Posted on 08/31/2014 1:28:09 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
So much has been written about the incident at Ferguson, Missouri, that its remarkable none of it is of any use. So lets try something new.
My idea is to look at the shooting as a shooting, not as an avatar of social malaise, a tragedy or an inevitability. Instead, lets determine what can be learned from the few facts known and considered incontrovertible. I am no expert but I do know a little about this stuff.
The four shots that hit Michael Brown in the right arm, according to autopsy drawing provided by Dr. Michael Baden at the insistence of Browns own parents, penetrated the outside, leading edge of that limb, just inside the bone. Thus it seems unlikely that those shots, assuming they came directly from in front, could have penetrated the arm at those locations while maintaining a front-to-rear angle.
Try this simple test. Raise your arms. In that position, examine which surface of your arm is vulnerable to frontally incoming gunshots. Clearly, it is the inside, unless you torque your arms inward in order to make the outsides vulnerable to incoming shots, an inconceivable notion. As I see it, Browns arms were not up when he was shot, at least four of the six times.
Or let me put it this way. Stand naturally. Place your left forefinger on a spot you determine to equate to one of the wounds. Youll see that it faces the front. Now, keeping the finger in place, raise the arm. NOW the spot faces the rear and the bullet direction is clearly front to rear.
Next examine the pattern of the four shots. Beginning at the thumb, they are spaced a few inches apart, in a rising line on a rightward bias, essentially climbing the arm. I see this pattern on the handgun range all the time, as do most shooters. It is a consequence of shooting quickly without aiming, a sure signature of a shooter in a panic mode (as when being charged by a much larger assailant) or someone preparing for just such a moment.
This is what happens: the gun, no matter if gripped properly in two hands or improperly in one, rises in recoil in each shot and the shooter brings it back down as he resets the trigger and fires again. But the reset is faster than the full return, so the subsequent shot is fired from a higher location; thus the bullet strikes higher. It is typical of anyone except perhaps a Special Forces professional or a full-time professional competition shooter to produce this pattern on a target when shooting fast and without aim, relying on crude instinctive reflexes instead of technique.
When I look at the shot placement in the Baden sketch, I infer the officer is firing as fast as he can pull the trigger without aiming, but merely pointing; hes not looking at his sights (crucial to aiming) but at the man oncoming. Thus he sees hes striking to the left margin of the target (the arm) and makes a gross correction, though he continues to place his shots more highly. His fifth shot hits the eye, the young man drops immediately and is tumbling forward when the sixth shot hits him in the top of the head. The officer was locked into the fast-fire scenario and even if he observed the effect of the fifth shot, he was unable to command his trigger finger to halt before firing the sixth.
Finally, I note that much has been made of the fact that Brown was shot six times, as if thats somehow relevant. A man shooting in defense of his life, police officer, soldier, or citizen, will shoot until his adversary is down. Manybut not Officer Wilsonwill then shoot him a couple of more times on the ground, to make certain. People who think six is a lot are not familiar with the speed at which a reasonably trained shooter can fire six times with a semi-automatic pistol. The answer is less than two seconds. I bet I could do it in less than one.
Thus any insistence that Michael Brown was shot with his hands up or an inordinate number of times is simply unsupportable by the known facts. It should not be assumed or repeated in any journalism that considers itself informed and unbiased. One of the saddest aspects of contemporary journalismI worked on great newspapers for 38 yearsis that almost no one on staff knows a single fact about things that go bang in the night. Some cant tell an earplug from a rubber bullet or a semi-automatic from a full-automatic. Thus reportage on shooting incidents is always woefully flawed by ignorance and the public is ill-served, as in this disgraceful case.
Which is precisely why we haven't heard anything about it from any news outlets.
Sadly I believe you are corrct.
I happened upon the below video the other day, and it became more clear to me what we as conservatives are up against; folks with the mindset of the lady in this video vote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i28cQDHnho4
Read my original post again.....nowhere did I have the rusher with raised hands.....only extended outward as he reaches the QB.
You are right in that the defense often raises their arms to block passes, but that isn’t germane to this scenario.
Yes, there has been much written about the incident.
It seems quite arrogant for him to say none of it is of any use. What he says has been covered extensively.
What in his article prompted that response?
Mr. Hunter does not reference the movements of the attacker in the potential area of shots and the time that it would take for the attacker to cover the ground and the ability to hit such a target. Mr. Hunter brings up the idea of someone with their hands raised. Fine. But, also include the shoulder and arms moving as someone runs.
And with one eye somewhat out of commission to some extent.
We cannot allow Wilson to be the new Zimmerman.
The Mike Brown background story is a myth, and the truth has to come out.
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