I ignored your point because it was irrelevant. If they were reasonably sure that no one was home they are not taking their lives into their own hands anymore than the daily risks involved in life.
Breaking into an empty house runs the risk of getting caught, but doesn't necessarily encompass the risk of a vigilante neighbor gunning you down in cold blood.
To claim that anyone breaking into a house realizes the outcome could be death is foolish. They could be certain no one is home and risk only criminal offense.
Not true. You NEVER NEVER NEVER know what's going to happen when you break into anyone's house. You don't know for 1000% certain no one is in there, even if all the lights are off, even if the place looks deserted. Hell, someone could come home and see you robbing their place if nothing else. Making an ASSUMPTION that no one is home does not equate to removal of the risk involved. That's just silliness.
Again i will ask if this is such a good policy why dont we expand it to include the use of deadly force against anyone seen committing any crime?
According to you guys we could do away with all police and just let citizens police each other with state sanctioned legal executions of anyone seen committing a crime.
Once again, senseless and useless hyperbole. No one here is advocating that, yet you and others keep bringing it up as if it's our stance. It's not. Please stop putting words in our mouths and making assumptions that are not based on what we're saying. If you want to have a logical discussion, that's fine, but vilifying us for placing some of the accountability on the perpetrators of the crime will not help your cause.
I was about to say the same thing.
If someone steals from a house two blocks down the road and happens to drive by, should I run out of my house and shoot them in the face as they drive by?
It's what they deserve, right?
Maybe I should be posted outside of Wal-Mart, waiting to shoot the 14 year old girls who steal makeup.
More senseless and stupid hyperbole. Do I need to post the definition of this term so you guys realize what you're doing? No... you guys are well aware of what you're doing, in my opinion, and it's one of the lowest forms of debate, indicating (to me at least) a number of things, including a lack of debate skills, a lack of a reasonable stance and a conviction on that stance, and desperation in trying to discredit one's opponent by use of inflammatory means. It's one of the things I despise about most politicians in this country, too...
No one is saying that the victims should not be defended to the letter of the law. No one has a problem with the burglars going to jail. But the burglars should not have been killed.
What I find funny is that people are afraid to go places where the law is taken into the hands of the people (think ghetto's) and yet here people are, saying "Yeah, let them do as they please." It's ridiculous.
I never said they should have been killed for stealing or that simple larceny should be a capital offense. People being afraid of going into places like the ghetto is not from fear of people enforcing the law by themselves, but because of
crime... because of a
lack of people willing to step up and see that the law is upheld. It's a significant difference. I have lived in places where the common people will pull a child molester out and beat him within an inch of his life, where thieves caught red-handed have "street justice" meted out, and where people are not afraid to stand up for what is right... it's actually nice to know that the common man walking the street will have your back if you're a victim.
Do those who support this killing believe that burglary warrants capital punishment?
I don't support them being killed, although it is most certainly a risk any non-mentally-ill American should be able to assess when deciding if they are going to rob someone or not.
Then Joe says... "I'm not going to let them go"
He didn't want them to get away scott-free is how I understand that... he did not say he was going out to kill them. He said he wasn't going to let them get away. People are making the assumption that he intended all along to kill these guys... if that were the case, why would he have called the police first? Why would he have stayed on the line with the dispatcher? Why would he have warned them to stand still? It would have been much better for him to simply go over to "investigate" suspicious activity he noticed, then "spontaneously" shot them and claimed they threatened him. MUCH MUCH easier... no... I think this guy was trying to get things done the proper way, and when he saw that the thieves were (apparently) going to get away, he decided that the last resort was for him to step in... I believe he showed remarkable restraint for some time, waiting and waiting, only intervening when he felt there was no reasonable option left that would still result in the perpetrators being captured.
However... once again, I am not defending him shooting them, as I don't know what happened in that yard.
i will agree that that getting involved should be within the limits of the law. and in some states, joe was, is, well within his rights.
Not sure I agree with this, but I haven't (and don't intend to) listened to the 911 tape, because it is irrelevant to my point.