Safety issue(s) or not?

There’s a second flag in the stack when they unload from the trailer. I’m no high speed guy either, but there were some fundamental issues in weapons handling that lead me to believe that some of the shooters had little experience.

  1. Muzzle awareness and standing behind targets have already been adressed, but WTF?!

  2. I see no instructor or AI’s following students to observe that they are in fact being safe. Nobody does live fire runs without a safety crew.

  3. They seem to have no real clue of what to do when inside the room, I was just waiting for one guy to step into his buddys sector of fire and catch one.

  4. Cardboard shoot house? I am wondering how thorough they are in checking that the angles at which these guys shoot does not involve a round going all the way though the house and hitting someone in the wait area.

  5. How sure are they about the riccochet risk from that back stop?

  6. No BA or PPE other than eyes and ears. Just plain stupid.

  7. Their room clearing battle drills are crap

Not sure how much flat range work they did before going hot with the “cool” stuff. I saw the “tape house” pictures. I get the idea they were basing their class on what they have seen not on what they have done. Loose/sloppy basic skills get people killed in a fluid (SHOOTHOUSE) environment. He muzzled his buddy- he is three steps towards disaster in a four step process. What happens when he or one of his partners gets tired, hungry, slips further out of mental focus, stumbles, etc.?

I have a flightsuit and live near an airport…anybody want to go rent a plane?

It seems like people expect watching videos to make them experts for some reason. Way to much standing in the fatal funnel, bad exit’s and a host of other jackassery.