Zero 5 Podcast
This episode/article is likely going to throw a lot of people off. As protectors we all like to think that if/when the time came and someone was threatening the lives of our families or congregations that we’d be able to dispatch the threat without giving it a second thought. Though I’ve discussed this topic before in a previous article [https://open.substack.com/pub/zero5safetytraining/p/get-shot-at?r=6g0xvh&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web] I believe it’s worth revisiting because there’s a tendency amongst the civilian population, including church safety team members to struggle with the actual act of pulling the trigger when it really matters. Against All Instincts Killing another human being is NOT a natural act. God did not design us to kill each other, and yet our sinful world is full of it. There are evil people out there who are capable of murdering without a second thought. They are the reason why we have armed safety ministries. For the rest of us, it goes against our nature to pull the trigger with the possibility of taking a life. Unless you have specifically trained and established the mentality, and PRACTICED pulling the trigger on another person there is no telling what you will do if you encounter a situation where that decision needs to be made. I know right about now I have a lot of folks reading this that are shaking their heads, puffing up there chests and saying that’s not them. “I have no trouble killing a bad person if they’re a threat to my church or family!” If you have ever been in a real gunfight and done it then I’ll believe you. If you’ve ever done actual force on force training with simunitions or UTM and you fired without hesitation then I’ll believe you. However, in all the force on force training I have done the majority of people hesitate or don’t shoot at all when confronted with a person threatening to take their life. Why??? Real life gunfights are nothing like TV, movies, or video games. There are real lives involved, your actual life is at stake with no respawns, and the bullets go through stuff and run out eventually unlike what the entertainment industry would like us to believe. This reality creates an EXTREMELY high stress situation that is almost impossible to completely simulate. I’ve seen this more times than I can count; there is NO WAY to tell how someone will act in that high stress of a situation until they’ve actually been in one. Believe it or not military and police have it relatively easy with regards to pulling the trigger because they have two things working for them: * There is an expectation that they will pull the trigger when it’s needed; * There is a certain amount of qualified immunity in their professions with regards to using deadly force. As a police officer, if you encounter someone threatening deadly force your are expected to meet a deadly force problem with a deadly force solution. The same goes for the military. In fact, in the military there is a certain expectation that if encountering a known enemy you will use deadly force before they have a chance to. In the church safety world we have A LOT holding us back from using deadly force. First, situations in the civilian world can be very gray. As safety team members we are reactive versus proactive when dealing with threats. Someone has to pose a deadly threat for us to react and address it. That reactive posture buys them time to increase or reduce their threat level at any time and we must act accordingly. Second, if we encounter a deadly force incident there is the looming disaster of legal issues that we will be forced to battle afterwards. It is almost never a cut and dry justified shoot. Jack Wilson, the church member who shot the attacker at the West Freeway Church of Christ shooting in White Settlement still had to deal with legal proceedings for 9 months after the attack happened; and that one was all on video and was as clear cut as it gets! Finally, there is the natural disinclination to kill another human being. That is a lot working against a person defending their congregation and a lot of ingrained bias towards not pulling the trigger. With all of that working against us we must be diligent about training our mindsets and our decision-making abilities. How?? Following the crawl, walk, run method of training is imperative to build a mentality that will unhesitatingly pull the trigger when needed. We start by learning two key pieces: * How to shoot, and shoot well (which I don’t think many of you have an issue training that, I hope); * Building an understanding of use of force laws; specifically use of deadly force. These to factors need to be so ingrained in a safety team member’s psyche that it’s second nature to be able to shoot without thinking and decide on whether a situation warrants deadly force without wavering. Next, we add dynamics to the shooting such as moving and engaging a target, and basic threat discernment on paper targets. We ramp that up to moving through a structure or a “field” and encountering paper threats. Incorporated with all of that is radio communication so we build the ability to think and communicate clearly while all of this is going on (it’s tougher than it looks). Finally, we go full kinetic using role players and simunitions or UTM cartridges in force on force scenarios. This forces safety team members to make the split second decision to shoot and take the shots all under the duress of someone shooting back. This also forces safety team members to manage the entirety of the situation rather than just the engagement. Training Progression Matters I’m going to keep this really simple. If you skip straight to force on force training without building the other fundamentals you are wasting time and money! Yes, your team is going to get something out of force on force training, and it will be a lot of fun. However, the purpose of force on force training is not to have fun. It’s to get better at meeting deadly force with faster, more accurate, more violent force. Skipping the fundamentals and the not-as-fun stuff will result in bad training habits and MANY missed lessons that would have otherwise been learned through the force on force encounter. For instance, I had spent a lot of time working on my shooting and target discernment fundamentals. My draw and sight acquisition times were very fast and my accuracy was solid. I had practiced tactics such as recognizing and using cover and concealment, angles, and movement. However, when I went to a force on force training day a got shot in a chest in my second scenario. Why? I drew faster, shot faster, and hit him center mass; yet, I still got hit. I got hit because I had failed to train moving off the “X” while in a kinetic engagement. I understood the principle, and had thought it over many times, but I had not trained it to the point that it was instinctual. Moving off the “X” was a fundamental that I had skipped. I had all the other fundamentals down pat. If I had not worked on the other basics I would have been hit and not known why. There would have been too many variables that I would have needed to work through. That’s why we must build the solid foundation first. Conclusion This article/podcast is longer than most because it is a severe blind spot that does not get trained enough. We must train ourselves to be able to pull the trigger when necessary without hesitation. Hesitation kills good people. It’s that simple. Actually getting to the point where you can pull it though, is not that simple. If you are a safety team member examine yourself. Look deep and decide in your heart if you are capable of taking another life. Will you take any life that poses a threat to your family or congregation? What if it was a youth? What if it was a youth that you know? These are all mental decisions that MUST be made ahead of time because in-the-moment is too late. If you are a team leader look at your team and your training. Are they mentally and physically prepared to handle a deadly force situation? Have they been trained properly in a manner that leads to long term skill retention, or have you taken shortcuts in the name of keeping things fun and interesting? Answer these questions with brutal honesty because your congregation, you friends, and your family are depending on you and your team. PROTECT HIS PEOPLE. GIVE HIM THE GLORY. 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