RangerDave wrote:
All banter aside, what I think it really does come down to is whether or not you think (a) proportionality is a factor in judging the morality of a response to a crime; and (b) killing someone is a proportional response to a pure property crime involving little or no imminent risk of bodily harm. My view is that yes, proportionality matters, and no, deadly force is not a proportional response to a property crime.
The problem with this is that it's a stolen concept fallacy. Proportionality is all fine with you when there's a risk of bodily harm, but as soon as it becomes property crime, no amount of harm no matter how devastating to a person's material situation, justifies deadly force.
I don't see why it is you think human life is automatically worth more than any amount of property. A person choosing to steal or damage property is choosing to place those actions at higher value than his own life, for even if it were illegal to kill for those things he could never be certain someone wouldn't kill him anyhow. It seems to me this is really just about your own sensibilities being protected from harm.