Spot on. The area of the brain that will cause instant death as the result of a gunshot wound is only about the size of a tennis ball, and it reaches from about the middle of the ear to the base of the neck at the bottom of the skull if you look at a side view of the human head. This is why snipers are trained to aim for the bottom of the ear or just under the nose of they're able to make a head shot. In a lot of circumstances, people with head injuries die as a result of brain swelling - Robert Kennedy might be the best known example of this. Had he been shot by a .22 in 2008 instead of 1968, surgeons might have removed a portion of his skull to allow for brain swelling, and it's entirely likely that he might have lived and recovered.


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