Excuse the double post, but I also think a lot of crime could be solved by making self-defense heavily protected and allowing people a lot of leeway to set up booby traps. Most criminals aren't nearly clever enough to bypass booby traps. Although there would need to be a way to indicate and/or disarm booby traps for emergency personnel.
I just deleted a huge rant about how private property owners should have absolute sovereignty on their land, including booby traps and lethal force. The word "trespassing" should instill instinctual, reactive fear in everyone and avoiding it at all costs should be a cultural and legal assumption.
I would read such a post, if you had the patience to write it out. I'm a big proponent of Castle Doctrine (the name is half of it) because defending your "nest" is so inherent to every living creature that demanding a human being not do the same strikes me as purposefully malicious. Is a man not entitled to the safety and security of his own domain?
Part of the justification for traps being illegal is that an innocent person, like a mail carrier, or an "innocent" person, like a trespassing neighbor who doesn't intend to break other laws, can trigger the trap inadvertently. These are clearly flimsy justifications to prevent you from defending your home against feds.
In the first case, fair enough, but A) why is the potential of harm illegal rather than the act of having trapped an innocent person and B) if you turn your lawn into a Vietnamese rice field, are you just going to be cool with a rando setting it all off? You're not going to cancel your mail for a while or put up a sign or something?
In the second case, it essentially decriminalizes trespassing. As long as they don't touch anything, anybody can just wander around your property, apparently. That's the kind of argument that an entity with a vested interest in uninterrupted snooping would make.
I don't see how the home owner did anything wrong. Sure, he maybe didn't identify his target before firing, but if the eurotrash hadn't trespassed, the homeowner would be peppering the walls of his own garage. Is that illegal? I'm against any law or system that prevents finding out after fucking around.
Excuse the double post, but I also think a lot of crime could be solved by making self-defense heavily protected and allowing people a lot of leeway to set up booby traps. Most criminals aren't nearly clever enough to bypass booby traps. Although there would need to be a way to indicate and/or disarm booby traps for emergency personnel.
I just deleted a huge rant about how private property owners should have absolute sovereignty on their land, including booby traps and lethal force. The word "trespassing" should instill instinctual, reactive fear in everyone and avoiding it at all costs should be a cultural and legal assumption.
I would read such a post, if you had the patience to write it out. I'm a big proponent of Castle Doctrine (the name is half of it) because defending your "nest" is so inherent to every living creature that demanding a human being not do the same strikes me as purposefully malicious. Is a man not entitled to the safety and security of his own domain?
It was more ramble than anything.
Part of the justification for traps being illegal is that an innocent person, like a mail carrier, or an "innocent" person, like a trespassing neighbor who doesn't intend to break other laws, can trigger the trap inadvertently. These are clearly flimsy justifications to prevent you from defending your home against feds.
In the first case, fair enough, but A) why is the potential of harm illegal rather than the act of having trapped an innocent person and B) if you turn your lawn into a Vietnamese rice field, are you just going to be cool with a rando setting it all off? You're not going to cancel your mail for a while or put up a sign or something?
In the second case, it essentially decriminalizes trespassing. As long as they don't touch anything, anybody can just wander around your property, apparently. That's the kind of argument that an entity with a vested interest in uninterrupted snooping would make.
This case still blows my mind: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/montana-man-charged-with-shooting-teen-in-his-garage/
I don't see how the home owner did anything wrong. Sure, he maybe didn't identify his target before firing, but if the eurotrash hadn't trespassed, the homeowner would be peppering the walls of his own garage. Is that illegal? I'm against any law or system that prevents finding out after fucking around.
For the 'innocent person' you have a DMZ. Like the postbox, or a foyer, or the threshold of your door.
Anywhere else and FAFO.