Normal Dude
Space Shuttle Door Gunner
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2007
- Messages
- 3,966
I'm telling you why they implemented it, and I'm telling you how effective it was.
I haven't seen any evidence to convince me of such. "Buy Grossman's book and read it " isn't very convincing to me.
I've found it to be quite similar.
No. They. Aren't. I'm honestly baffled that you can make this claim with a straight face.
You've never shot on a non-static range, on a reactive range, with silhouette targets, with pop-up targets, anything like that?
I think you misunderstand me. Having to hit moving targets, and pop-up targets and the like is all part of building good marksmanship and combat skills. In real life the targets don't resemble a stationary range target that just sits there and let you shoot it, so solely learning to shoot at stationary range targets is not very good preparation.
I have yet to see any convincing evidence here that the moving silhouette targets that pop down when you shoot them were expressly introduced for the purpose of desensitizing people to kill. I find the idea silly because there are plenty of far better ways to do it, ones I've already pointed out. Even if they were, then it didn't work well and they kept the training tools around because they are good training tools for combat skills.
As far as the pop-up targets. The pop-up targets we usually used were large squares, circles, triangles, and Xs (as in, not very human-like at all). You were told that some of these shapes were "friendly" and some weren't, and etc. You had to make a snap decision whether to shoot or not, because on the battlefield that is an important skill. That is training to build marksmanship and combat skills, not some sneaky way to desensitize us.
That's another issue altogether.
The point I'm trying to get across is that this is how they actually get people ready to kill, and it is not via silhouette targets. Whatever operant conditioning effect that has is very small compared to the above.
Well it's possible they have, although I can find a plethora of stuff online that seems to clearly indicate they haven't, and I know for a fact our own military hasn't.
I'm not sure what this is in reference to.
You say that all of your rifle range work was entirely focused on accuracy. It certainly might have seemed that way. The army might even want you to think that's what happening. But that doesn't mean it's true.
Doesn't mean it isn't true either, and I see nothing to convince me of it. Also, there is absolutely no reason to HIDE the desire to train people to kill. Anyone signing up for the infantry knows that that is what their job is. They talk about it all the time, and how you need to kill the enemy, etc. This isn't something they need to sneaky about. They are verbally encouraging it all the time. That, coming from an authority figure, is way more compelling than a silhouette target.