Concealed Carry
You’ve decided to join the millions of concealed carry holders. Now you need to choose what to carry. Caliber is a huge decision in making your firearm decision. Your objective in carrying concealed is to stop an attack. You don’t care if they are killed or not, you just need them to stop what they are doing.
You’ve got a bunch of choices: S&W .500 Magnum .50 AE, .44 Mag, .41 Mag, .45 ACP, .357 Mag, .357 SIG, .38 Special, 9mm, .380 ACP, .22, .17, with variations of each of those. Many make no sense at all. Let’s get rid of the ones which make no sense for self-defense on both the really small side and the really big side.
The .500 S&W Magnum, .50 AE, .45-70 and other cartridges should be left to rifle or handgun hunting choices. They’re just too big for self-defense. Even if the gun manufacturers build smaller, concealable-sized guns in those calibers, the recoil alone will make follow-up shots difficult at best. Try to concentrate on fending off an attack while your teeth are rattling, ears ringing, retinas detaching, your beard, mustache, both in some cases, are on fire, your firearm has recoiled and hit you on the back of your shoulder or right in the nose. There are some pretty darn funny examples of this on YouTube.
The smaller calibers such as .17, .22, .25 and .32 are a lot more controllable, with little if any knockdown power. You’ve probably heard the first rule of gun fighting is “Have a Gun.” Subsection “A” reads: “Win as fast as you can.” Okay, I just made the subsection stuff up, but that’s what it should be. You want to stop the threat as quickly as possible and you need a round powerful enough to do just that, quickly and efficiently.
The .380 ACP is sometimes referred to as the 9mm Kurz, especially in European guns, and it’s about as small as you should get. There are as many opinions about the stopping power of the .380 as there are fleas on a junkyard dog, but it’s better than throwing rocks. (I used to think maybe it’s not much better than rocks.) However, the way the .380 ACP bullets are engineered today is a far cry from yesterday. Federal, Winchester, Remington and Hornady make some excellent personal defense choices in .380 ACP.
The greatest caliber I’d go with is .45 ACP. Usually guns made for it are a bit larger and less concealable than the 9mm and .380 choices, but with a little research and a good holster they’re readily hidden away.