I've never met a dog properly trained in ACLS and I'm pretty sure that a gun 
isn't even useful for BLS.

Owen

On Aug 4, 2012, at 7:53 PM, Peter Kristolaitis <alte...@alter3d.ca> wrote:

> Considering that none of the services that can be dispatched by 911 are 
> legally required to help you  in most North American jurisdictions (i.e. if 
> you call 911 and the police don't respond until they finish eating their box 
> of donuts, they're not criminally or civilly liable), having working 911 
> services really doesn't guarantee you anything. Most security monitoring 
> companies have contracts that are completely worthless and guarantee nothing 
> as well.  
> 
> If you're depending on 911 for life safety and property protection, I'd 
> recommend revising that plan to include a dog and/or gun.  :-)  
> 
> - Pete
> 
> 
> 
> Nathan Eisenberg <nat...@atlasnetworks.us> wrote:
> 
>>> Residences aren't critical infrastructure, no matter how angry the owners 
>>> get.
>> 
>> 911 access isn't a critical service?  Fire and security panels aren't 
>> critical services?
>> 
>> If basic life safety and property protection aren't critical services, I'm 
>> not sure what is.  These are peoples' lives and families and homes.  There 
>> is nothing - repeat, nothing - more important than that.  It is absolutely a 
>> critical service.
>> 
>> Nathan Eisenberg
>> 
>> 


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