Who gets to decide what risks you’re allowed to take on your own property? Is it legitimate for police to make that call? Or is it your life and your right to risk it if you want to protect your home?
In Florida, a 42-year-old man realized that his neighbor’s house was on fire. It had apparently started as a kitchen grease fire, but the fire had spread. Before firefighters arrived, Daniel Jensen grabbed a hose and started spraying water on the fence between his house and the burning house and on a corner of his roof. At one point, he was afraid his house was in danger and he wasn’t sure whether his daughter was out of the house, so he was spraying water around her window.
All of this seems pretty reasonable to me, but I haven’t had police training that tells me I’m always in charge and my orders must be obeyed.
Police pulled him back from the area of the fire. Then when Jensen again saw flames getting closer to his house — and with firefighters still not on the scene — he grabbed the hose again and started spraying.
At the direction of a sergeant on the scene, an officer then used a taser to knock Jensen down into the puddle of water he was standing in.

Death of stranger’s dog reminds me how much dogs mean to us
Meet the new neighbors: Why rules aren’t always such a bad thing
Best ways for man to love woman flow from how he lives every day
Unexpected meeting forces me to believe I might fall in love again
Need for love drives behaviors; for me, old needs make me eat
Before you can rescue other folks, you have to learn to save yourself
If you think world is about logic, you misunderstand human nature
If you’re sure what’s important, everything else seems trivial