Neehau said:
SwigAg11 said:
Neehau said:
SwigAg11 said:
Neehau said:
petroleo y agua said:
Defending your own life is silly? Defending property is silly? Maybe go back to the Dems with those takes.
You should always defend your own life. Part of that process is making wise decisions. Kenosha has a professional, trained police force? Ever been there? I go there every year for the Renaissance Festival right next door. He made silly decisions and almost paid with ruining his life for it. He should go to a school in his home state and not bring his silliness to Texas A&M.
During those nights of rioting, that police force you mention was overwhelmed in many parts of the city. They were pushed back multiple times and had to abandon large parts of the city that were rioting. What do law abiding citizens do in that scenario? Do they give up property and let it be destroyed? I believe that insurance policies for many businesses have exclusions in their coverage for riot damage. That would destroy family businesses and their income. What should they do then?
Call in the National Guard.
There is no such thing as true riot exclusion language in any state for an insurance policy. It may read such as vacated premises for 30 days or something to that effect or it may attempt to classify the behavior of cogent actors as force majeure/acts of god. Still not legal.
The governor refused to call in the national guard. Which was another failure of government to protect its citizens. So again, what should law abiding citizens have done in this scenario?
Collect insurance. Bringing a gun puts you in a situation like Kyle found himself in. It was a stupid decision.
The only time you should ever consider using a gun, in my opinion, is when someone directly threatens your life or the life of your loved ones. If Kyle had stayed home, he would not have been involved. If Kyles relatives in Kenosha stayed home, and someone damaged their place of business for example, that would probably be a blessing so they could replace everything.
"I am neither an Athenian nor a Greek, but a citizen of the world"-Plato, attributed to Socrates, Theaetetus-