as an instructor who has most likely said treat a gun as if it is loaded at all times etc etc thousands of times . one would think he would of dropped the mag and un-chambered the round in the barrel before tossing a gun to the ground . even if he was just trying to make a point you can do so safely it could of been a person that got hit instead of a parked car! but that must be the difference between a good instructor and a bad. a good one would do as they preach .. but that just my opinion.
In my eyes, this is a chain of errors. Any one thing could have stopped this train wreck. If the instructor would have considered common range policy that a firearm is not unholstered/handled unless on the firing line, or maybe the common rule of a cold range unless on the firing line, or if he cleared the firearm prior to his (IMHO) stupid demonstration, or if he would have fessed up to the range on his error and thrown himself at their mercy, or possibly, in the very end, if Yeager was not such a douchebag in his "apology". Instead, the instructor got in the train, fired it up, put it in motion at full speed, ignoring all the warning signs and limitations, then Yeager who should have been the train's brakeman completely neglected his job while he looked in the mirror and admired what a total bad ass he was.
Fly