"[Mr. Breeding] doesn't have confidence in the forces of law and order" - I am quite sure that Mr. Breeding did not say anything like that to the French Press Agency. I could hear him speaking English and he sounded calm and reasonable to me.
What he might have said was probably something like this: "It's just not logical to depend on law enforcement officials to be everywhere all the time. If someone attacks my wife, my children, or myself, we could be badly hurt, my wife could be raped, and/or we could all be dead before the police even receive a call. Who's to say the police will even benotified of the attack quickly? Maybe nobody will see us get attacked, we'll all get killed, and so the cops won't find out until our bodies arediscovered in the park or in a lake or wherever,
days later??"
On that note, I'll tell you who I trust to watch out for my life.
I trust in God, in my armed wife, and in my .40 caliber pistol on my hip. I will never expect that the police will always be there for me the second I need them. Besides,
the police have absolutely no duty to protect citizens. The District of Columbia’s highest court spelled out plainly the “fundamental principle that a government and its agents are under no general duty to provide public services, such as police protection, to any particular individual citizen.”
I found this page about that
VERY interesting:
http://www.firearmsandliberty.com/kasler-protection.html