yes probably true, i should have been more clear that i also know hes not an idiot.and also, im not saying having a gun at home for safetly is an awful thing (in what cases you intend to you use it and how you use it is more important), ive been saying that its insane to shoot all intruders on-sight without warning.[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 1:27 PM. Reason : -]
2/14/2006 1:24:31 PM
2/14/2006 1:38:31 PM
without a source you might as well post anything
2/14/2006 1:45:55 PM
fine
2/14/2006 1:50:43 PM
2/14/2006 3:05:58 PM
2/14/2006 3:12:29 PM
2/14/2006 3:12:59 PM
2/14/2006 3:13:39 PM
I wouldn't necessarily give any sort of warning before I killed someone. I offered a warning in the aforementioned example because (1) I wasn't caught off guard...I had time to diffuse the situation by means other than 2 to the chest, 1 to the head, and (2) I was kinda betting on it being a bum looking for some heat, since nothing appeared to be disturbed.that's going back to that spectrum of possible circumstances.________________________In general, there are worse injustices than a burglar getting shot in the back, as far as I'm concerned...but I'm not going to say it's "ok". It's not generally right, but I don't view it as cold-blooded murder, either.
2/14/2006 3:22:43 PM
That'll learn 'em.
2/14/2006 9:25:54 PM
Got tired of reading all this crap, but as someone mentioned earlier, having your girlfriend and her dad take a handgun safety course, preferably one with actual shooting, is probably the best thing you can do to make your case. My dad was apprehensive when my boyfriend got me a handgun for Christmas a few years ago, but we brought him to the range with us a few times and he became more comfortable with it. When my brother takes his concealed carry course this summer, my dad is going to join in even though he doesn't plan to own any guns. Dad used to assume guns were dangerous redneck toys, but going to the shooting range has become a family outing (minus my mom, she keeps her mouth shut and that is really all I can ask of her).
2/14/2006 10:53:20 PM
I thought about the idea of using rock salt for home defense. It scatters like buck shot and the person who gets hit with it likely won't die but they will wish they were dead for about 3 hours or so.The issue is LAWSUITS.There have been instances where someone breaks into a house, is injured, then proceeds to successfully sue the homeowners or charge them with other things. If you add that to the list of risks (this person could kill me and my loved ones, they could sue me later, etc) then it almost makes sense to go for a 'kill shot.'
2/15/2006 2:59:09 PM
^ Kill Bill 2? do people legitimately use rock salt in shotgun rounds, or is this just movie nonesense?
2/15/2006 3:02:02 PM
I'm pretty sure rock salt is still fatal within home defense ranges.
2/15/2006 3:04:26 PM
CaptainBF: Not really. Put a shotgun right up against ballistic gel and you wind up with more gel disruption from high-pressure gas intrusion than from rock salt penetration.Bird shot across a (small) room is just barely lethal. Farther away, you can put someone's eyes out and cause some nasty shallow damage, but you won't reach vitals.Stick to #4 or larger buck, from a 20ga or larger shotgun. Or use fragmenting/expanding rifle ammo (M193, hunting softpoints, A-MAX varmint bullets, etc.). Or use expanding pistol ammo (hollow points, preferably things like Gold Dot, Hydrashok, Ranger SXT, softpoints, etc.).***I'm with Josh8315—sort of. If I caught an intruder in my house/apartment, I would give said intruder one chance to prone out, hands clasped behind head and feet crossed at ankles. Preferably not on any furniture that I like. Then the lights come on and we talk a little bit. And then I call the police.Any deviation from instructions results in a kill shot.Efficient, scary, and with provisions to avoid unnecessary property damage. Your life is forfeit the instant you enter my home castle (as in "castle doctrine") without permission.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 3:29 PM. Reason : blah blah blah]
2/15/2006 3:22:43 PM
2/15/2006 3:34:17 PM
BRENNEKE SLUGS WAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAA
2/15/2006 3:35:21 PM
2/15/2006 3:54:48 PM
I haven't seen anything about relying on the cops to protect you, but I think many of you might find this interesting:Warren v. District of Columbia, 444 A.2d 1 (D.C.App. 1981)...In the early morning hours of March 16, 1975, appellants Carolyn Warren, Joan Taliaferro, and Miriam Douglas were asleep in their rooming house at 1112 Lamont Street, N.W. Warren and Taliaferro shared a room on the third floor of the house; Douglas shared a room on the second floor with her four-year-old daughter. The women were awakened by the sound of the back door being broken down by two men later identified as Marvin Kent and James Morse. The men entered Douglas' second floor room, where Kent forced Douglas to sodomize him and Morse raped her. Warren and Taliaferro heard Douglas' screams from the floor below. Warren telephoned the police, told the officer on duty that the house was being burglarized, and requested immediate assistance. The department employee told her to remain quiet and assured her that police assistance would be dispatched promptly. Warren's call was received at Metropolitan Police Department Headquarters at 6:23 a. m., and was recorded as a burglary in progress. At 6:26 a. m., a call was dispatched to officers on the street as a "Code 2" assignment, although calls of a crime in progress should be given priority and designated as "Code 1." Four police cruisers responded to the broadcast; three to the Lamont Street address and one to another address to investigate a possible suspect. Meanwhile, Warren and Taliaferro crawled from their window onto an adjoining roof and waited for the police to arrive. While there, they saw one policeman drive through the alley behind their house and proceed to the front of the residence without stopping, leaning out the window, or getting out of the car to check the back entrance of the house. A second officer apparently knocked on the door in front of the residence, but left when he received no answer. The three officers departed the scene at 6:33 a. m., five minutes after they arrived. Warren and Taliaferro crawled back inside their room. They again heard Douglas' continuing screams; again called the police; told the officer that the intruders had entered the home, and requested immediate assistance. Once again, a police officer assured them that help was on the way. This second call was received at 6:42 a. m. and recorded merely as "investigate the trouble" - it was never dispatched to any police officers. Believing the police might be in the house, Warren and Taliaferro called down to Douglas, thereby alerting Kent to their presence. Kent and Morse then forced all three women, at knifepoint, to accompany them to Kent's apartment. For the next fourteen hours the women were held captive, raped, robbed, beaten, forced to commit sexual acts upon each other, and made to submit to the sexual demands of Kent and Morse. Appellants' claims of negligence included: the dispatcher's failure to forward the 6:23 a. m. call with the proper degree of urgency; Page 3 the responding officers' failure to follow standard police investigative procedures, specifically their failure to check the rear entrance and position themselves properly near the doors and windows to ascertain whether there was any activity inside; and the dispatcher's failure to dispatch the 6:42 a. m. call. ...In either case, it is easy to condemn the failings of the police. However, the desire for condemnation cannot satisfy the need for a special relationship out of which a duty to specific persons arises. In neither of these cases has a relationship been alleged beyond that found in general police responses to crimes. Civil liability fails as a matter of law. So the cops have no duty to protect individual people. Personally, I think I'll be taking matters into my own hands if the need ever arrises. Criminals know where there are guns and were there aren't guns. See Chicago, NYC and DC, no handguns, crime out the ass. They may not be the smartest people on the planet, but criminals watch their heads. My entire family shoots. My parents are nationally known shooters, my sister is an incredible skeet shooter. Most of my friends say they'd almost feel sorry for someone breaking into our house.
2/20/2006 10:00:34 AM
well how many minorities are in Vermont.anyway this debate can be skewed so many ways.
2/20/2006 10:07:10 AM
96.8% of Vermont's about 620,000 people are white according to their census datathats still approx 20,000 minorities in the state
2/20/2006 10:48:59 AM
side note- i won the "debate"
2/20/2006 11:40:02 AM
2/20/2006 9:41:58 PM
2/20/2006 9:50:26 PM
2/20/2006 10:06:07 PM
2/20/2006 10:12:20 PM
I always have a gun handy in the house, not in plain sight for someone to see or find but where I know I can get it. It's a lot better to have one and not need it then to need it and not have one. I think anyone should have a gun if they want it, they should take the steps to make sure it safe if they have kids.[Edited on February 20, 2006 at 11:47 PM. Reason : .]
2/20/2006 11:47:26 PM
Maybe it's just me but I sleep better knowing that there are 2 clips of .40 cal hollowpoints within arm reach.
2/20/2006 11:50:10 PM
Seems to me that if you are trying to argue your side with statistics then you are fighting a losing battle no matter how good your stats are. This is a father worrying about a daughter. Bottom line here is that it is an emotional argument. You would be best off appealing to those emotions. Seems that logic will get you no where but frustrated in this case.
2/20/2006 11:51:12 PM
Is he honestly going to search your house. just tell him what he wants to hear...you sold them.The only time he should ever find out about them is if you have to use them, in which case I doubt he will be upset.
2/20/2006 11:55:16 PM
2/21/2006 1:32:31 AM
2/21/2006 9:57:38 AM
Anyway, will you morons stop with the strawmanning?Of course a thief isn't going to research the safest targets for burgling some drug money then drive long distances to get there. However, thieves already "there" ("there" being some specific place...deep thoughts people) will behave in line with the level of home defense. Areas with high gun ownership tend to have fewer break-ins, because the casualty rate is higher. Areas with low gun ownership tend to have more break-ins, because the casualty rate is lower.QED.
2/21/2006 11:09:17 AM
It'd be kinda fun to print a bunch of those "Proud Supporter of Gun Control...This is a gun free home." signs and take them to an anti-gun rally to hand out.....[Edited on February 21, 2006 at 11:23 AM. Reason : ]
2/21/2006 11:23:13 AM
Having a gun in a home and being trained is a benifit to help protect yourself. As long as you are have no kids in the house. My question to everyone is once you have a family do you keep your loaded gun in the night stand beside your bed?
2/21/2006 11:30:45 AM
why would that be fun, because you would be high at the time?
2/21/2006 11:36:47 AM
Once I have kids, it'll be locked away. They sell safes that can be opened in a sec or two. I'd prob get one of those. Not to mention making sure they my kids understand the responibility entailed with having guns in the house (once they are old enough of course), which I see as far more important than having the guns locked away. It's only a matter or time before the kids figure out the combo to the safe.
2/21/2006 11:59:29 AM
2/21/2006 2:27:28 PM
rofl"Gun ownership, not sight ownership"Anyway, having a gun on the nightstand isn't so terribly bad. Keep it on you when you're up, keep it ready at night. Or, as mentioned, get a quick-access safe.And the quick answer for the "think of the children!" argument: swimming pools kill a hell of a lot more kids than guns do.
2/21/2006 2:49:38 PM
2/21/2006 9:03:31 PM
look if you want to set her dad straight then tell him to talk to the cary policeMy dad took a class there and they gave him all the stats for guns
2/21/2006 10:25:46 PM
2/21/2006 11:09:27 PM
affect You're intentionaly dodging the question. Why does a sign warning of a gun on the premises affect a criminal's thinking? According to you, you must prove it to do anything to deter crime, but now you're claiming a sign will have an effect as well. Why?
2/21/2006 11:16:22 PM
2/21/2006 11:19:58 PM
2/22/2006 9:33:28 AM
in my opinion, having a sign advertising gun ownership would work against a homeowner.criminals want guns, and by advertising that you have one, you open yourself to a break-in while you are not present. as for the storage. i keep handguns locked up. the nightstand is fine at night. if you are leaving it laying around during the day when you are not home, you open yourself up to have it stolen, or used against you when you get home.the quick-action safes are the best way to go. 4 buttons on top you feel with spread fingers and a spring action door.i can leave my firearm loaded, chambered, and ready to go. i can access it as fast as i can if it were in the nightstand.
2/22/2006 10:10:23 AM
2/22/2006 10:14:16 AM
hahahai guess his stance on guns works against him there. but they know we're getting married
2/22/2006 10:17:10 AM