Where did the gun regulations sticky go?

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Isabel1130
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Re: and further

Post by Isabel1130 »

JamesH wrote:
FredB wrote:
Isabel1130 wrote:
Did you even read the article I linked in a previous post which explains why clever little semantic games won't fool the Supreme Court?

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... games.html
I read it, and I found the article by the same author (which was linked in the "word games" article) even more relevant to this whole discussion. While I don't agree with everything in it, it's the best synopsis I've read so far explaining why all the gun control regulation that's about to be foisted on us is worthless. I would urge JamesH and Gerard and Zuckerman to read this article, because it answers a lot of your concerns in a logical and sympathetic manner.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... sacre.html

FredB
Another essay along the lines of "we don't have any ideas, and they wouldn't work even if we did"

As it stands now you're going to have worthless legislation foisted on you, which won't change the shooting murder rate - which is by itself about triple the total murder rate of most developed countries - but will negatively impact on shooting sports and enthusiasts.

I would be looking for solutions, not complaining that everything is impossible.
You may not believe this James, but I am far less worried about my rights as a target shooter, than I am my rights as a citizen.
Throwing my own right to self defense in my home, and while traveling, under the bus, to preserve my right to play games with target guns, is not a trade off I want to make,

As a woman who is rapidly approaching 60 years old, who is not rich enough to afford a body guard, my only defense against a burgler, or a car jacker, or a potential assult of any kind, is that I live in a country and state with ubiquitous concealed carry, If that right is ever revoked, people my age will become prisoners in our own homes, who are forced to put up walls around our property, and iron bars over our windows. Ever been to Johannesburg? My friends tell me that is what it looks like. Coincidently, that is also what the "gun free" cities in the U.S look like too.

So don't tell me I should be willing to evicerate the Constitution of the US in order to placate the socialist nannies into allowing me to continue to play silly games with guns. Fun games of course, but a darn sight less important than my personal freedom.
zuckerman
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Post by zuckerman »

obviously, you did not look at the data, where did it originate? news reports. are they spoofed, not the random numbers I have been looking at, over the last 4 weeks, all have had "real" orginators such as newspapers, tv stations, radio, I have not seen any blogs listed as a source, as much of the "facts " listed here on TT are.

here are 4 gun shot deaths from the last week....
and just so it is thought that I am cherry picking, the first random choice I made is the one you guys are gonna whoop and holler about.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_ ... id=twitter
http://www.9news.com/news/article/31057 ... rings-----
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.s ... ounds.html
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/loca ... 1402.story


actual data, live local news from around the country. spoofed? fake? nope....
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

How does it deal with multiple reports of the same incident? Or does he read every report from every newspaper and adjust it? Now some suicides are reported in news sources and some aren't. What about accidents, or those wounded that later die, and maybe it's not reported? So if things are missed or double counted that does make the data inaccurate at least in the eye of most peoples definition of inaccurate.
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

zuckerman wrote:obviously, you did not look at the data, where did it originate? news reports. are they spoofed, not the random numbers I have been looking at, over the last 4 weeks, all have had "real" orginators such as newspapers, tv stations, radio, I have not seen any blogs listed as a source, as much of the "facts " listed here on TT are.

here are 4 gun shot deaths from the last week....
and just so it is thought that I am cherry picking, the first random choice I made is the one you guys are gonna whoop and holler about.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_ ... id=twitter
http://www.9news.com/news/article/31057 ... rings-----
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.s ... ounds.html
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/loca ... 1402.story


actual data, live local news from around the country. spoofed? fake? nope....
Looks like all the more reason law abiding citizens should be armed. Where were the cops to prevent all these?
zuckerman
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Post by zuckerman »

I have not found any duplicates yet. and I do not know how the algorithm works, but as I have not found any dupes, there probably is a line of code in there to ferret out the dupes.
accuracy... yeah, lets get worried about accuracy of this data.

926 gun shot deaths since :

Grace McDonnell

Killed in Newtown, Connecticut

Killed on 12/14/2012

Age: 7
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

Is the level of debate we're going to get from you when anyone doesn't agree with you?

I really don't know why you'd wan to associate with people that don't seem to have the same level of guilt as you because they enjoy various forms of shooting.
FredB
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different approach

Post by FredB »

OK Zuckerman, let's try a different approach. Putting aside the obvious inaccuracy of the figures and the probable inclusion of suicide deaths, can I get you to answer some other questions for us. Please tell us why you feel the alleged number of deaths since this particular date is so important to you that you keep repeating it? Was everything supposed to change as of that date? Apparently your point is that it didn't, but why would you expect that it would? Do you think that murderers and police and severely depressed people should have stopped all their destructive behaviors as of that date? So tell them and not us.

Why that date and why not a year ago or 10 years ago? People are people, and the American people have always tended to be rather violent. That violence manifests in many ways, not just in the use of guns for murderous, or law-enforcement or suicidal purposes. These tendencies can't stop on a dime, no matter how much you may wish for it. Wishful and magical thinking may temporarily feel satisfying, but, like cotton candy, there's no substance to it. Don't depend on it for your nutrition.

FredB
BenEnglishTX
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Re: different approach

Post by BenEnglishTX »

FredB wrote:Please tell us why you feel the alleged number of deaths since this particular date is so important to you that you keep repeating it?
I hope he answers but I'll butt in with my supposition. I hope he proves me wrong.

Quoting the number appeals to emotion. It's the same reason Joe Biden's study group delivered their report two weeks early. (When was the last time you saw a government study group get anything done on time, much less in half the time allotted?)

Both the quoting of the number and the hurry-up offense currently being employed by the administration are designed to keep emotions high, make decisions, and get things done while those emotions are high and people aren't thinking rationally.

If the hoplophobes of the world let the emotion fade and are forced to argue their positions on the merits, they know they don't have a leg to stand on. Thus, they whip up emotion while moving fast and hope to achieve their aims before people realize their goals are just stupid.

In New York, the governor managed to successfully pull off exactly that strategy. I don't think it will work nationally but they gotta try.
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

Ben the fact that it was done early basically just proves it was in the can just waiting for the right opportunity, just like the Patriot Act.
BenEnglishTX
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Post by BenEnglishTX »

Richard H wrote:Ben the fact that it was done early basically just proves it was in the can just waiting for the right opportunity, just like the Patriot Act.
I have no doubt it was in the can. I'm just saying they knew nothing like this had a chance of passing unless they could skate on the blood of innocents to get it done. NY managed to do so but I don't think they'll succeed nationally.

It took the amount of blood spilled on 9/11 to adequately lubricate the engines of totalitarianism so that the Patriot Act could be passed.

And while it doesn't bother me that gun control plans get pulled out during a tragedy (the original Metzenbaum bill would be, what, about 30 years ago?) I did find it deeply disturbing that the Patriot Act came together so quickly. What was the thought process, pre-9/11, of the person who sat down at their word processor and thought "Hmmm, just in case we ever need it, I should draft some legislation that basically reduces the Bill of Rights to just so much toilet paper."? The sudden appearance of DF's bill doesn't surprise me but the rapidity with which the Patriot Act came together truly did. Things like that are almost (note I said "almost") enough to make you want to tune in Alex Jones every day. :-(
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Gerard
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Post by Gerard »

Thanks for including that 'almost' Ben. I've forced myself to listen to Alex Jones for perhaps 20 minutes in total over the past month. Hadn't heard of the weirdo before December, and won't be listening to him again as the knot in my stomach is almost as painful as the sense of a tumour growing somewhere behind my eyes as his filth spews forth. Howard Stern with a mission or something like that. Utterly pointless drivel, all about the pitch like any carnival con man, and the scary part is the number of people he claims actually subscribe. But then one has to remember how many books guys like Trump and O'Reilly manage to flog... what a country this USA with its matter-of-fact acceptance of violence in the culture, as evidenced by comments today from Fred and Ben both.

So what, we shrug and just say it's cool to gun down someone who's robbing your SUV, as was the case in one of those news articles to which zuckerman posted a link? Apparently human life is worth less than property in Texas and that gun-happy old guy killing another guy for sitting in a getaway vehicle while his buddy looked for meth money or whatever is not going to face charges. Hm. Sounds fair, right? Is that part of your bill of rights or constitution as well? I thought every person had a right to a trial by judge or jury of his peers. Must have misread that bit. Nope, turns out every citizen with a strong insecure streak and a handgun has the right to blow away anyone out in the street interfering with mere property. Next thing they'll be lobbing hand grenades at shoplifters in Walmart.
JamesH
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Re: and further

Post by JamesH »

Isabel1130 wrote:
You may not believe this James, but I am far less worried about my rights as a target shooter, than I am my rights as a citizen.
Throwing my own right to self defense in my home, and while traveling, under the bus, to preserve my right to play games with target guns, is not a trade off I want to make,

As a woman who is rapidly approaching 60 years old, who is not rich enough to afford a body guard, my only defense against a burgler, or a car jacker, or a potential assult of any kind, is that I live in a country and state with ubiquitous concealed carry, If that right is ever revoked, people my age will become prisoners in our own homes, who are forced to put up walls around our property, and iron bars over our windows. Ever been to Johannesburg? My friends tell me that is what it looks like. Coincidently, that is also what the "gun free" cities in the U.S look like too.

So don't tell me I should be willing to evicerate the Constitution of the US in order to placate the socialist nannies into allowing me to continue to play silly games with guns. Fun games of course, but a darn sight less important than my personal freedom.
When did I say you should be willing to eviscerate anything?

Some imaginative and productive solutions which didn't impinge on anyone's rights would be far better than what the NRA and the anti-gun crowd have set out wouldn't they?

I would be looking for solutions, not complaining that everything is impossible.
JamesH
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Post by JamesH »

BenEnglishTX wrote:I have no doubt it was in the can. I'm just saying they knew nothing like this had a chance of passing unless they could skate on the blood of innocents to get it done. NY managed to do so but I don't think they'll succeed nationally.

It took the amount of blood spilled on 9/11 to adequately lubricate the engines of totalitarianism so that the Patriot Act could be passed.

And while it doesn't bother me that gun control plans get pulled out during a tragedy (the original Metzenbaum bill would be, what, about 30 years ago?) I did find it deeply disturbing that the Patriot Act came together so quickly. What was the thought process, pre-9/11, of the person who sat down at their word processor and thought "Hmmm, just in case we ever need it, I should draft some legislation that basically reduces the Bill of Rights to just so much toilet paper."? The sudden appearance of DF's bill doesn't surprise me but the rapidity with which the Patriot Act came together truly did. Things like that are almost (note I said "almost") enough to make you want to tune in Alex Jones every day. :-(
Its hardly a secret that Obama wanted to reintroduce an assault weapons ban.

It was barely a secret that some people in the GOP wanted to provoke a war in the ME, and have an excuse to bring in something like the Patriot act.
Why do you think they did nothing to stave off 9/11?
Hemmers
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Post by Hemmers »

zuckerman wrote:hemmers says:

"So what? "


so what.

such a callous and vindictive statement. so what that over 900 people have died due to gunshot deaths in less than a month? try saying that statement to the families of the gunshot dead. such a high horse you sit on, anonymous and faceless. heartless. guns seem to mean more than people to you. how very sad.
your statement is a perfect example of why many people react with disdain when guns come up in a conversation.

here's the data source I quote from:
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_ ... oting.html

926 USA gunshot deaths since sandy hook
It is not a callous nor vindictive statement, although it may appear so on first glance. Your fly away comment "x gunshot deaths since Sandy Hook" trivialises and oversimplifies a whole range of serious issues.
It presents the matter as a single issue, that you simply wave a law at to fix and that all the ills of the US are simply a result of politician's refusal to pass one simple little law. It plays to the very very worst propaganda "think of the children! Stop this happening!"

Stop what happening?

Suicides with guns? Murders by legal firearm owners? Self defence shootings by legal CCW holders? Shootings by black-market owners? Gangland shootings? Dealing by black market dealers & smugglers?
All of the above?
Because that's not one issue. It's a plethora.


Playing an emotive "oh x deaths" is a totally worthless statement with no merit unless you are a gun control advocate trying to whip up a senseless media orgy (and a tactic which works surprisingly well).

If 925 of 926 gunshot deaths are suicides, then getting rid of assault rifles, or even assault rifles and pistols is not going to stop people laying hands on rifles or shotguns. Banning all guns would not prevent people hanging themselves, or slitting their wrists, or overdosing (is it any surprise some of the highest suicide rates are amongst doctors and vets? They have access to drugs and know how to painlessly end life as well as they do how to save it).

So there have been 926 gunshot deaths since Sandy Hook. That's very sad, but that statement has no merit - there is nothing you can do about it.

Now, if you can tell me that there have been x deaths by legal owners, then we can look at common factors and whether there could be a legislative solution. If you can tell me x deaths in Chicago by gangs members using black market guns then Chicago PD can look at their guns and gangs operation and whether it needs more resource, reform, restructuring, or whatnot, and Border Force can be looking at how effectively they are stopping guns slipping into the country for black market sale.
If you can tell me that there have been x gun-suicides, then we can look at possible legislative reform in terms of mental health checks on firearm purchases, but more important would be accessible mental healthcare.

The two largest mental health clinics in the US are in Chicago and LA prisons. If you don't have the right type of medical insurance or personal wealth, the best way to get mental health treatment in the US is to get yourself convicted (or at the very least charged) for something to get a referral to a criminal psychiatric unit. Which is completely retarded when you consider it, because you're closing the stable door after the horse has bolted - the patient has already committed or been alleged to commit a crime. Surely better to catch people with depression or mental illness beforehand with accessible mental health facilities & treatment.


So I say again. So what? It's very sad, but so what? What do you want the government to do about it? What can be done about it? The answer is nothing. "Oh, x gun deaths". It's a worthless and offensive statement that trivialises the whole matter and shows that you can't be bothered to form complex arguments.
"Oh, loads of deaths. We need new laws and anyone who says otherwise is callous and vindictive."

Give some real numbers. Legal/Illegal/Suicide/Defence.

That gives you enough information to know whether the problem lies with white market/black market/suicides (the latter not fundamentally even being a gun problem. Passing gun control laws to stop suicides is straight up idiotic).

For some context, here's a source of data on methods of suicide. In the US in 2006, 50.7% of all suicides were by firearms - some 16883 deaths, followed by suffocation/hanging on 7491 (22.5%) and then drugs/poisoning.
If you click on the tab for England & Wales, much the same order exists except firearms are way down the list, but otherwise it's hanging, poisoning, drowning or jumping from high places.

So when you hear gun control advocates talk about x thousand gun deaths a year, strike 16,000-17000 off that figure, and then you've got actual crimes or accidents (it's probably been a bit higher through the recession as well, with people losing jobs or their businesses folding).

Suicide is a totally different issue.
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

Just look at the 4 or 5 examples Zuckerman posted, out of that small sample the only true innocent victims were the two home owners that walked in on a burglar. The rest all looked like they were involved in the commission of a crime or involve and associated with criminals. Callous as it maybe if criminals kill each other I couldn't give a shit, just one less scumbag. If had to guess the burglar that killed that couple I doubt his handgun was legal. So again why support a knee jerk reaction that when the emotion is taken out would have little to no effect on the criminal use and possession of firearms yet severe effects on law abiding citizens?
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Post by sakurama »

I think there's been some really interesting and fair reporting going on but it's rather overlooked. Both NPR and the Times have admitted that pretty much all of the proposals would not prevent another Sandy Hook. Even the president has admitted as much. But like a drunk driving tragedy it serves as a lightning rod to address a larger issue. Perhaps like drunk driving a real and effective change can be made.

Everyone here would agree that banning a specific weapon won't change the situation but the NRA can't even make that point because they're so far off the deep end with their hysterical attack ads and lack of real proposals that they can't be engaged or taken seriously. Exactly how did their ad help their cause with the people who are making the proposals right now? It did nothing but anger the left and inflame the right. Smart thinking there NRA - way to go.

If you ask me the NRA is the real failure here. They've allowed gun owners to become marginalized, they've engaged in bitter partisan politics and they've let down a huge population of gun owners by not trying to develop a broader base of gun owners through more inclusive ideas. There is a huge movement on the left towards sustainable, free range meat and yet this group doesn't hunt. That's a cultural divide that the NRA has helped to erect and perpetuate. Way to go NRA.

Think, if hunting and target shooting weren't thought of as "right wing" hobbies (which they aren't and never were) and the NRA had spent the last thirty to forty years cultivating a bipartisan membership based around safe, useful and recreational gun use would we be having this discussion?

The argument was made that we don't make cars illegal when someone is killed by a car but if only half the country owned a car then we would certainly be looking to restrict the rights of car owners who victimized pedestrians. By allowing guns and gun ownership to become a defacto political persuasion they have placed themselves in the situation where they suffer the political consequences. Way to go NRA.

Gregor
joel
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Post by joel »

The NRA has stated many times that the type of weapon and/or the magazine capacity would do nothing to change the situation. Where are you getting your info about the NRA?

I am not an NRA member.

As for bipartisan politics, yes, it's all the fault of the NRA as you claim. There would be peace in the house and senate if the NRA did not exist. Please note sarcasm. They are only going to lobby those that will listen.

The NRA is not the failure here. They have made suggestions and they must be vigilant and over the top or else when it comes time to compromise, it will be a sad time for lawful gun owners.

Joel
FredB
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again

Post by FredB »

Gerard wrote:Thanks for including that 'almost' Ben. I've forced myself to listen to Alex Jones for perhaps 20 minutes in total over the past month. Hadn't heard of the weirdo before December, and won't be listening to him again as the knot in my stomach is almost as painful as the sense of a tumour growing somewhere behind my eyes as his filth spews forth. Howard Stern with a mission or something like that. Utterly pointless drivel, all about the pitch like any carnival con man, and the scary part is the number of people he claims actually subscribe. But then one has to remember how many books guys like Trump and O'Reilly manage to flog... what a country this USA with its matter-of-fact acceptance of violence in the culture, as evidenced by comments today from Fred and Ben both.

So what, we shrug and just say it's cool to gun down someone who's robbing your SUV, as was the case in one of those news articles to which zuckerman posted a link? Apparently human life is worth less than property in Texas and that gun-happy old guy killing another guy for sitting in a getaway vehicle while his buddy looked for meth money or whatever is not going to face charges. Hm. Sounds fair, right? Is that part of your bill of rights or constitution as well? I thought every person had a right to a trial by judge or jury of his peers. Must have misread that bit. Nope, turns out every citizen with a strong insecure streak and a handgun has the right to blow away anyone out in the street interfering with mere property. Next thing they'll be lobbing hand grenades at shoplifters in Walmart.
There he goes again.

I haven't listened to Alex Jones, but I gather, from reading comments of those who have, that he's big on self-righteous blaming as he excoriates aspects of society with which he disagrees. Now, who in this discussion does that remind you of?

Description is not acceptance. I don't feel obliged to engage in orgies of emotional hand-wringing here.

FredB
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Post by Rover »

"So what, we shrug and just say it's cool to gun down someone who's robbing your SUV, as was the case in one of those news articles to which zuckerman posted a link? Apparently human life is worth less than property in Texas and that gun-happy old guy killing another guy for sitting in a getaway vehicle while his buddy looked for meth money or whatever is not going to face charges. Hm. Sounds fair, right?"

Gee, Gerard, it sounds damn good to me! And it's the law.

Let's have a hearty boo-hoo boo-hoo for the innocent victim.

Sounds to me like Texas is going all out to frustrate The Whitehouse Weenie. I see Arizona is following suit and other states are doing the same.

I wonder what they know that you don't.
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Gerard
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Post by Gerard »

What they know that I don't isn't the source of such laws, which allow a murder to be considered an appropriate response to an act of property theft. What these governments believe in seems more at issue than anything they know as fact, or even as moral code. What they believe in is that those with the most power win. And that's a race to the bottom. Have fun jumping into that race. I'll be off at the sidelines watching America decay, and feeling more than a little sadness for all the good folks there getting dragged down with you, and hoping Canada doesn't follow too closely on your heels.

I'm out guys. It's plain there's no point talking with people who try to justify a nation-wide weapons and bullets buying spree after a massacre of children as though this were sane behaviour. Whatever.
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