Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP, if you’re real, you are exactly the sort of person who shouldn’t have a gun- emotional, impulsive, panicky. Bringing a gun into your home makes you more likely to accidentally harm yourself or a family member, self harm, accidentally harm someone like a delivery person, lost teen, etc, and you’re more likely to be injured if you try to use a firearm to defend your home (see below for a good collection of data).
It’s easy to say, that you can handle it, but most people have no idea how they will react when adrenaline is pumping and they are terrified. It takes a lot of training and certain personal qualities to physically attain calm and make good decisions with a gun during a crisis.
Since you have so much money, why not build safe rooms? Get a dog, any dog is a deterrent. You correctly assessed that you can’t manage a guard dog, well I don’t think you can manage a gun either. You can afford a dog walker.
https://www.thetrace.org/2020/04/gun-safety-research-coronavirus-gun-sales/
This is all BS.
And all of it was already refuted in the other thread.
PP: you probably think Kamala Harris should not be allowed to have her gun in her home for home defense.
I’m going to side with the VPOTUS over you, PP, since you’re just some internet rando who doesn’t care at all about my family’s safety.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, if you’re real, you are exactly the sort of person who shouldn’t have a gun- emotional, impulsive, panicky. Bringing a gun into your home makes you more likely to accidentally harm yourself or a family member, self harm, accidentally harm someone like a delivery person, lost teen, etc, and you’re more likely to be injured if you try to use a firearm to defend your home (see below for a good collection of data).
It’s easy to say, that you can handle it, but most people have no idea how they will react when adrenaline is pumping and they are terrified. It takes a lot of training and certain personal qualities to physically attain calm and make good decisions with a gun during a crisis.
Since you have so much money, why not build safe rooms? Get a dog, any dog is a deterrent. You correctly assessed that you can’t manage a guard dog, well I don’t think you can manage a gun either. You can afford a dog walker.
https://www.thetrace.org/2020/04/gun-safety-research-coronavirus-gun-sales/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you truly prepared to kill someone? Are you prepared to be someone who shot someone dead? Do you know what that does to a person psychologically? Think about that before buying a gun.
If someone hopped up on crack went towards my kids’ room I’f have no compunction whatsoever in shooting them in the head. I could live with myself if I was such a coward I could not defend my family.
What if they weren't on crack? What if they didn't go towards your kids' room? What if they just wanted to take electronics and china? Or steal your dog? Then would you kill them? Can you make that decision in a split second?
Anonymous wrote:If everyone's plan is just "let the burglars take whatever they want; its not worth it," then
- what if they are breaking in to rape your daughter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you truly prepared to kill someone? Are you prepared to be someone who shot someone dead? Do you know what that does to a person psychologically? Think about that before buying a gun.
If someone hopped up on crack went towards my kids’ room I’f have no compunction whatsoever in shooting them in the head. I could live with myself if I was such a coward I could not defend my family.
What if they weren't on crack? What if they didn't go towards your kids' room? What if they just wanted to take electronics and china? Or steal your dog? Then would you kill them? Can you make that decision in a split second?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you truly prepared to kill someone? Are you prepared to be someone who shot someone dead? Do you know what that does to a person psychologically? Think about that before buying a gun.
If someone hopped up on crack went towards my kids’ room I’f have no compunction whatsoever in shooting them in the head. I could live with myself if I was such a coward I could not defend my family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to keep your cars parked in your driveway so it always looks like someone is home. Hiring your cars in your garage makes it look like your house is empty.
Always keep a light on downstairs.
We keep a tv on overnight in a room and leave the curtains open so it appears we have a night owl.
Honestly, if someone has approached your house twice, I’d be worried too. Did you recently have someone in your home? Perhaps the company that shampooed your rugs? Any outsider could case your home. If you were wearing fancy jewelry, that could make you a target. Or if they saw your car keys and car, they could come back for it (I know a family that happened to; construction workers grabbed their spare keys and took the car overnight).
This is why I always dress down and don’t wear jewelry when I have workers in my house. I also don’t leave any keys out (I put my purse and all keys in a closet upstairs when I have workers present).
I also make a point of saying that I work from home and so do most of my neighbors ever since Covid. And I say that my husband usually works from home but is at a meeting.
You can’t trust anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you truly prepared to kill someone? Are you prepared to be someone who shot someone dead? Do you know what that does to a person psychologically? Think about that before buying a gun.
If someone hopped up on crack went towards my kids’ room I’f have no compunction whatsoever in shooting them in the head. I could live with myself if I was such a coward I could not defend my family.
How many times have you shot a gun?
DP, probably tens of thousands of times, but I grew up in a family where shooting was just something we did