The statistical likelihood that the victim of a violent crime will be the victim of a violent crime is 100%. Since it's quite literally impossible to predict where violent crime is going to strike, and since it's been known to strike in even the most peaceful communities, it seems prudent to prepare and train for such an event. Since such training and awareness have the direct benefit of decreasing the chance that you will be victimized by giving you better situational awareness skills, as the OP demonstrates, not to mention the additional peace of mind, physical exercise and confidence that being trained provides, the benefits of such training far outweigh the negative aspects, of which there are effectively none.rEvolutionist wrote:
The point is, do the crime statistics reflect the need to practice your scary faces in the mirror? They certainly don't here. Perhaps they do where you live. There's reasonable precautions and then there's obsession with the possibility that something bad is going to happen to you.
It's no different than practicing your fire escape plan so you won't die in a house fire because you don't know what to do.
You seem to have this silly notion that entertaining the idea that one might be criminally victimized and preparing a response plan for that eventuality is "obsessive." It's not. It's just common sense. And you will probably (hopefully) live your whole life without ever needing to employ your plan, but if it happens to you it will likely mean the difference between survival and death.
With death or crippling permanent injury as a risk of a violent encounter any person with any sense at all can see that having a plan and some training as to what to do is a perfectly rational idea.
Your dismissive attitude is just trollery because you can't bring yourself to agree with me on much of anything.