Gabrielle Giffords Shot
- mistermack
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
It's misleading because without posting the reason for so many guns, you're inadvertantly giving a false impression.
Inadvertent my ass!!
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Inadvertent my ass!!
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While there is a market for shit, there will be assholes to supply it.
- maiforpeace
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot

So now we're including anyone in the military who has been issued a gun a "gun owner"? Mmmkay.
Atheists have always argued that this world is all that we have, and that our duty is to one another to make the very most and best of it. ~Christopher Hitchens~
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
Let's all blame the film "Inception".“Jared felt nothing existed but his subconscious,” Mr. Gutierrez said. “The dream world was what was real to Jared, not the day-to-day of our lives.”
And that dream world, his friend said, could be downright strange.

[Disclaimer - if this is comes across like I think I know what I'm talking about, I want to make it clear that I don't. I'm just trying to get my thoughts down]
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
No. That's not it at all. 50% of the Swiss have weapons. mmmkay... that's like saying that the Michigan militia holding weapons is the same as "people in the military."maiforpeace wrote:![]()
So now we're including anyone in the military who has been issued a gun a "gun owner"? Mmmkay.
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
I gave no impression. I just pointed out that Switzerland requires most every household to have a gun. That's directly relevant to someone else posting about how the US should require people to have guns, and another person saying they would move out of the country. I gave no impression other than that.mistermack wrote:It's misleading because without posting the reason for so many guns, you're inadvertantly giving a false impression.
Inadvertent my ass!!
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Besides - when in the world have you ever been concerned with giving false impressions? It's your consistent practice when having any discussion about America...er...I mean 'merkins....
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
What direction would that be?JimC wrote:I can treat this as a piece of amusing, dry-humoured rhetoric, and smile...Warren Dew wrote:Alternatively, make it a requirement for everyone to carry a gun so that Gifford's lack of a security detail wouldn't be quite as big a blunder.JimC wrote:Here's an idea. Make it illegal to possess and carry a handun unless you go through a very rigorous vetting proceedure...
Or I can treat it as a considered opinion, and despair...
I am being driven steadily in the Gawd and Sandinista direction...
Quite seriously.
Our struggle is not against actual corrupt individuals, but against those in power in general, against their authority, against the global order and the ideological mystification which sustains it.
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
You know that my theme in this whole thread has been better controls on privately owned handguns, carried concealed in public...Coito ergo sum wrote:One word: Switzerland. Number of private homes with firearms is estimated at about 3 million. Population 7.75 million.ScienceRob wrote:The day something even close to this happens is the day I move the UK. Australia possibly but to my understanding they are having flooding issues at the moment.Warren Dew wrote:Alternatively, make it a requirement for everyone to carry a gun so that Gifford's lack of a security detail wouldn't be quite as big a blunder.JimC wrote:Here's an idea. Make it illegal to possess and carry a handun unless you go through a very rigorous vetting proceedure...
Reservists toting assault rifles I consider a little bizarre, perhaps, but it is like comparing apples with cheese...
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
- JimC
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
"It's just a jump to the left..."sandinista wrote:What direction would that be?JimC wrote:I can treat this as a piece of amusing, dry-humoured rhetoric, and smile...Warren Dew wrote:Alternatively, make it a requirement for everyone to carry a gun so that Gifford's lack of a security detail wouldn't be quite as big a blunder.JimC wrote:Here's an idea. Make it illegal to possess and carry a handun unless you go through a very rigorous vetting proceedure...
Or I can treat it as a considered opinion, and despair...
I am being driven steadily in the Gawd and Sandinista direction...
Quite seriously.

Getting a little crankier with more and more US policies, both internal and external...
But I don't translate that to getting cranky with Americans...
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
- maiforpeace
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
Well there's no doubt that this shooting is causing us to seriously re-evaluate current gun laws. If anything will actually get done is another story, and given the current Congress... 

Atheists have always argued that this world is all that we have, and that our duty is to one another to make the very most and best of it. ~Christopher Hitchens~
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
There does need to be a rethinking of gun regulations. Since it's generally a state law issue, though, it will be a monumental job to enact a comprehensive national policy. The feds tend to work around the margins -- transporting across state lines here -- fully automatic there - sawed off shotgun here -- we've never had a national comprehensive gun law.maiforpeace wrote:Well there's no doubt that this shooting is causing us to seriously re-evaluate current gun laws. If anything will actually get done is another story, and given the current Congress...
I'm happy with the states doing it. If the people in California or Wyoming want different gun laws because of different needs, then I think that makes sense. I would imagine allowing ranchers in Wyoming to wear their guns out in public makes some sense -- allowing folks on Santa Montica Blvd to do so....not so much.
I think it's sensible to reduce the number of rounds in a clip -- 33 rounds is a lot, and I don't think the 2d amendment requires unlimited rounds to be left unregulated.
I think regulations are permitted and sensible, provided the people still are left with a right to keep and bear arms as envisaged by the 2d Amendment. That's not unlimited and unrestricted - but, neither is the language of the 2d Amendment meaningless. Both sides on this have to realize those points.
I think that those in favor of gun rights have to accept that regulation is important, and that we're not talking about flintlocks and mustkets and smooth bore rifles. We're not talking single shot weapons with mini-balls where it takes you a minute to stop, pack in some more powder and tamp ammo down and then line up the relatively inaccurate weapon for round number 2. They have to understand that M-16s, if they existed in 1787, would not have been something the founding fathers would have thought every person had a right to have, just as we are sure that folks ought not to have bazookas and shoulder fired rocket launchers.
By the same token, the anti-gun folks have to acknowledge that there is a role for arms in this world, and that's why there is, in fact, a 2nd Amendment in our Constitution. It does mean something, and does provide a right to something - to keep and bear arms. So, we can't just simply hand-wave that away and say - times have changed and now no guns should be allowed unless the State says you can have one. I think the fear of guns exhibited by many on the anti-gun rights side is unhealthy as well - as unhealthy as a creepy attachment to guns exhibited by the other side. Guns are tools - they can be dangerous - they are dangerous - but that doesn't mean we should view them as Kryptonite and be unnerved by the mere sight of them. They are a fact of life, and we ought to understand, accept and respect them.
The extremes on both sides of this issue are off base.
Now, queue the folks who want to call me a "libertarian" all the time.....
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
'course...they're not reservists by and large. They're civilian citizens, and they have a "militia."JimC wrote:You know that my theme in this whole thread has been better controls on privately owned handguns, carried concealed in public...Coito ergo sum wrote:One word: Switzerland. Number of private homes with firearms is estimated at about 3 million. Population 7.75 million.ScienceRob wrote:The day something even close to this happens is the day I move the UK. Australia possibly but to my understanding they are having flooding issues at the moment.Warren Dew wrote:Alternatively, make it a requirement for everyone to carry a gun so that Gifford's lack of a security detail wouldn't be quite as big a blunder.JimC wrote:Here's an idea. Make it illegal to possess and carry a handun unless you go through a very rigorous vetting proceedure...
Reservists toting assault rifles I consider a little bizarre, perhaps, but it is like comparing apples with cheese...
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
By the way - the Senate is controlled by the Democrats and the House is controlled, barely, by the Republicans. You can't really expect much better than that. Having clear majorities in the House, Senate and owning the Presidency at the same time is a an extreme rarity in American politics and the Democrats had that for 2 years, and had control of both houses of Congress for 2 years before that even while Bush was President. So, there was plenty of time for a different Congress to "actually get done" what you're talking about. They didn't bother though. So, maybe it's not just "the current" Congress.maiforpeace wrote:Well there's no doubt that this shooting is causing us to seriously re-evaluate current gun laws. If anything will actually get done is another story, and given the current Congress...
- JimC
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
There are some things I agree about here; it is a measured and rational response. Were I an American, I would want, on average, somewhat tighter controls than you would probably envisage, particularly on hand guns and assault rifles, and carrying concealed weapons in public. However, I take the point that some anti-gun folks can go to extremes, and throw out the baby of responsible gun ownership along with the dirty water of gun-toting craziness...Coito ergo sum wrote:There does need to be a rethinking of gun regulations. Since it's generally a state law issue, though, it will be a monumental job to enact a comprehensive national policy. The feds tend to work around the margins -- transporting across state lines here -- fully automatic there - sawed off shotgun here -- we've never had a national comprehensive gun law.maiforpeace wrote:Well there's no doubt that this shooting is causing us to seriously re-evaluate current gun laws. If anything will actually get done is another story, and given the current Congress...
I'm happy with the states doing it. If the people in California or Wyoming want different gun laws because of different needs, then I think that makes sense. I would imagine allowing ranchers in Wyoming to wear their guns out in public makes some sense -- allowing folks on Santa Montica Blvd to do so....not so much.
I think it's sensible to reduce the number of rounds in a clip -- 33 rounds is a lot, and I don't think the 2d amendment requires unlimited rounds to be left unregulated.
I think regulations are permitted and sensible, provided the people still are left with a right to keep and bear arms as envisaged by the 2d Amendment. That's not unlimited and unrestricted - but, neither is the language of the 2d Amendment meaningless. Both sides on this have to realize those points.
I think that those in favor of gun rights have to accept that regulation is important, and that we're not talking about flintlocks and mustkets and smooth bore rifles. We're not talking single shot weapons with mini-balls where it takes you a minute to stop, pack in some more powder and tamp ammo down and then line up the relatively inaccurate weapon for round number 2. They have to understand that M-16s, if they existed in 1787, would not have been something the founding fathers would have thought every person had a right to have, just as we are sure that folks ought not to have bazookas and shoulder fired rocket launchers.
By the same token, the anti-gun folks have to acknowledge that there is a role for arms in this world, and that's why there is, in fact, a 2nd Amendment in our Constitution. It does mean something, and does provide a right to something - to keep and bear arms. So, we can't just simply hand-wave that away and say - times have changed and now no guns should be allowed unless the State says you can have one. I think the fear of guns exhibited by many on the anti-gun rights side is unhealthy as well - as unhealthy as a creepy attachment to guns exhibited by the other side. Guns are tools - they can be dangerous - they are dangerous - but that doesn't mean we should view them as Kryptonite and be unnerved by the mere sight of them. They are a fact of life, and we ought to understand, accept and respect them.
The extremes on both sides of this issue are off base.
Now, queue the folks who want to call me a "libertarian" all the time.....
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
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Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
It's also important to note that the massive numbers of guns in the US hasn't made the US a more murderous country, by and large. As a nation - we have a 5 intentional homicide rate per 100,000. That's pretty average-to-good overall. Europe, according to stats previously discussed, as a whole has a 5.4 per 100,000 rate. That, of course, takes into account the "bad" sections of Europe - but, then again - our intentional homicide rate takes into account the "bad" sections of the United States (and Europe and the US are often compared directly, due to their comparable sizes).JimC wrote:
There are some things I agree about here; it is a measured and rational response. Were I an American, I would want, on average, somewhat tighter controls than you would probably envisage, particularly on hand guns and assault rifles, and carrying concealed weapons in public. However, I take the point that some anti-gun folks can go to extremes, and throw out the baby of responsible gun ownership along with the dirty water of gun-toting craziness...
So - there is something to be said for the fact that while the US has more gun homicides than a lot of places, we don't really have an high homicide rate overall. A reasonable question seems to be whether eliminating guns would, in fact, reduce the intentional homicide rate much. That, of course, doesn't mean we ought not have reasonable regulations to protect against known dangers associated with guns. But, it is an important fact to note.
Re: Gabrielle Giffords Shot
An Arizona TV station has an interview with the shooter's high school girlfriend up on its web site.
She doesn't come across as the brightest person (she keeps saying that he spoke in too many big words she couldn't understand), but some interesting tidbits:
She doesn't come across as the brightest person (she keeps saying that he spoke in too many big words she couldn't understand), but some interesting tidbits:
Figueroa added, that Loughner basically kind of thought that the government was crap and that it was just this big, bad thing that was trying to just take over everybody and that we had no say in anything; that we were controlled by them 100%, and he strongly disagreed and felt people should be able to make own choices," she noted.
"I know he had a difficult relationship with his parents," Figueroa said. "They would never let me come in the house, and I couldn't understand why they wouldn't let me come in."
"There's a lot of people out there right now who are saying Jared Loughner is mentally ill, I know you're not a doctor, but your gut feeling, is he mentally ill or an accumulation of everything you talked about?" "I don't think he's mentally ill at all. I think he's honestly, I think he's faking everything. I think he's planned it, planned for sometime."
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