Living with your choices.
Monday, February 16, 2009 Filed in:
General gun
stuff, Personal
opinions
One-liners, sound bites, and witty retorts are often used to
convince others to unthinkingly follow a certain path or belief.
When the subject matter is of little import, they are simply
amusing. When subjects turn more serious, they impede the flow of
vital information necessary to make good decisions.
Such is the latest, a hearty "guns break!" when faced with evidence
that one's choice in safety/rescue equipment might not have been
ideal. Yes, guns are mechanical contrivances and do suffer
failures; it is important, though, to understand the nature of
failure before making such proclamations.
Any mechanical device - be it a gun or an automobile - is subject
to failure from several causes:
- design flaw
- inferior materials
- construction irregularities
- improper maintenance
- suitability mismatch
Of these, only the last two are within our control - the others are
beyond our control. That doesn't mean we're at the mercy of the
fates, however; the end result can still be affected by the choices
that we make.
In order to avoid failure, one would choose a perfect design, made
with the best possible materials and showing the highest
workmanship. Of course, that can only happen in La-La Land (or the
internet!)
In the real world we have to make compromises at all of those
points, and it is necessary that we understand those compromises
going in. Nothing's perfect, that's a fact. From 'imperfect' to
'near perfect', though, is a continuum: we have bad choices, better
choices, and - if we're lucky - superb choices.
Simply put, there will always be better choices than others for any
given criteria. For instance, let's say that you were looking for a
car to get you reliably back and forth to work - day in, day out,
with as little down time as is possible. You might succumb to
glitzy marketing and pick a Land Rover or a BMW, or perhaps
something more pedestrian like a Toyota or a Honda.
Were you to look at reliability rankings for those brands over at
Consumer Reports, you'd find the Rover and the Beemer were the
least reliable over a large sample, while the Toyota and Honda are
rated as the most reliable. (One example from each may be at the
far end of the bell curve, but the probability of getting that one
is not with you. A sample of one is just that: one.)
Of course, there are other aspects to the choice: comfort,
amenities, performance, and (admit it) status which also might
figure into the decision. Understand, though, that those cannot be
transmuted to the primary criteria: reliability.
In this example, were you to pick one of the first two brands, the
likelihood of a failure leaving you stuck on the side of the road
increases dramatically. You might be able to fool yourself, but the
data says that the Euro-rides will suffer more frequent failures
than their Asian counterparts. That is a fact you just can't
sound-bite your way around.
If your co-workers happen to point out that your fashionable wagon
breaks down more often than their less ostentatious wheels, how
intelligent would it be for you to yell "cars break!" at them? Yes,
they know cars break, which is why they chose examples which break
less often. Getting mad at them won't make your car's repair record
any better.
The same is true for firearms and their attendant equipment. Like
it or not, there are products which, over time, have proven to fail
less often than others. If reliability and/or longevity is your
primary concern in a gun-related purchase, you should understand
that there is in fact a range from most to least, and make your
choice accordingly.
Pretending that there is no difference between the alternatives
because they all fail at some point is ignoring reality. As someone
once told me: you either acknowledge reality and use it to your
advantage, or it will automatically work against you.
Georges Rahbani, 'The Best Rifle
Instructor You've Never Heard Of', has a great way of putting
this in perspective: if you're buying a gun for fun (plinking,
target shooting, hunting, competition, etc.), you can be far less
demanding about reliability/longevity. A failure in those
applications is of minor consequence, and thus you have leeway to
factor other criteria into your decision.
If, however, your firearm is a serious tool upon which your life
may depend, you need a relentlessly critical attitude toward your
choice. Don't make it on the basis of one-liners heard at the
gunshop.
-=[ Grant ]=-