So, here is a startling statistic that nobody will believe
because it detracts from the gun control agenda: according to the Centers for
Disease Control, which tracks emergency room visits, over 134,000 patients were
admitted to US emergency departments for edged weapon wounds received in
violent crimes in the year 2016. Most of these are domestic violence
or known party altercations rather than random stabbings, but it is still a
huge number. The FBI does not track these statistics, because over
90% of knife wounds are non-fatal, and the FBI only publishes knife attacks
that contribute to the homicide rates. The 134,000 number does not
include fatal edged weapon attacks, as the CDC statistic is for emergency room
admissions, not morgues. The 134,000 plus number sorts out all
self-inflicted and accidental wounds; it only includes non-fatal violent crimes
committed with edged weapons.
Why is a firearms instructor telling you
this? Because I don’t want to get stabbed, even if I have a ninety
percent chance of survival, which is the liberal argument in the UK against
guns that somehow being stabbed is so much better than being
shot. No thanks! The mass stabbings in the UK and Paris
make the news, as do the spectacular fatalities like the poor lady in DC last
week, but the vast majority of non-fatal stabbings never make the
headlines. If it is happening over 134,000 times in America in a
single year, it probably is not very news worthy, to be fair to the news
industry. But it is epidemic from the perspective of the
self-protection industry. To answer my question more thoroughly, a
firearms instructor is telling you about knife attacks because I don’t want you
getting stabbed either, and the best way to not get stabbed is to shoot the guy
with the knife.
Many honest martial artists will tell you that in a knife
attack there is no way to prevent getting cut or stabbed. What they
are training you to do is minimize the damage caused by those knife
wounds. Deflecting a blade away from the torso and getting a cut
across the outside forearm muscle is success according to honest martial
artists. I won’t even belittle the (honest) martial arts community
in this edition, because I agree a cut forearm is better than a punctured lung,
liver or diaphragm muscle. But isn’t it better to have
neither? Which is not a guarantee that I can make with a gun, but
then there are no guarantees at all in an interpersonal combat situation
(self-protection incident). But there are ways of improving your
odds; to prove this point I will relate a true story. One dark and
stormy night in the Diyala Province of Iraq in 2006, a guy jumped out and
emptied his AK-47 magazine right in front of my buddy Chris. The
only problem the guy had was that Chris was in an M1 Abrams Tank, and he simply
swiveled the coaxial machine gun at the guy and let off a half-second burst
before running him over. One can’t discredit the bravery of the
insurgent, just his judgment and gambling ability.
Here’s my point: Always take a gun to a knife
fight. Do not trust any martial arts instructor that says they can
prevent you from getting cut or stabbed in a knife encounter. Don’t
trust a firearms instructor that says that either. I can’t guarantee
you win with a gun against a knife; but I can increase your
chances. It’s better to have the tank than the AK-47 in Chris’ story. It’s
better to have the gun in a knife fight.
An annoying irony is that cops are allowed to shoot guys with
knives, but citizens are only allowed to in certain
jurisdictions. Some crazy jurisdictions like my former state would
prosecute a person who shot somebody trying to stab them. They have
a proportionality self-defense law that says you can’t use a more powerful
weapon on an assailant for self-defense. If you live in those kinds
of jurisdictions, you really, really need to move. The state is jeopardizing
your safety and life because of an absurd concept of fairness towards
psychopathic predators. The reason cops are justified in shooting
guys with knives is because it is a lethal force situation. The
infamous “21 foot rule” comes from a case where an officer shot a guy with a
knife twenty-one feet away, because he proved in court that the guy could close
that distance at a sprint in less time than it takes to draw a handgun and
engage. That is therefore a lethal threat. No knife
attacks start as far back as twenty-one feet against civilians, by the
way. Which means, up close and personal, you have to train to draw
and fire at hand-to-hand combat range. You have to train it over and
over and over again, because it is very possible you’ll have a knife wound
before you fire, and if you train your reptilian brain to just draw and squeeze
that trigger, even wounded, you will complete that ingrained
task. But you still got stabbed, which is why you continue to
squeeze the trigger until the knife wielder is no longer a
threat. Don’t try to disarm him, don’t try to wrestle for the knife,
just pull out your gun and squeeze the trigger until he is no longer a threat.
If, for some reason that escapes my understanding, you still
live in a jurisdiction that punishes you for defending yourself with a firearm,
then you should get real good with whatever tools you are allowed to
carry. The principle is the same. Do not attack the
knife. Do not go for the weapon. Use your tool,
improvised or otherwise, to eliminate the threat behind the
knife. Shut down the predator’s central nervous system and you won’t
have to worry about the knife. There are experts out there that
teach this, I always recommend Tim Larkin’s Target Focus Training system, but
even they would say the best solution to a guy with a knife is to shoot
him. The worst case scenario in a knife attack is to be just a
helpless victim who gets stabbed, but only slightly better than that is to be a
not-so-helpless victim who gets stabbed but manages to crush the guy’s trachea
or snap his neck. The best case scenario is to not get stabbed,
either because you escaped, or because you shot the prick before he had a
chance to stab you.
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