I see. You just broke in for a cup of coffee? Not to rape my daughter? Well, why didn't you say so!
Just because you are willing to gamble with your life, doesn't mean I should have to do the same.
Do I want to kill you? Absolutely not. The simple solution is...don't break into my house! But why are you trying to convince me that I should give a person who just broke the law by breaking into my house the benefit of the doubt? My life, and the lives of my wife and daughter, are far too valuable to me to guess that this guy is probably not going to hurt them.
You can't just kill a person because of your imagination, that's not right or ethical or responsible. You can incapacitate the intruder or you can hide yourself and your family. Do something that doesn't get people killed. That should go both ways but just because I broke into your house doesn't mean you get to kill me either. You don't have to tolerate me and my presence in your house, but you just don't have any ethical right to let your imagination and "what if's" justify killing. You're going to have to deal with it.
Sabretooth said:
Right. Call the cops. What shall I do with the intruder while we're waiting for them? Talk about the weather? Exchange cookie recipes?
I gave you a laundry list of the many things you could do that doesn't involve killing. Pick some and stop pretending that killing is the only solution.
Sabretooth said:
I'm not going to shoot him if I catch him running out with my TV. But let's say he sees me, drops the TV, and reaches into his jacket/pocket/whatever...I'm pulling the trigger. It's not murder if I feel he's going to kill me. I'm not the criminal here, remember? Why are you giving him more rights than me?
How is he getting more rights than you? Again you are trying to promote the kill or be killed argument but that's a paradox here. What you're actually promoting in this scenario is "kill because I'm afraid." I understand the sentiment but it's not ethical and that's self defense. That's a preemptive strike.
Sabretooth said:
I would most likely give a verbal warning, out of your sight, for you to get the **** out of my house. If you leave, no one dies. If you do not comply, I have every right to assume you have hostile intentions. After the warning, if you come toward me, I will pull the trigger.
Again you only demonstrate that killing is your go to defense. Not incapacitation or securing yourself or just leaving your damned home. You assume an intent that you cannot know only infer and you'd meet that intent by killing first instead of avoiding conflict.
Sabretooth said:
You are asking me to be psychic and assume the criminal only has good intentions. If you are approaching me in a threatening manner, how the hell am I supposed to know if you are going to try to break my nose or give me a hug? If I have a gun pointed at you, you are ignoring verbal warnings, and you're still approaching me, I'm pulling the trigger.
Killing because of your imagination doesn't justify actually killing someone. I thought my life was in danger is the go-to line but you actually have to demonstrate that it WAS IN DANGER. The "thought" part of "I thought my life was in danger" is the part that makes no sense. Either you are in danger or you aren't and you should leverage your options based on that.
Sabretooth said:
Right. Like I said, if I have a gun pointed at you, you are ignoring verbal warnings, and you're still approaching me, I'm pulling the trigger.
Then you may be a responsible gun owner but you're as irresponsible a citizen as the guy who broke into your house, if not worse. You killed someone, he didn't. Again the fact that you think that your warning/pulling the trigger is FINE and safe and justified...you're insane. And you're the one who says I live in a fantasy world and you're the guy who is planned out how to kill.
Sabretooth said:
If I have a gun pointed at you, you are ignoring verbal warnings, and you're still approaching me, I'm pulling the trigger. I have no ethical rhyme or reason to assume you mean good will to me. If you leave, you get to keep your life.
You have no right to that kind of force to actually make that call to kill. Like I said it's cowboy logic. We don't treat bad will as immediate "kill him" but you're fine with that. Not only do you assume the person's up to no good you jump right to him/her being so damned dangerous that they must die and that you have to pull that trigger. Not only do you ignore any other means of nonlethal ways to handle it I don't even think you're considering it. You're sick in the head but a lot of people think like you do.
Sabretooth said:
It wasn't my choice to have you break into my house. I won't kill you if you leave before I count to 5...
Dude listen to how insane you are. YOU ARE MAKING THE DEATH THREAT based on fear. What if that person you're threatening to kill then thinks EXACTLY what you're thinking "Kill him before he kills me". Just because he broke into your house doesn't mean you can just do that to a person. It's hard to meet in middle on this but you're practically making killing easy. You're not trying to prevent death here or murder, you're killing because you don't see the future and that scares you.
Sabretooth said:
You are, finally, absolutely right. Sailors murdered that boy and he should serve the rest of his years in prison.
Nothing you've said above is reasonable to kill anyone. If you think this was the only line I was right about then you need your head examined. Self defense only makes sense when you are actually defending yourself from harm, not preemptively striking and putting yourself in harm's way just to kill.