{snip a lot of stuff, some of which I agree with}
To think that you can define upfront what you have "the right to do" is to ignore reality.
The law does precisely that---that is the point of the law. Now, whether or not you have to argue it in a court of law afterward is a separate issue. However, we ARE talking about what should be taught in an official CCW class in Nebraska---and it IS clear there.
Reference Nebraska Revised Statute 28-1409 for exact wording:
http://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=28-1409Remember: There are only four Nebraska statutory rationales for the use of deadly force, even in the home setting... so you'd better be able to convincingly demonstrate that one or more of the four were applicable at the time you used your firearm: Death, serious bodily injury, rape or kidnapping. To authoritatively suggest that someone wanting to break through your locked door in Nebraska legally authorizes lethal interaction is foolishness - hey, maybe the poor illegal immigrant just wanted to take your wallet?
Legal opinions vary---including a large body of case law that says if you are at home, and someone breaks into your house and comes at you, then a fear for your life is reasonable. I don't believe anyone here has said "if someone kicks open a locked door, automatically shoot them"---instead, the totality of the circumstances (in home, locked door, attacker enters knowing person is inside, etc) can give reasonable fear of death or seriously bodily harm depending on the situation.
But, the main point is still
what should be taught in a CCW class. WHAT THE LAW STATES is what should be taught in a CCW class. While instructor opinions, discussions of actual events, etc, are useful additions sometimes (as long as they are relevant and correct), it doesn't change the fact that no matter what your personal opinion is, the class itself should clearly teach what the law says.
My point is not to dissuade you from defending yourself and your loved ones, but instead to rebuke those who would minimize and take lightly the probable legal ramifications regarding home defense shootings during break-ins. You can't employ lethal force in the home just because you fear what might happen.... you can't employ lethal force just because someone kicks in your locked door... the events must suggest one of the four rationales for employing deadly force. I don't like our current law, but it is what it is.
Actually, you CAN employ lethal force because of what you fear might happen. After all, you don't have to wait until you are
actually killed to employ defensive lethal force on your own behalf.
In a similar fashion, if someone kicks in your door, there are a number of circumstances in which you can legally defend yourself with lethal force. True, if the singular and only fact is "kicked in door" then you can't---but there isn't ever a situation in which that is the
only fact.
As for "
rebuke those who would minimize and take lightly the probable legal ramifications"---I don't believe anyone has done that. Instead, if you look at the thread, people have been saying "in the CCW class, you need to teach the law correctly."
Can you give an example of someone minimizing the issues? Or taking anything lightly?
Avoid lethal interactions at all costs, short of death, rape, severe bodily injury or kidnapping. And should you employ deadly force in your defense, may God and your NFOA brothers and sisters be with you at that time.
I'm with Gary on this topic... it is the last, last, very last action to take after all efforts to avoid deadly force have been frustrated by the perp... whether in the parking lot or in the home.
And yet, the whole point is that the law clearly differentiates your choices between being in public, and being in your own home. As such, a CCW instructor (who is doing the job correctly) MUST explain that differentiation correctly.
As I said before:
While the above list of worst-case possibilities (that are of lower likelihood considering we are talking about a home invasion situation) would indeed be bad, this is your personal choice.
And while you of course can discuss your personal choices in your classes, it should be separate from making sure the students have the correct specific information about what the law says so that they can make their own decisions. As SFG and feralcatkillr have said---the law is extremely clear on this. Your students need to know what the law says.
If you aren't teaching the law correctly, or you are saying the law but then saying "but you need to do this" then you aren't teaching the class correctly. This does a disservice to your students.