. I mean how to load, where's the safety, how to clear a jam. I see this all the time. I think people are believing that once they by a handgun and get the chl permit that they are protected. Which I feel is not the case. In fact a person with no or very little handgun skills, is far more worse off than not having a chl permit at all. Just my two cents at what I see all the time.![]()
There it is. Not everyone has the skills of an Emerson Fitipaldi, but that's no reason to discourage them from driving their cars........as long as they follow the law. And yet, even skilled drivers kill other motorists and pedestrians on occasion.74novaman wrote: Seems most of us have forgotten the idea of minding our own business.
I think the problem would correct itself if there was no help (cheating) on the CHL tests. A student should have to operate the handgun safely or they shouldn't pass. Like the road test for a driving license. I don't think you can have someone help you parallel park or operate the turn signals for you. I'm also pretty sure they'll fail you for running a red light.74novaman wrote:So what are you planning to do to correct this horrible problem as you see it?stinkbait wrote:I know it's everyone's right to get a CHL, no problem with that... the problem I see is there are people out getting their CHL permit and know not one thing about their handgun. I mean how to load, where's the safety, how to clear a jam. I see this all the time. I think people are believing that once they by a handgun and get the chl permit that they are protected. Which I feel is not the case. In fact a person with no or very little handgun skills, is far more worse off than not having a chl permit at all. Just my two cents at what I see all the time.![]()
As a new instructor, the students will know right off the bat that if they cannot operate their pistol, they don't pass the class. PERIOD!! We're not allowed to do any teaching during the test.Ameer wrote:I think the problem would correct itself if there was no help (cheating) on the CHL tests. A student should have to operate the handgun safely or they shouldn't pass. Like the road test for a driving license. I don't think you can have someone help you parallel park or operate the turn signals for you. I'm also pretty sure they'll fail you for running a red light.74novaman wrote:So what are you planning to do to correct this horrible problem as you see it?stinkbait wrote:I know it's everyone's right to get a CHL, no problem with that... the problem I see is there are people out getting their CHL permit and know not one thing about their handgun. I mean how to load, where's the safety, how to clear a jam. I see this all the time. I think people are believing that once they by a handgun and get the chl permit that they are protected. Which I feel is not the case. In fact a person with no or very little handgun skills, is far more worse off than not having a chl permit at all. Just my two cents at what I see all the time.![]()
Maybe DPS will correct it when they start auditing classes. viewtopic.php?f=18&t=44211" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
My friendly advice would be that I will be glad to teach them the basics (for a fee) and that they can retest during the normal test time for the next class but today, they will not get the CHL100 signed by me.texanron wrote:Next time you see it offer some friendly advice to them.
I thank you for being a hard nose about it. This is a serious issue.TDDude wrote:My friendly advice would be that I will be glad to teach them the basics (for a fee) and that they can retest during the normal test time for the next class but today, they will not get the CHL100 signed by me.texanron wrote:Next time you see it offer some friendly advice to them.
One of the first things they talked about up in Georgetown was integrity and passing someone who obviously will hurt themselves will not go.
If someone is stuck with a rented pistol and they aren't sure of the mag release or such, that would be the only friendly advice I would give.
Yes, I'm a hard nose and yes, I take the test seriously. In my opinion, it's already way too easy. If a shooter scores all 5's at the 3 & 7 yard lines, they can blow off the 15 yard portion, go sit down and still pass the thing with 25 points to spare.
Nope, not gonna do it. There's a driving test for a car (Is there still a driving test to get a license?) and if the applicant don't know where 1st gear is, I'm fairly certain they would flunk that as well.
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