checko 180 Posted July 11, 2013 I don't know about these guys. I get the premise behind what he's doing here but having these guys all on a line doing this silliness seems dangerous to me. Has anyone ever taken tridents courses? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
leahcim 682 Posted July 11, 2013 I agree--I definitely see the value in these drills, but I would sure want to know and trust the skill level of all the other participants and my own skill level. Don't know what they drilled prior to this, but it sounds like they worked these moves without actual ammo before doing live-fire drills. I would want to have considerable dry-fire drills prior to anything like this. But I am sure it is valuable training if you are going to be in a close combat or stressful firefight. I have similar concerns when I SCUBA dive. I do not like the idea of going on an advanced or difficult dive and then being assigned a random "buddy" where you have no idea of their skills and abilities. And I know this breaks a cardinal rule, but I have argued that diving solo or in a loosely organized group is better than diving with a "buddy" who could turn into a liability. Same here, not a class for beginners and I would think you would want time together in the group to understand everyone's skill level. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ronhonda 86 Posted July 11, 2013 They should just watch a John Woo movie. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pjd832 146 Posted July 11, 2013 Would have to hope that wasn't just some random group of weekend range ninjas that signed up for a combat pistol class and they had them in those drills an hour in lol Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites