AndyDufresne wrote:Those no good fact-peddlers. Wioutta,
--Andy
It's getting weird how wrong Scotty is on this stuff. An odd mistake here or there is understandable, but he's not simply wrong- he's posting the exact opposite of the truth.
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AndyDufresne wrote:Those no good fact-peddlers. Wioutta,
--Andy
Phatscotty wrote:it was an accident. truth be told, I asked about it here yesterday and the day before. didn't get a response
Thanks for pointing it out, Symm
I had heard they found the assault rifle in the trunk...
Phatscotty wrote:it was an accident. truth be told, I asked about it here yesterday and the day before. didn't get a response
Thanks for pointing it out, Symm
I had heard they found the assault rifle in the trunk...
Metsfanmax wrote:As to whether carrying a weapon means you'll be able to stop someone...
Metsfanmax wrote:So I make the argument that the average civilian with a concealed weapon would not be able to stop a spree shooting from occurring due to the mass chaos and moving targets, as well as the likelihood that an innocent person will be shot. Your counter-argument to this is that you have an example of a person stopping a single unarmed robber inside her own house, with a gun that was lying around and enough time to find it and load it.
Well done.
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:So I make the argument that the average civilian with a concealed weapon would not be able to stop a spree shooting from occurring due to the mass chaos and moving targets, as well as the likelihood that an innocent person will be shot. Your counter-argument to this is that you have an example of a person stopping a single unarmed robber inside her own house, with a gun that was lying around and enough time to find it and load it.
Well done.
Well, I have already provided a list of average civilians with a concealed weapon stopping a shooting spree. The one in Oregon just about a week ago was cut short by just such an average citizen. That "shooting spree" ended with 2 dead people.
In either case, there is one way that an attacker can be stopped, and that is by defending yourself with a gun. If you don't have a gun, then you are completely defenseless and at some evil psycho's mercy
Phatscotty wrote:all he did was pull out his gun and aim it at the shooter. I suspect a large majority of concealed carriers, when faced with a psycho starting a shooting spree, would surely pull out their fire arm and aim it towards the shooter.
That's what the gun is there for. You are thinking of carrying a gun from a non carrying perspective. I'm not sure you can understand.
thegreekdog wrote:Does advertising (for lack of a better term), gun ownership reduce the chances of a place to be targeted by a potential spree-killer?
I don't know the answer, but for example, I heard that the Joker killer had his choice of five (or seven) movie theaters to target and chose the theater that had a posted "no guns" sign, even though it was farther away. I don't think that is proof of anything, but I wonder if there is a deterrent factor (rather than an actual "hey I stopped a shooting spree"). I'm trying to recall whether, in any of the recent shooting sprees, any of the potential victims had guns. I think the answer is no.
Phatscotty wrote:it was an accident. truth be told, I asked about it here yesterday and the day before. didn't get a response
Thanks for pointing it out, Symm
I had heard they found the assault rifle in the trunk...
comic boy wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Does advertising (for lack of a better term), gun ownership reduce the chances of a place to be targeted by a potential spree-killer?
I don't know the answer, but for example, I heard that the Joker killer had his choice of five (or seven) movie theaters to target and chose the theater that had a posted "no guns" sign, even though it was farther away. I don't think that is proof of anything, but I wonder if there is a deterrent factor (rather than an actual "hey I stopped a shooting spree"). I'm trying to recall whether, in any of the recent shooting sprees, any of the potential victims had guns. I think the answer is no.
It may be a deterrent to certain people in certain circumstances but consider that where I live almost nobody owns a firearm , I have literally never seen one , so the the pool of potential victims is huge yet......
I keep being told the guns are an integral part of US culture, that may be so but can anybody seriously think the the gun death levels are acceptable in a civilised society , the culture needs to change.
Metsfanmax wrote:Then obviously, everyone should join the NRA and we'll all be safe.
comic boy wrote:Crimanality occurs throughout the developed world without the resulting levels of homocide, I would venture that gun culture is the X factor in the USA .
thegreekdog wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Then obviously, everyone should join the NRA and we'll all be safe.
I don't think I suggested that, but I suppose that's one idea. Seems a little divergent from your normal views on these types of things.
Anyway - what culture do you want to change Mets?
I don't think getting rid of the NRA would really change anything. But I think the statistics that look into global gun violence, the U.S. does look like an outlier sort of, in that we seem to rank around countries like Venezuela, Columbia, Brazil, Mexico, and some southeast Asian countries in terms of numbers. Gun stats are always weird.thegreekdog wrote:comic boy wrote:Crimanality occurs throughout the developed world without the resulting levels of homocide, I would venture that gun culture is the X factor in the USA .
So if we eliminate the NRA, without changing any laws, violent crime would decrease in the US? I find that hard to believe.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Then obviously, everyone should join the NRA and we'll all be safe.
I don't think I suggested that, but I suppose that's one idea. Seems a little divergent from your normal views on these types of things.
Anyway - what culture do you want to change Mets?
On the guns topic I don't see it as a culture issue (at least, not from any way in which the government can help this problem). The government's job is to determine the firearms policy that strikes the best balance between civilian protection and access to guns for criminals; this optimal policy would minimize the number of gun-related deaths.
AndyDufresne wrote:But I think the statistics that look into global gun violence, the U.S. does look like an outlier sort of, in that we seem to rank around countries like Venezuela, Columbia, Brazil, Mexico, and some southeast Asian countries in terms of numbers. Gun stats are always weird.
thegreekdog wrote:comic boy wrote:Crimanality occurs throughout the developed world without the resulting levels of homocide, I would venture that gun culture is the X factor in the USA .
So if we eliminate the NRA, without changing any laws, violent crime would decrease in the US? I find that hard to believe.
comic boy wrote:thegreekdog wrote:comic boy wrote:Crimanality occurs throughout the developed world without the resulting levels of homocide, I would venture that gun culture is the X factor in the USA .
So if we eliminate the NRA, without changing any laws, violent crime would decrease in the US? I find that hard to believe.
You are putting words in my mouth but I will respond in good graceThe single most effective way of decreasing violent crime in the US would be an overhaul of the drug laws that both drive crime and criminalise a ridiculously large percentage of the population. The single most effective way of decreasing gun deaths in the USA would be to decrease the volume of firearms in circulation.
To ban guns because criminals use them is to tell the innocent and law-abiding that their rights and liberties depend not on their own conduct, but on the conduct of the guilty and the lawless, and that the law will permit them to have only such rights and liberties as the lawless will allow... For society does not control crime, ever, by forcing the law-abiding to accommodate themselves to the expected behavior of criminals. Society controls crime by forcing the criminals to accommodate themselves to the expected behavior of the law-abiding.
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