Sunday, February 23, 2014

Stand Your Ground...Good Idea or Scourge of the States?



Chad’s Input - 

The idea that to “Stand Your Ground” has to be made a law confuses me. I am sure that when our forefathers arrived here and began a new country they never would have thought that if someone broke into their homes and in protection of said home and they wound up killing said intruder they would face the possibility of going to prison. I don’t understand how anyone could ask me to let someone uninvited come into my home and steal what I worked my entire life for simply so the lawbreaker’s freedom and/or life are not compromised.  I am honestly sick and tired of a society where those who break the laws not only get preferential treatment, but, laws are drafted around what’s best for them.

You may ask what is the definition of Stand Your Ground? Here is the definition I will be working from. “A Stand-Your-Ground law is a type of self-defense law that gives individuals the right to use deadly force to defend themselves without any requirements to evade or retreat from a dangerous situation. It is a law in certain jurisdictions of the United States. The basis may lie in either statutory law or common law precedents or both.”  

I live in Wisconsin, a state with the “Duty To Retreat” clause. That says if I am being attacked by someone, even if it is their intent to take my life, before I can retaliate I have to make every reasonable effort to retreat. If I don’t and I somehow kill a lawbreaker then I go to prison for murder. Take a moment to re-read what I just wrote. If I don’t give up what the LAWBREAKER is after and I stand my ground and he gets injured or killed I have to pay the penalty for this even if his intention is to take my life.

I think now is a place for a little bit of background on me. I am a practicing Roman Catholic. I believe in the Bible and the dictates of Christ. I am even a believer in the concept of turn the other cheek, but, if someone comes into my home and threatens my family, my way of life or my livelihood I will stand my ground. We can also argue about what stand my ground means. I don’t own a gun, even for hunting. I don’t own a taser, even for weekend parties. I do own a bat and I was a pretty fair hitter in my youth. I do own a few blades, I aim well enough to cut. I would never want to purposefully or accidently kill someone, but, I want the right to protect what is mine.

With the George Zimmerman case in Florida most people have heard of the stand your ground law there, but, where does Stand Your Ground exist. I got my list from http://www.propublica.org their tag line is Journalism in the Public Interest.

Alabama
Arizona
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois – The law does not include a Duty To Retreat, which courts have interpreted as a right to expansive self defense
Indiana
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Michigan
Mississippi
Montana
Nevada
New Hampshire
North Carolina
Oklahoma
Oregon – Does not include a Duty To Retreat
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Washington – Does not include a Duty To Retreat
West Virginia

On the flip side there are the states such as Wisconsin that has a law that states a Duty To Retreat. I found this list on http://www.findlaw.com. Those states include:

Arkansas
Connecticut
Delaware
Hawai’i
Iowa
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Missouri
Minnesota
Nebraska
New Jersey
New York
North Dakota
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Wisconsin
Wyoming

I now want to take this one step further. Let’s take a look and see which states Red (Predominately Republican) or Blue (Predominately Democratic). We will find out if there is a political correlation between the Stand Your Ground laws and Duty To Retreat states.

Red States (Republican) with Stand Your Ground:
Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

Red States (Republican) with Duty To Retreat:
Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and Wyoming.


Blue States (Democrat) with Stand Your Ground:
Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon and Washington.

Blue States (Democrat) with Duty To Retreat:
Connecticut, Delaware, Hawai’i, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.

So from this cross section and honestly, politically motivated for making a point there is definitely a correlation between the ideas of protecting yourself (Republican) and protecting the lawbreakers (Democrat).

What has the Stand Your Ground laws done in different states as it relates to crime?


“The third edition of More Guns, Less Crime by John Lott says that the states adopting “Stand your ground”/”castle doctrine” laws reduced murder rates by 9 percent and overall violent crime by 11 percent, and this occurs even after accounting for a range of other factors such as national crime trends, law enforcement variables (arrest, execution, and imprisonment rates), income and poverty measures, demographic changes, and the national average changes in crime rates from year-to-year and average differences across states.”
All this together makes me say that the Stand Your Ground laws are something that we need; we should have and we should fight for.
 

Todd’s Input –

When human beings lived in caves, laws were completely unnecessary. Humans lived in small disorganized groups and hunted and ate and mated and died for generations with no law more complicated than the one that said whoever had the bigger stick or spear or rock was always right.

            Later as humans discovered agriculture and basic technology, they stopped living in disorganized groups and started to live in villages, and towns, and eventually cities. Concepts such as “property” and “ownership” and so on came soon after. And to protect these things, guidelines were laid down, such that if a man paid for a cow his neighbor could not just take it from him. Over time these guidelines became rules and then, eventually, laws with consequences.

            Agreed upon laws exist in a civilized society to establish the rules of that society. To establish, for example, how contracts may be executed, how property rights are to be protected and how crimes are to be punished. Laws are written and enforced to help eliminate bias and favoritism.

            If a man commits a murder, then the law permits for that man to be arrested, tried based on the evidence of his guilt and, if convicted, sentenced to an appropriate punishment. Clear cut. Simple. Fair.

             But the “Stand Your Ground” laws that Chad mentions are not based on a system of fairness or a desire to protect society. They’re based on fear. And not necessarily fear of one’s home being invaded by bad guys, but just fears in general. Fear of African Americans, fear of people who are different.

            When George Zimmerman shot and killed Trayvon Martin under Florida’s Stand Your Ground law, Mr. Zimmerman’s home was not being invaded. His property and his safety were never in danger. He was following an unarmed African American man, whose only crime was being in George Zimmerman’s neighborhood and Mr. Zimmerman killed him.

            In Jacksonville, Florida on November 23, 2012 a gun collector named Michael Dunn was at a convenience store when some young black men were playing loud music in their SUV. The young men apparently “trash talked” to Mr. Dunn, who thinking he saw a shotgun in the young men’s car, opened fire into the car, letting off ten blasts, nine of which hit the SUV. One of which struck and killed 17 year old Jordan Davis. Mr. Dunn used “Stand Your Ground” in a failed attempt to stay out of prison.

            Like Mr. Zimmerman, Mr. Dunn’s home, his wife, his property were never in any form of danger. Like Mr. Zimmerman, Mr. Dunn could have walked away from the scene unscathed. Like Mr. Zimmerman, Mr. Dunn left a dead body and a grieving family in his wake.

            Many laws currently exist to protect a man’s home from invasion and allow for reasonable force to be used in self defense of one’s property or safety. But Stand Your Ground isn’t about that. Stand Your Ground is about enshrining a tin foil hat wearing mentality on an unsuspecting nation. Stand Your Ground is about taking us back to a time when the caveman with the biggest rock always got his way. How much more innocent blood will have to be spilled before we get the message? Stand Your Ground is a 21st Century evil. And it belongs on the ash heap of history.

Now you know where we stand, what is your take on this subject. Please let us know below. Also, at any time feel free to ask us to cover a topic you would like to see us cover. Can’t promise anything, but, I can tell you we will take it under advisement.




3 comments:

  1. And the winner, Chad! Stand your ground, Todd, is not based on fear of race. Liberals always go to the race card. (If the race card is the only one in your hand, ask for a re-deal.) It is based on fear of idiot District Attorneys and Judges who find you guilty of some one else breaking into your home. If I'm breaking into your home and you have a gun, I have no right to be surprised when you shoot me dead. On the chance you only wound me and I run away, I shouldn't expect for you to pay me.

    Problem is there are lawyers and judges who think that way. I was in court fighting a traffic citation when the case before mine knocked me for a loop. Woman turned into a going through a controlled intersection. She said the turn arrow was on. Other driver didn't have a license. At that point I thought "Unlicensed driver = 100% fault. Case dismissed. After all, if he hadn't been breaking the law he wouldn't have been there to be hit. Not so. Liberal minds don't use common sense.

    Stand your ground is just codified common sense. In the Zimmerman case the jury believed that Travon abandoned his role as victim when he started beating Zimmerman's head into the ground.

    In the Dunn case Todd even states the use of Stand your ground wasn't justified and the jury confirmed that. That's the way it's supposed to work. I don't believe Mr. Dunn even thought about Stand your ground before firing his gun. But that's not my call to make. It's to be decided on a case-by-case basis, by a jury of your peers. Unless you've been in the same life-and-death situation, you have no right to judge.

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  2. Makes sense to me Dick. Thanks for your input.

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  3. Personally, I think the 2nd Amendment is an antiquated law that serves no purpose. I'd rather we joined the rest of the civilized world and worked to greatly restrict access to weapons. This is speaking both as a former US Army soldier AND a man with a degree in history.

    Stand your ground is absolutely about fear. Sometimes it helps to look outside your own personal experiences at bigger pictures. Stand your ground is yet another way for those who fear minorities to try and restrict and marginalize said minorities - like the drug war, or the recent slew of voter ID laws.

    You don't have the right to track someone who looks suspicious, and if that person confronts you on following them, shoot them because YOU feel threatened. You don't have the right to fire a gun into a car full of kids because their music is too loud or because they called you a name.

    It may be true that guns don't kill people, people do... but guns sure make it easier for sickos and freaks to gun down innocents, like children or hapless bystanders.

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