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Topic: Gun free zone - page 24. (Read 21968 times)

hero member
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December 15, 2012, 01:40:40 PM
#55
I don't have a strategy of begging for mercy and hoping for the best (psychopaths aren't really good listeners to mercy pleas). In a rampage, I would try to escape and help others escape, if I find myself trapped, I would gather whatever weapon I can find and hide as best as I can. If found, I'll use them until incapacitated or dead.
Now, wouldn't it be nice if you didn't have to go hunting for a weapon?
You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Where I live we don't have the right to bear guns. We have 7 murders for 1_000_000 people each year. Among these murders there are 2 by guns. In the US this is around 60 to 65 deaths with 35 by guns each year (for the same amount of people). I simply don't understand why people think having more guns is a good thing.

I can understand needing guns in some places. I might even agree that guns in the hands of trained professionals in school might be a good thing in the current US situation, but allowing nearly everyone the right to bear something designed to kill just blows my mind. If your society can't protect you just change the society don't ask for more personal destructive power. Or at least plan to have it only temporarily as a lesser of two evils until your society catches up on the safety of its members.
legendary
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December 15, 2012, 01:27:48 PM
#54
Why are people so fucking against people defending themselves? Doesn't it occur to you that any other rational human being out there would never use a gun on another human being unless they had no choice? Or that there are gun owners out there who don't make the news and do a perfectly acceptable job carrying armed weaponry around without causing any trouble whatsoever. I think I am actually tired of this argument, while I disagree with Obama on many of his policies it will be interesting to see his conclusion on guns if we finally see one, it may actually be one of those moments where we see some amazing rationale from political leaders like with hurricane Katrina.

I'm done arguing with people who want to take away the only defence most people have against armed psychopaths and will resort to any stupid retort just to get their way no matter what evidence is presented to them, all I want to see is innocent people protected, my final point will simply be Switzerland, there is a country that actually has mandatory training for firearms which is something I would highly recommend if you intend to have firearms for everyone to prevent any stupid accidents from happening. In fact in the very unlikely case that a political official in the USA is reading this, I seriously recommend that you talk about it and see if something can be done to educate people properly on firearms because I cannot believe the ignorance surrounding them.

When I was very young, I can't remember when exactly this was, I went to Ireland and there was a fair where some army recruiters for the Irish Army showed up and they were showing people how guns worked, now from what I could remember these looked like fully functional and working guns, so why were there no shootings or accidents there? Oh that's right, they were being handled by professional and well trained people who made sure the safeties were on and that no one could muck about with them and end up hurt.

I'm sorry, but the only thing I can think of right now is how sad this whole situation is and how only America has the ability to show off just how utterly stupid and senseless human beings can be to each other, you don't see this happening so often in other countries.

While it's only Wikipedia I can't be bothered doing more research any more to prove how stupid you all are so here's a page on Switzerland that has some crime statistics involving shootings:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Switzerland

Quote
Police statistics for the year 2006[12] records 34 killings or attempted killings involving firearms, compared to 69 cases involving bladed weapons and 16 cases of unarmed assault. Cases of assault resulting in bodily harm numbered 89 (firearms) and 526 (bladed weapons). As of 2007, Switzerland had a population of about 7,600,000. This would put the rate of killings or attempted killings with firearms at about one for every quarter million residents yearly. This represents a decline of aggravated assaults involving firearms since the early 1990s. The majority of gun crimes involving domestic violence are perpetrated with army ordnance weapons, while the majority of gun crime outside the domestic sphere involves illegally held firearms.[13]
hero member
Activity: 896
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December 15, 2012, 01:13:11 PM
#53
What makes you think psychopaths care about that? The last one shout himself at the end. Some might even see this as a challenge.
The fact that shootings don't happen at gun ranges? They want easy targets, not a challenge. It's easier to rack up a high score in a victim-disarmament zone.
A gun range is a little extreme although I found out this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vPnMbLr5nc

Admittedly that was not a rampage, but the mom wasn't shot by other customers: she killed herself, that should illustrate that even if you have a gun ready, when taken by surprise you can't save yourself or another human being (the guy on the right is lucky she didn't want to take him out too...).

I don't think anyone advocated giving untrained teachers weapons. Let the trained ones carry, though, and going into a school suddenly seems less likely to rack up a high score, doesn't it?

I'm not sure, it's possible if there are enough stable people with guns in the school. But the more guns you have around, the more stable and disciplined people need to be. You'll have to get military like discipline among gun bearers in a school to keep it safe then. If you agree on that then I have no objection on the safety part but you will have made a big trade-off (both in the conditions the children will be raised and the costs to maintain an acceptable level of security). I agree the children would be safe, I'm not sure what the impact on their education would be (maybe positive, I just don't know).
hero member
Activity: 702
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December 15, 2012, 01:07:44 PM
#52
I dunno. I'm willing to sacrifice chewing gum in order to live in a place where my daughter can be safe on the streets at any hour of the night in any neighborhood.
I am not sure there is such a place without other adverse side effects, especially for a female child. (As you know, gum law is one of the least of Singapore's "unusual" laws.) If no one else hurts them, kids often find a way to hurt or kill themselves for no good reason...

As someone whose family had to bury a loved child as soon as he grew up, i definitely sympathies with the sentiment and the affected parents; few things are harder than burying a child for any reason, especially something senseless...  Sad

However, with regard to the mass murders of children in America, Russia, Norway, et al,  i would settle for a couple of well-armed, ex-military or police  guards or even trained, armed parent volunteers in the school, who could put up a good fight on my child's behalf.

If that were not enough, i guess, besides crying i would just have to remember that even presidents of "strong" states are not immune from being shot, even though they spend their lives in well-protected, "gun-free zones"...   Sad
hero member
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FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
December 15, 2012, 12:59:11 PM
#51
I don't have a strategy of begging for mercy and hoping for the best (psychopaths aren't really good listeners to mercy pleas). In a rampage, I would try to escape and help others escape, if I find myself trapped, I would gather whatever weapon I can find and hide as best as I can. If found, I'll use them until incapacitated or dead.

Now, wouldn't it be nice if you didn't have to go hunting for a weapon?
hero member
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My PGP Key: 92C7689C
December 15, 2012, 12:50:07 PM
#50
Gun Free Zones = Criminal Safe Zones.

I'm kinda partial to the moniker "victim disarmament zone," but that works too.
hero member
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December 15, 2012, 12:49:12 PM
#49

In the real world we see normal people who defend themselves in schools with firearms against rampage killers have a 100% success rate.


You mean that rampage killers don't kill anyone if there is some people defending themselves? That would be a nice surprise for me, source?

This list shows about 120 people have been killed in school rampage shootings during the last 20 years in America.

Do you honestly think more than 120 people would have been killed by having guns in schools?
I don't know if these 120 people would have all survived with people with guns around so I don't know how many accidents would make more guns counterproductive. From my point of view the US are the only civilized country with this kind of problem *and* the only one with a right to bear arms for civilians. This make a link between the two at the very least possible.
In Utah where guns are allowed in schools we've seen accidental discharges happen 0 times during the same time period.
I'm not sure how many teachers are carrying guns and if it's enough to have the protective effect you seek. But psychopaths don't seem to be impressed even now:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/wams/2012/02/09/school-shooting-barely-avoided-in-utah-talk-to-teacher
My daughter is a public high school teacher.  She carries a Sig 9mm, but not on campus because that is prohibited by policy.  In a school shooting she would employ your strategy of begging for mercy and hoping for the best.  I guarantee you she trains more than most cops.  Most people who carry do.  
I don't doubt that your daughter could be of help in a rampage situation but a single person is only an example however great it is, not a rule.

I don't have a strategy of begging for mercy and hoping for the best (psychopaths aren't really good listeners to mercy pleas). In a rampage, I would try to escape and help others escape, if I find myself trapped, I would gather whatever weapon I can find and hide as best as I can. If found, I'll use them until incapacitated or dead.
hero member
Activity: 532
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FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
December 15, 2012, 12:41:52 PM
#48
Anyway even if you wanted to, not every teacher would accept to carry a handgun making some of them easy targets and thus accomplishing nothing. If you want to have to choose your teacher based on its ability to defend your child with a gun instead of its ability to educate him/her, good luck...
As I said, you don't have to arm them all. Even one or two in a school is enough to remove the welcome mat. Imagine that cartoon with "Someone in here might shoot back." in the thought bubble.

What makes you think psychopaths care about that? The last one shout himself at the end. Some might even see this as a challenge.
The fact that shootings don't happen at gun ranges? They want easy targets, not a challenge. It's easier to rack up a high score in a victim-disarmament zone.

In Israel teachers get free guns.
Living in a state surrounded by enemies and subject to waves of terrorist attacks is desirable? Maybe you should try it.
Cool strawman, bro.
The most recent school shooting I could find (with a brief Google) in Israel was in 1974. and that's with the terrorist attacks and enemies all around.

I know, terrorists hit my country instead recently: 3 children were killed in France in a Jewish school in 2012 which was unprecedented in France. The current investigation seems to show that our own agencies are at least partially to blame (in 2007 we voted for a president who liked to be surrounded by morons, we shouldn't be surprised to pay the price). If you want to follow your line of thought and not look at the big picture, you should adopt our policy of no guns for civilians unless special circumstances require it. We have even less shootings in school than Israel...

But that's a simplistic view. Israel circumstances are neither our own nor yours. I bet Israel doesn't simply "give free guns" to teachers, they are most probably adequately trained too: men spend 3 years in the regular (mandatory) service and women 2 years.
I don't think anyone advocated giving untrained teachers weapons. Let the trained ones carry, though, and going into a school suddenly seems less likely to rack up a high score, doesn't it?

Now transplant that policy to a country without the enemies at the gates.
What you don't consider is that you can't simply "transplant" a policy from a country with a totally different mindset and circumstances. This is why I proposed to go live in Israel, that was not a tongue-in-cheek remark.
But it was a load of bullshit.
donator
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Axios Foundation
December 15, 2012, 12:35:44 PM
#47
Absence of logic and reason. Further argument on my part is pointless.

That's an actual observation based on statistics. I don't see a lot of bombs used to rob people... It's easier to use guns than hand grenades.
donator
Activity: 131
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Axios Foundation
December 15, 2012, 12:33:52 PM
#46
Unless American citizens have genes that other countries do not to explain this level of violence, if I were a citizen there, I'll study what kind of tradeoffs you are doing in your policies to get this kind of result...

Actually we do.. USA doesn't have a uniform culture like Denmark for an example. Too many cultures, ethnic groups in one country, and the country is one of the largest. (3rd)
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
December 15, 2012, 12:31:55 PM
#45
The fact is, country's with stricter gun controls generally have lower rates of gun crime. The idea that more guns results in less violence is simply a fallacy.

In America, gun-free localities are always high crime.  In America, that is not a fallacy.

Unless American citizens have genes that other countries do not to explain this level of violence, if I were a citizen there, I'll study what kind of tradeoffs you are doing in your policies to get this kind of result...
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
December 15, 2012, 12:28:46 PM
#44
Anyway even if you wanted to, not every teacher would accept to carry a handgun making some of them easy targets and thus accomplishing nothing. If you want to have to choose your teacher based on its ability to defend your child with a gun instead of its ability to educate him/her, good luck...
As I said, you don't have to arm them all. Even one or two in a school is enough to remove the welcome mat. Imagine that cartoon with "Someone in here might shoot back." in the thought bubble.

What makes you think psychopaths care about that? The last one shout himself at the end. Some might even see this as a challenge.

In Israel teachers get free guns.
Living in a state surrounded by enemies and subject to waves of terrorist attacks is desirable? Maybe you should try it.
Cool strawman, bro.
The most recent school shooting I could find (with a brief Google) in Israel was in 1974. and that's with the terrorist attacks and enemies all around.
[/quote]

I know, terrorists hit my country instead recently: 3 children were killed in France in a Jewish school in 2012 which was unprecedented in France. The current investigation seems to show that our own agencies are at least partially to blame (in 2007 we voted for a president who liked to be surrounded by morons, we shouldn't be surprised to pay the price). If you want to follow your line of thought and not look at the big picture, you should adopt our policy of no guns for civilians unless special circumstances require it. We have even less shootings in school than Israel...

But that's a simplistic view. Israel circumstances are neither our own nor yours. I bet Israel doesn't simply "give free guns" to teachers, they are most probably adequately trained too: men spend 3 years in the regular (mandatory) service and women 2 years.

Now transplant that policy to a country without the enemies at the gates.
What you don't consider is that you can't simply "transplant" a policy from a country with a totally different mindset and circumstances. This is why I proposed to go live in Israel, that was not a tongue-in-cheek remark.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
December 15, 2012, 12:22:34 PM
#43
> I'm curious how many dead children you consider "a marginal effect".  5 ?  10 ?  20 ?

Depends on the expected additional casualties caused by allowing guns to be in more places. If you expect a 10% success rate of an armed teacher against an assailant with a gun already drawn and that it saves 20 lives every 5 or 10 years while having a gun in each classroom don't cause as many deaths, that's a win for more guns, I'll support you. I just think it's completely unrealistic.

In the real world we see normal people who defend themselves in schools with firearms against rampage killers have a 100% success rate.

This list shows about 120 people have been killed in school rampage shootings during the last 20 years in America.

Do you honestly think more than 120 people would have been killed by having guns in schools?  In Utah where guns are allowed in schools we've seen accidental discharges happen 0 times during the same time period.

My daughter is a public high school teacher.  She carries a Sig 9mm, but not on campus because that is prohibited by policy.  In a school shooting she would employ your strategy of begging for mercy and hoping for the best.  I guarantee you she trains more than most cops.  Most people who carry do.  
legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1100
December 15, 2012, 12:16:47 PM
#42
The fact is, country's with stricter gun controls generally have lower rates of gun crime. The idea that more guns results in less violence is simply a fallacy.

In America, gun-free localities are always high crime.  In America, that is not a fallacy.

hero member
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FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
December 15, 2012, 11:56:05 AM
#41
Quote from: Chris Rock
You don’t need no gun control, you know what you need? We need some bullet control. Men, we need to control the bullets, that’s right. I think all bullets should cost five thousand dollars… five thousand dollars per bullet… You know why? Cause if a bullet cost five thousand dollars there would be no more innocent bystanders.
Yeah! Every time somebody get shot we’d say, ‘Damn, he must have done something ... Shit, he’s got fifty thousand dollars worth of bullets in his ass.’
And people would think before they killed somebody if a bullet cost five thousand dollars. ‘Man I would blow your fucking head off…if I could afford it.’ ‘I’m gonna get me another job, I’m going to start saving some money, and you’re a dead man.
Lead is cheap.
Brass is cheap.
Primers are cheap.
Sulfur is cheap.
Charcoal is cheap.
Salt Peter is cheap.
Reloading press is cheap.

How you going to make bullets expensive?
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1042
Hamster ate my bitcoin
December 15, 2012, 11:52:00 AM
#40
Quote from: Chris Rock
You don’t need no gun control, you know what you need? We need some bullet control. Men, we need to control the bullets, that’s right. I think all bullets should cost five thousand dollars… five thousand dollars per bullet… You know why? Cause if a bullet cost five thousand dollars there would be no more innocent bystanders.
Yeah! Every time somebody get shot we’d say, ‘Damn, he must have done something ... Shit, he’s got fifty thousand dollars worth of bullets in his ass.’
And people would think before they killed somebody if a bullet cost five thousand dollars. ‘Man I would blow your fucking head off…if I could afford it.’ ‘I’m gonna get me another job, I’m going to start saving some money, and you’re a dead man.
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
December 15, 2012, 11:45:44 AM
#39
Anyway even if you wanted to, not every teacher would accept to carry a handgun making some of them easy targets and thus accomplishing nothing. If you want to have to choose your teacher based on its ability to defend your child with a gun instead of its ability to educate him/her, good luck...
As I said, you don't have to arm them all. Even one or two in a school is enough to remove the welcome mat. Imagine that cartoon with "Someone in here might shoot back." in the thought bubble.

In Israel teachers get free guns.
Living in a state surrounded by enemies and subject to waves of terrorist attacks is desirable? Maybe you should try it.
Cool strawman, bro.
The most recent school shooting I could find (with a brief Google) in Israel was in 1974. and that's with the terrorist attacks and enemies all around.

Now transplant that policy to a country without the enemies at the gates.
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
December 15, 2012, 11:33:12 AM
#38
The problem with that is that will only have a marginal impact on murderers who fully expect to die on the scene.

I'm curious how many dead children you consider "a marginal effect".  5 ?  10 ?  20 ?

Depends on the expected additional casualties caused by allowing guns to be in more places. If you expect a 10% success rate of an armed teacher against an assailant with a gun already drawn and that it saves 20 lives every 5 or 10 years while having a gun in each classroom don't cause as many deaths, that's a win for more guns, I'll support you. I just think it's completely unrealistic.
Anyway even if you wanted to, not every teacher would accept to carry a handgun making some of them easy targets and thus accomplishing nothing. If you want to have to choose your teacher based on its ability to defend your child with a gun instead of its ability to educate him/her, good luck...

In Israel teachers get free guns.
Living in a state surrounded by enemies and subject to waves of terrorist attacks is desirable? Maybe you should try it.
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1003
December 15, 2012, 11:30:25 AM
#37
Singapore is a great example of that. Many other legal actions we take for granted in our countries are subject to corporal punishment in Singapore. So, i doubt any of us would wish to have those in addition to protection from gun violence.

I dunno. I'm willing to sacrifice chewing gum in order to live in a place where my daughter can be safe on the streets at any hour of the night in any neighborhood.

As long as she doesn't chew any gum. Or look like she's chewing gum. Or look like she might chew some gum.

It actually isn't illegal to import 1 pack for personal consumption. Sale within the country is illegal. So I just have to worry about her selling illicit gum on the streets. Anyways, the law is sexist. They reserve the cane for males.
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
December 15, 2012, 11:27:03 AM
#36
Singapore is a great example of that. Many other legal actions we take for granted in our countries are subject to corporal punishment in Singapore. So, i doubt any of us would wish to have those in addition to protection from gun violence.

I dunno. I'm willing to sacrifice chewing gum in order to live in a place where my daughter can be safe on the streets at any hour of the night in any neighborhood.

As long as she doesn't chew any gum. Or look like she's chewing gum. Or look like she might chew some gum.
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