ould it be fair to say that draw speed is less of a concern to those who:
1. Carry off the body?
2. Use deep concealment?
3. Don't keep one in the pipe?
4. Don't practice?
1- No, even a draw off body is a draw.. if that means dropping your backpack, unzipping and retrieving your gun, it is still a draw.. just took a long ass time...
2- No, see above... even deep concealment is a draw...
3- No, it just adds one more step to my previous post of racking the slide to chamber a round... that additional step further slows you down in the process of protecting yourself.
4- NO!!!!... one must practice to become proficient with their gun... Does that mean they must be a competition quality shooter? No, but a licensed driver isnt a professional racer either. Practice, at least in the basics is a must. Carrying a gun that one has never practiced with is a major ingredient in an recipe for disaster.
Lets look at this from a different perspective... You are working in the yard and get bit by a snake... this problem has happened and is now no longer part of the illustration..
So, you go to the doctor and say "I got bit by a rattle snake (you noted this upon the bite...)"
Would you prefer the doc take your word for it, give you the anti-venom for the rattle snake, dress your wounds, and treat you with antibiotics to prevent infection (IE the quick draw, aim, and shoot...).... OR.... disregard your statement that it was a rattle snake, send someone to your house to check the area for snakes, run tests as to which venom you were exposed to (all the time allowing your extremity to swell and become necrotic) THEN, draw blood samples, tissue samples, wound cultures, etc to treat you with an antibiotic for the infection that has now been produced by all the time they took by not listening in the first place? (IE, slow draw, aim, and shoot.)