Every chud in my life is obsessed with someone breaking into their house and the situation being resolved with the discharge of a firearm. And these are people living in low crime areas out in the suburbs, with no pedestrians. It's frustrating to talk with these people since their whole worldview is a racist panic over some imagined brown interloper invading their white fortresses.

One of my coworkers tells me he always pulls out his Glock to check the corners when he comes home in the evening. Another has a CCTV system and an AR15 by his bed. I personally don't own a gun anymore because I don't trust myself with one, and chuds will ask me what I'll do if some mentally unwell person high on amphetamines decided to enter my apartment. I guess I'd leave or call an ambulance? It seems so unlikely of a scenario that even if I had a firearm I probably wouldn't use it right, or even register this person as a threat quickly enough to do a John Wick style takedown.

How many home invasions are actually stopped this way? Do chuds all think they're Robocop?

  • Frank [he/him, he/him]
    ·
    7 months ago

    claimed he got stopped by "antifa checkpoints"

    What in the entire fuck? Was he just making shit up or did he really believe that? Like the cops from Kansas or whatever glass-flat shitholes abut on Colorado are notorious for robbing people with colorado plates, but antifas?

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      7 months ago

      I think people like my cousins are in a constant competition with other paranoid conservatives to tell the best spooky campfire story.

      For whether or not he actually believes it, it seems like a lot of their beliefs exist in a liminal position between legitimate belief and making shit up. They make stuff up until they believe it. It's like Qanon. Whether or not they believe in the tiny, granular details doesn't matter because they believe in the general vibe of the thing. Antifa checkpoints exist to my cousin because they sound like they're supposed to be a thing, not because he actually experienced them