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In this Defenders LIVE episode, Lee Weems and Tyler Tharp go head-to-head (with respect) on what training really matters and why nuance is important.
What you’ll walk away with:
* Why “good with a gun” is more than speed or groups
* Where USPSA/competition helps and where it can hurt
* The real gap between technical skill and real-world decision-making
* Optics reliability: what fails, what doesn’t, and why
Defenders LIVE is supported by you. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Tonight’s Defenders LIVE episode is a rare kind of conversation… two strong voices, one shared mission, and a whole lot of nuance. Returning guests Lee Weems (law enforcement trainer, use-of-force and decision-making instructor) and Tyler Tharp (competitive shooter, coach, and performance-driven instructor) unpack a debate that started online: the value—and limits—of shooting sports as training for real-world defensive and law enforcement environments.
They get honest about what “good with a gun” actually means, where competition builds real capability (and where it can build bad habits), why context matters as much as mechanics, and how you can train with both excellence and accountability. They also tackle pistol optics reliability with real-world numbers, plus the practical realities that keep most officers from getting the training they want—time, funding, and red tape. Most of all, this episode models something we need more of: disagreeing without disrespect, and sharpening each other without tearing each other down.
Thanks for reading Defenders LIVE! This post is public so feel free to share it.
By Lora Thorson, Defenders USAIn this Defenders LIVE episode, Lee Weems and Tyler Tharp go head-to-head (with respect) on what training really matters and why nuance is important.
What you’ll walk away with:
* Why “good with a gun” is more than speed or groups
* Where USPSA/competition helps and where it can hurt
* The real gap between technical skill and real-world decision-making
* Optics reliability: what fails, what doesn’t, and why
Defenders LIVE is supported by you. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Tonight’s Defenders LIVE episode is a rare kind of conversation… two strong voices, one shared mission, and a whole lot of nuance. Returning guests Lee Weems (law enforcement trainer, use-of-force and decision-making instructor) and Tyler Tharp (competitive shooter, coach, and performance-driven instructor) unpack a debate that started online: the value—and limits—of shooting sports as training for real-world defensive and law enforcement environments.
They get honest about what “good with a gun” actually means, where competition builds real capability (and where it can build bad habits), why context matters as much as mechanics, and how you can train with both excellence and accountability. They also tackle pistol optics reliability with real-world numbers, plus the practical realities that keep most officers from getting the training they want—time, funding, and red tape. Most of all, this episode models something we need more of: disagreeing without disrespect, and sharpening each other without tearing each other down.
Thanks for reading Defenders LIVE! This post is public so feel free to share it.

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