I watched this video this morning and I believe this is an accurate assessment.
I was never in the military, I have never been shot, shot at, shot at a human, been in life or death fights, etc.
I have never seen combat, war, or even been in a trauma room at a hospital.
I have seen people shot at, shot, beat up, jumped, etc. It did not make me throw up or feel weird. It did not make me cry or act weird. Not saying that is anything compared to real war.
I honestly can not say how I would react in a PAW. I can only say that my mindset is different the average non LEO, MIL, Alphabetico boy, civilian, sheep. I have been in situations where others had deer in the headlights look or acted like white people in scary movies ("Hey lets go check out that noise"). One thing I have always been good at is being situationally aware. Common sense. Avoiding conflict if all possible, well post age 25 I guess.
I know that I am very protective of my family. I am very protective of my property and possessions. But, if a gang of 10 in the PAW was going door to door raping and pillaging I would only have 2 choices, run or defend. I cant say that I would risk their lives if I did not have a plan or some serious force multipliers.
I always analyze and access. Even when I watch dumbsday preppers. I always look for strength and weakness, in business or at the grocery store. Always.
I think that most preppers are the worst at this because they think that because they bought those AR's and cases of ammo and wear camo and carry a tacticool knife, have some food put up, have some books, etc that they are going to go all Karate Man on anyone that comes a knockin.
One thing I have a read a ton on with books or manuals is guerilla warfare and urban warfare because thats the only type we would see in my neck of the woods. More manuals that fiction tales.
I dont get to shoot as much as I used to just because ammo is stills scarce out here and I dont want to get too deep into my stocks. When I do go shoot its not "set up with some beers and see how many times I can hit bullseye or how many cans I can knock down. I try different scenarios and I will tell you running and then hitting the ground and trying to hit the target is hard as hell. Heavy breathing is tough to overcome, I can only imagine when someone is shooting to kill you and you are running for cover and/or a better vantage point.
What do you vets and LEO with real scenario experience think of this guys' assessment? I personally think its spot on and it really made me check myself and my daily life.
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