Toni
Contributor
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2011
- Messages
- 20,954
- Basic Beliefs
- Peace on Earth, goodwill towards all
Right? I'm not talking video games, bro. My cousins were in Viet Nam. One trained as a sniper---in other words, as a marksman. FWIW, it did not do him much good as far as how he was mentally when he came home. Being a sniper in a video game is one thing. Knowing that you are shooting to kill someone, however much they need to be stopped, that's a whole different ball of wax. People train for that--SWAT teams. Maybe that's what I should have written, SWAT team, but in that small town, I have no idea how long it would take to get a SWAT team in place. A trained sniper, that would be much easier. Lots of people with guns in TX. Some of them are even really good shots.Yeah, in the video games, there are many fewer innocent bystanders where ricocheting bullets are flying through walls. In the real world, more bullets means even more risk of more dead.Yes--a professionally trained sharp shooter = sniper, who would have the best chance of stopping the gunman, rather than accidentally shooting more children or teachers.He was in the school activity shooting. Sniper? What?Or they were ordered to wait for other resources, such as someone with sniper training.
My cousin was trained as a sniper in Viet Nam.