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| | #41 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() The Cake is a lie... Location: St. Louis Posts: 2,385 | Quote:
"Now Timmy, please don't go out TPing tonight because you could GET SHOT!" What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? | |
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| | #42 (permalink) (top) | |
| Libertarian Location: Colorado Springs, CO Posts: 1,609 | Quote:
I got tons more where that comes from. Don't test me. However, I have to respect the Texas statutes that allow confronting a burglar in the act as have been posted here. I guess we can leave it at that. If you would like. Keith The great thread killer. | |
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| | #43 (permalink) (top) | |
| Libertarian Location: Colorado Springs, CO Posts: 1,609 | Quote:
Do you not do so in Missouri? Keith The great thread killer. | |
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| | #44 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 3,805 | Texas, go east until you smell it, south until you step in it. I've lived there. Not a good place to go burglaring. I'd also be wary of walking across my neighbor's lawn after dark. "Everybody knows that the boat is leaking Everybody knows that the captain lied." - Leonard Cohen |
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| | #45 (permalink) (top) | ||
| Principled Observer Location: Toledo, Ohio Posts: 13,873 | Quote:
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Got a phone? Petition of Redress of Grievances: http://www.givemeliberty.org/default.htm Canadian Lawsuit Against Their National Banks: http://www.freewebs.com/classaction/ Osborn F. Enready | ||
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| | #46 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Igneous Magma Location: Cape Town South Africa Posts: 363 | Murdering someone on your property or in self defense is a crime, because to kill is a crime. Killing someone that wants to kill you just transfers the crime from that person to you. If someone wants to kill you then they are preparing to commit a crime, and if they kill you then they have done wrong. If you get killed you have done no wrong, but if you kill them you have commiteed the crime yourself. Sometimes people people won't listen to you as you plead for your life, but that is tough luck, the power is in the hands of one party, and if the power is in the hands of two parties then there should be a stale mate, not a 'homicide', or by anohter name, self defence. If you bring a gun to bear on a burglar then you are threatening them, so the power has shifted to you. To shoot is a conclusion to the power play and if both people shoot then there is a real problem. People should just lie down and let people commit their crimes, as this power play leads to death, which is something far worse than losing a few valuables. If it comes down to it being you or them you may wish it to be them, and act accordingly, killing them. Have you done wrong? Have you committed a crime by defending yourself? You would need information about the intruder the same way a policeman needs info about his perps, so think of yourself as the law. Do you own your house, or does the state? Can you shoot someone on your property seeing as how it is under a states jurisdiction? Are you the law? If you think you are the law then you will find that you have had no power vested in you and that is why you will stand accused of acting agaisnt an intruder or whatever, so best to just lean back. Poison for the system! |
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| | #47 (permalink) (top) |
| Principled Observer Location: Toledo, Ohio Posts: 13,873 | I will defend my life, and bear the consequences of doing so, regardless of the "threatened" cost of such acts. Petition of Redress of Grievances: http://www.givemeliberty.org/default.htm Canadian Lawsuit Against Their National Banks: http://www.freewebs.com/classaction/ Osborn F. Enready |
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| | #48 (permalink) (top) |
![]() The Cake is a lie... Location: St. Louis Posts: 2,385 | Not as many as they should. Though usually one isn't thinking about being shot over something a trivial as the inconvenience of cleaning up toilet paper from their lawn. What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? |
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| | #49 (permalink) (top) | |
| Principled Observer Location: Toledo, Ohio Posts: 13,873 | Quote:
It isn't about the TP, its about the breach of property rights. Petition of Redress of Grievances: http://www.givemeliberty.org/default.htm Canadian Lawsuit Against Their National Banks: http://www.freewebs.com/classaction/ Osborn F. Enready | |
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| | #50 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() The Cake is a lie... Location: St. Louis Posts: 2,385 | Quote:
Having them clean it up and maybe a fine/restitution isn't sufficient? All I'm saying is with something as important as the law regarding lethal force, it should be a tad more specific than criminal mischief. What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? | |
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| | #51 (permalink) (top) | |||
| Principled Observer Location: Toledo, Ohio Posts: 13,873 | Quote:
Who are you to defend that right to trespass at whim? On what ground? Quote:
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If a TP'ing kid is shot violating property rights, who is at fault if the person who did the shooting felt threatened, ON HIS PROPERTY by trespassers who had no right to be there? You sound like you would defend a person who was breaking into a home, and injured themselves because they tripped over a childs toy left in front of the locked door they just broke through. Petition of Redress of Grievances: http://www.givemeliberty.org/default.htm Canadian Lawsuit Against Their National Banks: http://www.freewebs.com/classaction/ Osborn F. Enready | |||
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| | #52 (permalink) (top) | |||||
![]() The Cake is a lie... Location: St. Louis Posts: 2,385 | Quote:
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You understand that this vagueness of law works both ways, right? Police could shoot you for trespassing on government property by your logic. Also, terms like trespassing are ill-equiped to deal with this law. It's technically trespassing if a friend has you over, you offend them, they ask you to leave and you don't do so immediately. By the logic you've demonstrated here they could be gunned down for this behavior. You are not thinking this one through. Quote:
Do you have any concept of reasonable force? Sure children should learn to respect property rights? But if they don't, kill them? Christ... What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? | |||||
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| | #53 (permalink) (top) | ||||||||||
| Principled Observer Location: Toledo, Ohio Posts: 13,873 | Quote:
When I own property, I shouldn't have to "expect" my property limits to be broken. If I see someone in my yard, at dark, the first question that should come up is "why is someone in my yard without my permission?" The second is to assess the situation and see if a threat exists. If I were to walk up on this "suspect" of criminal trespass, and they do something quickly that I feel places me in danger (mainly because its dark and like most people, have trouble seeing in the dark unless my eyes are fully adjusted), things could get ugly. Instead of allowing situations like this to be "routine" we should be teaching people how important respect of property rights is. Quote:
You know 9 times out of 10, a person wouldn't be shot for TP'ing a tree in someones yard... but it is NOT the property owner who should be obligated to justify every action he takes, when the law is quite clear... NO TRESPASSING. You also know in many situations things don't appear as they are, especially if you are walking into a group of people, who are already breaking the law, on your land, and they don't see you coming up on them. You don't know what to expect when you challenge them to identify themselves and state their reasons for being on your property, and you don't know if theyll react by shooting at you, or simply saying "hi mr, I have a flat, can I borrow a 4-way?" You know as well as I do, people sometimes do stupid things, and in cases where a law has already been broken, we should give benefit of the doubt to the property owner. Quote:
Secondly, because you think we should change the law, again, putting more restriction on the person who may be in serious threat to his life. I have trouble with that. People have enough pressure on them already from all the ridiculous rules and regulations you have to observe simply to exercise your right to defense. We should not be protecting law breakers, at the expense of innocent people. If a person is trespassing, that is a serious issue that can end up in serious results, and that should be known when trespassing. Do you think people coming across the border from mexico into the U.S. worry about being shot? I wonder why? You expect people to respect government "no trespassing signs" with reverance, yet can't observe the same thing for private individuals, and it just doesn't jive with me. Defense is defense, and the benefit of the doubt has to be with the property owner. Quote:
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Haha... not funny. What if I am coming out of a brightly lit house, into a dark yard taking my trash out, notice people next to me who don't see me, and just as I recognize the shape I see them throw something that looks like a brick, or drawing a gun, or pulling a knife? Obviously if it was identified as TP there wouldn't be an issue besides saying "GET OFF MY LAND". Quote:
Childish. Quote:
Try wandering your ass on to a nuclear power plant property, and see what happens. Why? Because they don't know what your intentions are, what you have on you, if you're armed, etc. Why should private property be any different if there is reason to believe the property owner felt a reasonable threat? Do you deny this could happen? Quote:
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The fact is, accidents happen, and the benefit of the doubt should be given to the property owner. Petition of Redress of Grievances: http://www.givemeliberty.org/default.htm Canadian Lawsuit Against Their National Banks: http://www.freewebs.com/classaction/ Osborn F. Enready | ||||||||||
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| | #54 (permalink) (top) | |
| Verbal dreadnaught Location: N.Y Posts: 91 | Mr. Horn said he didn't know the neighbors very well. I don't know some of my neighbors very well but I do know if they are male/female or elderly or how many children reside in the houses around me. Though Mr. Horn may not have known them well I'm sure he knows them. I understand why he did what he did. From his perspective he could have just watched the two people who slit his neighbors throats, adults/children for a mere gymbag of silver spoons and forks. I think Mr. Horn acted in a rash manner and his quotes,as I have read them in this thread, do not work in his favor I don't think I would call what he did..... Quote:
"Darkness!...gather to me! Yield unto me the unbridled fury of chaos!...... Gift unto me the indomitable power of rage!"......... ..................... and cookies and milk if ya got em':) | |
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| | #55 (permalink) (top) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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If you need a law to protect you should you use a firearm irresponsibly, you don't deserve a firearm. That simple. What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? | |||||||||||||||||||||
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| | #56 (permalink) (top) | ||
![]() Natures 'D' Student Posts: 1,214 | What I really like abou the Texas criminal code concerning property protection is as follows; It puts the homeowner/property owner in a position whereas they do not have to refer to their states criminal code law books to decide what to do. It is clear. Unlike in some states where you have to take off running from your own home if an intruder enters and you don't want to get into a shootout with the crook and end up in prison on a 12 year manslaughter sentence. Quote:
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For example, if you see a couple men running out of your back door with an armload of your loot and you yell "Hey stop", you may get a bullet in your stomach for asking. Shoot them in their back like the cowards they are, and you have little chance of being shot first. | ||
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| | #57 (permalink) (top) | |||
![]() The Cake is a lie... Location: St. Louis Posts: 2,385 | Quote:
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So someone stealing shit out of your yard, while not preferable does not presuppose danger to your person. In fact, at the moment they are in your yard and have not done anything there is not yet any potential for danger. On the other hand confronting the person who you believe might be stealing your sh*t does put you in potential danger that might not have been there had you remained in your home. In the interest of self-defense, if this really is your interest, it is simply idiotic to leave your home if you suspect someone intends to harm you and you see them in your yard. From your home you have a strategic advantage and leaving cover to go confront the individual is not in the best interest of protection, but in the interest of satiating ego. Also, not considering other possibilities/ramifications before discharging your firearm puts everyone around you at risk. Are you really advocating only relying on instinct in a situation where someone may or may not be a threat in the middle of the night? Sure you have to think fast, but quick thinking and no thinking are not the same thing. I hope you never have a child try and sneak back into your house late at night. Unfortunately (though I don't consider it so unfortunate) you must consider the ramifications of your actions should you decide to engage in them in this society. This does not just apply to firearm use, but every aspect of life. Now on the flip side, should these same hypothetical individuals attempt to break into your house, I think all bets are off. What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power? Or were you just born with a heart full of neutrality? | |||
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| | #58 (permalink) (top) | |
| Libertarian Location: Colorado Springs, CO Posts: 1,609 | Quote:
If a police officer attempts to stop you for jaywalking, and you run, the officer can pursue you. If you end up caught and fight him while he's trying to restrain you, he CAN shoot you. You may want nothing more than to be left alone, but, the escalation of the "crime" of jaywalking, could end up in your death. No one here is saying that they want to kill a kid for TPing their house. All they're saying is that, if they confront someone in such a situation, and things escalate for whatever reason, that the doubt should go to the person who was defending their property and their rights. Nothing more. An exact parallel, with far more justification, than a fully trained "professional" trying to apprehend a "suspect" for whatever crime would have for drawing his "service weapon" and firing a shot. Or, if we could draw a parallel, I would be more justified in shooting a kid who has violated my property in the dark, if I perceived a threat, than a highly trained, professional law enforcement officer has in tasering a 20-something speeder, in the back, in broad daylight on the side of a busy highway. Keith The great thread killer. | |
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