Two men stood in front of the autonomous vehicle, operated by ride-hailing company Waymo, and literally tipped a fedora at her while she told them to move out of the way.
Without hesitation, because she is brandishing a weapon, anyone else simply watching the scene from a distance feeling even slightly any emotion is justified to shoot her to death as a form of self defense.
Never draw a weapon unless the intent is to use it, and in her case she would only intend to use it as a threat not a deterrence, and therefore deserves to die in this imaginary scenario.
Do you think it's normal to see a civilian draw a weapon and point it to another one? First thing I would think is that she's gonna kill them, but I'm not American.
Sure, but that doesn't necessarily present a danger to you, and if it's clear that she's shooting as self-defense (and I think two young men accosting an elderly woman while physically preventing the car from moving qualifies), there's no reason for you to feel threatened.
If we put it in a non-gun context, let's say grandma pulls out a knife to defend herself from these men, and then someone sees that and immediately pulls a knife of their own and engages. Why would you do that? It's incredibly unlikely that grandma is going on a killing spree or anything, she just wants to defend herself from these aggressive individuals.
I'm sorry but doing creepy shit like stopping the car a stranger is in to freak them out is what actually gets you shot in America. Th3se two are lucky this woman wasn't a red blooded american.
anyone else simply watching the scene from a distance feeling even slightly any emotion is justified to shoot her to death as a form of self defense
That really depends on your area and what witnesses exist to corroborate your testimony. You can't just "say" you felt endangered just because a gun was drawn, it needs to pass the "reasonable person" standard (i.e. would a theoretical "reasonable person" feel threatened in this scenario?). I'm guessing an elderly woman pointing a firearm at an individual who is clearly harassing her doesn't present a danger to a reasonable person who isn't in the line of fire.
That said, if the elderly woman appears jumpy or something, maybe there's a case. But it's not an open-and-shut case like shooting someone who is taking hostages or something.
Source: am American in gun-friendly state who reads news articles about justified and unjustified shooting cases.
Wait so the people that are justified to shoot her to death, would I be justified to shoot them since they're pulling weapons too? Is it then open season on me
Yes. This is why brandishing a weapon is so fucking stupid, and why cops always get a wrist slap after shooting first instead of asking questions or deescalate.