goalie wrote:You seem to think that anything less than shooting first, asking questions later = rolling over and letting an intruder butt-rape your family. One can do many things in a continuum between the two that make dealing with an intruder safer for your family. Alarms. Dog(s), locking interior doors all come to mind. Justa say'n....)
You're the one suffering from a false dichotomy. I never said you should shoot first and ask questions later. I responded to your comment disagreeing with folks who took a "anyone in my house is automatically a threat" approach. Anyone who's in my house I don't know about is automatically a threat. How I deal with that threat is completely up to my discretion. Perhaps I'll call the police and retreat, or I might open up with everything I've got and never give the intruder/s warning.
Just to be clear though, are you seriously saying that one should have the same mindset as the military in their home?
People can adopt any mindset they want or feel is appropriate depending upon the circumstances they face. Who the hell are you to determine which is the best approach?
Snowgun wrote:What if it's your kids sneaking back in? If you can take the time to identify them as not a threat, you can do the same with another unwanted guest.
What kids? Apparently you know something I don't!

Identifying someone you know as not being a threat is much easier than determining if you're dealing with a confused Alzheimer's patient, or heavily armed escaped felon/s.
Interesting read:
http://iscqc.org/macyoung/2012/03/17/wh ... ried-by-6/
"The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without." -- Dwight D. Eisenhower