If I'm not going back and forth constantly through a door, it gets locked, period. No reason to not lock your doors or engage needlessly with unknown contacts.
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I have pissed off my wife more than once by locking the garage door behind me when I come inside and she is out and about in her car.. A habit that I don't want to break, but now I stop and think - Is my wife home or do I need to not lock the garage door so I won't get yelled at?
I'm also a huge advocate of locking one's doors. Vehicle and house.
I also close all interior doors when I prepare to leave the house. If I return home and find bedroom and bathroom doors open, it's a clear indication an unauthorized person has been in the house.
That’s is the MO for a lot of burglars. Most will kick the back door or break a back window to get in. The surprising thing is most people think burglaries happen at night. Nope it’s day time burglaries.
My pet peeve for burglary response by patrol is the lack of rear perimeter. My personal SOP is set the rear perimeter first before anyone approaches up front. Nope it’s let’s go to the front followed by frantic radio traffic about runners out back.
Just a dog chauffeur that used to hold the dumb end of the leash.
The 1950s weren't any safer https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Cold_Blood
Our doors are locked when we're in the house, when working in the yard where we cannot readily see the door, and when we're gone. It drives my dad nuts when he visits because he's a chronic unlocked car and house guy. Of course he had his unlocked truck entered in a very rural area, and our cars were untouched during a rash of car burglaries in our hood.
"Gunfighting is a thinking man's game. So we might want to bring thinking back into it."-MDFA
“It worked pretty good if you could shoot.” -Pat Rogers