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To: old curmudgeon

That is sorta what I thought last night when I read the post, and that I would veer to the right or to the left and see what they did and put my hand on my weapon and be ready. Actually, IF I was walking out in a parking lot alone, that time of night, I would probably already have my keys in one hand and my other on or very close to my gun. For me, I don’t find myself out alone that time of night often, most recent years was going to a Kenny G Christmas Concert a year ago and a Mannheim this past December, as husband really doesn’t care to go . . . and usually there lots of others leaving . .. I’m more worried being stranded on the highway or someone breaking in but anything could happen. I’m going to look into a class for sure.


81 posted on 01/11/2011 11:57:50 AM PST by Qwackertoo (New Day In America November 03, 2010)
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To: Qwackertoo
You should always have keys in hand before you get to your car.

And most important............

Always lock your doors immediately after entering the vehicle. Not after you put the key in the ignition, not after putting your packages down...

Immediately.

I once survived an attempted robbery/beating because I had my doors locked. They guy tried to start a conversation with me so I had my window down a few inches...it was a cold winter night.

I put my foot on the brake and saw another set of pant legs in the glow of the brake light and realized then that I was about to have a problem.

As I put the vehicle, a pickup truck, in gear the one at the window reached in over the window in an attempt to reach the door lock.

This was years ago, early ‘70’s, and the truck had mechanical windows. I grabbed the handle and rolled that window up so fast that I caught him by the elbow. I took him for a nice bit of road work up a steep hill and would not stop until I got to the top of the hill.

When I let him go, he had enough.

It is a long story and really worth telling, but the heart of it is that he tried to start a conversation with me during which he pulled a $20 out of his pocket, then asked me to open my door and put the light on it so I could tell him if it was counterfeit, which of course I refused on the grounds that I did not know a good one from a bad one, etc., and it was during that exchange that I put my foot on the brake.

Bottom line: You may meet a strong arm robber or one with a knife, but you are more likely to be met by one with a sad story about he needs his battery jumped off, he is out of gas, you have a flat on your right rear and need to look at it, etc.

So lock y our doors and THINK.

Cell phones make us much more safe if we can stay out of the guy's reach for a few minutes, which a locked door does for you. In the case of the flat tire story, you could rather than getting out, say something like “I'll just call the cops and ask them to help me.”

Remember, you might really have a flat tire because he let the air out of it. Women have been abducted with just that strategy.

83 posted on 01/11/2011 12:25:53 PM PST by old curmudgeon
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