Missing a ---><---- ??
It's the only explanation I can think of. That and subsequent posts.
Missing a ---><---- ??
I think the point is that if the victim had been a non-minority, he might still be alive. Not sure it's true, but that's what I glean from the post.
Because it's much safer than getting in a shootout with an armed intruder (or in this case, a carload of lost kids?)
Really ? Where do you keep your gun, sir ? In a safe with the ammunition in a separate compartment, as you should ? If so, how fast could you retrieve and arm your gun once you hear people tear down your front door in the middle of the night ?
Plus he forgot that the vast majority of Americans live on the 30th floor and therefore have no back entrance to their homes.
The purpose of a gun safe is to keep gun(s) from being stolen in a burglary that takes place when the owner is away. It's reasonable for someone who is at home, and feels he needs a gun for personal protection, to have the gun loaded and available without the need to retrieve it from a safe.
Evidence?
You don't believe if someone acted rashly and killed someone they could not be grief stricken about the suffering they caused and the life they took.
Or if someone in your family killed someone you could not be grief stricken for the dead mans family.
Tut tut, that is irresponsible according to some on this forum.
......
Really ? Where do you keep your gun, sir ? In a safe with the ammunition in a separate compartment, as you should ? If so, how fast could you retrieve and arm your gun once you hear people tear down your front door in the middle of the night ?
What Sailors did doesn't fall under Castle Doctrine - it was actively coming out of his house, charging a strange vehicle in his driveway via recon by fire.
According to a Harris County grand jury, it might indeed fall under Castle Doctrine. Remember this guy?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Horn_shooting_controversy
Came out of his house to shoot two people who robbed a neighbor's house. He was no billed because the grand jury believed the robbers stepped into his yard.
Why should someone have to flee their house, even if it's possible? If you have the means, defend yourself!
I think he was suggesting an even stronger point: that the reason the guy was shot was because he was "brown". Of course he offers no evidence of this, since he has none.
Also noteworthy is that the brother of the victim of the shooting says he does not think the shooting was motivated by racism.
I find it fascinating how eager many on this forum are to imagine incidents of racism.
If you at that level of risk fine sleep with your gun under the pillow, but when you wake up and the kids are up and about, lock it away.
How many people are seriously at such a risk they absolutely need/want to have instant access to a gun 24/7? Is the USA really that dangerous a place to live? The statistics do not suggest the USA is a particularly crime ridden country
http://www.civitas.org.uk/crime/crime_stats_oecdjan2012.pdf
The fear must be particularly bad.
Let's ask the 7-11, Quik-Mart, and Dairy Queen corporations. Unlike Nancy L. Suburbanite, they're actually likely to get robbed---probably repeatedly.
They do not arm their employees. They do not teach them to stand their ground. They teach them to give up the valuables, avoid conflict ... and turn security-camera footage over to the police later.
Why? Because the long, long list of things that can go wrong---missed shots hitting bystanders, mistaking non-robbers for robbers, wrongful-death lawsuits even from people you shoot "legitimately", and escalation of "robberies" into "shootouts"---are more expensive than just walking away. (Also: employees may play with the store's gun and have accidents; the store's gun may get stolen; the store's gun may get used in intra-employee arguments having nothing to do with robbers; etc.) The same is true of home defense. It's cheaper (in lives and in money) to make a policy of run/hide/call-911.
Let's ask the 7-11, Quik-Mart, and Dairy Queen corporations. Unlike Nancy L. Suburbanite, they're actually likely to get robbed---probably repeatedly.
As a non American this is a key point.
You have the right to have firearms, but so does the conspiracy nut or the incompetent fool.
By definition, the responsible gun owners are not the problem - the probem is that there are a lot if irresponsible gun owners and little way of determining whether a potential gun owner is responsible or not.
This is particularly difficult with people who are competent but with very odd survivalist/conspiracy beliefs.
You should look into that statistic. It's been addressed in other threads. Forgive me, but I don't have the time to go through that with you right now.
We are discussing a certain specific scenario.
Evidence?
Let's ask the 7-11, Quik-Mart, and Dairy Queen corporations. Unlike Nancy L. Suburbanite, they're actually likely to get robbed---probably repeatedly.
They do not arm their employees. They do not teach them to stand their ground. They teach them to give up the valuables, avoid conflict ... and turn security-camera footage over to the police later.
Why? Because the long, long list of things that can go wrong---missed shots hitting bystanders, mistaking non-robbers for robbers, wrongful-death lawsuits even from people you shoot "legitimately", and escalation of "robberies" into "shootouts"---are more expensive than just walking away. (Also: employees may play with the store's gun and have accidents; the store's gun may get stolen; the store's gun may get used in intra-employee arguments having nothing to do with robbers; etc.) The same is true of home defense. It's cheaper (in lives and in money) to make a policy of run/hide/call-911.