-
Content Count
1997 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Everything posted by Hixter
-
The other one is wrapped around a Smuttynose Finestkind.
-
When it comes down to killing or being killed, I'll always choose the former. Maybe the gun-toting person who smashes their way into my home in the middle of the night is just really eager to give me a foot massage, but I'm not going to take any chances and I'll try to give them a chest full of #4 buckshot every time.
-
I see where you're coming from, but it's not as if people are spending their days consumed with fear and frantically checking the preparations that they've made. It's more of a Boy Scout "be prepared" sort of thing. Keep a loaded 12-gauge handy in the unlikely event of a break-in. Install smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors in the unlikely event of a fire. Carry a seatbelt cutter and window breaker on your keychain in the unlikely event of becoming trapped in a submerged car. (I have one of these: http://www.amazon.com/resqme-Original-Keychain-Escape-Orange/dp/B0042VTYXM/)
-
Any training is always good. People should know how to aim, fire, load, unload, carry, store and clean their firearms. Everyone should know when it's OK to shoot someone and when it's not, but common sense is the biggest determinant. Let's face it, the overwhelming majority of us aren't murderers and wouldn't even consider shooting someone unless it were a grave emergency.
-
First of all, I think you've greatly overestimated the number of home invasion shootings. But that said, yes, I think anyone illegally entering my home should be worried about being shot and I may very well do so.
-
No training is required to purchase/possess a firearm, but training in the safe handling of it would be a very good idea. It could be a friend or a teacher in a classroom, but everyone should know how to safely load, use and store a firearm.
-
I've never been to "gun school." My only training was in the Army and a healthy helping of common sense. I think you're within your rights to shoot any intruder who has illegally entered your home. Again, common sense prevails. But I don't think a court would convict you for shooting someone who has illegally entered your home.
-
There are a million variables to process in mere seconds, but it doesn't really matter if the intruder is armed. You're basically going to process the manner and time of entry (smashed window, open door, middle of the night) and try to make some sort of ID (young kid, large masked man, neighbor, police officer) and then based on your position determine whether or not it's best to run, hide or shoot. It's a lot to process, but the human brain is very, very good at it.
-
Absolutely. Self-protection is our most basic, fundamental instinct.
-
Or you can remove those 3 people's right to defend themselves and reduce the number of survivors to zero.
-
And that's the whole crux of the gun "advocate" argument: if you don't want to own a firearm, then don't. But don't try to take the constitutionally guaranteed right to bear arms away from those who feel differently.
-
Percentages are a funny thing. A .030 batting average won't cut it if you're not a pitcher, but if you had a 3% chance of winning the lottery you'd buy tickets every week. And you know what's even more important to me than winning millions of dollars? My life. Exactly.
-
She was not murdered, she was killed. There is a big difference between the two.
-
You're off by a factor of 10.
-
Concert halls targets for terror
Hixter replied to thejokeexplained's topic in Tongue-Tied Lightning
I know it's his band, but it seems kind of pointless to include Josh Homme in the interview, since he wasn't even in Paris when the attack took place. -
Absolutely. She and her crew broke into an occupied home while armed with guns, knives and burglary tools. They had already stolen several items, so there is no reason to say "allegedly." No he didn't. Apparently you don't understand the definition of murder. That's irrelevant. The burglars broke into a home and committed burglary. One of them paid the ultimate price for their crime. The Supreme Court has ruled time and again that it covers the right of individual Americans to own firearms. Since this gun ownership/control discussion pertains to America and Americans, I'm going to
-
First of all, the only reason that I responded was to refute the ridiculous assertions that burglars never strike while people are home and that gun owners don't know how to use their weapons and couldn't possibly use them in self-defense situations. As for the opinion piece cited above, it's just that: an opinion piece written by someone with an anti-gun axe to grind. But even his article admits that nearly 70,000 crimes are stopped by by armed citizens every year. That's nearly 200 incidents per day. Gun control advocates would like to ban so-called "assault rifles" yet rifles of all kinds
-
Cold, hard facts.
-
Yes, the homeowner shot and killed a burglar. Good for him. The invaders were armed with knives and a gun, so he probably saved his life. It happens many times a day across the country.
-
I don't know anyone who keeps a gun for home security who doesn't keep it loaded and doesn't know how to use it or "shoot it correctly." And, yes, burglars do break into homes at night when people are home. This happened about a week ago in my city: http://www.ksat.com/news/1-teen-killed-1-injured-in-home-invasion
-
The downing of a Russian jet by Turkish F-16s is worrisome. The Turks have been aggressively warning the Russians over the last few weeks and this was almost bound to happen. I expect Putin to retaliate and it could get ugly since Turkey is a member of NATO. Hopefully the Russians will just settle for a Turkish eye for a Russian eye and concentrate on deconflicting future flights near their border.
-
But the leader was very active in ISIS activities in Syria and bragged that he traveled freely between Syria and Europe at will. It will be interesting to learn how he was able to do so. It won't do the pro-refugee crowd any favors if it turns out that he was blending in with the wave of people pouring into Europe.
-
The calls for more gun control that come after a school shooting or whatever aren't really related to terrorism as we know it. They are the acts of deranged individuals, not organized terror groups with clearly defined goals. And politicians using them to criminalize law-abiding gun owners in order to be seen as "doing something" doesn't make the nation any safer. As for the NSA, their programs are vetted by an army of lawyers. They don't just sit down with Verizon and say, "Hey, we want to spy on millions of Americans and we expect you to go along with it." They bring a team of lawyers to m
-
I don't really pay any attention to them other than to write a check every few years when the president starts talking about enacting additional laws which will do nothing to solve our gun problems while simultaneously turning me into a felon at the swish of his pen.
-
Yes, I'm ok with the government possessing a massive surveillance system. That's the NSA's whole purpose. Several other acronyms', too. Every government does it. It's important for a nation's safety. I'm also ok with the government regulating guns, but knee-jerk reactions to mass murders that infringe on our constitutional rights are another story entirely. Don't let bad guys have guns. Don't let drug abusers have guns. Don't let crazy people have guns. Murder is already illegal, so that about covers it. Restrictions on magazine size, so-called "assault weapons" and handguns are just blatant