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Denied access #1 - Focused Entry course.

  Рет қаралды 30,567

Project Gecko

Project Gecko

10 жыл бұрын

In this video,you can see how 'Denied access' & 'Self extract' are
not only terms, but a reality.
This team members are inorganic. that means they were put together for the first
time,making everything a higher pressure and more chaotic.
Please avoid stupid statements as you were not there.

Пікірлер: 7
@justsomeguy3931
@justsomeguy3931 5 жыл бұрын
I like how high your standards are. Most people would consider this pretty professionally done.
@Tim14215
@Tim14215 8 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or does it seem like the #2 man is flagging the rest of the stack as he extracts the downed operator?
@ProjectGecko
@ProjectGecko 8 жыл бұрын
+Timothy Yang no, at least intentionally. he was exposed to an hard corner and tried to remain relevant, but well when you carry someone...
@3nertia
@3nertia 7 жыл бұрын
This is why trigger discipline is *so* important. In a dynamic situation, people are gonna get flagged ...
@justsomeguy3931
@justsomeguy3931 5 жыл бұрын
From "Fighting with the AK: Too Simple to be Tactical" by Gabriel Suarez of Suarez International. kzbin.info/www/bejne/npuriox6iLGfpKc "All right guys, I'm going to talk about gun safety for a minute here. Listen, safety is important, but it's not the most important thing. You can make yourself so safe that you're not combat efficient whatsoever. If you want to be totally safe any problem with firearms, you know what? Sell your guns, take up golf, all right? We have some guidelines that we use to make as sure as we can that we're not going to have any mishaps in training. I've read the Bible through at least a half a dozen times and there's nothing in there about gun safety, all right? So none of this stuff is written in stone, it's the work of man and open to revision and interpretation as needed. Often it's said 'All guns are always loaded.' Well, if I take this rifle, and I take this magazine out, and I verify the magazine is unloaded, and I run the bolt several times, dry press it, run the bolt again, dry press it, open the action, I show my students, I show the camera man, I show you, I look myself, I close the action and press the trigger. If you tell me this gun is loaded you're insulting my intelligence and your own! All right? So rule #1 for us is 'Treat all guns as if they are loaded, unless you have checked and two other independent people have checked and have verified that it's empty.' Now, why do we do that? Well, here in the US we're blessed with red guns and blue guns and purple guns and all kinds of rubber and plastic facsimiles of guns when we're doing CQB training or we're doing force on force, or when we're doing these non-range events. You go down to South America, there ain't no blue guns down there! You go down to Africa or some of those places? Sorry. So you either not do that type of training, or you do what we do here. Which is, we verify the condition, two other people verify it, and you carry on. All right? Simple as that. Rule #2. They'll tell you, 'don't let the muzzle cover anything you're not willing to destroy.' Well, you know, number one, that's impossible to do, all right? Any time you're carrying a rifle with you - it's pointing somewhere. Somewhere over there, there might be an airplane flying or something. So, you know, the idea of never letting your muzzle cover anything you're not willing to destroy is impossible to do. In rifle class we carry these things on slings all day long. Sometimes it might cover your foot, it might cover your knee. You know, the rifle is on safe when it's on sling, you're being careful, nothing's going to happen. This is the way rifles are used in combat environments, all right? What we say instead is, 'Don't be careless with your gun muzzle.' Well, somebody might ask, 'What's that mean? What's careless?' Well, careless is like pornography; hard to describe, but you know it when you see it! All right? Waving your rifle around, gesturing with it, 'Hey, go get me a glass of water or something.' That's being careless. Be conscientious with where your muzzle is pointing, everything will work out just fine. All right? Rule # 3, they say, 'Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target.' Very nice, it's got a rhythm to it, you could probably sing it to a guitar solo. Impossible to do. Because, if I'm shooting from close contact position, are my sights on the target? I have no bloody idea, I'm looking at the bad guy! All right? So what we say is keep your finger off the trigger until you've made a conscious decision to shoot. Very simple to remember. Which brings us to the issue of the safety, the safety lever itself. All right, there's three safeties, we have a three tier safety system. Number one your brain housing group. You're paying attention to what's going on and your brain is deciding I'm going to shoot that man or I'm not going to shoot that man. When somebody is trying to kill you, you're going to be paying attention. When you're training on the range, you should be paying attention. Safety number one is right here points to brain safety number two is your trigger finger. It is either on the trigger because you're intending to shoot, or it's at the natural limit of extension. This is as straight as it will go, it doesn't get any straighter than this. One of either two positions, here or here. Simple to remember, just like operating the AK, all right? And the last one is the mechanical safety, you use this when you're going to relinquish control of the rifle to the sling or the pistol to the holster as it were. You don't go through a tactical environment monkeying with the safety like this. The only place I've seen that done is here in the United States, no other place on earth do people mess around with the safety. So use it when you need to, remove it when you need to, and carry on. All right? Last thing, they say, 'Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.' Always a good idea! The implication is that if you have a questionable background that you're not going to shoot. Don't think like that! All right? If there's a bad guy in front of me, and he is going to kill me, and there is no doubt in my mind that he's going to kill me unless I shoot him, and there's other people in the background and stuff like that; you know, I'm going to do my best to not shoot them, but they should get outa the way! Because I'm not going to not shoot because of a possibility of a possible risk. That would be unreasonable to ask anybody to do that! So, those are the safety rules we operate by. They're reasonable, they work well in fighting as well as on the range, and I suggest you adopt them as well."
@Adri-242
@Adri-242 Жыл бұрын
Plz what is "bridge method" ??
@truwebz3185
@truwebz3185 8 жыл бұрын
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