GUN SAFETY 101 |
April 04, 2011
Name: Scott
Stationed in: Afghanistan
Milblog: The Sand Docs
The week has been notable for a rash of accidental, self-inflicted gunshot wounds by ANA troops. Three incidents in the past week, to feet, legs, and even the abdomen. Invariably they were just cleaning their weapon when it went off. We have been trying to envision how one holds the weapon to accidentally shoot oneself in the stomach while cleaning it. Let the imagination run wild.
Over the past few months we seem to have a gun accident about every other week. We have seen the double shot, which passed through the arm and then the mandible with the round coming to rest in the mouth, and the buddy shot, as in "Whoops, sorry about that buddy." Then there was the chemistry experiment. This involved throwing some M-16 rounds into a fire, no doubt in a quest for the Nobel Prize in chemistry. The chemist only suffered a leg shot rather than death, dashing our hopes for the Darwin Award.
One of the theories that has been postulated to explain this rash of accidents, is that the Taliban have employed a secret plot. Namely, pose a threat, ensure that the other side arms themselves, and sit back while they slowly knock themselves out. At our current rate, this would seem to be a viable strategy.
Normally the last thing you would ask of a medical team is advice on weapons handling. It would be boring stuff like lock it up and keep it out of reach of young children. (We have no comment on the question of whether some of the personnel issued weapons here constitute young children.) However, in light of the current streak, I'm interrupting the regularly scheduled blogging to offer the Forward Surgical Team's Gun Safety Tips as a public service announcement to anyone willing to listen. They are:
Rule 1 - DON'T SHOOT YOURSELF.
Rule 2 - DON'T SHOOT ANYONE ELSE.
We realize that Rule 2 is not completely feasible given the mission so it has been reworked for the combat theater.
Rule 2 (Modified) - UNLESS YOU ARE IN A FIREFIGHT WITH THE ENEMY, DON'T SHOOT ANYONE ELSE.
Rule 3 - DON'T THROW SPARE AMMUNITION IN A CAMPFIRE.
Following these three simple rules will keep you, your buddy, and inquisitive chemists safe from accidental gun harm. Good luck. Now back to the regular schedule.
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One of our junior officers demonstrates the empty chamber weapon cleaning technique.
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I heard many gun incidents in public places in the US and I feel worry about that. In fact, even me when I am in rage I might not control mind mind if I have a gun in hand. I am doubtful about your principles mate.
Posted by: gun safe | April 06, 2011 at 10:29 PM
I have to do this exercise for a course I'm taking and I found your post to be both humorous and educational. I shall pass your gun safety rules to as wide and audience as I can...
Posted by: Paqc Sandretto | April 08, 2011 at 07:56 AM
This is not a sensible rule, because guns used for hunting and defense purposes will be needed in a hurry whenever they are needed, and there is no time to be messing around loading your gun when you need it to save your life, or to take the game you're hunting. If you need your gun for defense from human or animal attackers and it's not loaded, it becomes a liability rather than a benefit, and your safety goes down the tubes.
Posted by: airsoft | May 16, 2011 at 12:36 AM
There are really helpful tips. Can I just add that guns should not be kept loaded to make it safer.
Posted by: Tucson Accident | September 07, 2011 at 03:54 PM