or a break in problem. Neither are an issue.
Um, do you have the numbers on that one? First source I find, here, has a little flash thing showing that Australia has a worse burglary rate than the US. Its apparently sourcing this, though I'm having trouble finding the actual data on that site.
Wow, we had the highest rate, and still nobody is pushing for looser gun laws. Perhaps it is the understanding that geographically half the country is living in third world conditions, and we should be trying to help these people, rather than shoot them.
I don't really mean luxury items. I mean things like your documentation, financial information, or vehicle. Stuff that is both valuable to thieves and necessary for your manner of living.
But the luxury items being stolen would probably make me think less of shooting them too, yes.
Being robbed can cripple someone's life and send them into an inescapable downward spiral. If some worthless punk finds themselves in the ground or a cell a few years earlier than they otherwise would so that I can escape such a fate I think I could still sleep at night.
Thieves do not break into an occupied house. Someone who breaks into an occupied house is looking for the people in side.
There is the possibility of failing to case the house properly and breaking in when they believe it to be empty, but for the most part this is also true.
How long would it take for the police to show up if you were reporting a break in, in progress? Let's say worst case,
an hour. That is a very long wait for an emergency call by anybodies standards. Think thieves can find said documents in an hour? I think they would be very lucky to in my case, fuck I'm not sure I could find them in an hour, and I know the exact folder I'm looking for, and even the room that they should be in, they wouldn't.
Also, taking a stab at criminal psychology, are we?