I'm trying to follow but not sure I agree with Tom_G's thinking.
Wow... am I really that unclear? Let me try again. JI808.
Based on statistics, the probability that one will get in a life threatening confrontation with a criminal is very low. However, at the same time, it never hurts to be prepared. The chances that one will need a fire extinguisher is also low. But it would be silly not to have one at home because chances are low that one will not need it on a daily basis.
1. I will never need a gun.
This doesn't in any way mean that I would not carry a gun. It means that, as I lay on my deathbed and am walking into the light, my last though could well be "Well, damn, I carried that gun all my days for nothing!"
If I ever am in a situation where I need a gun but have it locked at home, having 1 or 1000 guns will not be enough.
Having a gun means having a gun. It most emphatically does not mean not having a gun.
I don't get this one. Firing a warning shot sounds like a bad idea.
Who said anything about firing a warning shot? If I'm in a self defense situation where I need a gun, and I'm pulling the trigger, of course I'm trying to hit the bad guy!
If one isn't high on drugs, one hole may be enough.
Yep. Already acknowledged and addressed.
Better not miss a moving target or one behind cover.
So what if I do? Again, a fucking GUN FIGHT has erupted! People are going to take notice. Bad guys are going to run away!
Wouldn't one already be in trouble if one had to pull out a gun? I don't quite follow Tom_G's line of thinking as listed out above.
Trouble, in this case, means "I'm now in more trouble that I was actually prepared to handle. Looks like my philosophy may have been flawed. D'oh!"
This was what I was addressing in my previous post. I don't think most of the victims expect to get mugged or attacked in their homes either but it happens.
Which is why I have developed a philosophy for self defense in the first place.
It depends what the criminal is wanting to do. If they are there to behead you, or rob you, or rape you, they might not care if you see them or not. I think this is the biggest wrong assumption that a criminal will flee whenever you run into them.
Feel free to think that. I'm not operating on opinion here, as my philosophy obviously flies in the face of prevalent internet reason. I'm operating on statistics. Criminals, particularly those engaged in crimes of opportunity, do run away. The vast majority run away at the first sign of trouble.
Let's hope so.
I'll take that as an acknowledgement.
Possibly correct. I've never been in one and hope never to be in one.
And you know what? You never will be! Neither will I! Which is why (once Baker gets settled) I will feel perfectly secure with my choice of SD sidearm, despite the pooh-poohing of the Internet.
Considering all things are normal, I would say so. But if you were living in Ferguson during a riot or Louisiana after Katrina, that may not be the case.
Well, if I'm out and about, it's because things are normal. If I'm living in a post-apocalyptic situation where looting and malfeasance are commonplace, or if there are riots going on in my city, that changes the nature of the game. But for those rare days when the sky hasn't fallen, I'm pretty comfortable with my philosophy.
Does that clarify my position? Is it a little easier to follow my thinking now? It all seems quite clear inside my own skull, but that's really no yardstick.