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Originally Posted by Samurai |
I have not been to NCC so I would not know much about how it goes on there regarding various trainings. How it happens elsewhere (where firing is given very high importance) is, first theory classes go on, then several classes with a rifle. First without live cartridges, getting one used to, to different positions and letting the arms and muscles get used to holding the rifle for prolonged periods. Then after several days of toying around actual firing commences. Then moving on to different calibres and rifles, if imbibed in the training. Once this is done if the training offers or if the trainee is entitled to, handgun training takes place in a similar fashion.
Handguns are much more susceptible to anything going wrong than compared to a rifle.
Nevertheless, the drill with the rifle, typically an INSAS 556 nowadays, an SLR 7.62 earlier or a .303 before that would be done. The drill is a pain for almost everyone. Though it is a supreme requirement for imbibing discipline. The drill with a heavy rifle is obviously painful. 556 is lighter than the SLRs though, making it slightly easier for the trainee.
The next pain is to get your rifle inspected by the
Kote (armoury) incharge. He has a keen eye for any aberrations and getting it passed ok by him is a slight challenge. The other pain is the sound of the fellows firing their rifles alongside you. Yet another pain is to assist your fellow with a fired case catcher, generally your cap, and making sure no fired case goes missing. Which eventually is missed by atleast one trainee and the whole 'gang' gets it. While standing right beside a firing rifle opens your ears like nothing else does. It is a big pain indeed.
Letting aside these 'pains' I have never seen anyone not atleast slightly happy after their firings. The happiness is owed not to pulling the trigger but to the overall activity involved from taking the position, holding the rifle correctly, firing at your own time after the whistle by the instructor and getting a good shot group and and affirmation from your instructor about the whole thing. A bad group sadly results in more
ragda (punishment).
Never heard anyone complaining of recoil by a 5.56 or 7.62. It is just a jerk if you hold the weapon properly and firmly. After each fire, your muzzle should come back to the original position so as not to mess up the subsequent aim and firing. This requires a lot of resolve and training.As the trainee matures, the 'pains' become a job to be got done and the actual firing becomes a joy for some while just a job for others. Depends on the trainee's personality. There is no way somebody could decide to not show up.
In an advanced training one is issued a weapon of choice and basic training is done away with from day one.
I have not been to a civilian training, so can't comment on that.
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Originally Posted by Samurai This applies to the second group from above. So it is not a contradiction. |
It is indeed a contradiction because either there is no dopamine release for anyone or if there is a dopamine release only for a select few then there was no point in mentioning the two things in the first place in the way they were; as dopamine release would depend on the type of person doing the activity (firing a gun in this case). Not all of the people from your 2nd group would be getting the dopamine release.
Not all people who have to regularly fire in a range or in the practical world like it. Some just want to get the job done like they get other jobs done. Some like firing too much (might be getting dopamine release), so much so that when they practice with their rifle but without any cartridge, just making
tak-tak sounds from their mouths to let their buddy know (who is holding a piece of paper target with a pencil to mark the point when he hears the
tak sound), they feel the same like when they fire a live rifle.
Consider taxi drivers who drive a lot, drive quite well, perfectly well, but don't at all like driving. Some dislike it so much that they loathe it. It is just a chore for them. Albeit, their dopamine release might be coming from the fact that they don't have to sit in an office all day reporting to someone else.
As I perceived, your posts seemed to connote firing or owning guns to a negative shade. I'd apologise if my perception is wrong or if it was not your intention.
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Originally Posted by Samurai Well, true. |
Thanks!
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Originally Posted by AROO7 As for the first part, Sir let me give you another perspective. In Uttar Pradesh (U.P.) firearm possession legal and illegal is a must-have (more as a deterrent and not as a means of flexing your clout) if you are involved in trades or a profession that involves a lot of rubbing shoulders with people in power or involves a lot of money. |
There is more on this that could be added. U.P., Bihar and M.P. have been places where youth from rural areas used to carry guns or other personal weapons, properly trained, since as back as the 16th century if not further back. Post 1857, the youth was properly disarmed in British India, physically and psychologically. Weapons/guns are a part of heritage as a reminiscence of the things that remained. That is how we see so many gun lovers from those areas even today. You can read more on this in the book "A Call to Honour" by Jaswant Singh among many other notable books. Some families still own prohibited bores in a legal manner due to inheritance of such old weapons that date back to British times or somewhat near the partition.
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Originally Posted by AROO7 As per your stating that guns are sold as commodities, I don't think that's true. I will quote for my place (Lucknow) of course you can spot gun shops but it is limited to a particular market and a particular area. |
I mentioned Meerut and Muzaffarnagar. One can see rice, cakes and electronics shops adjacent to gun shops. The business is not so good though these days due to receding demand. I'm pretty sure a person from Lucknow would not be even remotely as alarmed as my dear friend from Hyderabad whom I mentioned earlier about his emotion of seeing a gun shop for the first time in his life.
Lucknow and Meerut are on different planets though when it comes to arms. Had you mentioned Pratapgarh, I'd have understood better
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Originally Posted by AROO7 As for traveling, from South to U.P. part is concerned I request you to just have a trip to Punjab. Or save the trouble and look at the records and the number of firearms possessed by all the civilians in Punjab. I don't take pride in saying that but it has now become a mini Texas. As per third-party data civilians there possess 15 times the number of weapons compared to the police personnel, which by law mandates should not exceed 2.5 times. |
It will be great if you can spare time sharing some source on this data.
I read many years back that U.P. had 1/3rd share of licensed weapons in the country and it has stuck with me since. I'm pretty sure if this data is correct (which I'm sure is) would not have changed much in the last few years given the stringent laws and legal hassles of getting a new license for arms.
Also, if the illegal bearing of arms is as prevalent as described by you (that is what you are pointing at, right?), then the strict gun control in our country is simply not working. Bans don't work anyways, be it banning cigarettes, liquor, Android apps or curbing the internet etc.
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Originally Posted by AROO7 As for the second part, I can tell you sir NCC training is more than just firing the gun. |
No doubt about it. NCC churns fantastic leaders who excel in all walks of life afterwards. Be it in the armed forces or otherwise. NCC is the first step for most youths to experience first hand how it would be in the real world afterwards.
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Originally Posted by AROO7 As for the dopamine rush that comes from firing a gun, I believe firing range and air guns are the best places and means to experience that. |
Dopamine rush has been mentioned not by me but another member originally. And in several different threads, probably by the same member.
Firing ranges are best to hone skills, like there are tracks to hone driving/riding skills.
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Originally Posted by AROO7 Channel the energy in the right direction. |
Channeling the energy in the right direction is what firing a gun is about, incidentally. Fire a gun or read a book or clean the floor, learn and do it religiously and honestly. If I can put it properly, some read Chetan Bhagat or the likes and brag about it, we can't get the point and neither do the bragger.
One member has mentioned a coloured guy with a bandana pointing a rifle at him and then scaring them away. We see muscular guys with bandanas on the forehead and get scared of them stereotyping and insinuating them. I'm of the opinion the guy was as scared of the 2 approaching sedans, if not more. He might have a family inside, small children, and got scared of the slow and strange sedan movement around his property, that too a dead end. He pointed a rifle (empty maybe?) to deter any untoward incident which apparently might be normal in that area of USA. Better to try pre-empt than regret later. I might be completely wrong though.