So now the 22 short is equal to the 10mm. This all makes sense to me. I should have no preference as to which I would rather be shot with...a .22 short or a 10mm...because they both inflict less than .1% damage to the overall tissue mass thus leaving 99.9% undamaged. Before this I would have died from ignorance believing that the 10mm wound to the chest I had just incurred was lethal.
People have been dying from wounds from .22 Shorts since the Civil War. The 10MM can, of course, kill much larger animals. Neither is an ideal choice for SD unless one fears bear attack.
John's point, I think, is that caliber is not anywhere near as important as some people profess to think it is when it comes to stopping a human being.
That's hard for some people to understand--there's Dirty Harry, and screen dramas with people being blown over backwards by shots from pistols. There's the legend about the fanatical Moros. And there's all that fuss and noise when you set off a magnum at the range. What about all that?
On the other side of the coin, there are the people who have kept coming after having been shot repeatedly by a .40 S&W with JHP bullets. Happened here in town a couple of weeks ago. The LEO shooter is in the hospital. So is the shootee, who fired back.
In the current issue of
Guns & Ammo American Handgun Magazine, Patrick Sweeney opines that the Army's insistence on the .45 back in 1905 had to do primarily with the need to stop an enemy cavalryman's
horse. That requires
penetration. No amount of energy from a pistol is going to wound a horse "massively"--it's hitting something important
inside the horse that counts. They tested different loads on live steers. I's a whole lot harder to penetrate to a steer's vital organs than it is to puncture a human being.
Back in the 1920s, Elmer Keith cooked up powerful handloads for his .44 Special revolvers. He used them for hunting game. A standard load just wouldn't penetrate to the vitals of a large animal.
For law enforcement, the .38 Special was considered quite adequate--as long as one didn't have to shoot someone behind a steel car door or someone wearing body armor. Smith & Wesson developed the more powerful .38-44 loading for use in large frame revolvers, and Colt, the .38 Super Automatic for the 1911 action. The former led to the subsequent development of the .357 Magnum, which was offered primarily as a hunting load. Patrick Sweeney has said that had the .38 Super Automatic been available at the time, the Army might well have adopted it rather than the .45 ACP.
The common raison d'etre for all of these higher powered loads was
penetration. You need a lot of power to penetrate a horse, a steer, large game (or a goat. for that matter), a car door, a bank window, or body armor. You don't need anywhere near as much to penetrate to the CNS of a standing human being.
But you may well need a couple or three rapid follow up shots to ensure a stop, because if nothing vital is hit, you will be entirely dependent on psychological effects. Too much power can work against the achievement of that objective. The gun has to be controllable.
A .22 Short is likely to not penetrate adequately; a 10MM is overkill except for hunting and will work against rapid follow-up. Personally, I'm not a .380 ACP aficionado, and I prefer the 9MM, and I can handle a .45 ACP with rapid follow up shots. Power alone will not result in a "one shot stop."
But what about all that energy, all that noise? I recently saw an old video in which someone fired a 7.62X51 MM FAL rifle at a man at point blank range several times. The man was wearing protective gear and was no more phased by the impact than the man shooting the rifle. Do not confuse the bang and blast with the effect on the target.
It's
penetration and
placement that count. With a human target, you only need so much penetration, but proper placement in a self defense encounter may well require a number of rapid shots.