Poll: Could You Pull the Trigger?

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hcig

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Mar 12, 2009
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nick n stuff said:
i'm all about being the bigger thus better man so i'm not too sure if i would be able to.
hahaha, oh wow

so getting murdered is being the bigger man? what if your family, or even strangers are in danger? you ever heard "all that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing"?
of course, it may just be that you arent a "good man", maybe if it ever happens, you will be the bystander, and a good man will step up to save you.
 

jpakaferrari

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Nov 9, 2009
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To be honest while I enjoy a good trip to the gun range I'm not sure if I would want to shoot another person with a gun. That being said I am not afraid to stand up for myself and take some one down if need be. I am prone to angry emotional outbursts and am a pretty large guy so in a fight if it was no rules I could probably win. I am much more in favor of subduing a person than actually killing them. If you chose to take me on I would absolutely humiliate you and make you feel like a pussy because you really pissed me off. I might even be inclined if I was holding a handgun to pistol whip you. That is not just me making a joke I am dead serious, shooting another person is easy (relatively) but smoking them in the head with the gun is challenging and humiliating for the person getting hit. You can tell a good story about getting shot in the leg but no one will think you are cool if you tell them you got smoked in the side of the head with the butt of a gun. Violence is often not the answer, but if it comes to it I wouldn't be afraid to inflict some damage.
 

Loop Stricken

Covered in bees!
Jun 17, 2009
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.
A: Yes. No hesitation in answering this one, really.

Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction?
A: And you thought I answered quickly before...

Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you?
A: Other than worrying about having to be within striking distance of a last-gasp retaliatory attack, not so much.

Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?
A: I'm not entirely sure what this question is asking. If it's "Would I involve myself to prevent the certain death of a stranger" then I'm afraid the callous answer is "only if I was sure I'd emerge the victor".
 

Iskenator67

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Dec 12, 2008
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My Comfy Chair
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Yes. I'm also the person who believes that all child molesters, rapists and murders who had 3 or more credible eyewitness to there crimes should be executed immediately. I have no problems with the taking the life of a person who commits a violent or wrongful act. I would prefer up-close due to being a bad shot. And I would focus on saving myself before any one else. The whole self-preservation instinct.
 

soapyshooter

That Guy
Jan 19, 2010
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I'm the guy that loves going to the firing range and has to so much practice with a gun I can double tap someone in the chest at 20 yards. Saying that, If anyone is trying to hurt someone I care about i will put him down.

[sub] I grew up in the south, firing a gun is part of growing up. I'm not a crazy NRA nut that goes around arguing for gun rights and all that horseshit. [/sub]
 

era81

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Jun 11, 2009
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I have killed to defend myself and my comrades.I took out a couple of guys with my M9a1 who where less than ten feet away trying to load an rpg.So I don't feel I'd have any problems in any other situations.
 

ShotgunSmoke

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Apr 19, 2009
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.
No doubt.

Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction?
It just makes me more mad. If my family was in danger, I definitely wouldn't think twice. Hell, I'd love to kill the person who threatens my family.

Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you?
I'd prefer a gun, but at that moment I probably wouldn't care. When the adrenaline kicks in, I won't give a damn about blood. I'll use a pencil if I have to.

Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?

It just means that I have to defend not just myself, but another person too.
 

hcig

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Mar 12, 2009
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soapyshooter said:
I'm the guy that loves going to the firing range and has to so much practice with a gun I can double tap someone in the chest at 20 yards. Saying that, If anyone is trying to hurt someone I care about i will put him down.

[sub] I grew up in the south, firing a gun is part of growing up. I'm not a crazy NRA nut that goes around arguing for gun rights and all that horseshit. [/sub]
too bad in a real life situation you arent half the shot you were on your worst day at the range
 

Shpongled

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Apr 21, 2010
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ITT: (For the most part) Internet bad-asses who have no experience in real-life situations. Seriously.
 

Warped_Ghost

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Sep 26, 2009
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Q1 I would offer the guy 1 chance to surrender and if he doesn't I wouldn't regret killing him
Q2 This would change my reaction because i wouldn't give him a chance to surrender
Q3 Range does have a different feeling but I could still do it. I have shot gophers and I have flooded them out and stabbed them and I have to say stabbing them put me at unease while shooting did not.
Q4 Both people are strangers to me and I would rather kill the one I know is violent compared to having the one I don't know anything about being killed.
 

soapyshooter

That Guy
Jan 19, 2010
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hcig said:
soapyshooter said:
I'm the guy that loves going to the firing range and has to so much practice with a gun I can double tap someone in the chest at 20 yards. Saying that, If anyone is trying to hurt someone I care about i will put him down.

[sub] I grew up in the south, firing a gun is part of growing up. I'm not a crazy NRA nut that goes around arguing for gun rights and all that horseshit. [/sub]
too bad in a real life situation you arent half the shot you were on your worst day at the range
Stress factors into it but if you practice enough, skill becomes reflex. No matter what you'll hit.
 

Icehearted

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Jul 14, 2009
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My mind has this sort of off switch. I can overcome just about anything if I choose to, however, the challenge isn't what I would do in the heat of the moment, but how I would recover afterward. If I was put in a life or death situation I believe pretty readily that I would be willing to kill with my bare hands if need be, and chances are good that if the threat were imminent and largely inescapable, I'd probably disregard survival and focus on killing the threat at all costs. This probably defeats the purpose, but that's just how I am.

I've been on the business end of a gun, I've faced trigger-happy nitwits that think shooting an unarmed man is somehow justified (I've never fired a gun and refuse to carry... I actually loathe violence), and every time I've been in this kind of danger I've been able to talk my way out. Macho pride means nothing when you're staring into the barrel of a gun, so yielding to the guy with the gun isn't my idea of losing or surrendering, since the assholes never shoot and I'm still here, I'd think that meant I got what I wanted and, in the end, I won.

I will offer this, to anyone that thinks the decision is a fast and easy one to make; the consequences of having another person's blood on your hands, whatever the reason, can be a lot harder than getting their blood on your hands to begin with.
 

skywalkerlion

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Jun 21, 2009
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.
I dunno. I think the sympathy with the BadGuy would end up making me make a bad decision. I'd like to try and help him by talking to him before I just start pulling triggers willy nilly.
Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction?
Yes. If I were to kill The BadGuy, he's be only one man dead, as opposed to 4 people dead.
Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you?
Hells yes. I'd much rather spare me the absolutely horrible viewing of a man just struggling to get each and every breath he can take. It would be like watching that horrible scene at the end of Saving Private Ryan.
Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?
Yeah, it's kinda the same situation as the family scenario.
 

DefunctTheory

Not So Defunct Now
Mar 30, 2010
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Josh_V2.0 said:
Pray tell, what is your job exactly?

Oh, and to answer the poll: Yes, no, and no.
Army. Granted, I'm not infantry, but my primary job is to risk my life when need be, and to take life when need be.

Obviously, I would not cut people down for no reason, and I have no wish for violence. But when the time comes, and its either him or me, its not going to be me.
 

Ze_Sapper

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Apr 12, 2010
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I wouldn't think twice about shooting someone if they threatened my life or the lives of my friends. This might be because of my military background but I would gladly kill or die for one of my buddies.
 

Iconsting

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Apr 14, 2009
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.
A: Well, I think I could, but the truth is, nobody truly knows what they're going to do in this situation. It's more of an impulsive move.
Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction?
A: So not only does he/she want to kill me, but my family too? Gives me all the more reason to kill him/her.
Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you?
A: So long as the threat goes down, I don't think I would care how it's done.
Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?
A: My life is still on the line, whether it's someone I know or not, I think I'd go for the kill anyway.
 

Azraellod

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Dec 23, 2008
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.

Well, it would depend on my mindset at the time. Under most circumstances I would not be able too, but if he tried pushing me to get angry first, there is a chance I could be able to do so simply because I'm angry enough to disregard their value as a human.

Although since that would be more out of anger directed at the attacker then a desire to save myself, I guess the answer is no.

Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction?

Instantly. If someone tried to threaten my family, I wouldn't hesitate to kill them if I got the opportunity.

Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you?

Assuming the conditions were set up so that I was going to kill them anyway, I don't really know. I guess I'd feel a little worse about myself after it happened if it was from a distance, since I would only get to see the results after either someone told me or after I walked over to wherever it was, at which point I'm likely to have settled down slightly.

I guess that's pretty irrelevant though, because if I got set off, I doubt I'd be able to use a gun properly. Although I'm not exactly a great fighter anyway, so I guess that would render the first part of it irrelevant as well...

Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?

It would, but how it would change it would depend on my initial impression of the stranger.
 
Apr 29, 2010
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Q: Do You think you could take a life to defend your own.
If I had to, then I would take a life to preserve my own. But my reaction after, who knows what my state of mind would be after killing someone.
Q: The BadGuy is threatening not just your life, but your family's. Does this alter your reaction? My decision to end his life would be made faster.
Q: Would the difference between the up-close kill, and the point and click of a ranged weapon have a difference on you? Yes, it would. Up close is somewhat personal. In fact, very personal. I mean, you're wrapping a rope around someone's neck and pulling it tight as they struggle to get away as they die, grabbing a bat as someone is chasing you and swinging it at their face and bringing it down over and over again in a rush of fear and adrenaline. In short, the up close kill is usually violent, messy, and in my opinion would probably have a deeper impact psychologically than shooting the bad guy a few times and watching them drop to the floor, that is if you don't miss. But that's my opinion.
Q: Would having a stranger's life on the line with yours make you change your reaction?
If I could I would help them as well.