
Bob D
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I have never locked a door in our home. If someone wants to break in, they will. I live in a small town in New Brunswick but have lived in Montreal, Toronto, Edmonton, Kelowna. Stuff happens and if you let the possibility of bad things control your life , it's not much of a life. I have 2 dogs to let me know if something or someone is outside, have never owned a gun, never will. Did 2 1/2 years of military service(volunteer) and have nothing in my home worth dying over except for our kids. I have a son in the military but he knows not to bring his work home with him. Raising our children to be aware of strangers and the dangers but at the same time teaching tolerance and understanding. Our doors are not locked because everyone needs help at some time and bigger fences and locked doors don't make for good neighbors. |
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Samara
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We ALWAYS lock our doors! |
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darkest queen
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it is 100% false...we canadians lock our doors just like everyone else because there are theives here too
what fascinates me is the fact that educated people think canada is on a different planet |
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Fleur de Lis
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We never did. |
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poorcocoboiboi
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My friend Jason (he works at a Toronto magazine called Now) was there when Michael Moore went through the neighbourhood in Toronto trying the doors. Jason said something like 80 percent of them were, in fact, unlocked. The owners had no idea he would be trying their doors; it was a valid experiment.
But that does not strike me as being the typical case in Canada. I always lock my door, so does everyone I know. It just makes sense; it's not like there is no crime in Canada at all! |
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Sumanitu Taka
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Hmmm.....someone saw "Bowling for Columbine" |
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Perplexed Music Lover
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It depends where you live. It is true that, in some smaller communities, people still do not feel the need to lock their doors at night or if they go out, for that matter. However, break-ins can happen in small communities, just as they can in large urban centres, so this practice is becoming increasingly less common. I live in the leafy green suburbs of a large Canadian city, and I always lock my doors at night and when I go out. I also have a 24-hour alarm monitoring service, and a large breed watchdog, too. My house was broken into twice before I got the alarm. Having said that, my neighbourhood is relatively safe, and property crimes are still not very common place. I live in the kind of community where kids can leave their bicycles and skateboards out at night and they'll still be there in the morning. I feel very fortunate to live in Canada, instead of the United States, where violent and property crimes are much, much more common. |
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beenthere
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I live a few hours from Trawna(the centre of the universe) and never lock my doors,but my dogsled is always locked up.
I think we feel safe because of Dudley Doright. |
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Zeeshan V
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Let me guess, you just saw 'Bowling for Columbine' by Michael Moore? In a city like Toronto, I think most people do lock their doors. I grew up in the country and in a small town, my parents would always lock the door at night. I live in the U.S. now in a small town and I lock the door every night. |
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♫ sf_ca ღ
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I stayed with my cousin in Toronto, and they locked their doors when they leave the house and at night. They live in a quiet and safe suburban area, too. |
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borscht
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When I am gone for the day or at night I have *always* locked the door, even when I lived in a village. But if I am at home, the door is unsually unlocked. |
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Gone fishin'
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Yeah we lock our doors at night . That is a bunch of crap. |
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thatchickistoast
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I definately lock my doors. It really depends where you live. I live in a city in the Maritimes and it's really not safe to leave doors unlocked. In the suburbs I've heard of people leaving their houses unlocked... |
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blackcatmingus
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Depends on where you live and how you were raised. I now live in a very small community and I know a lot of people here do not lock their doors. I however always lock my door whether I am home or not. I use to live in a city, in a bad part of town so it is habit. I lock my car too. |
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ORIGINQuest
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I can't speak for all of Canada, as I have basically lived in Windsor/Detroit my whole life. I can, however, speak for this area of Southwestern Ontario. B&E's are a daily occurance throughout the city, auto thefts are also common place and are usually used for the B&E's.
Please don't believe Michael Moore's 'Canadian safe haven utopia' retoric. We have all the same problems as you guys do with violent crime, drug addiction, and other social-economic issues.
I personally lock my door soon as I either go in or out, no matter how long I will be. If somebody wants something, and you've got it, they're gonna get it one way or another. The lock won't stop them, only slow them enough for you to prepare. I like to be prepared. |
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steph
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we don't lock our doors..
i've lived in the country for most of my life and for the most part the door is locked only when we are sleeping however the dog is always inside.. so the house is somewhat protected..
when i moved into the city i've always been a door locker..
now i'm in the city and my bf isnt' much of a door locker so its usually open |
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customdreammachines
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canada canadians are peaceful and friendly people. im sure city folks lock their doors, but country people live atleast like 5 miles from eachother, lol. so i guess they can leave their doors open, why not, just easier to get back in. |
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Goddess of Grammar
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I lived in Montreal (in the city). When I lived in apartment, the main door in front was always locked, but the back door was accessible from outside. I usually locked the doors at night or when I went out, but occasionally forgot. Not in the day when I was home.
Where my (now) husband lived before we moved in together, they never locked at night, figuring there was nothing worth stealing. I think they usually locked when they were gone.
My parents live in suburban Montreal, they always lock up at night and when they're out, and I think also usually if they're in the backyard or basement and wouldn't hear someone come in.
I suspect people in better neighbourhoods lock up more than poorer neighbourhoods, because they have more stuff that could be stolen--and are also more likely to have theft insurance, which probably wouldn't pay if the door wasn't locked. |
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JuanB
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I think on average, Canadians do lock the door less than Americans. But it is probably a 15 or 20% less situation, not a we all do or all don't.
I watched Bowling for C. I couldn't grasp it. He was checking family homes, in the middle of the day when people were home, in the suburbs. I thought obviously they are unlocked, What is he talking about?? It took forever to figure out he means most Americans have their doors locked all the time. Even the middle of the day. Even here, those that say they lock their doors when they are out or at night, imply that they leave them open during the day when they are home.
I am from a mid-size town in BC - Doors locked for convenience as I live alone. If more people were coming and going, I'd leave it open. I grew up with doors unlocked all day while someone is home. Again for convenience for family given having all sorts of keys, even to very young kids that could loose them. AND you don't lock your kids out of the house. Then again, we came from a time when we walked to school by ourselves and played all over the neighborhood until dark. My parents locked the door when they went to bed.
I know of several situations where Aunts or grandparents would occasionally have kids come visit. They would leave the door open when they weren't home. The kids had full access to the house, they didn't want them coming over to a locked door.
I think BforC covered it quite well. Are you locking crime out, or are you locking yourself inside! Do your kids feel locked out? |
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hilarywow
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I live in a suburb of Vancouver. If I'm at home, I don't always lock my door, but I do at night. If I go out, yes I lock the door. But if I'm just running to a neighbours house I don't lock the door. All of my windows have been wide open since April. |
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*ღ♥۩ THEMIS ۩♥ღ*
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Well, I live in a city, so I do lock my doors! In some small towns they may not feel that they have to. There was a time when I would leave my windows and doors open during the hot days of the summer, as it was no concern of mine if someone couldn't read the "Beware of Dog!" signs on the gates and doors! lol |
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Pichi
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I grew up in the US, in a small town, and my parents still dont lock their doors. Nor did I living in a tiny rural town.
I now live in vancouver, BC, and believe me, that door is always locked! It was in the US once all my kids moved out too. |
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Johnny
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I live 25 miles north of Toronto and I lock everything twice.
But when I was a kid in the 60's we never locked our house until it was vacation time and there was scramble to find the key. If you did that in that neighbourhood now you'd lose everything fast. Even back then my dads work car was broken into. |
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Suzy
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15 years ago, living in the suburbs of ottawa I used to not lock my door, however in the last 5 years the suburban have become hooked on hard drugs, making break ins a very common thing. Other than that ottawa is great
Yours to discover
http://www.ottawafinder.com |
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happywhereIam
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I have friends in Canada who always locked their door because their home had been broken into. This was in the Vancouver area.
I live in the US and lock my door but have friends that still don't. It depends on where you live.
In my experience, i felt very safe in certain parts of Asia where we didn't have to lock our door at night. Punishment for committing crimes was very harsh and not accepted. High morals and a belief that stealing was a true crime in a deeper religious sense kept the peace.
This kind of safety will never be the case on our continent. |
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