CameronPoe wrote:
Self defence - shoot to maim though at least, rather than kill. Righteous war.
Alrighty, this is a good starting place. Cameron, I don't know how much firearms training you have, but I need you to explain this to me. How, exactly, can you shoot to maim? Every firearms training class I have ever attended has emphasized that there is no such thing as shoot to maim. If a situation is serious enough to use DEADLY FORCE (ie, a firearm) you shoot to kill. You shoot for center mass.
Not to mention, if you shoot to maim, what happens if you miss? Center mass is a much bigger target than someon's leg.
MrE`158 wrote:
I'm in favour of people being allowed to defend themselves with "reasonable force". If someone holds a legal firearm and has to shoot someone to stop them attacking someone, then so be it.
But I do think it's an area you have to be careful in. If someone breaks into your home, you should have a right to defend it. But no "shoot first, questions later" style, please. An intruder should (if at all possible) be made aware of an armed defender, and if he doesn't run, or makes a move that could be an attack, then shoot the fucker.
Yes, I believe a citizen should be permitted to shoot a criminal, if absolutely necessary, and the laws I live under seem to more or less support that stance. More or less...
I have a couple of problems I'd like to discuss with you. First and foremost, the concept of reasonable force doesn't exist in US law with regards to to civillians.
When you talk about an intruder breaking into a house, that's where I have a big issue. You say that you should identify yourself to the intruder as being armed and give him the opportunity to flee. I don't understand why. If someone is in your house going bump in the night, why would you give him the opportunity to shoot you? Why would you identify yourself at all? If you have the drop on him, and can resolve the situation with complete safety (to yourself, which is all that matters), why wouldn't you take advantage of that?
Rosebudteg wrote:
Guns complicate issues. A lot. How often does someone go around into a random house and kill people. Not often. The chances that you'll need your firearm for protection are small. If someone comes up and points a gun at me and says "Give me your wallet and have your wife give me a blowjob." Even if I am carrying a handgun, I'd turn to my wife and say "Do that thing to him that I really like.." as I hand over my wallet. I don't want to risk pulling out that handgun and tossing the dice on who gets off the first shot that hits.
In other words, yes there is justifiable homicide, but I don't think it is common enough to worry about.. an average of about 225 cases per year... a 0.00000075% chance of it happening (225/three hundred million people in USA). Lets say double that for the situations where the criminal is wounded and not killed... so 0.0000015% and lets say triple that where the gun is pulled and the situation is over just like that. 0.0000045%... if you STILL think you are going to be able to use that gun to protect yourself or someone else, go buy a lotto ticket too...
Now this assumes private citizens. This does not assume law enforcement which is probably much higher.
First, on your quote about tossing the dice. Train.
TRAIN. Everyday for a week. Then every two for a month. Go to classes. Keep shooting until you can shoot the Marine pistol course as expert with both hands. Fire that weapon until your hands are bruised.
Why?
I'll tell you. I don't feel like I'm tossing the dice if I pull my weapon. I know where my first shot is going to his before my weapon leaves my holster. Shooting is a reflex action, and the more you do it, the better at it you will get.
Now, on to your averages. For every person who is shot and killed in the US, about 20 are shot and survive. That's mainly due to our superior medical care, but whatever. So, that would alter your statistics from 225 a year to 4725 a year (225 killed and 4500 that survive). If you look at that data as compared to population, sure, it't not a big percentage. But, neither is homicide as a whole.
Moreover, the defensive use of a handgun is not a lotto ticket. The crime rate is not equal in all neighborhoods across the US. I know a DCFS caseworker who works in the ghetto in Little Rock, who has pulled her carry piece more than 40 times for defense. She hasn't had to shoot anyone yet, thank god, but she won't go about her duties without her weapon.
aardfrith wrote:
Is it OK for a private citizen to shoot a criminal? Well in the United States, you've got these things called trials, juries and the law. We've got them in the UK, though ours have a little more history and experience behind them. It's for a trial by twelve men, good and true, to determine whether someone is a criminal, not for private citizens. If you see a crime being committed, you may not have the full facts at your grasp. If you shoot someone who's brandishing a weapon at another person, how do you know they are not just defending themselves?
OK, I don't know what kind of wild west vigilante justice scenes you have flying through your head, but I think you're a little confused about the definition of a justifiable homicide.
I'm not talking about citizens stalking the streets, shooting down suspected criminals. I'm talking about a 24 year old woman who lives alone shooting a man that comes into her apartment. I'm talking about a 41 year old man shooting the man who broke into his house. I'm talking about the bystander at the convienence store robbery who shoots the man pointing a gun at the clerk's head.
Now, I am of the opinion that I have the right to defend myself and others from hostile action. Anywhere, anytime. That's what we're discussing here.
topal63 wrote:
Also, there is blur (not a clear line) when killing becomes homicide vs being self-defense. Just as wrong as it is to kill an innocent man within the current death-penalty system. It would be just as wrong for me to kill a suspect rapist and it turn out: I was wrong. Does my ignorance excuse my action?
I would argue it depends on the circumstances. You shot a man you thought was a rapist. Where did you shoot him? Your daughter's bedroom? Your front yard? Some random alley? Again, I'm not advocating vigilante justice. But, I do believe that if you are walking down an alley, and see a man raping a girl, you should have the right to shoot him, in order to defend her.