Bertros Bertros wrote:So you do consider capital punishment a suitable penatly for armed robbery, Iz Man?
Let me repeat:
Capital punishment for armed robbery. No.
Deadly force authorized during the commission of an armed robbery. Yes.
Bertros Bertros wrote:Feeling the need to carry a gun to assuage your fear of the bad guys does not make you courageous, it makes you scared. The marine, presumably trained like yourself to be an excellent marksman with a cool head in a life threatening situation chose to shoot dead a man who was committing a robbery. If anything I see this as the cowardly option. Would not a braver man have disabled the robber and left the courts to see to his punishment. To shoot the man dead, presumably because he was scared of the reprisal if he didnt go the whole way strikes me as a little yellow bellied really, unless of course he was just missing the thrill of the kill since he finished active service in line with the arguments presented by Dave Grossman.
I'm sensing sarcasm, and I hope its there.
The marine chose to defend himself and the other patrons and employees in the Subway.
I believe I remember you saying you were trained in the use of firearms. If that is correct, you would know that you never shoot to maim, or disable. The police & military don't do that. You shoot to kill. The premise being an armed, albeit wounded, assailant can still shoot back.
Bertros Bertros wrote:I don't think anyone here is suggesting they wouldn't step in if they saw a granny being mugged on the streets, I sure know if I did I would try to stop it. But then I could do so fairly sure that I'm not about to be shot, not the same for you.
On the contrary, that is exactly what Stopper is suggesting, that the all powerful, almighty government should protect us all. Which is true to an extent, but not at the cost of having citizens run for cover at the first sight of a crime being committed.
Bertros Bertros wrote:I'm not a coward and I'm not scared of guns, I'm concerned by the proliferation of gun culture and I don't see joe public being armed to the teeth as a way of mitigating the danger. Ultimately I'm not criticising the marine, or even you, but the second amendment which has led to the horrible dillemma your society faces over gun crime.
I'm not asserting that you are a coward. I'm glad to hear you would step in to help granny. Hopefully you live near Stopper as he apparently would not.
I will respectfully agree to disagree with you on our 2nd Amendment, and on gun ownership in general. We would not find common ground on that issue. I respect your beliefs on the subject, however, it is not what this thread is about IMO.
I see what the marine did as honorable. He protected himself and everyone else who was in the shop. The 2nd thug was armed as well, he fled because he knew that he chose to rob the wrong place at the wrong time. He ran (even though armed) because of the exact reason you stated above. He had a gun because he was scared that the unarmed (his mistake) employees and patrons might fight back if he himself didn't have a gun. When the odds became even (his victim being armed, that is), the coward ran.
I pose the same question I did earlier: If the marine had killed the thug with a knife, does it change the topic?
I don't think so. The premise is the same.
If you have the means and the opportunity to stop violence against your fellow man, then you should try to stop it.
It's the right thing to do.
This man is a hero.