Since the police were brought into it, if guns are the end all, be all chance to "go down fighting" and for defense, why do police bother to carry all of the other defensive tools (tazers, asp batons, chemical sprays) in addition to a firearm? After all, shouldn't all they need is their firearm?
you ever seen a cop perform a felony traffic stop? they don't have their chemical sprays drawn.
You ever see a cop go into a potentially bad scene? usually his hand is on his gun, not on his pepper spray.
You ever see how a cop deals with a person who won't follow their commands? they usually have the taser out, hoping they won't have to use it, but ready to do so should the situation warrant it. You ever see how a cop deals with an armed person who won't follow their commands? the usually have their sidearm drawn, hoping they won't have to use it, but ready to do so should the situation warrant it.
I work with people who used to carry ASP batons on the ambulance. They were in an urban area, they didn't get cops on every call, and management definitely didn't approve of them. But the entire shift had them in their pockets, just in case. the idea was better to be terminated or taken away in cuffs than to be taken away in a body bag. I am not saying I agree, and I never worked for that particular agency, but I guess it was better than carrying a gun.
Do I really think cops should turn in their guns? absolutely not. But everyone needs to understand that cops carry guns to protect themselves from people who would do them lethal harm. They don't carry them to protect others.
one last comment about the cops; I know quite a few uniformed law enforcement officers, and a couple non-uniformed (detectives, goon squad, narcotics, and a few white shirts). the uniformed guys always wear their belts, which has their guns, batons, handcuffs, spray, etc. the non-uniformed guys only carry their guns (and cuffs), and they know they will call for uniformed backup for most incidents, and only draw if they encounter a life threatening situation.
Drawing a gun is a last resort, when you are faced with a threat to your life. And quite honestly, if drawing a firearm (and not firing) ends that threat, because the assailant got scared or ran away, than the firearm did its job. But if it's a threat to your life, and you do draw your gun, be prepared to fire until the threat is neutralized, and hope you don't have to.