Another day, another shooting in the US

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Edmond Dantes
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Edmond Dantes »

neorichieb1971 wrote:What you need is "phone home" cabinets that when opened (to take the gun out) you get a text from gun control HQ. If you don't reply within 10 minutes the cops come round and blow the shit out of your house. That way, if anyone except the true owner of the gun has it, they can be caught (and shot if necessary) before any harm is done to others.

I'd go for that. If you don't buy a "phone home" cabinet. You have to give up your guns.

There, technology solved the problem. Albeit expensive. But oh well!
Can't tell if joking or serious, so excuse me if I'm coming off as a little dense, but...

Immediate problem with that scenario:

Burglar steals gun.
Burglar does not reply to prompt.
Legitimate home owners see no reason to reply, aren't at home right now, are asleep etc.
The outcome: Cops destroy house and home owners who did absolutely nothing wrong. Meanwhile, there is still someone out there with a gun he (or she) shouldn't have.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by neorichieb1971 »

Edmond Dantes wrote:
neorichieb1971 wrote:What you need is "phone home" cabinets that when opened (to take the gun out) you get a text from gun control HQ. If you don't reply within 10 minutes the cops come round and blow the shit out of your house. That way, if anyone except the true owner of the gun has it, they can be caught (and shot if necessary) before any harm is done to others.

I'd go for that. If you don't buy a "phone home" cabinet. You have to give up your guns.

There, technology solved the problem. Albeit expensive. But oh well!
Can't tell if joking or serious, so excuse me if I'm coming off as a little dense, but...

Immediate problem with that scenario:

Burglar steals gun.
Burglar does not reply to prompt.
Legitimate home owners see no reason to reply, aren't at home right now, are asleep etc.
The outcome: Cops destroy house and home owners who did absolutely nothing wrong. Meanwhile, there is still someone out there with a gun he (or she) shouldn't have.

The cabinet would be tamper proof. A gun would probably do it, but since the burglar is trying to steal a gun one would presume they didn't have one. Besides, the idea is stop your kids getting the guns, not burglars. If you got a text saying "gun closet unlocked, please text back authorization code or call 911". I don't think your not going to text back. The idea is to have a 3rd party decide if the legal owner has the gun or not. Since Americans cannot be trusted to lock the stupid things away securely. Probably hide them under the mattress.

I'm being serious. No point joking about lives here. Perhaps Americans are the ones not taking things seriously. What we are looking for is a half way measure between a total outright ban and sensible gun control that should allow most gun owners to go about their business. Without kids getting shot every other weekend. Get my point?
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BulletMagnet
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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ED-057 wrote:There does not appear to be any concerted effort by the anti-gun crowd to amend the constitution to get what they want. Instead of following the process that is in place to change the constitution, they would rather ignore it.
I think most of us would just prefer that more emphasis was put on the "well-regulated" part of "well-regulated militia" - on that front nobody willfully ignores the second amendment more than gun advocates.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by louisg »

BulletMagnet wrote:
ED-057 wrote:There does not appear to be any concerted effort by the anti-gun crowd to amend the constitution to get what they want. Instead of following the process that is in place to change the constitution, they would rather ignore it.
I think most of us would just prefer that more emphasis was put on the "well-regulated" part of "well-regulated militia" - on that front nobody willfully ignores the second amendment more than gun advocates.
It's debatable whether "well-regulated" refers in part to government regulations-- it's an old idiom. Though Googling, I can't find any neutral hits on it, so maybe that's BS. Militias though... yeah, it says "militias", not "it's your right to own any damn firearm you want".
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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louisg wrote:It's debatable whether "well-regulated" refers in part to government regulations-- it's an old idiom.
Personally, I wouldn't even be bringing the government into the equation if I didn't feel it was the only viable option: seriously, if the NRA and other such groups took a more reasonable stand towards (and concrete actions concerning) background checks, expanded magazines, the gun show loophole, etc. I'd be perfectly willing to say "Okay, at least these guys are making some effort to practice what they preach about responsible gun ownership, and should be given a chance to handle things themselves if that's the way they'd prefer to do it." Unfortunately, when the prevailing interpretation of the second amendment is "Any mentally-unstable ex-con with links to terrorist organizations should be able to buy as many assault weapons at one time as he wishes, no questions asked, and should be able to carry as many of them as he can strap to his body, loaded and with the safety off, to any place, any time, under any circumstances" you'll have to excuse me if my faith in the good graces of free enterprise remains shaken.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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BulletMagnet wrote:
louisg wrote:It's debatable whether "well-regulated" refers in part to government regulations-- it's an old idiom.
Personally, I wouldn't even be bringing the government into the equation if I didn't feel it was the only viable option: seriously, if the NRA and other such groups took a more reasonable stand towards (and concrete actions concerning) background checks, expanded magazines, the gun show loophole, etc. I'd be perfectly willing to say "Okay, at least these guys are making some effort to practice what they preach about responsible gun ownership, and should be given a chance to handle things themselves if that's the way they'd prefer to do it." Unfortunately, when the prevailing interpretation of the second amendment is "Any mentally-unstable ex-con with links to terrorist organizations should be able to buy as many assault weapons at one time as he wishes, no questions asked, and should be able to carry as many of them as he can strap to his body, loaded and with the safety off, to any place, any time, under any circumstances" you'll have to excuse me if my faith in the good graces of free enterprise remains shaken.
Yes, what irks me most is that it's past the point of ridiculousness. A lot of people can't seem to see the forest for the trees.
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Edmond Dantes
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Edmond Dantes »

neorichieb1971 wrote:
Edmond Dantes wrote:
neorichieb1971 wrote:What you need is "phone home" cabinets that when opened (to take the gun out) you get a text from gun control HQ. If you don't reply within 10 minutes the cops come round and blow the shit out of your house. That way, if anyone except the true owner of the gun has it, they can be caught (and shot if necessary) before any harm is done to others.

I'd go for that. If you don't buy a "phone home" cabinet. You have to give up your guns.

There, technology solved the problem. Albeit expensive. But oh well!
Can't tell if joking or serious, so excuse me if I'm coming off as a little dense, but...

Immediate problem with that scenario:

Burglar steals gun.
Burglar does not reply to prompt.
Legitimate home owners see no reason to reply, aren't at home right now, are asleep etc.
The outcome: Cops destroy house and home owners who did absolutely nothing wrong. Meanwhile, there is still someone out there with a gun he (or she) shouldn't have.

The cabinet would be tamper proof.
There's the first problem: You want something that doesn't exist.
A gun would probably do it, but since the burglar is trying to steal a gun one would presume they didn't have one. Besides, the idea is stop your kids getting the guns, not burglars. If you got a text saying "gun closet unlocked, please text back authorization code or call 911". I don't think your not going to text back.
Dude, do you know how many people put their cellphones on mute or vibrate and just tune the damn thing out?

And that's before you even get to people who mislay their cellphones, or they get destroyed in an accident, or the thing is just crap and it breaks on its own, or you have to get a new one for some reason (say because an annoying ex won't stop calling) but the gov. still has your old number...

I mean granted, there is a certain beauty to any plan that punishes people for being stupid, but you're suggesting this for gun control, and in that capacity its horribly flawed because it punishes people for trivial mistakes without actually preventing guns from falling into the wrong hands.
I'm being serious. No point joking about lives here. Perhaps Americans are the ones not taking things seriously. What we are looking for is a half way measure between a total outright ban and sensible gun control that should allow most gun owners to go about their business. Without kids getting shot every other weekend. Get my point?
I get your point, I just question your method.
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Ed Oscuro
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

neorichieb1971 wrote:The cabinet would be tamper proof.
I just had an amazing insight - everything neorichie writes, regardless of topic, is actually a fiendishly clever spoof of our discourse. Well done sir!
BulletMagnet wrote:
ED-057 wrote:There does not appear to be any concerted effort by the anti-gun crowd to amend the constitution to get what they want. Instead of following the process that is in place to change the constitution, they would rather ignore it.
I think most of us would just prefer that more emphasis was put on the "well-regulated" part of "well-regulated militia" - on that front nobody willfully ignores the second amendment more than gun advocates.
I'm not sure what the well-regulated part refers to - but it seems plain as day that there is little to object to in having some kind of regulation to become an accredited firearms owner. I'm just not sure what this would do, outside of perhaps increasing operational knowledge that might prevent some of the self-inflicted harm you can see on YouTube, and maybe some of the accidental cases, but I think the firearms lobby is mistaken (from the standpoint of good policy, as opposed to policy that is quickly supported by the political base) to begrudge the government some of the same measures that you will see in most auto sales. You have license transfers, mandatory insurance in most places (perhaps a state-by-state issue) as well as the mandatory (if questionably effective) tests. On the flip side of things, advocates of government action should become well acquainted with the facts of a limited budget that prevent placing police in every school, workplace, street corner, and home, and that at the end of the day people must be allowed some measure reflecting the fact of their being primarily responsible for their own well-being in many cases. In short: Some cases show the use of government; some cases show the importance of some reasonable liberties. I think that many partisans on both sides make a mistake of having unreasonable faith in their style of solution - on the one hand the technocrats with their "look, a UTILITARIAN ARGUMENT makes everything better! Nothing else matters" naivete; on the other, the people who ritually use the Nazis as the first point of reference in any discussion of government.

My view is that people should become accustomed to having some government oversight - although no oversight outside of surveillance is very likely to prevent massacres without weakening rights and draining the budget (because a national firearms round-up would be prohibitively expensive, even if it was adhered to - I think most people would become scofflaws just as during the Noble Experiment). I think that having people more aware of the issue, putting up surveilance cameras, much as the UK has done (one of those pesky little uncounted facts that frustrates an attempt to show it is merely the UK's firearms law that restricts rates of homicide by handgun), and institutional practices (fuckwit scaring the hell out of your workplace / classroom / etc.? GET HELP!) are relatively cost-effective measures that should be tried first off.

This is not to say that the justice system isn't one of the largest perpetrators (albeit mostly unwittingly) of injustice in the land - it certainly is, but even if reform isn't likely to happen, some kind of armed resistance against all the relatively mundane (but still crushing) injustices the system inflicts isn't likely to be an antidote.

However I would leave it up to the discretion of the individual to say (within reason; it does seem reasonable that fully automatic weapons are highly controlled, after all!) what is useful to them. All the politicians blathering on about how people "don't need" feature X, Y, or Z have obviously never realized that these "features" can save lives, help civilian familiarization with service weapons (useful in peacetime as well as the runup to war) and most importantly have never realized the "points system" some hack dreamed up for counting up how many "bad" points a weapon had before it could be denied import was a clever farce with no real significance other than to frustrate users.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Ed Oscuro wrote:However I would leave it up to the discretion of the individual to say (within reason; it does seem reasonable that fully automatic weapons are highly controlled, after all!) what is useful to them. All the politicians blathering on about how people "don't need" feature X, Y, or Z have obviously never realized that these "features" can save lives, help civilian familiarization with service weapons (useful in peacetime as well as the runup to war) and most importantly have never realized the "points system" some hack dreamed up for counting up how many "bad" points a weapon had before it could be denied import was a clever farce with no real significance other than to frustrate users.
Well, if anyone wanted to make a difference ban-wise, they'd ban handguns, not rifles. Just look at the murder statistics, plus they're easier to conceal for robbers. But that's not as easy of a target-- it'd really piss off a lot of people.

Anyway, lots of weapons have features that can "save lives" because they're powerful/easier to hit shit with, and would help "familiarize" people with military-grade weaponry. Not all of them are legal, for generally good reasons. So, I don't know where you're going there.

But as far as I can tell, the only reason people buy a lot of the more powerful guns, scopes, etc, isn't that they're worried about home defense, it's because they think the guns kick ass. But they don't want to say that, because that sounds less than completely serious. I'd personally respect people more if they were honest about being enthusiasts and hobbyists instead of coming up with bullshit reasons why every home needs an AR-15. Serious business :roll:
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Well my methods may be silly or unorthodox, but i'm coming up with ideas. From where I'm standing your still going around and around in your political loop holes.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Well, if anyone wanted to make a difference ban-wise, they'd ban handguns, not rifles. Just look at the murder statistics, plus they're easier to conceal for robbers. But that's not as easy of a target-- it'd really piss off a lot of people.
100% true. So why do we waste time talking about "assault weapons" and magazine sizes?
But as far as I can tell, the only reason people buy a lot of the more powerful guns, scopes, etc, isn't that they're worried about home defense, it's because they think the guns kick ass. But they don't want to say that, because that sounds less than completely serious. I'd personally respect people more if they were honest
Why should they have to justify their legal activities in the first place?
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Just because something is legal in a certain place at a certain time, that doesn't make it right, desirable, or "good" (moral). Slavery was legal at one point, now it isn't. Manufacturing and selling tobacco is still legal. You can be sure it WILL BE autlawed eventually, be it in 50 or 100 years (simple reason: the opportunity cost of cigarettes is higher than the tax revenue, they make you and those around you sick and kill you when used as intended, nicotine is as addictive as heroin).
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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ED-057 wrote:
Well, if anyone wanted to make a difference ban-wise, they'd ban handguns, not rifles. Just look at the murder statistics, plus they're easier to conceal for robbers. But that's not as easy of a target-- it'd really piss off a lot of people.
100% true. So why do we waste time talking about "assault weapons" and magazine sizes?
It's twofold. Like I said, it's something more people would agree on, which I do think is a bit cynical of the politicians. The one legit argument is a question of the intent of a gun like the AR-15 vs. a handgun or hunting rifle. But I do think there's a point to limiting the clip size. Second, more powerful weaponry has always been limited. For example, I'm sure fully automatic guns weren't illegal once upon a time. It's a matter of scale, and where the line is that is crossed.

*Everyone* agrees on limiting weaponry that citizens have access to. It's where the line is drawn that is the arguing point. Even some knives are off limits. Some cars are off limits as long as you're on the streets with it. Even Sudafed is controlled. It just depends on what society deems appropriate for people to be able to possess and under what circumstances.
But as far as I can tell, the only reason people buy a lot of the more powerful guns, scopes, etc, isn't that they're worried about home defense, it's because they think the guns kick ass. But they don't want to say that, because that sounds less than completely serious. I'd personally respect people more if they were honest
Why should they have to justify their legal activities in the first place?
Like Friendly said: it's legal *now*. This is a point that is currently being argued because, guess what, guns are fucking dangerous and the primary purpose of the guns which are being argued about is to kill large numbers of human beings. Items which are this deadly usually get regulated out the ass, and there's no reason that guns should be the lone exception, lobbying groups aside.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Friendly wrote:nicotine is as addictive as heroin).
Actually it's not. Not even close. That's not to say cigarettes aren't awful, not to mention nasty as fuck, but very few (if any) smokers have trouble sleeping through a night b/c they have to get up and have a cigarette. On the flip side, one of the tell tale signs of Heroin withdrawal is the physical aspects of it, which are so strong they can interfere with your body, even when the mind is shut off. This is one of the hurdles you have to get over to stop smoking cigarettes: the addiction is all in your head. I was in the professional smoking league here for 9 years and went cold turkey about 9 years ago.

I do agree that production of cigarettes is pretty much immoral. I would not want to make or sell them. However, I think grown ups should be able to put chemicals in their body if they want.

Okay, back to the war on guns...
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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ED-057 wrote:So why do we waste time talking about "assault weapons" and magazine sizes?
Because (again) assault rifles and whatnot are designed not just to kill, but to kill lots of people in a very short span of time, which is a good deal harder for both the media and the citizenry in general to ignore (just one person shot in an alleyway somewhere? Eh, big deal). Most criminals who murder other people don't want to get caught, and thus commit said crimes on a smaller scale with smaller weapons; anyone who bursts into a shopping mall with an AK-47 is not looking to remain inconspicuous, and rarely does.

In any event, even if they're not used to commit a majority of murders, I don't think seeking ways to prevent them from being used in an ever-increasing amount of atrocities is "wasting time". Just my opinion, of course.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

louisg wrote:
Ed Oscuro wrote:However I would leave it up to the discretion of the individual to say (within reason; it does seem reasonable that fully automatic weapons are highly controlled, after all!) what is useful to them. All the politicians blathering on about how people "don't need" feature X, Y, or Z have obviously never realized that these "features" can save lives, help civilian familiarization with service weapons (useful in peacetime as well as the runup to war) and most importantly have never realized the "points system" some hack dreamed up for counting up how many "bad" points a weapon had before it could be denied import was a clever farce with no real significance other than to frustrate users.
Well, if anyone wanted to make a difference ban-wise, they'd ban handguns, not rifles.
Rifle and shotgun attacks are far more lethal than most handguns. We should carefully note that aside from the rare cases where somebody has brazenly gone out with a rifle for criminal activity - like a gang (Tubbs would like to remind us all that "I hate machine guns!") or one of the recent massacres - most criminals would use handguns, which are generally far less deadly, because they are convenient and concealable. But oh goodness! Such are the reasons why police use them as well, and law-abiding owners too. Since society is unlikely to tolerate citizens walking around armed with rifles (as you might see in a place where the argument for going so armed is implicitly understood - like Israel or certain parts of the southern US border, perhaps) this means that we are going to limit homeowners, people in private security, and others to an inconvenient solution which will lead many to stop going armed or greatly inconvenience them, while criminals may go armed as before.

Now, the sheer number of deaths and wounds attributed to handguns, as well as the statistics presented earlier about how they seem to help facilitate suicides that might have been avoided otherwise -
Anyway, lots of weapons have features that can "save lives" because they're powerful/easier to hit shit with, and would help "familiarize" people with military-grade weaponry. Not all of them are legal, for generally good reasons. So, I don't know where you're going there.
Any specifics or are you just going to throw up your hands and give up? Very little I can respond to in here, except to say that I could not say that familiarization is alone a sufficient condition for allowing freedom to arm. It is a supporting reason, at least as far as I've developed it here. But I think we should be careful before we throw away one of the advantages the nation's soldiers have traditionally enjoyed, simply because various populations (other populations - I don't mean this as any kind of a class war opener but it should be noted that the nation's military service members are more highly representative of some parts of the country, and less in others) within the country have determined that they know what is best for everyone. I think we should allow every area the chance to make some determination on this kind of issue, since locality really does matter in this kind of debate. And this seems to follow logically from my discussion earlier about situations where the individual or government is advantaged - I think there is a better reason to be less friendly towards the idea of carrying weapons in densely populated areas with heavy police coverage, as opposed to carrying weapons in sparsely settled areas with gaps in government services.
But as far as I can tell, the only reason people buy a lot of the more powerful guns, scopes, etc, isn't that they're worried about home defense, it's because they think the guns kick ass. But they don't want to say that, because that sounds less than completely serious. I'd personally respect people more if they were honest about being enthusiasts and hobbyists instead of coming up with bullshit reasons why every home needs an AR-15. Serious business :roll:
That is an interesting dimension to it, too, but are you going to start requiring Hummer owners and soccer moms to prove that they shouldn't just be driving around in a plastic smart car? Or the guy who owns a two-ton ex-military truck because he's a collector - obviously, we could say that if such a truck were to lose its brakes or be driven recklessly, it could do a lot more damage! The problem with this "what's needed" view is that it assumes some outsider should (or can) determine what a person needs, and it also denigrates the ability of the owner to exercise their own caution in potentially dangerous situations. In the case of the driver I am thinking of (I have no idea where he would come down on the firearms debate), I recall that it was an SUV turning on red that totaled one of his Jaguars. Quite often you can only count on enthusiasts (amongst all the world's population) to know what they are doing. And also, what would your example tell us about video games? Surely it has occurred to you that some people not only like the "experience" of being a soldier or being in charge of deadly vehicles and weaponry, but they like the violence as well. And some would even admit this but they could also strenuously argue that they know the boundaries of conduct and reality - just as the driver of a heavy vehicle should have his license and watch all the signals, because he likes the heavy vehicle and not necessarily a particular use, and just as the owner of a firearm might enjoy "plinking" and target practice or hunting or have a demonstrable need for personal protection.

Yeah, obviously a lot of gun nuts like guns because they're supposed to be neat (I think they're rather boring in many ways actually). I don't see what that's supposed to tell us other than it is supposed to call into question the "seriousness" of gun owners, but that would be an ad hominem we wouldn't want to fall for, wouldn't you agree? If this "seriousness" of the hobby could tell us something profound about the seriousness exercised towards safety (it does not), or would tell us something about the intent of the weapon, then we might have something interesting to talk about.

Talking about the purpose of firearms gives us fewer obvious opportunities for reform than you might think because people with criminal intent don't reveal that intent ahead of time - unless somebody can be tricked into revealing their bad intent, it remains a secret (if it is a secret good intention, then obviously it is no problem). When you hear about the latest bomb plot bust, does the phrase "entrapment" ever enter your consciousness? This happens in much more mundane and less serious classes of offense, too, of course, of which firearms would be and is a chief example because the courts only need to be reminded of the "deadly nature" of a firearms to be convinced to throw the book at someone. It seems that we can use intent to validate cases of gun ownership (because the person is obviously good), or in cases as a misnomer because other judgements (psychological or criminal history) are really doing the work (where it's not undiscoverable "intent" but rather the observation of other people who are preventing a crime), or in some kind of "needs-based" test. If somebody misuses a firearm by accident, that has nothing at all to do with intent, of course. I realize that all probably sounds somewhat suspect, but I believe it is actually true. When we use "intent" in the law I think we're really asking people to try to do some armchair quarterbacking without having thrown the ball from the defendant's perspective.

I think the strongest case that can be made for limited gun ownership is simply the utilitarian "by the numbers" argument. But this is also an argument that cries out for a better thought-out solution than one that is merely ideologically satisfying. Banning slavery is a good example of something that is applicable everywhere and emotionally satisfying to think of, because any "stakeholders" who lose out in a slavery ban are profiting from a wrongdoing. But banning an entire class of handguns that are known to be useful (I won't comment on bans of "nuisance" firearms, except to say that it seems like some bans were directed against manufacturers and price points, i.e. trying to force guns out of the market without going through the trouble of a full ban, rather than quality concerns; banning the sale of new firearms that are dangerous to operate seems uncontroversial) sets us up to have to consider how heavy the bad consequences must be that we should accept in order to achieve the good ones. And tragically too many people are too short-sighted to see that calling for the nationally organized example will ensure that all relevant local distinctions are lost - so that either one camp is severely underserved by any resulting legislation, or the compromise ensures that no adequate legislative solutions are reached for any populations.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

BulletMagnet wrote:
ED-057 wrote:So why do we waste time talking about "assault weapons" and magazine sizes?
Because (again) assault rifles and whatnot are designed not just to kill, but to kill lots of people in a very short span of time, which is a good deal harder for both the media and the citizenry in general to ignore (just one person shot in an alleyway somewhere? Eh, big deal). Most criminals who murder other people don't want to get caught, and thus commit said crimes on a smaller scale with smaller weapons; anyone who bursts into a shopping mall with an AK-47 is not looking to remain inconspicuous, and rarely does.

In any event, even if they're not used to commit a majority of murders, I don't think seeking ways to prevent them from being used in an ever-increasing amount of atrocities is "wasting time". Just my opinion, of course.
Ah, my friend, I think that although we often see closely on such issues, you have characterized this issue sloppily. First, let us dispense with the histrionic-sounding "kill lots of people in a very short span of time." That was the machine gun developed in the later 1800s. The modern AR series assault rifle was denigrated at its introduction as sporting a weak varmint (i.e., squirrel) "intermediate" rifle round and a "Mattel" plastic body, which we are rediscovering is much less useful in fights across wide valleys and across mountain ranges than the old rifles. The "Real Man's Rifle" was something like the M-14 with a fullsize cartridge more in line with a (small caliber) machine gun, or the classic rifles of the world wars, meant to take down an enemy in one shot. The M-16 style rifle was designed to allow an infantryman to keep firing for a sustained period of time, and to do so with reasonable accuracy; it was not assumed that each round would kill or even wound an enemy, but contribute towards mass fire and suppressive capability (i.e. keeping their heads down). The AR-15 / M-16 style cartridge does inflict some grievous wounds, but generally only if it hits bone or certain other kinds of tissue - and some of these wounds merely cripple an enemy, rather than contribute to fast bleeding which is the main cause of death by firearms. Now, it is true that such a design allows bullets to be sprayed around recklessly at a greater volume than older rifles. And that was an argument made against not only the rifles but the tactics of the Vietnam war, both from inside and outside the establishment. That being said, the military functionality of such a high capacity rifle may actually be of use in some domestic situation - let's not be so credulous as to think that a "better rifle" is one which runs out of bullets quickly, giving criminals a chance to counterattack; what's militarily useful may also allow a person to defend against bad guys without even killing anyone. Going to larger cartridges won't really ensure improved accuracy or care in firing, of course; and bigger bullets tend to travel farther through barriers than smaller ones.

The people going into these massacres loaded down have often carried thousands of rounds, like a real infantryman might, but they only fire a fraction of them. I think it is obvious that even if we all stuck to New York's 7-shot magazine cap limit, it would be very easy with a modern magazine (or multiple firearms, or both) to keep firing at a rate that would not give unarmed civilians much help to counterattack. And any intent of causing the shooter in such a situation to poorly operate their firearm when reloading three or four times as often means that people in legitimate situations now also have the potentially deadly inconvenience of having to load three or four times as often. Any professional criminal (funny how the argument often switches categories without people bothering to make the distinction between a focused spree shooter who does not care to hide their identity, versus a professional criminal who has accomplices to help with planning and an escape) who isn't following these laws will end up better-armed in that situation. And let's not forget that police officers are not always the good guys in these cases - being issued a badge and a department firearm often means that the murder weapon can be department-issued. I'd like to suspect that bad apples in police departments would be sorted out soon enough, but unless we can start to work towards a de-escalation in violence worldwide, we're just setting up an imbalance in firepower between groups which may satisfy the public's demand for a satisfying proclamation but we sacrifice a person's ability for personal protection.

What would be nice, and is probably essential, is at least a push by all parties towards responsible behaviors. People should seriously consider not only the type of firearm they are considering but whether to buy any weapon at all.

The same reason that new pattern military rifles are less effective per bullet than many old-fashioned rifles is also why handguns and submachine guns, the boogeymen in many of these debates, is less effective than any of the designs previously mentioned. Almost all handgun bullets simply do not have the ability to reliably provoke deadly bleeding, and the handguns themselves are potentially louder than rifles (good for alerting passerby to get outta Dodge) and not very accurate (good for keeping your head safe - the lower brainstem is about the only location on the body that will certainly cause death if shot; as we've seen with Gabrielle Giffords, thankfully).

I should also note that in these mass killings, you had better pray that the shooter is fixated on tagging as many people as possible with the most convenient weapon possible, because the handgun may hurt terribly but it is less likely to hit accurately to kill you, and without enough force to cause you to bleed to death.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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GaijinPunch wrote:
Friendly wrote:nicotine is as addictive as heroin).
Actually it's not. Not even close. That's not to say cigarettes aren't awful, not to mention nasty as fuck, but very few (if any) smokers have trouble sleeping through a night b/c they have to get up and have a cigarette. On the flip side, one of the tell tale signs of Heroin withdrawal is the physical aspects of it, which are so strong they can interfere with your body, even when the mind is shut off. This is one of the hurdles you have to get over to stop smoking cigarettes: the addiction is all in your head. I was in the professional smoking league here for 9 years and went cold turkey about 9 years ago.

I do agree that production of cigarettes is pretty much immoral. I would not want to make or sell them. However, I think grown ups should be able to put chemicals in their body if they want.

Okay, back to the war on guns...
I wasn't talking about withdrawal symptoms.
Nevertheless, the American Heart Association states there are similarities between tobacco and heroin in terms of the "pharmacologic and behavioral characteristics that determine...addiction." Canada's Federal Health Department also agrees. Health Canada explains that "nicotine causes chemical or biological changes in the brain," a psychoactive effect. "Although it is less dramatic than heroin or cocaine, the strength of the addiction is just as powerful."
Other international scientists reached the same conclusion.
GaijinPunch wrote:I think grown ups should be able to put chemicals in their body if they want.
I generally agree. Problem with smoking is that statistically 50% of all smokers die of smoking-related diseases, and often rather slowly (and painfully, but that's not the problem). During the time it takes them to die, their medical treatment requires more money than they ever paid for health insurance, which means that sooner or later non-smokers' money is used to make the dying process of smokers more comfortable, which is simply unfair.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

Friendly wrote:
GaijinPunch wrote:I think grown ups should be able to put chemicals in their body if they want.
I generally agree. Problem with smoking is that statistically 50% of all smokers die of smoking-related diseases, and often rather slowly (and painfully, but that's not the problem). During the time it takes them to die, their medical treatment requires more money than they ever paid for health insurance, which means that sooner or later non-smokers' money is used to make the dying process of smokers more comfortable, which is simply unfair.
One difference (two differences, possibly) that appear between smoking and guns are - there's no obvious time at which a smoker should, in the course of buying and using cigarettes or cigars, be asked to offset society's costs. On the other hand there are (small, and for administrative reasons, not insurance-related ones) tax-like payments that firearms owners are asked to pay (but only in certain cases, i.e. when buying a "barrel extender;" Hikock45 on YouTube will explain what that is if you'd like to know).

Another (debatable, of course) difference might be that a smoker clearly harms themselves, to a great deal, and possibly others as well, in the course of their smoking (but this hasn't stopped me from talking with philosophers, so...) - harm from firearms doesn't come from merely owning a weapon, but in misuse. I think that circles us back around to the usual utilitarian-style argument from pure statistics.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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"...harm from firearms doesn't come from merely owning a weapon, but in misuse."

Given that the 'correct use' of firearms seems to be 'home protection' (lit. execution without trial) I fail to see the legitimacy of any argument for a private citizen owning any kind of firearm.

As time goes by and more and more people are efficiently and systematically killed by firearms, the ridiculously antiquated notion that owning a firearm affords either protection (ha!) or (ha!) cultural enrichment will become ever more derided. There is no such thing as 'responsible gun ownership', as to own a gun is to buy into a fallacy that it will somehow protect you, and, if the situation arises, you would be willing to circumvent standard criminal procedures and kill another human being, fully believing that your life is more valuable.

So what else can a gun be good for? Recreation? Then Jesus Christ, go play some Time Crisis, watch a John Woo film, just anything.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

MX7 wrote:"...harm from firearms doesn't come from merely owning a weapon, but in misuse."

Given that the 'correct use' of firearms seems to be 'home protection'
I don't see where anybody granted you the sole judge of that. Hard to discuss this if that's what you think.

And how should we construe home defense? Must you only shoot inside the house? Not from outside? What about a rancher carrying a rifle - that's defense of property but perhaps not strictly "home" defense.

And speaking of laughable notions, until somebody can come up with a way to end the arms race - that in fact began with evolution long before there was sentience - firearms are just one of the latest developments in the fundamental process of staying ahead of the game. Banishing the use of all firearms (or weapons, at any rate) leaves the exercise of might to the powerful, and this is an obviously unjust imposition on the physically weak and outnumbered. We never question the use of countless varieties of tools, let for some reason firearms (and some other devices) get this peculiarly fetishistic treatment.

I'm not saying that it is a good solution to every problem (lots of people demonstrate the "everything looks like a nail" problem when it comes to firearms) and I do think that government and organizations can help prevent the necessity of using firearms, at least privately, in many situations. But these responses won't adequately cover whole categories of important situations that private arms could. Additionally, for all the blather about the evils of firearm misuse - we already have procedures in place for many such misuses; they're called reckless endangerment, assault, or murder charges! What the rare homicidal madman does with a firearm doesn't seem to tell us much about what we should do with the entire class of firearms, nor with what to do about video games, automobiles, and other things.

Even the NRA brought up the violent media link. There ought to be some change in how firearms get this fetishistic treatment - of course that's unlikely to change. But a person who has a firearm and keeps it responsibly can't be blamed for feeding into the cult of the firearm.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Come on, the notion that violent media creates violent people is weak at best. Let's cast out this Frankfurt School model for good. Absolutely bizarre that so many people believe this bullshit when it's been proven to the contrary over and over again. I guess it's very convenient to blame violent films, Lord knows they've been a scapegoat since the genesis of the medium, ditto videogames.

Given that a firearm only has the utility to kill animals or humans and destroy things, the notion of there being a 'responsible' way of owning such an item is laughable at best. The desire to own a gun is the very definition of irresponsibility! Unless it has a utility that has hitherto evaded my knowledge?
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

MX7 wrote:Given that a firearm only has the utility to kill animals or humans and destroy things, the notion of there being a 'responsible' way of owning such an item is laughable at best.
In a world where only firearms have utility to kill animals, humans, and destroy things? They are indeed a tool with a purpose but the world is, I think you'll find, often an irresponsible place.

Enough of that, here's an interesting article about gun manufacturer licensing and video games.

I think the bottom line is that violence is a part of being alive. Keeping that in check is everybody's struggle. No, I do think that just getting a gun to blow things up is stupid - I don't like destroying anything, personally. But that kind of story very conveniently ignores the responsible uses of firearms.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

MX7 wrote:Come on, the notion that violent media creates violent people is weak at best. Let's cast out this Frankfurt School model for good.
I forgot to mention - I agree with this. The responsibility for doing something evil lies with the person considering it - I'd even go so far as to say that the impulse also comes from within but this kind of talk is verboten with the "nature & nurture" crowd of psychology. Nevertheless, it does seem like the mass culture influences what people decide to do with their impulses. I don't blame TV news for reporting these issues - they are serious and people ought to know! Yet at the same time it looks as if many people have been copycatting the spree shooting model because this has been a fixture in the news since at least the Son of Sam attacks, "going postal," and the Columbine model especially. I don't know what's going on inside these diseased minds but it does look like they have considered their 15 minutes of fame on TV.

However, a firearm itself doesn't prescribe carelessness in ownership. Contrast this with the average video game where you're more or less expected to act very carelessly with (digital) firearms. If we grant that people can tell that a video game isn't reality - they know to be more careful in real life (generally) than they are in the latest GTA or Call of Duty - it seems this applies really in both cases.

I had some other thought about this which maybe I'll remember later - for now I'd again just like to register my perplexity at the fact that we accept dangerous devices and tools in some cases as practical evils (someday, according to BryanM, the feeling of the open road will be considered...BARBARIC!) but not in others. There is no doubt that automobiles have more utility in general than privately held firearms (and possibly even any firearms for that matter; there's no reason to suspect that if the police stopped carrying firearms regularly that society would break down completely), in the modern world, but in pointing this out we haven't really done anything against the fact that there are cases where firearms are a useful tool (for police, military, and civilians alike). We recognize, for example, that the polices' jobs can be hampered without firearms - like rescuing a hostage from a man with a knife. So - should firearms be used very sparingly, if at all? Yes, of course.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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The NRA wrote:The solution is always MOAR GUNS!
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

Post by Ed Oscuro »

Some good stuff there but look at this:
Myth #4: More good guys with guns can stop rampaging bad guys. [evidence following that it hasn't happened yet and that armed guards can have their guns taken from them]
Well, the "myth" is something which is actually not disproven at all by what has been said here.

I think it's fairly obvious that the rarity of those cases, and the rarity of CCW holders, means that the situation hasn't presented itself. (It's also quite possible that CCW holders will react poorly in such a situation but that's another story.) The fact that these cases are so rare means that it is of relatively limited value against a person's right to self-protection.

Take the "stand your ground" laws. They are bad because they were intended not to provide a "home is castle" defense - that has been specifically recognized by many, if not all, American courts since at least the 1920s - but because they appear intended to exempt a person involved in a shooting from a trial. Many people involved in a justifiable homicide suffer greatly from the justice process, but these problems can usually be put down to civil rights (or similar) violations and should be remedied in the community, not by bypassing the justice system's function of allowing community judgement about a shooting after the fact.

I should also note (ER stats aside) that all the recent massacres I can think of were at places that had "no guns allowed" rules (or at least expectations). If anything, this stat, and similar ones I'm sure can be found for police (not to mention police involved in misuse of department issue firearms - I read about a likely case of that last week) shows that a "two tier" system of owning normal firearms doesn't help much so long as guns are worn in public. After all, security guards are supposed to be the ever-vigilant protectors of society, and bestowed certain rights the rest of us are not, right? ER security guards (and probably those in malls and other high-traffic public spaces) are probably in a different situation than many other guards who are more focused on protection of a certain goal and less intended to interact with the public, as security guards in a hospital might be called to do various things with the public which may distract them from their protective role. I hope nobody thinks it would be a wonderful idea to disarm guards at nuclear facilities!
43% of homes with guns and kids have at least one unlocked firearm.
What this means is ambiguous.
In one experiment, one third of 8-to-12-year-old boys who found a handgun pulled the trigger.
So don't leave them lying around? To be fair there is some amount of debate about how useful a gun in a safe that is unloaded would be in a home invasion.
A Philadelphia study found that the odds of an assault victim being shot were 4.5 times greater if he carried a gun. His odds of being killed were 4.2 times greater.
Take it like the bitch you are? 8)
Myth #8: "Vicious, violent video games" deserve more blame than guns.
Fact-check: So said NRA executive vice president Wayne LaPierre after Newtown. So what's up with Japan?
With all seriousness, what kind of culture is portrayed in games you're likely to see in Japan? I think they're right here, though, if the violence seen in many mangas is any indication, having violence (of any kind) in media doesn't appear linked. Of course, we might be comparing two different kinds of violence here.

There is a lot of useful information there and the fact that firearms are correlated with increased levels of harm to all parties is a problem I wouldn't deny, but there's also a lot of lazy analysis and wrong conclusions drawn too.
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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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I'll just leave this here (thanks to NTSC-J):

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 78695.html
Always outnumbered, never outgunned - No zuo no die

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Re: Another day, another school shooting in the US

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Apparently in his 'autobiography', he brags constantly about getting into bar fights and refers to the people he killed as 'savages'. That's why I'll never be able to join an army; I just don't get that mindset. Yes, war happens, and sometimes you have to kill other human beings, but they're still people fighting for what they believe (even if it's a messed up religious ideology by modern standards), and you shouldn't ever want to kill or enjoy killing. A good soldier doesn't revel in slaughter.
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