Perhaps I am the one who expressed myself unclearly.
It's good we share opinions on such things. I have my approach and have discussed such matters at length with my partner, you and everyone else willl have their own approach. Your points are all good and I try to answer them below.
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You say there is no way one should comply with being told to give up location control. Do you have any statistics on how many times that has been done and all that happened was the robbery was completed out of sight of the public? (I don't and don't have time to pursue that right now)
This is a very valid point and question, it is very hard to test such things. That said, from the reading I have done (and I can only hope and assume the police/crime stats they source and draw on are true/correct), the message seems to be that "victims" of crimes committed in public, rather than isolated in the majority fair much better, whereas where victims are isloated, there is a far higher percentage of it ending badly/fatallly.
That's all well and good. Assuming you prefer death to rape or having to watch a rape of someone you feel you should protect, and assuming that person would prefer death as well. How do you make sure of that, and that even if you or the other person has said so, at the last minute, faced with death, nobody will change their mind?
No, I didn't say I prefer death to rape. It is wrong (in my opinion and those of most SD spcialists I have followed) to conclude that not allowing them to move you to crime scene #2 (the isolated area) increases your chances of being shot/killed. What makes you think the assailent will actually shoot you while in public if you resist and move on? They could have done so in any event from the start, if that is the concern or argument - the reason they want to isolate you is so they have more time and control and privacey to do whatever they want, including shooting/kiiling you. If you run, and if they still have the intention of shooting, the odds on them hitting you while you are running and particularly in a public area populated with others, etc are less than where they have you under control in an isolated area.
In addition, how do you know once the rape has occured that they still won't try to kill you to remove witnesses, for the fun of it, etc?
Also some people who have actually been in such situations, or even in sudden confrontations with situations that could/would result in death and had only a few seconds to make their decision, right or wrong?
Absolutely, my action (not decision), it's already been pre-determined, may result in tradegy. But from my informed research, I think it hightens my and my loved ones' overall chances of safety.
As I said, I cannot. Each terrible situation like was described, depends on all the people involved and what they want to decide at the moment.
that is one way to look at it, there is another way. As above, I am not going to decide at that moment "hmm, do I go with this guy/this group who have bad intentions". I will re-act as have trained and preped for. If they ask for the wallet, give it to them there and then and move on. No reason why you have to go into the dark alleyway to give them your wallet.
I could not know until confronted with the situation. I would be torn up inside if I were the man and that happened. But I would prefer not to die and my companion be raped anyway. If I live, I can hope to find them so they can face some kind of justice.
Understood, again, as above, I (and that's just me but there seem to be a heck of a lot of others out there that have researched this stuff and interviewed numerous victims, police and criminals and assalents and psychopaths in prison (such as de Becker)) think overall my odds are better in resisting and moving on at all costs.
The underlined/bolded was what I have been trying to say all along. Your second paragraph doesn't sound right, but who knows. When people decide to violate law and mores, especially sexual mores or law, they can do some pretty bizarre things. But considering mexican machoism, I still have my doubts.
Yeah, agreed, I wish I could remember where I read it, maybe it is one of these "urban myth" things. I am certain I read it though in some publication.