Good advice if you're ever attacked by a marauding ream of twenty pound bond paper.
You (or probably they) are confusing two separate issues: accuracy (or more correctly precision) and the effect of incoming fire on a human being.
If the desired result is one ragged hole in a piece of paper, they're right, slow down. If the desired result is to change someone's course of action, fast misses can be very effective at doing so. Their mistake is applying the desired result for the piece of paper to a bad guy. They're not the same, and the desired results aren't the same.
It's hard to concentrate on the front sight if the window you're looking through, the jamb and the Venetian blinds all explode in your face.
You (or probably they) are confusing two separate issues: accuracy (or more correctly precision) and the effect of incoming fire on a human being.
If the desired result is one ragged hole in a piece of paper, they're right, slow down. If the desired result is to change someone's course of action, fast misses can be very effective at doing so. Their mistake is applying the desired result for the piece of paper to a bad guy. They're not the same, and the desired results aren't the same.
It's hard to concentrate on the front sight if the window you're looking through, the jamb and the Venetian blinds all explode in your face.
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