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July 5, 2010, 06:13 PM | #51 |
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Join Date: March 24, 2010
Location: Rochester, NY
Posts: 97
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What would you do
At our voluntary safe seminar in Rochester, NY area we we told we could use deadly physical force only when we were under the threat of deadly physical force.
We were also told that legally - shooting someone in the back is usually not good thing for the shooter. When I was in high school I worked at a Burger King. We were told if someone comes and demands the money - give it to them. No need to ask if he wants fries with it simply give him the money. |
July 5, 2010, 08:38 PM | #52 |
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Join Date: May 4, 2010
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That is why it will always come down to the ones with the best judgement being the ones that are best concealed carry candidates.
I know of a whole lot of people who would bust in on any situation just because they have a gun, and have waited all of their lives to be in a genuine, honest to god gunfight, and be the hero. |
July 6, 2010, 12:27 AM | #53 | |
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Join Date: January 27, 2008
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Quote:
Is the $150 in the register worth killing over? I say "NO." (Even if he is a bad guy.) Most posters, including myself, have stated they would intervene if they thought some innocent person was going to be hurt. I don't want to see McDonalds robbed of $150, but I doubt I would kill anyone to prevent it. If the clerk is about to be shot, the calculation changes...as does my willingness to unleash a lot of force. |
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July 6, 2010, 03:28 AM | #54 | |
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Quote:
We are concealed weapons holders, not police officers. Despite my detest for scumbags that rob people at gun point, I was not appointed judge, jury, and executuioner. My rights as far as the use of lethal force are pretty clear. In Florida, it states that deadly force can be used to protect myself or another person from death or serious bodily harm or the prevention of a forcible felony such as rape, robbery, burglery, or kidnapping, it also states that carrying a concealed weapon does not make you a free-lance policeman or "good samaritan". You may want to risk your life, your money, and your freedom to protect someone elses money. Protecting someone elses life is a more noble cause, but maybe your actions will turn a robbery into a shootout. Maybe other people will get killed as result of your actions. Think before you act!!!
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The ATF should be a convenience store instead of a government agency! Last edited by stephen426; July 6, 2010 at 03:45 AM. |
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July 6, 2010, 03:38 AM | #55 |
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Location: Pittsburg, CA, USA
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"Your money or your life" is not a new social contract.
If I can drop them without undue risk to bystanders, I will. If they die, it won't be because of "money". They'll die because they posed a criminal risk of murder to everyone around them. I honestly think I could sleep just fine over that. Hell, I'd be halfway through lunch before the cops finally show up.
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Jim March |
July 6, 2010, 08:59 AM | #56 | |
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Quote:
you've apparently ignored important parts of every post I have made about the subject, and parts of posts made by others. This isn't about money, this is about a criminal committing a felony, who has stuck a gun into the face of some other person's child, and the obvious threat to that person's life. In this and many other threads, a constant theme runs, that "I'm not putting my **** in jeopardy because someone else is under that gunsight." The question in the mind of anyone who has a concealed weapon should not be, "should I intercede to save a life?" If it is presumed that you will shoot to save your own life, but not shoot to save the life of another, that is wrong If you're carrying a weapon and a deadly force situation comes up, your only thoughts should be about if, when, and how, you should intercede with your own deadly force. If the robbery goes off smoothly, so be it, nobody was hurt. I don't give half a fart about the money. It is all about the people. |
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July 6, 2010, 09:54 AM | #57 |
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Join Date: November 11, 2009
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QUOTING Mr. Glenn Meyer......"The problem with that predictive analogy is that the McDs robber is going to be a child rapist? Well, lets execute him then after conviction for the robbery?
Or if a kid has childhood conduct disorder, execute him as he may be likely to develop antisocial personality disorder and become a murdering sociopath?" You stretched for that one. Predictive analogy WOULD lead one to believe that if they did it once they'll do it again and how many innocents will be hurt by them eventually? Me thinks you get the drift....but in case not, how many "uneventful" robberies committed by a perp might occur before someone, an innocent, is maimed or killed eventually? If the perp is taken out, incapacitated or killed, there is a nearly 100% chance that he/she will NEVER harm anyone again. That is the gist of part of what I posted. In a later post you mentioned dropping the blood lust. With blood lust I WILL defend my family. You'll think I'm a maniac. I will do everything in my power to protect them. I may do some things halfway, like keeping my yard clean and tidy or straightening up the garage, but not when it comes to protecting my wife and girls. Anyone with an ounce of gumption would do the same. An armed perp in my family's immediate area with felonious intentions? I'm not giving them the opportunity to scar my family for life. stephen426....in an INSTANT the perp turns with his booty, a bag of money which isn't yours to defend, and points his gun at you or a loved one or a complete stranger.....and pulls the trigger. You HAD an good opportunity to dramatically alter the outcome but didn't. If caught, the perp languishes in prison for 20 yrs (if WE'RE lucky) and an innocent victims family weeps. Now what say ye? Last edited by jreXD9; July 6, 2010 at 10:02 AM. |
July 6, 2010, 11:31 AM | #58 |
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Location: Illinois
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This is definitely a tough one. But what defensive situation isn't?
If I were in the shoes of the sheepdog in this situation, I'd drop that wolf in the same second he drew a gun on an innocent teenager behind a register. Sure, I might carry some mental baggage after that.. but it's a hellovalot better than the baggage which I prevented the parents of that teen from carrying. Me.. I love people. I love people so much that I will spend my life in jail just so another person could LIVE their life. Any thug who respects human life so little that he will pull a gun on a person for money isn't just someone I don't approve of.. they are someone I hate with a passion. I just ranted hardcore, my apologies.
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Amateurs think equipment, Students think techniques, Experts think tactics. |
July 6, 2010, 01:58 PM | #59 | |
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Quote:
The reason you stop him has nothing to do with the purse he is stealing or $50 from a stop and rob. small property crime means nothing. You are keeping him from shooting the neighbor's son. You are stopping him from raping his daughter. Abducting his grandchild, knifing or beating his mother or grandmother, or even your own grandmother as she walks away from the pharmacy with two months worth of oxycontin. When people are in danger, everything that makes people great and noble requires at least an effort to stop it. Sometimes it is shooting the guy and taking his gun. The rest of the time it is turning in the worthless little punk down that happens to be your nephew, sitting on the jury instead of making an excuse, picking up "bargains" that fell off of the truck, or even giving your kid the case of beer for the graduation party. This is all the boy scout good citizenship that I learned when I was 5, and it still rings true, because it's pretty obvious that abandoning it has not done us a whole lot of good. And BTW, in case anyone wonders, I don't love people, I hate them all. The chances are that whomever i might someday die defending would turn out to be some hellbound moron that I wouldn't let in my house. Should that stop me? NO. A cop wouldn't do it, because he has made the decision to defend the public, and excluding losers who don't deserve it isn't the right thing to do. |
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July 6, 2010, 02:03 PM | #60 |
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Not going anywhere and I fear folks are posting opinions that might get them into legal difficulties if they were in an ambiguous situation.
So, closed.
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