I’m not sure that sweeping someone is inevitable but I agree that people are fallible.
Each layer of safety that you add, is multiplied by the previous layers. If you practice muzzle discipline, the time it will be pointing at someone should be 0%, but let’s call it 0.1% (an absurdly high number) for sake of example. Then during that 0.1%, how often will your safety be off? Say another 0.1%. Then while it is off, how often will you be in bushes? While in bushes how often will a stick pull the trigger. 0.1x0.1x0.1x0.1 is a very small number.
Now, before the statisticians chime in, I am aware that these variables may not be independent. The point is simply that if you follow basic safety practices, you have a vanishingly small chance of something bad happening.
I also agree that a sling is your friend. There is lots of talk about problems with one but I assure you that a person not used to carrying a rifle in his hands for 10 hours is going to get tired and may not shoot it well.
Each layer of safety that you add, is multiplied by the previous layers. If you practice muzzle discipline, the time it will be pointing at someone should be 0%, but let’s call it 0.1% (an absurdly high number) for sake of example. Then during that 0.1%, how often will your safety be off? Say another 0.1%. Then while it is off, how often will you be in bushes? While in bushes how often will a stick pull the trigger. 0.1x0.1x0.1x0.1 is a very small number.
Now, before the statisticians chime in, I am aware that these variables may not be independent. The point is simply that if you follow basic safety practices, you have a vanishingly small chance of something bad happening.
I also agree that a sling is your friend. There is lots of talk about problems with one but I assure you that a person not used to carrying a rifle in his hands for 10 hours is going to get tired and may not shoot it well.