My grandfather lived in a small town in the 60s/70s and had a gun stolen. It was a huge shock because it was the kind of society where no one locked their doors. The thief was some bad boy my aunt was dating. Some things never change.
Not judging, but I honestly cannot imagine not locking your doors in any society. The idea that just anyone can walk in - even if they never do - would drive me crazy.
How would high gun ownership help you against someone sneaking into your home and holding you at gunpoint - before you get the chance to get your gun? Of course, this question is theoretical, because obviously this did not happen in those areas.
The stereotypical olde tyme family had 3 kids and a big dog. Retriever or Shepherd, usually. Beyond just somehow sleeping through someone walking through your house, that was usually sufficient secondary alarms. Someone shoots the dog, you shoot them. Because you DO have your gun on-hand. One in the bedroom, one on the mantle in the family room, sometimes one by the door.
If it's a farmstead or plantation house, even more animals would be about and easily startled by strangers. People call cows dumb, but if someone untoward came towards my grandfather's farm, they'd have three bulls surrounding them real quick, any time of day.
Were I grew up in NZ in the 90s we didnt always lock our doors. I'd come home from school and the house would just be open with no one in it.
Its not like that anymore though.
My grandfather lived in a small town in the 60s/70s and had a gun stolen. It was a huge shock because it was the kind of society where no one locked their doors. The thief was some bad boy my aunt was dating. Some things never change.
Not judging, but I honestly cannot imagine not locking your doors in any society. The idea that just anyone can walk in - even if they never do - would drive me crazy.
The past really is another country.
Live in a place with both high gun ownership and supportive and functional law enforcement.
The druggies know to only steal from each other because if the homeowner doesn't get them the cops will.
How would high gun ownership help you against someone sneaking into your home and holding you at gunpoint - before you get the chance to get your gun? Of course, this question is theoretical, because obviously this did not happen in those areas.
The stereotypical olde tyme family had 3 kids and a big dog. Retriever or Shepherd, usually. Beyond just somehow sleeping through someone walking through your house, that was usually sufficient secondary alarms. Someone shoots the dog, you shoot them. Because you DO have your gun on-hand. One in the bedroom, one on the mantle in the family room, sometimes one by the door.
If it's a farmstead or plantation house, even more animals would be about and easily startled by strangers. People call cows dumb, but if someone untoward came towards my grandfather's farm, they'd have three bulls surrounding them real quick, any time of day.
If you don't live around blacks that just doesn't happen.
Were I grew up in NZ in the 90s we didnt always lock our doors. I'd come home from school and the house would just be open with no one in it. Its not like that anymore though.