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Good grief!

Should it bother me that she didn't clear the chamber on any of those pistols?There's safety in numbers.
Should it bother me that she didn't clear the chamber on any of those pistols?
I am so safety focused, I can't stand it when someone doesn't follow my personal protocol.
I thought about that, but (1) having to chamber a round slows you down and the sound of chambering may undermine the element of surprise (your only advantage) in the case of having to confront a bad guy; and (2) a good safety protocol demands that you never ASSUME the chamber is clear unless you clear it.She may not chamber rounds until needed.
Great, we completely agree on somethingI thought about that, but (1) having to chamber a round slows you down and the sound of chambering may undermine the element of surprise (your only advantage) in the case of having to confront a bad guy; and (2) a good safety protocol demands that you never ASSUME the chamber is clear unless you clear it.
The reason I am obsessed with checking the chamber is that my NRA-certified instructor gave me a protocol for safety back when I was in grade school and modeled it every time we went shooting. It is a force of habit. Moreover, there have four times in 40 years when I was surprised by the contents of the chamber -- three times it has been empty when I was certain a round was chambered, and one shocking day when a round was chambered and I was certain it was empty. But each time when what I thought was certain was in fact, wrong, I had followed the safety protocol and there were no casualties except for my shock at the realization that I did not actually know the status of all of my firearms.Great, we completely agree on something.
I thought about that, but (1) having to chamber a round slows you down and the sound of chambering may undermine the element of surprise (your only advantage) in the case of having to confront a bad guy; and (2) a good safety protocol demands that you never ASSUME the chamber is clear unless you clear it.
Then you don't carry a firearm. You carry an expensive and mostly useless club.I carry and I do not chamber a round.
over 40 years ago I learned a scary lesson.The reason I am obsessed with checking the chamber is that my NRA-certified instructor gave me a protocol for safety back when I was in grade school and modeled it every time we went shooting. It is a force of habit. Moreover, there have four times in 40 years when I was surprised by the contents of the chamber -- three times it has been empty when I was certain a round was chambered, and one shocking day when a round was chambered and I was certain it was empty. But each time when what I thought was certain was in fact, wrong, I had followed the safety protocol and there were not casualties except for my shock at the realization that I did not actually know the status of all of my firearms.
It is really easy to get lazy and have an accident. Most of my friends who do not have a rigid protocol have accidentally fired off a round.over 40 years ago I learned a scary lesson.
One day I blasted a hole in my closet wall with my Mossberg 12 gauge which did not have a chambered shell. Right.
No one was hurt except my wounded ego for (me a veteran) being so stupid in weapon handling. Never happened again.
It is really easy to get lazy and have an accident. Most of my friends who do not have a rigid protocol have accidentally fired off a round.
A friend of mine lost his life in 2016 by his own hand with an AR-15 style rifle -- either he was not being safe (I had witnessed that behavior before) or he decided to commit suicide in a way that looked like an accident. There were no witnesses and his wife found his body by a fence with much of his skull missing. In any case, he left behind a traumatized wife, three children who were devastated, and a Christian overseas ministry which may or may not survive.