Originally Posted By: j_mac
What I'm trying to say about a glock is that it has a single action trigger pull ALL THE TIME. If something accidentally gets to the trigger, the gun can be easily discharged.
The talk about the "Safe Action Trigger" and its 2 halves is nonsensical in my book. If something gets inside the trigger guard and touches the trigger, then it will trip BOTH halves just as easily.
We're talking about concealed carry. Were the gun is hidden in all sorts of places. Stuffing a Glock just anywhere is eventually gonna get you shot accidentally.
A glock is only suited to a combat situation in a dedicated hard-sided holster. My local police department like the majority in this country carry glocks. If they ever draw on me for any reason, I'm hitting the pavement face first. Because I don't want some itchy trigger fingered, excited, liberal putting my life between them and a light double action trigger pull.
By contrast, on my SIGs. I would feel confident twirling two of them loaded, cowboy style with their hammers down. And I would still be able to engage with them just as fast as the "cocked" glock. I'll stuff it in my beltline and know that it would be near impossible for something to stroke the LOOOOONG, HEAVY double action trigger and make it go off.
Oh, and I have a horrible personal accident story of a friend of mine who was depositing a bank bag one night. He stuffed his glock .40 into the front of his beltline. It went off "somehow" and the slug went down his femur, partially severing his femural artery. He nearly bled to death. Spent a long time in the hospital over that one. It happened before I knew him or I would have warned him.
Remember this thread is about concealed carry. I say glocks are especially dangerous for that purpose.
Okay, now you and I are partially on the same page. A Glock, IMO, is perfectly acceptable for concealed carry by SOMEONE WHO KNOWS HOW TO CARRY IT. I carried mine in a Serpa paddle holster. I practice at the range (generally) once a month. I know how a Glock functions and how to handle it properly. You are correct that a Glock is not the gun for stuffing in your pocket, or pants, or purse. It's not the gun for the "concerned citizens" who one day decide to take a CCW course and they've never handled a handgun in their lives. There are far better and safer choices for those folks.