Please accept my humble apology.
In the past, on several discussion boards, the person I mentioned, frequently promoted head shots. Being an arrogant braggart who touted his amazing skills with firearms, "brain 'em" was a tactic and term he used frequently.
...well it was not intened to sound that way but what is there that would cause an argument? I didn't attack anyone...
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"Hardin/gunkid's" modus operandi would be to post a controversial topic, and then attack all who disagreed with him afterward.
I'd intended to reply to your post, pointing out the presumptiveness of your proposed tactic, but the more I thought about it the more I became convinced you were indeed "Hardin."
I don't know if you've ever been in combat or how close your training has come to simulating the physical stresses of battle. However, in my experience, just clearing a house causes me to overheat and breathe hard (even when I'm not performing vigorous physical activity). This effect increases (for me at least), when I'm moving into and out of odd positions (kneeling, moving while kneeling [pieing], crouching, duckwalking, etc.) to take advantage of whatever cover and concealment there is as I move.
You cannot predict what activity you might be engaged in before you have to take the shot, nor can you predict the environmental conditions in which the shot must be taken. In many situations placing a bullet into an adversary's torso is going to be a challenge.
I suggest performing jumping jacks for about two consecutive minutes and immediately afterward test your marksmanship.
Try shooting from uneven ground (stairs, side of hill, etc.), or unstable ground (loose gravel, dew-covered grass, etc.), with the position of your strong and weak side feet reversed from your "normal" shooting platform stance.
Try shooting a head-sized, helium-filled, floating latex balloon that's tied to a string at 100 yards in daylight and low-light conditions. (Speaking of lighting conditions, hopefully you won't have to take the shot in the periods of dawn and dusk, when the sun is just above the horizon and backlighting your target.)
And finally, don't underestimate your foe. I train with the belief that any adversary I encounter is at least as good as I like to think I am. Expect him/her to be trying to out-maneuver and shoot you with as much effort and skill as you are trying to out-maneuver and shoot him.
This is why its important to have a toolbox of tactics, so when the job calls for a certain tool you have it.
How does that saying go? If all you have is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail.
Something to think about.