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Pride Is Not A Self-Defense Strategy » Concealed Carry Inc

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Yesterday morning, I woke up to my partner telling me she had just been sideswiped while driving the kids to school.

No injuries. The car is damaged, but drivable. Everyone was shaken. B,ut after the Road Rage Shooting last week here in Conway, South Carolina, the news hit a little harder than it normally would.

Just days before, a traffic accident on a familiar stretch of road ended with a man dead, another man charged with murder, and families permanently altered.

One situation ended with insurance claims and shaken nerves.
The other ended with gunfire and a body on the roadside.

The difference in the situation wasn’t simply fate. It was choice.

Below is a video breakdown of the road rage shooting in Conway, South Carolina, discussed in this article.

What happened in Conway, South Carolina?

On the morning of January 6, following a traffic collision on S.C. Highway 90, Paul Greenwood, 33, was shot and killed in a Road Rage Shooting. Elijaih Taylor, 23, has been charged with murder and possession of a weapon during a violent crime. He waived his bond hearing and is being held without bond. Greenwood died at the scene.

Mugshot of the suspect charged in a deadly road rage shooting in Horry County, South Carolina.

Booking photo of the suspect facing murder charges following a fatal road rage shooting on S.C. Highway 90 in Horry County.

Multiple videos recorded by a witness document what led up to the shooting. Those videos matter because they replace speculation with sequence.

From early on, Taylor is visibly angry, hostile, and escalating. Greenwood initially appears calm, focused on insurance, and on the phone. As time goes on, both men choose to engage verbally. Ego enters. Posturing follows. Pride replaces judgment.

Eventually, a firearm is introduced.

In the final moments, Greenwood turns and runs away. Taylor fires multiple rounds into his back.

That single fact ends any serious discussion about lawful self-defense even though there was plenty of speculation on social media after the incident took place.

Why this wasn’t self-defense

Self-defense is not about who was more offended, more justified, or more wronged. It is about imminent threat, necessity, and reasonableness.

Shooting an unarmed man who is actively fleeing does not meet that standard in South Carolina or anywhere else. Whatever anger Taylor felt, whatever he believed Greenwood “deserved,” stopped mattering the moment Greenwood turned and ran.

That is why Taylor is charged with murder. And why he should be.

The harder truth we need to sit with

Acknowledging that Taylor committed murder does not require pretending Greenwood made good decisions.

Greenwood did not deserve to die.
But his actions did nothing to keep him alive.

At a certain point, Greenwood chose to re-engage. He chose to posture. He chose to defend his pride instead of creating distance. Phrases like “you don’t know who you’re fing with” and “I’m getting ready to f him up” are not self-defense language. They are the language of ego.

This wasn’t about safety anymore.
It was about being right.
About not backing down.
About delivering a lesson.

That mindset gets people killed.

The decision that mattered most came earlier

As I’ve reflected on this, one thing stands out.

Many people talk about what they would have done once the gun appeared. Very few talk about the decision that mattered most. Long before that moment.

From early on, it was clear Taylor was emotionally unstable and escalating. That was the signal. Stay in the vehicle. Create distance. Walk away. Let insurance and law enforcement handle it.

When emotions rise and take control of a situation, only reason has any chance of prevailing. Ego does not calm volatile people. Posturing does not restore order. Matching intensity almost always makes things worse.

The most important self-defense decision is often made before violence is obvious.

Once you’re face-to-face with an enraged person, your options collapse quickly. At that point, you’re reacting, not choosing.

This wasn’t “just a gun problem.”

Some will argue this only happened because there was a gun. That two men should be able to fight without someone dying. That Greenwood was a victim of gun violence.

That argument ignores reality.

The world does not operate on agreed-upon rules of fair play. There is no guarantee a confrontation will stay at the level you imagine it should. There is no referee. No bell. No shared understanding that this is “just a fight.”

When you willingly step into violence, you accept all possible outcomes, not just the ones you hope for.

Greenwood didn’t deserve to die.
But he did step into violence, believing it would stay within the limits he imagined.

That belief was wrong.

Guns don’t create violence. They expose the stakes.

The gun didn’t cause the egos.
The gun didn’t cause the escalation.
The gun didn’t cause the confrontation.

The gun revealed how thin the margin really was.

Once violence begins, you’re betting your life on another person’s restraint, judgment, and emotional control. That’s not courage. It’s a gamble.

Stoic restraint and personal standards

Stoic philosophy teaches something uncomfortable but necessary:
You are responsible for your reactions, not other people’s behavior.

Anger often feels justified. Disrespect can feel intolerable. There are moments when someone truly “deserves” to get their teeth knocked in.

But Stoicism asks a better question:

What does that cost me?

I hold myself to a standard that does not allow me to devalue my life, my future, or my family to be the giver of a needed lesson. No insult, no accident, no moment of pride is worth prison, death, or the permanent loss of everything I’m responsible for.

Walking away is not weakness.
It’s discipline.
It’s choosing life over ego.

Carrying a gun changes the rules

If you carry a firearm, this incident should make you uncomfortable. Not fearful. Not paranoid. Just honest.

Carrying a gun means:

  • You don’t get to argue like everyone else

  • You don’t get to posture

  • You don’t get to teach lessons

  • You don’t get the last word

Not because you’re weak.
Because the stakes are real.

Taylor failed that responsibility catastrophically. Greenwood misjudged the danger just as badly. The consequences were irreversible.

No winners, only lessons

This morning, my partner came home shaken but safe. The kids went to school. We’ll deal with insurance and repairs.

That’s how traffic accidents are supposed to end.

A few days earlier, a similar situation ended with a road rage shooting, a body on the roadside, a young man facing life in prison, and many lives forever changed.

The difference was not luck.
It was restraint.

The lesson isn’t anti-gun.
It isn’t anti-self-defense.
It’s anti-ego.

Being right will not keep you alive.
Pride is not a self-defense strategy.

If this convinces even one person to choose distance over dominance, reason over rage, then something meaningful comes from a senseless loss.

That should be the goal.

If you wish to dive deeper into how you can be a better concealed carrier and guardian of your family you should check out Guardian Nation. There are hundreds of hours of training and information available to members that will help make you the best you can be and that is just one of the benefits of this community.

About Mitch Goerdt

Mitch Goerdt is the Director of Marketing and Events at ConcealedCarry.com. Originally from the woods and iron mines of Northern Minnesota, Mitch left the Iron Range to explore the country—living in California and Colorado before settling in South Carolina. He now balances his passions for preparedness, philosophy, content creation, and marketing strategy with family life, enjoying every adventure with his partner and their three kids.





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