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<blockquote data-quote="tacmedic" data-source="post: 59813" data-attributes="member: 578"><p>I think Mike makes a great point about experience. So called professionals like laywers and doctors have a very hard time admitting they don't know something. Think of it like this...if you need brain surgery do you want a colon-rectal surgeon doing it? If you find you need a laywer you better be asking them how many justified homicides they've handled. Then subtract 2 from the number they give you to get the truth. </p><p></p><p>Another legal curiosity I have...anyone hear of this ever happening? Scumbag breaks into your house and attacks you, you have to shoot him to stop him so his family sues you. Has anyone ever, or could you even file a counter lawsuit suing them for all your legal and or medical bills and emotional trauma because they didn't do a better job raising junior? Or because they knew he was a violent criminal and did nothing about it? Or because they didn't turn him in for old warrents instead of hiding him? </p><p></p><p>Another point I noticed. You will experience some emotional distress afterwards, its human nature, such as second guessing, remorse, depression, etc. this should never be verbalized in such a way as to be confused with an admission of wrong doing. Remember you were forced to make a split second decision based on what you knew at the time. Get the proper training LIKE MIKE's CQT CLASS OR TDSA's CLASSES and trust yourself. I could have never imagined all that would go through my mind in that split second before engaging and during force on force training. Time seemed to slow, tunnel vision ensued, and half a dozen questions went through my head before I could even clear leather. The benefits of experiencing this in training are unimaginable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tacmedic, post: 59813, member: 578"] I think Mike makes a great point about experience. So called professionals like laywers and doctors have a very hard time admitting they don't know something. Think of it like this...if you need brain surgery do you want a colon-rectal surgeon doing it? If you find you need a laywer you better be asking them how many justified homicides they've handled. Then subtract 2 from the number they give you to get the truth. Another legal curiosity I have...anyone hear of this ever happening? Scumbag breaks into your house and attacks you, you have to shoot him to stop him so his family sues you. Has anyone ever, or could you even file a counter lawsuit suing them for all your legal and or medical bills and emotional trauma because they didn't do a better job raising junior? Or because they knew he was a violent criminal and did nothing about it? Or because they didn't turn him in for old warrents instead of hiding him? Another point I noticed. You will experience some emotional distress afterwards, its human nature, such as second guessing, remorse, depression, etc. this should never be verbalized in such a way as to be confused with an admission of wrong doing. Remember you were forced to make a split second decision based on what you knew at the time. Get the proper training LIKE MIKE's CQT CLASS OR TDSA's CLASSES and trust yourself. I could have never imagined all that would go through my mind in that split second before engaging and during force on force training. Time seemed to slow, tunnel vision ensued, and half a dozen questions went through my head before I could even clear leather. The benefits of experiencing this in training are unimaginable. [/QUOTE]
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