you look at amir locke, a young man up in minneapolis who was in his apartment, and the police first through in basically a no-knock warrant, and he has a gun by him as he is asleep on the couch. they see the gun, they say threat and they shoot him dead within 10 seconds. that sense of the castle doctrine. this is what breonna taylor supposedly had and now she is dead. this is what catherine johnston had, and now she is dead. the ability to protect your home from an invasion? no. and then jayland walker. i'm reading through that story. the last time i read someone gunned down was the quadruple lynching in 1946 in georgia, where two men and two women, two black men and women, basically executed in a hail of bullets. the corners report described 60 bullets in each of their bodies. the kind of fear that has to generate, to create that depth of violence against that young man. when you think about it, the guy who shot up the movie theater in colorado, he was taken alive in the parking lot. i think 12 dead? 70 wounded, something to that effect. dylan roof, guns down nine folk in church du