. Yes, I'm not in favour of a total ban, so there we do disagree. I think hunting, sport shooting or military training are understandable hobbies or reasons (with the last one). — ssu
There is call once again for firearms to be allowed in class rooms and how to handle that. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I don't see (R) or (D) when it comes to an infringement on the rights of an American citizen. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I need a (sequitur) non-sequitur song about now: — Mayor of Simpleton
Residing in Maricopa County, AZ we are protected by the Maricopa County Sheriff Officers, who is led by Sheriff Joe Arpaio. Here is what he wants us, as private citizens, to do with our firearms.
“My goal of utilizing 250,000 citizens armed with concealed weapons is to stop the carnage, stop the killing before cops arrive,” said Sheriff Arpaio in a video posted to social media.
The sheriff’s goal of getting 250,000 armed citizens would be just under 10 percent of the Valley's population.
Many gun owners agree that more armed citizens might be the answer.
From the top down... — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I agree for the most part. I don't think they're always fetish objects. Guns are a great equalizer for those of diminutive stature. However, they become a great un-equalizer when someone grabs an AK-47 and starts shooting up a public space.
It becomes a trade off. Do we think that the protection of people in private or public settings is more necessary/more important?I think it should probably be the latter. — ProbablyTrue
Keeping a sword or machete at one's bedside would probably be an effective and possibly safer alternative if one felt the need for home protection. Banning guns outright is likely an impossibility at the moment. That's why I support incremental changes to the law to make it more and more inconvenient to obtain them. This would at the very least deter spur of the moment homicidal maniacs.
People will of course say that if you ban guns, only criminals will have them. That would be true for a time. However, I think the long-term benefits would outweigh the risks
John, you might be right if the populations compared were very similar. I just saw a report that tried to compare Honduras to Switzerland in terms of gun ownership versus fatalities. See rebuttal here:
http://www.snopes.com/politics/guns/hondswitz.asp — Cavacava
I don't disagree with you entirely. I think at the very least the US needs to start making it more difficult for people to own them; e.g., permit courses, long hold periods, psychological tests, etc.. Unfortunately the NRA fights every little battle as if it's the whole war, which effectively stalls most reasonable gun legislation. In a way I suppose it is the whole war since it's incremental changes that are going to eventually change the culture.
I do sympathize with people who use a gun(s) for home protection. Especially those who live in less urbanized areas where wait times for police would be unreasonably high. I personally have a handgun in my home that I would be glad to have if my front door was kicked by the Manson family or would-be burglars at 4 in the morning.
Is that likely to happen? Burglars, maybe; Manson family, extremely unlikely. It doesn't take much perceived risk for people to want to hedge their bets though. — ProbablyTrue
Nonsense a population of a few million people is plenty big enough to assess average trends. — John
On a related note, the U.S. urgently needs a Mass Shooting Channel to make some room for real news on cable. Oh, and they could leave the Republican debate on the mass shooting channel. — photographer
Interestingly the US and Belgium, being the only countries with permissive gun laws are bang in the middle when it comes to both Rampage Shooting Incidents and Fatalities per capita.
I can't imagine what you think it is that the US is winning, but this data seems to do nothing to support your contentions. — John
↪Baden Paul Ryan is trying to strike a balance between not reacting emotionally to what the gun control advocates use as their platform, the crisis of the moment, BEFORE it is even over. As soon as a gun is known to be involved, they latch on to tightening gun rights.
In voting down the bill, that would paint with a VERY broad brush, that if someone is on a No Fly List that they should also be banned from purchasing or possessing a firearm would violate American citizens Constitutional right to do so.
Simply based upon the unconstitutional foundation in which the No Fly list was compiled. Tens of thousands of people are on the No Fly List but for the American citizen, they are promised due process and suspicion does not satisfy the governments right to infringe on your individual rights. There are many, MANY people that should never have been put on the No Fly List and that is a nightmare to try to challenge but to sweepingly take away a individuals Constitutional right would be illegal. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
For what it's worth:
http://shootingtracker.com/wiki/Mass_Shootings_in_2015
— Mayor of Simpleton
Might I add that no guns where harmed in these shooting.
There is a particular community that exudes the characteristics that you are mocking, Landru. However, the majority of gun owners(in my experience) don't fall into that category. The reason people here calling you a troll is because you either don't see or pretend not to see this issue on a spectrum. It is not so perfectly black and white as you portray it. — ProbablyTrue
Now before we start controlling bow and arrows, let's remember that primitive bow and arrows can be found and forged from elements of the earth, the world over. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Yes, Virginia, there is a Landru. Landru, an omniscient computer on the planet Beta III, had a near-tyrannical hold on Beta III's people until Captain Kirk put a stop to it. This is the way Landru wished to represent himself. Apparently Kirk wasn't quite as successful as he thought. Landru escaped from Kirk through an unguarded TV screen back in the 1960s. Just walked out of the screen into a state college dorm TV room and took over. A generation of leftist students was the result. There was infiltration and subversion. There were sexual outrages on campus. Lesbian separatists performing unspeakable acts on the Quad (It was quickly paved over -- literally - to contain the sacrilege. Sodomy in the stacks. Buggery back stage. Je suis l'homme -- well never mind. — Bitter Crank
Feel free to discuss this with the local troll, who actually has already earlier on the thread stated that Australia has a ban on guns and that this ban has successfully ended mass shootings. Your opinion will put you in the gun-nut, right-wing meme & drinking Kool-Aid section. — ssu
Those who want to inflict harm and kill will always find ways to do so. Mass shootings constitute a tiny percentage of total gun deaths. — John
I am not against tighter gun laws for the US. Here in Australia weapons are required to be registered, but citizens may still own them, even semi-automatic weapons. Tasmanian has the highest gun ownership, with, according to Wiki, 1 gun per 4 people. The Northern Territory is second with 1 gun per five. The problem is there is not a clear correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths.
Given the US has always been a 'society of the gun', I think a nuanced approach will be needed there, not an hysterically extreme 'black and white' approach; which you seem to be advocating.
There are more possibilities than two, however. Most gun owners are not "militarized" -- and even those who are are no more militarized than our present day police force ;). Owning one's violence does not mean that you are militarized, either. It means that your choices to use violence are closer to home and harder to forget. I certainly don't call the police to my house.
What you present here is a false dichotomy, and not merely in some hypothetical sense. Gun ownership and usage is not an attack on public space or democracy. Many people own weapons without the fetishism you're targeting.
In any case, the proposition that a armed society (forced militarization of every citizen) is a polite society is utter and complete rubbish. It's just the opposite of course. And the opposite is the purpose.
I've agreed to your first sentence, though I don't agree with the latter. — Moliere
Just for the record: I live in Arizona and the law allows individuals, to legally carry a concealed weapon, without a permit.
However there are in fact individuals who have lost their right to own a firearm. I am one of those people because as long as I am a Legal Medical Cannabis patient and Cannabis is still against the Federal Law, the gun dealer would have to decline the sale of a firearm to me, because in the Federal Governments eyes, Cannabis consumption is against the law and they cannot sell to someone they know is breaking the law. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Yep. Your just an internet troll.
No reason to respond to you. — ssu
Try sometimes a new thing, Landru, read what the others actually write. — ssu
I haven't mentioned explosives at all, but hand saws and Caustic Soda; both of which are freely available for purchase. — John
Landru, how much damage do you think a skillful maniac could do with a carpenter's hand saw, or a ten litre tub of premixed Caustic Soda in a crowded mall, before being apprehended? — John
That's a bit too far of an exaggeration, Landru. I'd just highlight here the point I made awhile back that you can't somehow escape violence in our society -- even if you prefer to delegate violence out. I'll note that in spite of the difficulties surrounding weapon ownership I still prefer to own weapons, and keep it that way. — Moliere
Well, you simply don't get the point that people are trying tell you, so whatever, Landru.
Besides, The most likely people that end up having accidents with guns or shooting people have other difficulties in their own life. People that have mental problems, excessive moods swings and are extremely impulsive really don't make good gunowners. Now can this be done away with feasability exams, having to go to the doctor to get an OK pass for to get a gun licence? It's problematic, but sure, to make it really an effort to buy a gun will put off many people. Yet any system won't work optimally: some will really be treated unfairly and some who shouldn't get guns will obtain them. Then of course there is the question of a black market. How easy is that when the country is already filled up with guns? — ssu
You might want to hold your fire, so to speak. The "armed polite society" was most certainly at play in this shooting, you are just choosing to focus on those with an agenda, to harm innocent people using firearms AND explosives in this case.
Where is your call for laws against fireworks where enough explosives can be extracted from to cause mass casualties?
Where is your call for every remote controlled toy car to be destroyed because it was going to be used as tripping device on the explosives?
The firearm is easy for you to rail against because it cannot rail back. How about looking at the people behind the firearms first? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I assume that when people talk here about armed society they think of a society where people carry arms for their personal protection basically against other members of the society. The politeness is then more like prudence or simply or caution. It's common sense not to start picking a fight with somebody who is armed. — ssu
Legislation made on an emotional basis without any consultation of those who actually the law effects is simply bad legislation in my view. Yes, lobby groups of gun owners or shooting sport association might find restrictions bad, but at least there should be some rationality. And when the objections to gun restrictions are made by both the interior minister and the defence minister, their argumentation isn't about gun owners rights, really. — ssu
So it is with cold weapons, Landru the Chairfighter.
From exactly the same site that you took the parking dispute gone bad news: Police: Man stabbed to death for taking last piece of chicken. That's what happens when cold weapons are in everybody's reach. — ssu
For a country that isn't in NATO, has mandatory conscription and the defence forces' deterrence comes basically from the large reserve force, it's a totally reasonable argument. Totally reasonable when basically every tenth Finnish male is a reservist (and more are in the secondary reserve, at the largest you are talking about 900 000 people out of 5+ million people).
Actually so reasonable that Finland officially had it, the training of reservists, as the main reason why they have problems with the EU's proposal.
I'm wondering just who has the new lows for nut arguments here, because I'm not sure that you are even replying to what I'm writing about. — ssu
There isn't an "ugly incident" here about once a week, and there definately isn't a terrorist attack every week, so you remark is off base. But tightening of gun control does happen systematically when there is a media frenzy about something. Those events happen more rarely than once a year or two. — ssu
Furthermore, what is the logic that if there is a terrorist attack in France (with actually the terrorists using full automatic weapons that are illegal), then army reservists shouldn't here have the ability to train shooting as they have been able before? If either there is a terrorist strike or someone with severe mental problems makes a bomb attack or goes on a shooting spree, why is it then logical to make training possibilities for reservists more difficult?
And in this country you don't get a permit for any gun for "self defence". The right of self defence is totally different from the American law. If you use a gun for "self defence" it's very likely that you will go to jail. If somebody kills a burglar that has entered your home, that somebody will extremely likely go to jail for "use of excessive force" and simply for "manslaughter". Using a firearm for personal defence here will be seen as use of excessive force. In fact there are a multitude of things that you are not allowed to use for self defence.
An event defined as a genocide that happened in our time only a few years ago, actually, was basically carried out with knives. So mass murder with knives has happened. Besides, with knives far more Americans are killed than with rifles, shotguns and other guns than handguns (see FBI statistics). Only with handguns more people are killed than with knives in the US. So why the carefree attitude against the second most lethal weapons in the US?
Truth be told -- in most combat situations training doesn't do much in terms of missing, it just makes you less worse as opposed to actually good. Being shot at sucks, period -- even if you're a crack shot. Additionally there are tactics which aren't necessarily meant to connect to a target, so you have to take that into consideration -- but on the whole most discharges do not hit their target. — Moliere
What I most despise about the whole gun ownership/ gun legislation issue is the way it is handled, actually universally in the West (both here and there). And that is that gun rules are never, ever discussed or handled at normal circumstances in a normal way as some other legislation might be formed. No, the gun controls are allways rushed in after an ugly incident which has caught the media's attention. The reason is logical, after some attrocity (with guns involved) the majority of the people that are not gun owners and hence the matter doesn't actually matter to them (it's not their property or hobby etc. that is talked about) are quite emotional about the event and prone to accept tighter gun laws. When there isn't an ugly incident in their minds, the majority might not be so open to tighter government control. — ssu
How many innocent lives do you think one armed attacker could take, in a public place such as a supermarket, if 40 out of 100 private citizens are armed? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Carrying a firearm comes with a great deal of responsibility and judgement calls that sometimes have to be made in a 'split second' and considering the use of a firearm is never an easy one. Yes, some become reckless when stress arrives in a life and death situation but others are capable of channeling that stress into a heightened awareness of what is going on and make those split second decisions and it does save lives, sometimes without firing a shot.