Mass shooting at Oregon college: 15+ dead...

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timtowdi
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08 Oct 2015, 11:58 pm

Dox47 wrote:
timtowdi wrote:
This truth about guns would be a lot less truthy if it counted gun deaths, rather than gun homicides, and included the rest of the world's stats for context. And had more than four points on it.


That sounds an awful lot like a selective demand for rigor to me; are you also going to scrutinize all the anti-gun graphs and studies quoted in this thread to a similar degree?


Only if they're giant and obviously giving a distorted view, like that one was. That's a bad piece of propaganda.



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10 Oct 2015, 8:00 am

You know, I still don`t understand why gun advocates are soooo anti changing some laws.
It almost feels like there will be no negotiation, no attempt to discuss making changes, it really feels like a point of principle with no room for manoeuvre, except perhaps allowing even more freedom of access to gun.

I think a few of us here have attempted to understand some pro gun positions eg. shooting rattlers in then wild etc, culling overpopulated wild animals; enjoying the technology, history and collecting guns almost as a pastime.

However I don`t think (I apologise if I am wrong) I have read any points agreeing or conceding the most miniscule point re the change agenda or even the tiniest modification in the gun laws (apart from further pro gun ones) have so far been made here in this thread, ie that there is even a problem that needs improving. It does feel quite immutable and that the pro gun apologists are 100% in the right.
And while this absolutism is the case there is no wonder that Obama et al feel that they just cannot help things get better.

Another 2 campus killings Texas and Arizona within hours of each other today . ...... so far.

Incidentally I started thinking about and researching for thoughts on "what is a gun for?"

Sure they are used for hunting, target shooting, protection/dissuading others from violence; providing enjoyment through collecting and the science and technology history and probably a few other things too. I would even go as far as saying that under clear and controlled licence some people should be able to use guns for these activities... as a tool.

But lets face it guns are tools essentially designed by humans with one purpose and that is to kill living things.

I know that is stating the obvious, but there we are, the reason for guns existing is as killing weapons.

Finally are pro gun advocates arguing that if all the guns didn't exist that the same (in my opinion huge number) of homicides and mass killings would still occur but with different weapons?



Last edited by Peejay on 10 Oct 2015, 8:35 am, edited 2 times in total.

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10 Oct 2015, 8:04 am

glebel
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10 Oct 2015, 10:48 am

timtowdi wrote:
glebel wrote:
Lukeda420 wrote:
Hey glebel, who are the people that want to ban all guns in the U.S.? I have never heard ANY proposals to do anything close to this. I think the closest I've ever heard from someone in a position of power is Senator Feinstein and she's never proposed anything like that in the senate. I can kind of understand her statement as she was there when Harvey Milk was assassinated.

George Soros, the ex-Nazi who funds so many 'liberal' causes and organizations for starters, such as the Violence Policy Center. He imported a woman who was instrumental in imposing Australia's draconian gun laws to do the same here. Nothing succeeds like success.
When we have to go to the government to ask permission for anything that is allowed under the Constitution, this is the beginning of dictatorial rule. I can see where a person could go to the government, a person with a legitimate need for, and a legal right to have a firearm, and the government would say "No, we don't think you need it".
And still, what needs to happen is for society to clean up it's act, and not go running to the government for all solutions to every problem, real or imagined.


Okay, I was sympathetic to the "rural and have gun to protect myself from animals" argument, but this is just paranoid ranting. Soros is a Hungarian Jew who was a kid when the Nazis rolled in. He was not a Nazi. I had to look up what you were saying to see where this craziness is coming from, and am not surprised to find it's Ann Coulter. And no, there are not people trying to pry all your guns from your cold, dead hands. There are tens, maybe hundreds of millions of people now who have had enough of the unchecked gun lunacy that's turned the whole country into a dangerous place. I think even the people who want to see stronger gun control understand rural self-protection from animals, hunting, and sport shooting. You just don't need military equipment for those. Very unexciting rifles used to kill deer just fine when I was a kid.

As for the wiper fluid: your county has some pretty densely-populated areas where the ordinance makes sense. There are things I don't like about my county ordinances, either, but I understand that for the majority of the population, they make sense and do good things. Instead of trying to doctor your wiper fluid, you should probably just drive to a county where you can get the stuff you need, get several gallons of it, and be set for years. I think rural America has bigger worries than that, mostly to do with nearby-metropolitan views on infrastructure, zoning, and natural resources.

Actually, Soros delivered deportation orders during the war and was not deported himself. He is at least guilty by association. What was the source of influence that gave him a free pass when so many other people were slaughtered? And no, I didn't hear this from Ann Coulter, who I have no more use for than I do her fellow ranter and raver, Keith Olberman. I can see why you tried to attribute her as my source of this information as she is easily demonized and you think this strengthens your argument and negates mine. Nice try.
And I really liked your " cold, dead hands" reference. An ineffective attempt on your part to make me sound like some kind of nut, which you think will make you right. It doesn't.
And as far as the fluid goes, no retailer in the 'densely populated' areas of this county would stock something that people don't need, nor would the consumers buy something that costs significantly more unless they did need it. The market alone would see to this being used only in the places and at the times of year that it was necessary. Just another example of Sack-er-termaters passing another stupid law they can't enforce and that makes no sense whatsoever.
As I said, you flatlanders come up with some outlandish, impractical, asinine ideas that sound good to you and because they don't effect you, you're all for them. Screw us, right?


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Last edited by glebel on 10 Oct 2015, 10:55 am, edited 1 time in total.

Lukeda420
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10 Oct 2015, 10:55 am

glebel wrote:
nor would the consumers buy something that costs significantly more unless they did need it.


Do you seriously believe that!? The entire United States economy is built on selling things to people that they don't need at an over inflated price.



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10 Oct 2015, 11:02 am

Peejay wrote:
You know, I still don`t understand why gun advocates are soooo anti changing some laws.
It almost feels like there will be no negotiation, no attempt to discuss making changes, it really feels like a point of principle with no room for manoeuvre, except perhaps allowing even more freedom of access to gun.


I'll get back to you in more detail later, but we tried negotiating and compromising, right up till the early 90s, and all it got was more and more pointless restrictions. If you have a specific proposal that you think you'd work, give me an example of it working, e.g. a country with high violent crime imposing that policy and showing a demonstrable drop in crime that can be solidly tied to the new law.


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10 Oct 2015, 11:04 am

Lukeda420 wrote:
glebel wrote:
nor would the consumers buy something that costs significantly more unless they did need it.


Do you seriously believe that!? The entire United States economy is built on selling things to people that they don't need at an over inflated price.

Say you walk into a store, and there are two similar products sitting side by side. One costs 50% more than the other. Which one do you buy?


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10 Oct 2015, 11:24 am

glebel wrote:
Lukeda420 wrote:
glebel wrote:
nor would the consumers buy something that costs significantly more unless they did need it.


Do you seriously believe that!? The entire United States economy is built on selling things to people that they don't need at an over inflated price.

Say you walk into a store, and there are two similar products sitting side by side. One costs 50% more than the other. Which one do you buy?


This is the problem with libertarianism, and communism for that matter. They both look good on paper, but as soon as you introduce the human element both philosophies fall apart. The world is so much more complicated than that. For one thing there is deceptive advertising and near monopolies in this country. We pay more for internet, phone service and healthcare in this country than nearly every other first world countries because of corporate lobbying and advertising.. So yeah people buy overpriced crap that they don't need all the time. Have you ever been to Whole Foods? That's their entire business model.



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10 Oct 2015, 11:53 am

Lukeda420 wrote:
glebel wrote:
Lukeda420 wrote:
glebel wrote:
nor would the consumers buy something that costs significantly more unless they did need it.


Do you seriously believe that!? The entire United States economy is built on selling things to people that they don't need at an over inflated price.

Say you walk into a store, and there are two similar products sitting side by side. One costs 50% more than the other. Which one do you buy?


This is the problem with libertarianism, and communism for that matter. They both look good on paper, but as soon as you introduce the human element both philosophies fall apart. The world is so much more complicated than that. For one thing there is deceptive advertising and near monopolies in this country. We pay more for internet, phone service and healthcare in this country than nearly every other first world countries because of corporate lobbying and advertising.. So yeah people buy overpriced crap that they don't need all the time. Have you ever been to Whole Foods? That's their entire business model.

I used to shop in the Whole Foods in Berkeley when I lived in the S.F. Bay area, and there again too, I excercised my judgement. I bought what they had that I couldn't get elsewhere and bought other things where I could get them at a better price and of sometimes of better quality. We are not children; we do not need the government, or anyone else for that matter, telling us what to do.


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10 Oct 2015, 12:10 pm

Glebel
That's not entirely true. We need to live by rules and laws in this world and our government is just supposed to be a tool the people use to establish those rules. Too bad that right now it's largely been taken over by corporate influences. Besides there are plenty of people in this world that are basically children in adult bodies.

There are reasonable laws that govern human behavior in this country and so it makes perfect sense that corporations are subject to reasonable regulations as well.

Oh and the CEO of whole foods is still a multi-millionaire despite not having you as a customer. So I guess that not everyone acts the same way.



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11 Oct 2015, 3:54 am

Lukeda420 wrote:
Oh and the CEO of whole foods is still a multi-millionaire despite not having you as a customer. So I guess that not everyone acts the same way.


This is sort of a logic fail, unless you honestly don't believe there's a legitimate market for an upscale grocery shopping experience and people willing to pay for it. That's not a market failure, that's a personal preference and an entrepreneur filling a niche. You really see those forces at work in the restaurant business, where a dollar menu item from a fast food joint might get you just as full as a much more expensive prepared meal at a nice place, but no one argues that the two are the same or that only fools would choose the pricier option.


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11 Oct 2015, 4:02 am

timtowdi wrote:
Only if they're giant and obviously giving a distorted view, like that one was. That's a bad piece of propaganda.


Because it wasn't promoting the message that you'd prefer? It was a very simple graph accurately showing two sets of data over a period of time, illustrating a point I was making; all the sourcing was above board and displayed on the graphic. Perhaps that word, propaganda, doesn't mean what you think it does.

Also, is your standard for demanding rigor really the physical size the data is displayed? That's...odd.


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11 Oct 2015, 4:24 am

glebel wrote:
We are not children; we do not need the government, or anyone else for that matter, telling us what to do.


I also have to disagree with this statement. Judging everyone else by your own standards only works if they also choose to be respectful to others and their environment. There is a significant number of people who need rules in place to govern them and the threat of punishment to ensure they don't take too many liberties.



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11 Oct 2015, 4:25 am

Lukeda420 wrote:
Hey glebel, who are the people that want to ban all guns in the U.S.? I have never heard ANY proposals to do anything close to this. I think the closest I've ever heard from someone in a position of power is Senator Feinstein and she's never proposed anything like that in the senate. I can kind of understand her statement as she was there when Harvey Milk was assassinated.


You'd have to have been following the issue long enough to remember when the anti-gun groups had more honest names, like the Coalition to Ban Handguns, now the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, or Handgun Control Inc, now the Brady Center, and the more extreme positions they took when their views were more mainstream. Going back even farther, elements of the National Firearms Act and Gun Control Act where enacted as the vanguard of a planned push to ban handguns, specifically by making it a federal crime to shorten a rifle or shotgun to create a de facto handgun. There's a lot more there if you read between the lines, but the real proof is looking at what's happened to countries that have adopted many of the proposed regulations, specifically registration, which is greatly diminished if not entirely abolished firearms rights for their citizens.

Incidentally, Feinstein apparently wasn't so traumatized by the Milk assassination that she personally swore off guns, obtaining a virtually impossible for the unconnected California carry permit and the gun to go with it when she felt she'd been threatened. She's far from alone in this hypocrisy either; Dennis Kucinich had a handgun ban as a plank in his abortive presidential run some years back, despite his own concealed carry during a union dispute back in his mayoral days, and every anti-gun celebrity and politician seems to have their own entourage or armed bodyguards. Somehow guns make everyone less safe except famous people who are surrounded by them?


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11 Oct 2015, 5:10 am

Peejay wrote:
You know, I still don`t understand why gun advocates are soooo anti changing some laws.
It almost feels like there will be no negotiation, no attempt to discuss making changes, it really feels like a point of principle with no room for manoeuvre, except perhaps allowing even more freedom of access to gun.


You'd have to actually understand the issue and how pointless and cumbersome most of the proposed laws are, especially when we're still fighting to get previously established burdensome and unhelpful laws changed. Why is the length of my rifle barrel a federal matter? Why can attaching a device that makes my pistol more accurate get me years in prison? Why are simple devices that reduce the report of firearms to make them less likely to damage hearing regulated more strictly than the firearms themselves? On and on, and then something like this happens, and well meaning but emotional and clueless about guns folk can't figure out why we're not receptive to their foolish and/or unworkable ideas.

Peejay wrote:
I think a few of us here have attempted to understand some pro gun positions eg. shooting rattlers in then wild etc, culling overpopulated wild animals; enjoying the technology, history and collecting guns almost as a pastime.


You're entirely missing the self defense, competitive shooting, and military deterrent angles, among others, but good on you for at least trying a bit, more than we usually get in these threads.

Peejay wrote:
However I don`t think (I apologise if I am wrong) I have read any points agreeing or conceding the most miniscule point re the change agenda or even the tiniest modification in the gun laws (apart from further pro gun ones) have so far been made here in this thread, ie that there is even a problem that needs improving. It does feel quite immutable and that the pro gun apologists are 100% in the right.


Pardon me, apologists? Here I am, trying to keep this civil, and you've got to go throw some insulting loaded language in there, since I guess you felt your argument needed the additional punch of little name calling. I mean really, it's you who should be apologizing for wasting my time with the same unworkable proposals I've had to put up with for years from people who know nothing about guns but have strong opinions on them anyway, but I digress.

To answer you though; why compromise or negotiate with ignorant and wrong? I've been looking for a smart and knowledgeable anti-gunner for going on a decade here with no success; I strongly suspect that everyone who actually learns about guns and gun law ends up on my side, it's the only explanation that fits.

Peejay wrote:
And while this absolutism is the case there is no wonder that Obama et al feel that they just cannot help things get better.


He could do many things if he wasn't so concerned about the guns, ending the drug war alone would save millions of lives both directly and indirectly, and likely reduce violent crime much more than any form of gun control would. This isn't about saving lives though, this is about control and personal antipathy towards guns and their owners, hence the tunnel vision.

Peejay wrote:
But lets face it guns are tools essentially designed by humans with one purpose and that is to kill living things.

I know that is stating the obvious, but there we are, the reason for guns existing is as killing weapons.


No. As, as far as I know the only person with gun design experience on this board, and likely the only one you'll ever have a conversation with, that's crap. Design parameters of firearms are things like weight, reliability, modularity, ease of use and manufacture, ergonomics, etc, and things like target shooting, hunting, self defense, etc as uses. "Killing people" isn't a design goal, and if you really want to get technical, is really more a function of how the bullet is designed than the gun itself. Still, guns are weapons, and the thing about weapons is that they are force multipliers, and can be used for good or ill, though in the States the numbers are prettt overwhelmingly for good.

Peejay wrote:
Finally are pro gun advocates arguing that if all the guns didn't exist that the same (in my opinion huge number) of homicides and mass killings would still occur but with different weapons?


You might see a slight decrees in murders and matching uptick in attempted murders as less effective weapons were substituted, but you'd wouldn't see the dramatic drop you're imagining, even if you could magic wand all the guns away tomorrow. A gun in the hand might make committing a murder easier, but it doesn't make a person murderous, that takes other factors not addressed by gun controllers.

Incidentally, if your magic wand doesn't work, I wouldn't want to be one of the poor SOBs sent out to try and roundup the 300 million plus guns out there, I don't see that going well for them.


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11 Oct 2015, 5:39 am

Are there any reliable estimates of how many illegal guns are in circulation in the US?