Editorial: Armed and Safer
Editorial from the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2000/Jul-21-Fri-2000/opinion/14000175.html
EDITORIAL: Armed and safer
A gun at home can save lives.
Gun control advocates will have a tough time brushing this one off.
   Early Tuesday, a Las Vegas homeowner shot and killed an armed burglar and scared a fellow intruder into  fleeing the scene, leading to his eventual capture. It’s quite likely that had the resident been unarmed, he  and his wife would have died at the hands of the robbers. The deadly encounter is at least the eighth occasion  over the past three years that local home or business  owners have used lethal force and killed intruders. The  incidents reinforce the benefits of individuals arming themselves for their own protection.  On Tuesday, the resident was awakened by his dogs  about 5:15 a.m. He grabbed his handgun and went  downstairs to see what caused the commotion. When he  opened the door of his den, the armed burglar was   standing only two feet away. A gunfight ensued. Police say the intruder fired three shots,
the  homeowner eight. The burglar died on the scene, but an  accomplice fled the house and drove away in a Jeep.  Officers arriving on the scene chased the man to a fast food parking lot several blocks away, where he was  apprehended and arrested. By being armed, the homeowner was able to
protect  his family long before the police arrived on the scene private  ownership of guns would leave us at the mercy of violent  predators. And make no mistake — an armed intruder like  the one killed Tuesday is unlikely to be some misunderstood prankster who merely wishes to break into  a home, swipe some of the family silver, and slink quietly  into the night. In Tuesday’s case, the dead man had been  arrested a number of times for burglary and battery over the past 18 months.   Gun-control advocates argue that we must
rely on police protection. But it’s neither possible nor practical for  cops to hang out on every street corner or keep watch on every garden gate. The cost in both tax dollars and  personal liberty would be too high. The advice of Greg Block, of Huntington Beach,  Calif., who teaches cops and civilians firearms
safety, is worth repeating: “I always say it is better to have a gun  and never use it than to wish you had one when you really need it.”

 
        


