Ladies Ease Your Worries Get a Tazor
Ladies! DIY Self Defense understands you’re a woman on the go!
DIY also wants to make sure your safe and well protected when travelling alone. Help ease DIY Self Defense worries! Order a female self defense Tazor!
Your tazor will provide protection you need when you’re on the go! Fits perfectly in your hand, for accessible ease and comes in 8 beautiful colors, choose one just right for you.
Features of your Tazor:
Get the upper hand on any would be assailant! Order you Tazor Now! With your female self defense tazor, stop assailants in their tracks,
No need to wait, Order yours Today!
DIY Self Defense encourages all customers to stay safe and adhere to Laws and Restrictions governing your State .stungunlaws.htm
Until Next Time,
Security Girl
What Is a Taser C2 , Do I Need One ?
First lets discuss the Difference Between a Taser and a Stun Gun?
The concept of this type of defense technology still confuses many people. For most of us the two devices are blatantly diverse and we know the difference but for those who are still in the dark allow me to quickly explain.
The stun gun is a very short range protection device. Of course there are many good products out there that are small and stylish that work quite well but the one draw back remains that any persons trying to violate you must come within reach. This means entering your personal space which can be frightening and intense. The product must touch the person and to some this is too close for comfort.

A C2 taser works a little differently. It basically shoots small metal spikes into the perpetrator allowing the victim to remain at a safe distance. This offers peace of mind knowing that you don’t have to risk yourself by letting them get too close before making your move.

So now that you know the differences, the question I mostly get is “Who Should Own A Taser”?
Anyone can own this taser for personal or home protection. The big advantage of owning a Tazer c2, they are a safer substitute to buying a gun.
Bullets kill, Im not going to go in to a rant how guns are evil ..yada , yada, yada…they do have their place and not that there is anything wrong with a person exercising their constitutional right to bear arms; safety should be your primary concern.
If not for the person about to violate you, then at least for your family’s sake think about an alternative weapon The C2 Taser.
To obtain this weapon however, there is a background check that you must first complete.
It only takes a few moments and you can choose to do it via internet or telephone depending on where you are buying from.
I got my c2 taser at diyselfdefense and I am glad I did !!! If you would like to to get a C2 taser at a great sale price go to Diy Self Defense
Until Next Time ..be safe not sorry !!
Security girl
What nonlethal weapons do police use?

BY JASON KOTOWSKI, Californian staff writer
Friday, Mar 21 2008 5:51 PM
Whether with a jolt, a sting or a wallop, law enforcement has a wide variety of tools at their disposal to take a suspect alive or disperse a crowd.
The county SWAT team uses to fire nonlethal “rubber” bullets.
The “less-lethal” weapons used by the Bakersfield Police Department and the Kern County Sheriff’s Department are virtually the same.
The average cop or deputy on the street use:
• Pepper spray — Also called OC spray (for oleoresin capsicum), used to irritate the eyes and cause pain. Sheriff’s Sgt. Ed Komin said the effects of the spray usually wear off 45 minutes after exposure. If you get pepper sprayed Officer Scott Lazenby said you need fresh air and patience.
• Taser — An electroshock weapon that can be used from a distance of up to 25 feet by firing prongs that stick into a person, or by placing the weapon against a suspect and activating it. The weapon delivers a shock that causes pain and muscle contraction for five seconds, but after the shock is over there is no lasting effect. Police Detective Kevin P. Findley said one drawback to the Taser is that some suspects are able to pull the prongs out after they’re hit. This weapon is the most recent addition to law enforcement. Every deputy is armed with a Taser and so are many, but not all, police officers.
• Baton — Perhaps the oldest less-lethal weapon that law enforcement uses, the baton is a short stick, typically made of wood, used to hit certain parts of the body to incapacitate a suspect. A drawback, said Komin, is that a lasting injury can result.
• In addition, some officers in the police department use a Pepper Ball gun. This CO2-powered gun, very similar to a paintball gun, fires small pellets that release pepper spray when they break open.
There are several important implications to this article. First, if the police are becoming aware that there are non-lethal ways of subduing attackers, there is hope for the rest of us. Secondly, there are self-defense tools available to all of us. We have choices and can get information regarding which tools are best for our needs.
For information or to order tasers, pepper spray or other self defense tools click here or visit us at DIY Self Defense
Until Next Time, Be Safe Not Sorry,
Security Girl
C2 Tasers Take Self Defense to New Level
These days, no matter where you live or travel, there is a possibility that you could become the victim of an attack. Even in small towns that in the past have not experienced much crime, personal attacks are becoming more and more prevalent. Since crime is increasing – not decreasing – what can we do to protect ourselves?
There are excellent tools on the market that are legal and legitimate when used properly for self defense. One powerful tool is the Taser C2, which, according to Elias Jimenez of the Defiance post of the Ohio Highway Patrol, “is not an instrument that will kill you, but it is an instrument that will render someone helpless.”
Napoleon, Ohio Police Chief, Bob Weitzel adds, “Such devices as tasers and pepper spray are legitimate self defense tools. The constitution expects you to protect yourself if you are attacked. In a situation where you need to defend yourself, it [a taser] is a good option to have.” Weitzel also added that tasers should be treated with respect, and an individual should understand how a taser works and how to use it effectively.
Watch The Taser C2 Testomionials
Tasers, such as the Taser C2, which are available to the public, work the same as tasers that police officers carry. The difference is that the tasers used by the public produce a lower voltage, but will still incapacitate an attacker, leaving you enough time to get away and get help.
Tasers are affordable, effective and easy to use. They have become so popular that they are available in an assortment of colors. Holsters – such as holsters for your cell phone – are also available in a variety of colors.
Don’t become a victim or a statistic. Don’t avoid taking a walk, run or jog, going to the ATM, or any other activities because of safety concerns. With a Taser C2 you can feel safe and be safe.
To order your Taser C2 or for further information on specials and discount prices, visit us at www.diyselfdefense.com.
Until Next Time, Be Safe Not Sorry,
Security Girl
Sale of Tasers to public weighed
These days there are more and more personal attacks and a greater need for self-defense products and weapons such as the Taser C2. The article below from the Detroit Daily News discusses some of the issues surrounding self-defense in Michigan. It also specifically talks about the Taser C2, an affordable, effective and powerful self-defense weapon.
Sale of Tasers to public weighed
Mich. bills would allow people with concealed weapons permits to carry nonlethal device.
Delores Flynn / The Detroit News
GRAND LEDGE — Cana Garrison has handled guns since age 12, when she and her dad shot targets in the woods behind their Charlotte home. But the Air National Guardswoman, who has rifle and pistol training, would rather carry a Taser than a gun. “With a Taser, I can still defend myself, but with less force to incapacitate a perpetrator, and at the same time I don’t have to worry about hurting anyone else,” she said.
Garrison is among those who support a three-bill House package that would allow Michigan residents with concealed-weapon permits to carry a Taser, instead of a gun, as a less-than-lethal option for self-defense. Under current law, only law enforcement and Corrections officers, military personnel, licensed private investigators, pilots and crew members can possess weapons that use electric currents.
“I believe firearms are a good thing, but I’m concerned about potential stray bullets harming someone, especially in my home,” said Garrison, 28, who’s taken state concealed pistol license training and is seeking a CCW permit. “If I shot someone and the bullet went through them, then through a wall or window and hit an innocent bystander on the sidewalk, that’s the absolute last thing I’d want to happen trying to defend yourself.”
The law would allow Michigan residents to buy single-shot civilian Tasers that use compressed nitrogen to shoot wired darts 15 feet, delivering a painful electrical charge that incapacitates a person’s muscles and limbs. And while proponents argue that Tasers are a safer alternative to firearms, law enforcement officials and human rights advocates say the devices are far too dangerous to entrust to the public for widespread use.
Civilians are allowed to carry the devices in 43 states. Taser laws vary by state. Illinois only allows residents to use a Taser or stun gun, which has to be pressed against the skin, inside a home or business. In Arizona, women attend Taser parties that resemble Tupperware get-togethers. In 2007, Taser International released its fits-in-a-purse C2 model, which comes in a variety of colors, including metallic pink.
Michigan’s legislation, which is under review in the House Judiciary Committee, makes it a felony for anyone to misuse or commit a crime with a Taser. Jones hopes the Judiciary Committee takes up the issue in the next two months and the bill gets passed by the end of the year. If not, he will take up the issue again in 2009.
Since the devices are only intended for self-defense, once a Taser is shot it spits out a confetti-like material containing the serial number of the cartridge that police can use to identify the owner if necessary, according to Taser International. The company has sold Tasers since 1994 and knows of fewer than a dozen cases where the device has been used in a crime. In 14 years, more than 160,000 Tasers have been sold to consumers directly from the company, Cabela’s and some firearm outlets.
Tom Urbanski, owner of Ski’s Firearm Training and Consulting in Oregon, Ohio, a Toledo suburb, keeps a handful of Tasers in stock in case one of his firearms students becomes squeamish about using a gun. “When I hit students with the fact they need to aim for somebody’s chest, which might kill them in defense, I usually get a negative reaction, especially from women,” Urbanski said. “That’s when I pull out the Tasers and stun guns and offer them a different option.”
Brad Benzing doesn’t support Michigan’s proposed legislation because, as with guns, it would limit the places where Tasers can be carried.
No-carry zones would include schools, university classrooms and dorms, churches, day care centers, hospitals, bars and taverns, sporting arenas and entertainment facilities with 2,500 people or more. That’s too restrictive for Benzing.
For further information about the Taser C2 and other affordable self-defense tools click here or visit us on the web at http://diyselfdefense.com
Until Next Time, Be Safe Not Sorry,
Security Girl
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