When the so-called aggressor said... "Hey, you're that guy"... That's when the ER nurse should have kept right on walking and just kept looking over his shoulder. Avoid the whole scenario all together. If the aggressor still followed, light him up with the flashlight first. If the aggressor calls the cops, sez there's a guy pointing a gun at me, cops show up, good guy could have a problem. Happened to me LOL. Good stuff thanks for posting.
Theyve had top notch acting in this show from day one. 😂 I like how they all get it to character makes the training seem more like real life situations
But what doesn't make any sense is... If he's an ER nurse, he can't carry on the job so he leaves his gun in the car. So walking to his car after shift he's SOL.
@@lifeofmike556 The rules of his job that prohibit the carrying of concealed weapons for the purposes of lawful self-defense force him into unarmed helplessness, which is deadly dangerous, and therefore should be ignored. Does that help you understand better?
@@allemander "The rules of his job that prohibit the carrying of concealed weapons for the purposes of lawful self-defense" it's not job rules, it's the law. for example, florida has 394.458 which makes it a felony to CC in any hospital that provides mental health services, which = all ER's and hospitals by default. there may be a state that does not have a similar law but in most of the united states you are advising people to commit a felony which would end his career, put him behind bars, and cost him 10's of thousands of dollars. in florida and most states, it can be securely encased in his vehicle, but he's not going to be walking out of the ER or hospital CC without committing a felony.
in most states it's a felony for him to be CC walking out of his hospital job. the gun would still be in his vehicle when the bad guys approached. same thing if he worked at a school, airport, or somewhere else CC is illegal.
@ Yeah...no...not period... It may be illegal where you are, but not everywhere. Where I live it's only illegal in very specific medical locations, not all of them. Now, if it's against your policy, that's different. Policies are not law and cops cannot legally enforce policies.
Weapons arent allowed in hospitals I'm a security guard in one. How is he able to have a firearm in this situation? I feel like a gun shouldn't have been allowed in this particular training exercise
...why didn't you think of that before???? NEVER carry an accessory in your gun hand. Never carry your keys in your gun hand, never carry your bags in your gun hand, etc...
@@anthonyruiz7925 Oh, I don’t realize that. Thank you for the clarification. Later in the video, however, I believe I did hear the word “index” used, when the instructor was describing handling the firearm, so that could potentially become confusing terminology.
Mike is a GREAT addition to the First Person Defender team.
When the so-called aggressor said... "Hey, you're that guy"... That's when the ER nurse should have kept right on walking and just kept looking over his shoulder. Avoid the whole scenario all together. If the aggressor still followed, light him up with the flashlight first. If the aggressor calls the cops, sez there's a guy pointing a gun at me, cops show up, good guy could have a problem. Happened to me LOL. Good stuff thanks for posting.
The nurse could also, call security. Leave the garage and get security.
@@nikolailang4157 I should have probably worded it that way. LOL thanks for taking the time to respond.
Theyve had top notch acting in this show from day one. 😂 I like how they all get it to character makes the training seem more like real life situations
He did really well once he was able to utilize his light.
Great job.
What a great episode. I hope this show continues! Might need to market the show a bit more on social media.
First secnorio a pepper spray would have been perfect.
Cool seeing a male ER nurse. We need more men in the nursing field.
about 1/3 in the military are male
Remember situational awareness!
But what doesn't make any sense is... If he's an ER nurse, he can't carry on the job so he leaves his gun in the car. So walking to his car after shift he's SOL.
Dangerous rules should be ignored.
@@allemander what do you mean?
@@lifeofmike556
The rules of his job that prohibit the carrying of concealed weapons for the purposes of lawful self-defense force him into unarmed helplessness, which is deadly dangerous, and therefore should be ignored.
Does that help you understand better?
@@allemander I see your point. I understand now. I work at the airport.. I wish I could carry everyday.
@@allemander "The rules of his job that prohibit the carrying of concealed weapons for the purposes of lawful self-defense"
it's not job rules, it's the law. for example, florida has 394.458 which makes it a felony to CC in any hospital that provides mental health services, which = all ER's and hospitals by default. there may be a state that does not have a similar law but in most of the united states you are advising people to commit a felony which would end his career, put him behind bars, and cost him 10's of thousands of dollars. in florida and most states, it can be securely encased in his vehicle, but he's not going to be walking out of the ER or hospital CC without committing a felony.
I love to learn
in most states it's a felony for him to be CC walking out of his hospital job. the gun would still be in his vehicle when the bad guys approached. same thing if he worked at a school, airport, or somewhere else CC is illegal.
@ Yeah...no...not period... It may be illegal where you are, but not everywhere. Where I live it's only illegal in very specific medical locations, not all of them. Now, if it's against your policy, that's different. Policies are not law and cops cannot legally enforce policies.
Love the info
Yelling at a guy who is sitting on his own tailgate because he’s close to your car? Sounds like provoking
Weapons arent allowed in hospitals I'm a security guard in one. How is he able to have a firearm in this situation? I feel like a gun shouldn't have been allowed in this particular training exercise
Emergency rooms aren’t hospitals
@@jrtheduck2324 yes they are part of hospitals I work in one and enforce the no weapons policy and dont know of any that allow you to carry
Some empty handed skills would have helped in the first scenario. After watching this I will move my flashlight to my left side.
...why didn't you think of that before???? NEVER carry an accessory in your gun hand. Never carry your keys in your gun hand, never carry your bags in your gun hand, etc...
@@Sunrie I'm not sure what your point is about my comment. Could you explain?
Why does every one of these videos have the words “End ex, End ex…” on the screen??
Shouldn’t it be “Index!”?
It is short for end exercise
@@anthonyruiz7925
Oh, I don’t realize that.
Thank you for the clarification.
Later in the video, however, I believe I did hear the word “index” used, when the instructor was describing handling the firearm, so that could potentially become confusing terminology.
Wish I can get a gun
What’s stopping ya?
@@allemander laws. It's not that easy.
@@averagebloke4474
So, you rely on total strangers to decide whether you get to defend your life?
That’s not smart.
@@allemander so your saying I should get one illegally? I cant get one legally
What state you live in or country?
👍🏻👍🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸☕️☕️