• SUBSCRIBE
Athlon Outdoors Supersite
Tactical Life Website
Ballistic Website
Personal Defense World Website
Skillsetmag Website
  • Guns
    • Handguns
      • Semi-Automatic Handguns
      • Revolvers
    • AR Pistols
    • AR Rifles
    • Rifles
      • Semi-Automatic Rifles
      • Lever Action
      • Bolt Action
    • Shotguns
    • Airguns
    • Custom Guns
      • Handgun Build
      • Rifle Build
      • Shotgun Build
    • Specialty Guns
  • Parts
    • Handgun Parts
    • Rifle Parts
  • Accessories
    • Optics & Sights
    • Lasers & Lights
    • Suppressors
    • Holsters
    • Slings
    • Shooting Rests
    • Targets
    • Maintenance & Tools
  • Ammo
    • Handgun Ammo
      • 9mm
      • 10mm
    • Rifle Ammo
      • .223
    • Shotgun Ammo
      • 12 Gauge
    • Rimfire Ammo
    • Reloading
  • Gear
    • Apparel
    • Ears & Eyes
      • Ears
      • Eyes
        • Thermal Vision
        • Night Vision
    • Storage
    • Tactical Gear
      • Body Armor
    • Knives
      • Fixed Blade
      • Folding Knives
      • Tactical Knives
    • Less Lethal
    • Flashlights
    • Electronics
  • Lifestyle
    • Concealed Carry
    • Personal Defense
      • Self-Defense
      • Hand to Hand Combat
    • Home Defense
    • Sport Shooting
      • Hunting
      • Competition Shooting
    • Precision Shooting/Long Range Shooting
    • Training
      • Shooting 101
    • Survival
      • First Aid
    • Tactical & LE
    • Pop Culture
      • People
      • Rides
      • History
      • Military Lifestyle
  • News
    • New Products & Industry News
    • Gun Facts & Laws
    • Police News
    • Military News
    • Politics
  • VIDEOS
No Result
View All Result
Athlon Outdoors
  • Guns
    • Handguns
      • Semi-Automatic Handguns
      • Revolvers
    • AR Pistols
    • AR Rifles
    • Rifles
      • Semi-Automatic Rifles
      • Lever Action
      • Bolt Action
    • Shotguns
    • Airguns
    • Custom Guns
      • Handgun Build
      • Rifle Build
      • Shotgun Build
    • Specialty Guns
  • Parts
    • Handgun Parts
    • Rifle Parts
  • Accessories
    • Optics & Sights
    • Lasers & Lights
    • Suppressors
    • Holsters
    • Slings
    • Shooting Rests
    • Targets
    • Maintenance & Tools
  • Ammo
    • Handgun Ammo
      • 9mm
      • 10mm
    • Rifle Ammo
      • .223
    • Shotgun Ammo
      • 12 Gauge
    • Rimfire Ammo
    • Reloading
  • Gear
    • Apparel
    • Ears & Eyes
      • Ears
      • Eyes
        • Thermal Vision
        • Night Vision
    • Storage
    • Tactical Gear
      • Body Armor
    • Knives
      • Fixed Blade
      • Folding Knives
      • Tactical Knives
    • Less Lethal
    • Flashlights
    • Electronics
  • Lifestyle
    • Concealed Carry
    • Personal Defense
      • Self-Defense
      • Hand to Hand Combat
    • Home Defense
    • Sport Shooting
      • Hunting
      • Competition Shooting
    • Precision Shooting/Long Range Shooting
    • Training
      • Shooting 101
    • Survival
      • First Aid
    • Tactical & LE
    • Pop Culture
      • People
      • Rides
      • History
      • Military Lifestyle
  • News
    • New Products & Industry News
    • Gun Facts & Laws
    • Police News
    • Military News
    • Politics
  • VIDEOS
No Result
View All Result
Athlon Outdoors Super Site
No Result
View All Result
  • TL
  • PDW
  • BM
  • Skillset
 
ENTER TO WIN: FREE GUN FRIDAY ft. Browning, Caldwell & Black Hills!

Tactical Training: Why We Need to Weed Out Weak Firearm Instructors

ShareTweetPin
Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach training

"Although shades of gray exist in every situation, it's the job of instructors to clarify uncertainty."

Aaron BarrugabyAaron Barruga
February 5, 2018
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach training
“Although shades of gray exist in every situation, it’s the job of instructors to clarify uncertainty.”
Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach lead
” If we fail to take a stance, we can confuse good luck with good tactics and jump to haphazard conclusions with incomplete data. We must always ask: What is the evidence? How good is the evidence? Are there real-world examples that disprove the evidence?’
Firearm Instructors Aaron Barruga Guerrilla Approach course
“Well-rounded leaders ask these questions and do their best to disprove unvetted concepts. This does not always need to be a lengthy task, but it requires scholarship beyond browsing 15-second Instagram videos.”

I’m a millennial and have grown up under the societal umbrella of participation medals. Since I was a child, my generation was esteemed for ensuring that everyone was included in everything, regardless of ability. Don’t get me wrong. I believe in social acceptance and that you shouldn’t exercise prejudice because someone comes from a different cultural background. But I also believe in holding standards.

Many adult millennials have never had standards forced on them. Well, I mean, there were standardized tests in school—which only measured an ability to regurgitate, not learn—and then there were the forced social standards, which held that all opinions are equal, no matter how radical or hollow. I get it. You want children to feel confident putting themselves out there and trying. But even more important than encouraging confidence is teaching children how to deal with failure.

Learning to Lose

Too often with millennials, when adults don’t get what they want, they look outward instead of inward. We blame institutions for their rigidity or the flaws of the “sell-outs” in those organizations. We reframe arguments and cherry-pick information so “facts” conform to our view of the world, regardless of objectivity. That lets us protect the identity of our youth, in which we were told we could have anything, provided we tried. Well, it turns out you can’t have something just because you want it. In fact, the free markets of adulthood are far less forgiving. There are hierarchies of knowledge, and when you’re at the bottom, it’s best to just keep your mouth shut and learn.

RELATED STORY

Falkor CSS: Falkor’s New Bolt-Action Rifle & Chassis Are Phenomenal

Joining the military after 9/11 restructured my sense of achievement. I was allowed to try many things but was also allowed to fail. Failing in the military is particularly different than failing in the private sector. You’re not coddled by superiors who tiptoe around what they really want to say because of fear of a lawsuit. Instead, you get a seasoned non-commissioned officer in your face “constructively criticizing” your performance.

Adult millennials would benefit from the experience of an Army-style ass-chewing. Unable to talk your way out or redirect blame, these one-sided dialogues teach recruits to immediately own mistakes and focus on the next mission. This ultimately leads to character development that encourages decisiveness and discourages weaseling out of responsibility.

One of the most important ass-chewings I received in the military was at the Robin Sage exercise. During the final phase of tactical training in the “Q” Course, I experienced a case of senioritis that affected my performance. As the patrol leader for a routine ambush mission, I apathetically presented an operations order to my evaluating cadre. Because the ambush is the baseline for teaching military planning and tactics, Green Beret candidates are drilled to the point of exhaustion (and boredom) in the science of mission preparation and execution via ambushes. This familiarity led to a presentation in which I tried to demonstrate how confident I was by delivering a halfhearted mission briefing—classic “too-cool-for-school” behavior.

Critical to these briefings is the execution portion in which every element confirms its specific tasks with adjacent friendlies and the broader scheme of the operation. This requires precise detail so there’s no confusion, but it’s unavoidably dry and boring in delivery. I thought I could speed through this section by using phrases such as “situation-dependent” or “context will dictate.” The evaluating cadre let me get about halfway through the presentation before he cut me off.

Releasing a sigh, he looked me straight in the eyes and said, “Stop. Everything in life is situation-dependent. Stop speaking in generalities like some [expletive] chapter from Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. Everything about a combat operation is uncertain. That’s why we attempt to be as precise as possible during planning.” (This was an Army ass-chewing, so there were, of course, a lot more expletives.) I was kicked out of my own mission briefing. I was left to wonder if I had just failed the final phase of Special Forces training.

A few months later, I was on an Operational Detachment Alpha learning the Special Forces brand of close-quarters battle. During breaks, the other new guys and I would debate the validity of the various CQB techniques being taught. This was ridiculous. The entire time, we misused phrases like “situation-dependent” and “shooter’s preference.” We thought we were adding context to our arguments. Instead, we were failing to clarify our viewpoints.

In reality, we didn’t need to have opinions. We needed to keep our mouths shut and learn. Unlike my use of vagueness at Robin Sage to demonstrate confidence, in the shoothouse, we failed to clarify our statements because we couldn’t substantiate our opinions with any real evidence or experience. This type of behavior is best described as the contextual fallacy.

There is nothing wrong with adding context by declaring shooter’s preference and situation-dependent. For some instructors, it’s a passive habit developed through public speaking. However, there’s a difference between framing a concept through contextual statements versus hijacking these phrases so we can weasel out of critical thinking. Although shades of gray exist in every situation, it’s the job of instructors to clarify uncertainty. After all, you’re paying them in part to do so. When they use the contextual fallacy, instructors typically get a pass because their noncommittal stance is perceived as a Zen-like state of mind. This appeal to authority fools amateurs, inhibits the growth of the professionals and shifts the norms of the tactical community toward accepting mediocrity.

In fairness, it’s exhausting to approach all new information through a lens of robust analysis. But if that information is gathered for the purpose of being used in tactical engagements in which our lives or the lives of others will be put in danger, shouldn’t that signal a decrease in our willingness to dwell in uncertainty?

The contextual fallacy also fools us when it’s used to critique procedural rigidity and behavior that discourages adaptability. Yes, we must remain vulnerable to new concepts, but that shouldn’t come at the expense of declaring what we know to be more true than false. Allowing for vagueness by proclaiming context affords lukewarm arguments a safety net that deteriorates one of our most critical skills as tactical leaders: decisiveness.

Making Hard Calls

Decisiveness does not imply a willingness to reject new information. Instead, it establishes a foundation that lets us analyze new details. If we fail to take a stance, we can confuse good luck with good tactics and jump to haphazard conclusions with incomplete data. We must always ask: What is the evidence? How good is the evidence? Are there real-world examples that disprove the evidence?

RELATED STORY

Nerf Guns Now Feature Sniper Rifles, SMGs, Bipods, Scopes, & More

Well-rounded leaders ask these questions and do their best to disprove unvetted concepts. This does not always need to be a lengthy task. However, it requires scholarship beyond browsing 15-second Instagram videos. Absent of this approach, we simply collect facts that can be contradictory, confusing and catastrophic when used in real tactical engagements.

During battle, leaders must immediately recognize patterns during ambiguous and exigent circumstances. Acting with too little information can be dangerous (such as getting baited into a larger attack), but delaying action when recognizable patterns have occurred is just as dangerous. Organizations that permit the contextual fallacy as an acceptable line of thinking will inevitably produce people incapable of assuming leadership during time-sensitive operations or crisis management.

In those situations, you will rarely possess the desired amount of information and resources. However, decisions still must be made and acted upon. That indicates the importance of promoting the development of decisiveness as a part of tactical learning. We do not create leaders capable of adapting to harsh environments by shortchanging them in training that discourages critical thinking.

But what kind of organization would willingly permit the contextual fallacy? Most typically don’t, and the contextual fallacy is an undiagnosed cancer that goes unobserved until an agency participates in large-scale training exercises, such as one involving an active shooter. This is best displayed when a team spends 15 minutes running through a scenario and then 50 minutes arguing about how they should have attacked the problem.

Although participants should engage in discourse, all opinions are not equal, and hierarchies of knowledge must be enforced. Ignoring these truths ultimately fails to develop new recruits into potential leaders. Worse, if left unchecked in an organization’s culture, few people will be capable of differentiating between ideas that sound good versus ideas that are actually actionable.

In commercial tactical training, the contextual fallacy is so seductive because it allows underqualified instructors to bargain way beyond their means and level of experience. Even better, the moment firm opposition arises, they can retreat back into obscurity without any real consequences.

This behavior is the antithesis of attaining knowledge because it doesn’t require any discipline. More importantly, it doesn’t allow for failure. A person simply observes what others are doing, stands on their shoulders to accomplish something and then, if he fails, doesn’t take any responsibility for it. We must recognize that context frames a situation. However, the contextual fallacy should not be used to bail out weak ideas and cherry-picked information.

For more, please visit GuerrillaApproach.com.

This article is from the summer 2017 issue of Ballistic Magazine. To subscribe, please visit OutdoorGroupStore.com.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

MOST POPULAR

13 Best Snub-Nose Revolvers for Concealed Carry [2023]

13 Best Snub-Nose Revolvers for Concealed Carry [2023]

Taurus Home Defender revolver in .410.

KA-BOOM: Here Comes the Taurus Judge Home Defender!

300 Blackout vs 308, rifles, ammunition

300 Blackout vs 308 Win: Which Round Reigns Supreme in AR-15s?

bond arms, bond arms derringer, bond arms derringers, Bond Arms snake slayer

10 of the Best Backcountry Pocket Pistols for Hunting, Self-Defense

TRENDING

Colt CSR-1516 5.56mm Rifle

Colt CSR-1516 5.56mm Rifle | Gun Preview

Who doesn't love a great bank heist movie?

The Top 5 Greatest Heist Movies Based On Actual Events

Victor Avila made a first-shot hit with a Glock 23 at more than 2,000 yards.

Former ICE Agent Victor Avila Makes Record 2,010-Yard Pistol Shot

Oxnard Police

VIDEO: Oxnard Police Shoots ‘Disturbed’ Girl Who Pulls Huge Knife

BROWSE BY BRAND

Skillset-Logo_yellow-153x47png
Ballistic_LOGO-217x47
CH-Logo_blue-153x47
T-L-SS-stack life-47x140
PDW_CCH_LOGO-300x101
PDW-2022-Sidebyside-logo 160x30-blk
GOW LOGO x101
AF_LOGO-184x47

SPOTLIGHT

Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle in American Sniper.

Reel Shooters: The Best Movie Snipers & a Few of the Worst

Fans of action and war movies would be forgiven for thinking that trained snipers carry their rifles disassembled in an...

RELATED POSTS

Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle in American Sniper.

Reel Shooters: The Best Movie Snipers & a Few of the Worst

...

The Tisas Model 1911A1 Aviator

Tisas 1911A1 Aviator: Bringing Back the ‘Feel’ of the Original

...

Davidson's Ruger American Predator

Ready to Pounce: Ruger American Predator From Davidson’s

...

Load More

TRENDING

croatia php mv pistol springfield xd

How the Croatian PHP MV Eventually Led to the Springfield XD

At the beginning of 1990, the Yugoslav People’s Army (YPA) was the military of the former Socialist Federal Republic of...

Taurus Home Defender revolver in .410.

KA-BOOM: Here Comes the Taurus Judge Home Defender!

The home defense revolver just got swole. The new Taurus Judge Home Defender brings a beefed up new version...

13 Best Snub-Nose Revolvers for Concealed Carry [2023]

13 Best Snub-Nose Revolvers for Concealed Carry [2023]

Compact, ultra-reliable and ever-ready for close-range self-defense!

10 .22 Pocket Pistols for Last-Ditch Self-Defense.

Best .22 Pistols for Self-Defense [2023]

When it comes to concealed carry, the clear defensive options are typically .380 ACP, 9mm, .45 ACP, 10mm, etc. However,...

MOST POPULAR

The Mossberg MC2sc semi-auto pistol.

12 Best Micro-Compact Handguns for Concealed Carry [2022]

A thick veil of fog stood forever in front of me as I cruised down the highway at 6:30 in...

Police Sidearms, police duty pistols, Handguns, America's Largest Police Departments 2018

Police Sidearms: Handguns of America’s 10 Largest Departments

Law enforcement in the United States is in constant evolution and that includes various police sidearms. These days, law enforcement...

U.S. Secret Service adopts Glock G47

FIRST LOOK: Glock Just Very Quietly Unveiled the New Glock 47 Pistol

Tuesday afternoon we broke news that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection selected three Glock 9mm pistols as its new standard...

All the best new handguns seen at SHOT Show 2023.

21 Best New Handguns [2023]

The NSSF SHOT Show is the premier event to get your hands on new gear. It gives us a first...

VIDEO SERIES: AT THE READY | SEASON 2

MORE VIDEOS

The Streamlight SpeedLocker.

The Streamlight SpeedLocker Portable Locking Storage Container

The Swampfox Warhorse 1-6x FFP LPVO.

The Swampfox Warhorse 1-6x FFP LPVO Riflescope

HANDGUNS

The SK Customs Morelos.

SK Customs Morelos 1911 Heralds Generalissimo Jose Morelos

The Tisas Model 1911A1 Aviator

Tisas 1911A1 Aviator: Bringing Back the ‘Feel’ of the Original

The Sig Sauer P226 Zev.

The Sig Sauer P226 Zev Reviewed: Is It the Best P226 Ever?

The Girsan High Power Negotiator.

The Girsan Negotiator Series Gets a High Power Addition in 9mm

Taurus Home Defender revolver in .410.

KA-BOOM: Here Comes the Taurus Judge Home Defender!

holster, holsters, full-size pistol, full-size handgun, handgun, handguns, pistol, pistols

Practical Concealed Carry: How to Carry A Full-Size Pistol

RIFLES - click to see all

The limited edition RISE Armament Topo Watchman rifle.

UPDATED: New RISE Armament Topo Watchman Limited-Edition

The MDC “Trench Art” Classic AK-47 Rifle.

MDC “Trench Art” Classic AK-47 is Back with Limited Availability

Davidson's Ruger American Predator

Ready to Pounce: Ruger American Predator From Davidson’s

The Exclusive HKMR762A1 from Davidson's.

Davidson’s HK MR762A1 in 7.62mm Brings Exclusive Battle Rifle

AMMO - click to see all

Ammo Storage, Survival Ammo, long term ammo storage, Prepper

Best Methods for Long-Term Ammo Storage

6 .410 Ammo Options for Home and Personal Defense.

.410 Ammo for Home Defense [2023]

.44 Magnum dirty harry

Your Guide to the .44 Magnum Cartridge

The Escort PS Youth 20-gauge shotgun.

The Escort PS Youth Shotgun is Now Available in .410 Bore

The 2022 Athlon Outdoors Rendezvous event.

Rendezvous Roundup: Guns & Gear at Athlon’s Signature Event

fbi ammo testing protocol

Understanding FBI Ammo Testing Standards

Magazines Available Now! Subscribe today for Home Delivery!
FREE NEWSLETTERS! Subscribe!
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • CORPORATE
  • ADVERTISE
  • EDIT DESK
No Result
View All Result
  • Guns
    • Handguns
      • Semi-Automatic Handguns
      • Revolvers
    • AR Pistols
    • AR Rifles
    • Rifles
      • Semi-Automatic Rifles
      • Lever Action
      • Bolt Action
    • Shotguns
    • Airguns
    • Custom Guns
      • Handgun Build
      • Rifle Build
      • Shotgun Build
    • Specialty Guns
  • Parts
    • Handgun Parts
    • Rifle Parts
  • Accessories
    • Optics & Sights
    • Lasers & Lights
    • Suppressors
    • Holsters
    • Slings
    • Shooting Rests
    • Targets
    • Maintenance & Tools
  • Ammo
    • Handgun Ammo
      • 9mm
      • 10mm
    • Rifle Ammo
      • .223
    • Shotgun Ammo
      • 12 Gauge
    • Rimfire Ammo
    • Reloading
  • Gear
    • Apparel
    • Ears & Eyes
      • Ears
      • Eyes
    • Storage
    • Tactical Gear
      • Body Armor
    • Knives
      • Fixed Blade
      • Folding Knives
      • Tactical Knives
    • Less Lethal
    • Flashlights
    • Electronics
  • Lifestyle
    • Concealed Carry
    • Personal Defense
      • Self-Defense
      • Hand to Hand Combat
    • Home Defense
    • Sport Shooting
      • Hunting
      • Competition Shooting
    • Precision Shooting/Long Range Shooting
    • Training
      • Shooting 101
    • Survival
      • First Aid
    • Tactical & LE
    • Pop Culture
      • People
      • Rides
      • History
      • Military Lifestyle
  • News
    • New Products & Industry News
    • Gun Facts & Laws
    • Police News
    • Military News
    • Politics
  • VIDEOS

© 2023 Athlon Outdoors - Premium Firearm product and industry news, reviews and magazines" .