To give some insight on American law. I can actually only speak for the state that I live in, so where this took place could be slightly different. I have a concealed weapons permit and in order to get that you are required to go through training, and that training includes and understanding of the law (of that state, and your premit is only good for your state and states that have reciprocity with that state... i.e. I can't carry in New York). Someone else on this post said that if a reasonable person would believe that their life is in danger, then lethal force may be used (my gun teacher used just about those exact same words). I would add this. The danger must be immediate. You can't shoot someone waving a knife at you from 50 yards away. You can save someone else it they are in immediate danger. You can make a citizens arrest.Mathurin said:I have always said the situations were different, but where you see the atlantic ocean I see the english channels worth of difference.Silvertounge said:I must ask if I'm the only one that sees the difference here. I can't be. To me there is a huge difference between arming yourself with a non-lethal weapon (that yes, can prove deadly under the wrong circumstances) and confront criminals in your own home than to arm yourself with a lethal weapon (try to shoot someone with a bloody shotgun and make them survive if you're using live ammo) and walk out the door to confront criminals that were inside your neighbour's house after a police officer has told you repetitively to not to that. If no one agrees with me that the situation is completely different I will shut up about it (and probably be really fucking scared).
Horn did not have less-than lethal ammunition available. I am fuzzy on american law in this respect but I think that the US law still considers a shotgun loaded with bean bags to be lethal force, so legally there would be no difference.
Ask the guy that Cheney shot how to survive a shotgun blast, with birdshot at least.
You place a great deal of weight on "other peoples house"
A criminal is engaged in a criminal activity, you have a safe place and have called the police, is exiting that safe place with a weapon in order to confront the criminal a bad thing to do?
Please answer this with some directness.
I believe this reasonably describes both situations, I am trying to discover what exactly about the difference you have a problem with.
If THOR had been forced to kill 2 of the criminals (who were apparently armed, even though the nation has gun control)would you still think his actions were justifiable.
Is a person only allowed to confront criminals on their own property, or in defense of their own property?
A dispatcher told him, a dispatcher is a police officer in diapers, he was under no obligation to do what the dispatcher told him. He was watching a crime in progress, he confronted 2 criminals.Silvertounge said:You say a law cannot grant someone right to live if you're not allowed to defend yourself. I have no problem with defending oneself for a legitimate reason. Running out the door to confront two criminals is in my eyes pushing it way beyond that. If someone tries to rob you on the street with a gun and you defend yourself, accidently killing that person in the process, if you're taken hostage and threatened to your life, sure. If someone pulls a gun on you inside your own house, yes. But when you put yourself at risk by getting involved in something that isn't your business (a police officer telling you to not getting involved several times makes it bloody well not your business) that's fucking pushing things.
what should those criminals have done?
They should have run away, if he shoots them then it is a crime
they should have surrendered, if he shoots them it is a crime
Instead they attacked, allowing him to defend his own life, and while defending his life he killed them.
If he had hit one in the chest and he was still alive, yet horn walked over and blasted him again as he lay on the ground, that is illegal.
If a cop had behaved exactly as this person did, then you would think nothing of it
Why hold citizens to a higher standard
Silvertounge said:If I walked up and punched a person with a gun in the face I would fear for my life. Killing that person then still isn't right, even thought I'm technically defending myself (if my intent was to just punch that person and then walk away). Sure, I'm still in for assault, but the murder is okay, or what?
This is stretching
You created a situation.
Now, if you are in a fistfight and someone pulls a deadly weapon, then yeah, you can defend yourself with deadly force.
Nobody said it wouldnt be a hairy law, thats why we have courts, nothing is ever clear cut in the law.
Well, as far as i am concerned, most european government already have obscene power, their citizens have traded personal liberty for wealth, safety, and protection from commerce, they just havent noticed it yet.Silvertounge said:I also think you misunderstood my take on liberty but that's not for this thread. It wouldn't give the government any obscene amounts of power.
uuuuhhhhSilvertounge said:The reason Sweden did this and people came running to America wasn't because of the views of the nations. It was because of their armies. America has always had a huge army, the last time Sweden had that was 300 years ago (or 500, I can't remember). If you're being attacked by a bully in a schoolyard you go talk to a teacher, even if that teacher isn't nice, you don't go to your five-year younger, disabled sister for help. The teacher has the power to stop the bully, hopefully. Your sister might want to help, but a bully would just turn over her wheelchair and keep stomping on your head.
not sure what you are talking about here, but pre-WWII US military sucked, it was undermanned and under supplied, so unless the discussion is about the cold war then you are wrong.
These next two are where the situation in question becomes grey. In my state, you have a duty to retreat, unless the act of retreating will endanger your life. For example, if someone has a gun pointed at me, it would be too dangerous for me to run. But if someone comes to the window of my car, it would be very easy for me to drive away. You have no duty to retreat in your own home or place of buisness. In my classes I found if very hard to find a situation where the act of retreating was safe. Now from what I understand from this situation (forgot where I heard this so don't quote me on it) if a neighbor asks you to watch his house, legally, his house if your house.
Next grey one. You cannot be in any way at fault. To further describe this one. If you START a bar fight, someone in the bar fight pulls a gun, you pull your gun in self defense and kill him, you will be charged with murder because you started the fight (PS even with a carry permit you cannot take a gun into a place that serves alcohol). Know the reason I think this doesn't apply is because he is allowed to make a citizens arrest, he did not confront them to commit agresion. As I understand it, he confronted them to stop them and they attacked him. To give and example my teacher gave me. If I am in my house (no duty to retreat) and someone breaks in an has a TV in their hands. If I am standing between them and the door out with a gun, they have two choices. Carge me or surrender. If they charge and I shoot, it is legal. If they stand still and I shoot, it is illegal. A TV could be considered a weapon. Personally, I think the situation at hand is a little grey, but I also know that the media is not telling us the whole story and will twist it so that it looks like this guy is a raving madman. I agree with Silvertoung in that the situations are different (and I think the media is leaving out key details), but I will say that he does have the right to confront them to make an arrest. Would I? Probably not, I value my own life too much.
To UltraJoe: I see what you are trying to say, but it is a little to black and white. If you say a gun is a tool (and I think it is) you can also say a chainsaw is a tool. Do I think every person should be able to operate a chainsaw, no. A 2 year old should not operate a chainsaw. Nor should my wife. She has the upper body strength of a kitten (but the booty of a goddess, seriously she's got a great ass). A gun is a tool, but it is a dangerous tool. And as such, only law abiding people should be allow access to it. Likewise, a knife longer than 3" is considered a concealed weapon (I think it is 3"). To make another comparison, alcohol. Alcohol is something that requires adult decisions to use responsible. People abuse it all the time. Guns are also something that require adult decisions to use.
So yes a gun is a tool, but it is a dangerous tool and should be regualted as such. What my argument is, is that our government is doing more to keep guns out of the right hands, not the wrong hands. Passing more laws to keep people from getting a gun, means that only poeple who obey the law will be the one's without guns. Simple logic. Sure there are laws that say a criminal can't have a gun. But guess what, they are criminals, they don't care about the law. I don't know how they get their guns. Where I am from, a background check is performed to buy any gun. Someone had mentioned a gun show and not doing a background check. I have been to several gun shows and they all checked. Maybe is was a specific location that didn't require. My idea to fix the problem... Don't enfore more gun bans, the current rules are fine. Make punishment for crimes commited with a gun SEVERE! I'm talking 50+ years for armed robery. Or find out how criminals are getting their guns and attack that. But don't hurt the guy who obeys the rules and make him defenseless.