Collarchat.com

Join Our Community
Collarchat.com

Home  Login  Search 

RE: Anotther school shooting.


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Anotther school shooting. Page: <<   < prev  21 22 [23] 24 25   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 8:44:44 AM   
lovmuffin


Posts: 3759
Joined: 9/28/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: EdBowie

Why do you think that 20 - 30 is an unreasonable number to have carry permits?

I'm not envisioning the little red schoolhouse, I'm talking about a school of 1,000 or more kids, and a hundred or more employees.

As far as track record, I only know that Arkansas passed such a law, and most schools in that state opted out on a faculty vote.


quote:

ORIGINAL: lovmuffin

You're probably right about spending the money. If we dropped the gun free zones designations and just let school employees who have permits carry, there wouldn't be any additional costs. However if this is adopted by most schools, I'm sure some Zimmerman type of fuck up would eventually happen though certainly nothing to the extent of 30 teachers running around waving guns.

Now I'm curious what the history has been with the 3 states and parts of Texas that have been allowing concealed carry in their schools. I believe Utah has recently approved it and it's under consideration in other states.




I suppose for a school with 1,000 kids, 20 - 30 armed personnel sounds about right. I could see a fuck up happening in an emergancy but I still don't see the level of pandemonium you suggested in an earlier post.

Now I'm finding out, I think there are more states than I previously thought with schools that have been allowing concealed carry all along. I'm wondering about and still looking for negative results.

_____________________________

"Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank. Give a man a bank and he can rob the world." Unknown

"Long hair, short hair—what's the difference once the head's blowed off." - Farmer Yassir

(in reply to EdBowie)
Profile   Post #: 441
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:04:31 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
quote:

Finally, I haven't heard any suggestions from you to fix the problem to debate.



Not Ed…but

Make home ownership of all automatic or semi-automatic weapons of any kind illegal.

Have a uniform federal extensive background check required to be renewed yearly.

No person under the care of a mental health licensed professional may own weapons. Yearly mental health evaluations be required for all gun owners.

Have all gun owners pass an extensive gun safety course and require all weapons be locked or stored in a secure gun safe or forfeit the right of ownership in the case of accident and theft.

Allow no private transfers of ownership without a licensed third party entity that would assure mental health and background checks were performed and properly documented.

Allow no public sale and transfer of weapons until the proper documentation can be presented and checked through the proper databases.


Butch

_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 442
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:17:56 AM   
igor2003


Posts: 1718
Joined: 1/1/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: igor2003

--FR--

There seems to be some discussion as to why shootings don't take place in private schools, so I did a quick search for shootings that took place in private schools in recent years, and came up with these in less than 10 minutes. The ones I found took place in various grade levels up to, and including private college. I didn't include one that took place on a private school bus.


http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/11662481-school-shooting-murdersuicide-at-florida-private-school

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/04/03/11003360-oikos-university-shooting-private-christian-school-catered-to-koreans?lite

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/10/02/amish.shooting/index.html

http://articles.latimes.com/1987-02-15/local/me-3520_1_private-orme-school

http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=93650&page=1

http://bradley.chattablogs.com/archives/2006/09/school-shooting-at-westminster-christian-academy.html

http://www.myfoxorlando.com/story/23614924/two-teens-shot-at-private-school-near-orlando


Just as a point of interest, July 26, 1764 was the earliest known school shooting in the U.S...even though it wasn't really the U.S. at that time. Here is what seems to be a fairly complete list of various shootings at U.S. schools over the years. The list includes suicides, accidents, etc. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_the_United_States#1760s

One thing I found of interest was the first listing in the 1880's section, and thought it seemed very similar to young kids fascination with things like gangster rap, etc. today.


Which pales in comparison with the violence in public schools so thank you for proving my point.


quote:

ORIGINAL: EdBowie
A closer look shows that most of those were not spree shootings like the ones currently making the news. Those are usually traced back to Charles Whitman, and they seem to be occurring in public schools and a few universities..


The arguments to which I was responding, both pro and con, were based around whether private schools were safer and whether private schools do or do not suffer from shootings. I was simply pointing out that shootings do occur at private schools. Kids, teachers, parents, etc. all still do get disgruntled at private schools, just like public school, and sometimes do turn to guns as a means of expressing their ire. As EdBowie tries to argue in his response to my post, private schools, so far, for the most part have not suffered from "spree" killings, though as in the case of Oikos, with, I believe, 7 dead, even private schools have that problem too. Just because there haven't been "a lot" of spree killings at private schools is probably just a matter of numbers as much as anything else. There are many more public schools, with many more students, teachers, and families involved, making them much more likely to have been the site for any shootings, including spree killings. As far as private schools being "safe" from shootings...that, to me, appears to be a myth.

So...in response to BamaD...there are fewer shootings at private schools, but I think in large part that is simply because there are not nearly as many people involved.

And in response to EdBowie...Private schools do have spree shootings, as shown by Oikos. There may be others. What I provided was the results of a very quick search, and is in no way presented as a complete list. I'm relatively certain that more examples might be found if a person wanted to take the time to look for them.

For anyone to say that my short list "proves" anyone's point (other than to show that private school shootings do exist) is ridiculous.

_____________________________

If the women don't find you handsome they should at least find you handy. - Red Green

At my age erections are like cops...there's never one around when you need it!

Never miss a good chance to shut up. - Will Rogers


(in reply to BamaD)
Profile   Post #: 443
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:18:20 AM   
lovmuffin


Posts: 3759
Joined: 9/28/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

Finally, I haven't heard any suggestions from you to fix the problem to debate.



Not Ed…but

Make home ownership of all automatic or semi-automatic weapons of any kind illegal.

Have a uniform federal extensive background check required to be renewed yearly.

No person under the care of a mental health licensed professional may own weapons. Yearly mental health evaluations be required for all gun owners.

Have all gun owners pass an extensive gun safety course and require all weapons be locked or stored in a secure gun safe or forfeit the right of ownership in the case of accident and theft.

Allow no private transfers of ownership without a licensed third party entity that would assure mental health and background checks were performed and properly documented.

Allow no public sale and transfer of weapons until the proper documentation can be presented and checked through the proper databases.


Butch


Really ?? Nix on all of that.


_____________________________

"Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank. Give a man a bank and he can rob the world." Unknown

"Long hair, short hair—what's the difference once the head's blowed off." - Farmer Yassir

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 444
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:34:08 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
No surprise there...lol

But no sense talking about changes that would reduce these type of tragedies without making suggestions that would make a difference. And my suggestions would greatly at least, reduce schools shootings and gun violence of all kinds.

But of course it is more important to make gun ownership convenient rather than safe.

Butch

_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to lovmuffin)
Profile   Post #: 445
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:42:37 AM   
EdBowie


Posts: 875
Joined: 8/11/2013
Status: offline
For the 3rd time, that was brought up in the context of American spree shootings of the type currently making headlines, not all shootings, ever. I haven't made the absolute claim that no one has ever been shot on a private campus, I'm examining the large difference in frequency.


quote:

ORIGINAL: igor2003


The arguments to which I was responding, both pro and con, were based around whether private schools were safer and whether private schools do or do not suffer from shootings. I was simply pointing out that shootings do occur at private schools. Kids, teachers, parents, etc. all still do get disgruntled at private schools, just like public school, and sometimes do turn to guns as a means of expressing their ire. As EdBowie tries to argue in his response to my post, private schools, so far, for the most part have not suffered from "spree" killings, though as in the case of Oikos, with, I believe, 7 dead, even private schools have that problem too. Just because there haven't been "a lot" of spree killings at private schools is probably just a matter of numbers as much as anything else. There are many more public schools, with many more students, teachers, and families involved, making them much more likely to have been the site for any shootings, including spree killings. As far as private schools being "safe" from shootings...that, to me, appears to be a myth.

So...in response to BamaD...there are fewer shootings at private schools, but I think in large part that is simply because there are not nearly as many people involved.

And in response to EdBowie...Private schools do have spree shootings, as shown by Oikos. There may be others. What I provided was the results of a very quick search, and is in no way presented as a complete list. I'm relatively certain that more examples might be found if a person wanted to take the time to look for them.

For anyone to say that my short list "proves" anyone's point (other than to show that private school shootings do exist) is ridiculous.



_____________________________

Reading for understanding, instead of for argumentation, has its advantages.

(in reply to igor2003)
Profile   Post #: 446
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 9:52:52 AM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

No surprise there...lol

But no sense talking about changes that would reduce these type of tragedies without making suggestions that would make a difference. And my suggestions would greatly at least, reduce schools shootings and gun violence of all kinds.

But of course it is more important to make gun ownership convenient rather than safe.

Butch


To the contrary.

None of the list of regulations you promulgated would have prevented any of the last shootings would they?
Would it have stopped Columbine? What about sandy hook?



Secondly, since there are more than 300 million guns out there, and most non-handguns have a semi automatic feature (its been around for over 150 years) it seems .. difficult to imagine a law applying retroactively.

Not to mention there is no possibility of that ban getting passed in the face of NRA opposition, and considering it is blatantly unconstitutional.

Second objection - there is no way you can require a yearly "uniform extensive background check" for the exercise of a constitutional right. Unconstitutional. Just like the federal government can not put significant burdens on the right to vote.

Yearly mental exams for gun owners - falls victim to we are protected from unreasonable search and seizure, not to mention due process.

Now personally I am in favor that if your guns are used in a crime, you are somewhat responsible. But if you live in the woods alone - the concept of locking your guns is ridiculous.



(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 447
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:00:15 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
Yes they could have stopped sandy hook...remember his mother was buying him weapons... even though he was under the care of a mental health professional. Of course any law requires compliance.

How may I ask are my proposed rules against the Constitution... They do not prohibit gun ownership.

Just because there would be a requirement for a mental health exam is not an invasion of privacy or due process.. It would just be a reasonable precaution to assure safe gun ownership.

Now why would living in the woods make it any less important to have your weapons secured?

quote:

Secondly, since there are more than 300 million guns out there, and most non-handguns have a semi automatic feature (its been around for over 150 years) it seems .. difficult to imagine a law applying retroactively.


As with all laws you must start somewhere...from any point forward you would have a steady decline in this type of weapon. By the way I did not prohibit ownership of these weapons... Just illegal to have at home.

Butch

< Message edited by kdsub -- 12/22/2013 10:17:11 AM >


_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 448
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:07:46 AM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline
Teachers at the college level break 8-1 democrat. At the highschool level its not as bad - in the neighborhood of 4:1.
Most teachers are women.

The demographics are such that even in a school of 50-100 teachers you will have probably at most 2-3 people with permits. Mostly in rural areas, or women that have been victimized before. I just do not see a situation occurring where you will have 20-30, unless you are paying for guards - and no school district can afford that much per school anyway.

This is why even in when they vote mandatory carry, most schools opt out.

Regarding the zimmerman kind of fuck up.
If you wanted to mandate that schools were concealed carry - it might work. It would lower the chance of random zimmerman types attacking.

But I don't think it solves the fact that the biggest cause of this kind of violence is student -on - student bullying or violence.

Which more or less I think occurs because we take juvenile delinquents and force them into school. Hard to expect them to become angels.

My proposed solution:

A). Carry law - as above.
B). Small juvie schools oriented around vocational training. Wood, Metal shop etc.
C). Better screening.




quote:

ORIGINAL: EdBowie

Why do you think that 20 - 30 is an unreasonable number to have carry permits?

I'm not envisioning the little red schoolhouse, I'm talking about a school of 1,000 or more kids, and a hundred or more employees.

As far as track record, I only know that Arkansas passed such a law, and most schools in that state opted out on a faculty vote.


quote:

ORIGINAL: lovmuffin

You're probably right about spending the money. If we dropped the gun free zones designations and just let school employees who have permits carry, there wouldn't be any additional costs. However if this is adopted by most schools, I'm sure some Zimmerman type of fuck up would eventually happen though certainly nothing to the extent of 30 teachers running around waving guns.

Now I'm curious what the history has been with the 3 states and parts of Texas that have been allowing concealed carry in their schools. I believe Utah has recently approved it and it's under consideration in other states.




(in reply to EdBowie)
Profile   Post #: 449
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:16:56 AM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline
The weapon his mom bought him while under therapy would have made no difference. His mom had other weapons.
He stole them. The law would have made no difference.

Not banning gun ownership is not the limit of what the constitution requires. You can not cause a significant infringement in the free exercise thereof either.

Let me give an example from the right to own property. The government is allowed to make regulations - but if the government regulations deprives you of the right to enjoy your property, you are allowed to make a takings claim - ie., make the government pay for depriving you of your property.

As for mental health exams for gun owners. Would you say the same restriction was legal to get an abortion?

It doesn't matter that you find the standard 'reasonable'. Reasonable or not there are some things the federal government is enjoined from doing.

If you live in the woods, miles from other people, and frequently have to deal with wild animals. You are the only person using your weapon, or with access to it. Requiring me to lock my gun is unreasonable.



quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

Yes they could have stopped sandy hook...remember his mother was buying him weapons... even though he was under the care of a mental health professional. Of course any law requires compliance.

How may I ask are my proposed rules against the Constitution... They do not prohibit gun ownership.

Just because there would be a requirement for a mental health exam is not an invasion of privacy or due process.. It would just be a reasonable precaution to assure safe gun ownership.

Now why would living in the woods make it any less important to have your weapons secured?

Butch


(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 450
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:22:07 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
This simply is not true my friend... she bought and taught him to use the weapons... this would be illegal... she did not have them properly stored... this would be illegal. She had weapons that would be illegal to store at her home under my suggestions. There would have been a good possibility that this tragedy could have been prevented.

Butch

_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 451
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:28:15 AM   
EdBowie


Posts: 875
Joined: 8/11/2013
Status: offline
On 1 - 'All home ownership' would include all, which means police etc. And those weapons categories would exclude pretty much everything beyond revolvers.
I'd probably draw the hypothetical line a bit less restrictively than that... I am not a fan of anyone and everyone having a Rambo 9 level arsenal in their home (I am well aware that it is Constitutional to have an M-60 in one's house, and I'm aware that such weapons aren't the ones most often used in the spree shootings, I'm drawing an imaginary balance point between individual rights, and some changes that might enhance the common good). I have no problem with people in general keeping a 9/10mm, or a .40/.45, or even an M-1 at home (these are examples, not a closed list).

On 2, I'd be in favor of regular checks for felony convictions, etc. To have a full federal ( i.e. an actual FBI agent going door to door revisiting 2nd grade teachers et al) background check annually would seem unworkable and ineffective.

On 3, I'd argue against that sort of labeling. 'Under the care of' would take the right of armed self defense away from rape and abuse victims undergoing counseling, not to mention people being treated for anorexia, agoraphobia, sex addiction and a whole host of mental health issues with no visible connection to violence. It would also open the door for throwing due process right out the window, and disenfranchising people for merely falling into a category, like disabled.
I'm much more comfortable with requiring a judicial hearing complete with defense attorneys, and a finding of 'danger to self and others'. I would be in favor of adjusting the mental health system instead of the laws, so as to get suicides, and violence prone individuals assessed earlier.
In fact, I think that this is one of the most important changes that American society could look into.

On 4, the more safety and scenario based training the better.
On 4b... Making it a crime to be the victim of a crime, again violates basic tenets of due process. What happens if the thief takes the safe and all, and cuts it apart? I would stick to current standards for negligence, on a case by case basis.

On 5, while it may add an inconvenient extra step to the cherished tradition of the kiddies opening their Christmas presents to find a new Glock, I might be persuaded that such an imposition on individual rights could help save lives in the future. The mental health thing, same as before. You can't keep a kid from having their first hunting rifle just because they stutter. Keeping a criminal or a dangerously disturbed person from using straw purchasers, sure... fix that.

On 6 I don't see that as too different from what is in place now. And yes, I'm aware that people try to figure out ways around such database tracking, that's going to be a given with any solution.

On top of those, I would look for a way to stifle the copycat effect from the media oversensationalizing these events. Given the current state of 1st Amendemnt law, that seems impossible. I don't know the answer to that one, perhaps a grass roots movement ala MADD or same sex marriages to create a shift in mores?


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

Finally, I haven't heard any suggestions from you to fix the problem to debate.



Not Ed…but

Make home ownership of all automatic or semi-automatic weapons of any kind illegal.

Have a uniform federal extensive background check required to be renewed yearly.

No person under the care of a mental health licensed professional may own weapons. Yearly mental health evaluations be required for all gun owners.

Have all gun owners pass an extensive gun safety course and require all weapons be locked or stored in a secure gun safe or forfeit the right of ownership in the case of accident and theft.

Allow no private transfers of ownership without a licensed third party entity that would assure mental health and background checks were performed and properly documented.

Allow no public sale and transfer of weapons until the proper documentation can be presented and checked through the proper databases.


Butch



_____________________________

Reading for understanding, instead of for argumentation, has its advantages.

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 452
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:33:52 AM   
truckinslave


Posts: 3897
Joined: 6/16/2004
Status: offline
quote:

That way if a gun is used, a ballistic match can be found even if the firearm was never used in a crime, and the owner located


Thats a pipe dream.

Mar the muzzle crown post-testing and the rifling on subsequently recovered bullets will be sufficiently altered so as not to match the test results.
Many many bullets are never recovered (remember Vince Foster?)
Most recovered bullets are too damaged for a ballistics match to be possible.
Shotguns leave no ballistic fingerprints on pellets/buckshot.

That's really a typical liberal suggestion: an emotional, poorly-thought-out proposal of vast complexity and expense that solves little or nothing.

_____________________________

1. Islam and sharia are indivisible.
2. Sharia is barbaric, homophobic, violent, and inimical to the most basic Western values (including free speech and freedom of religion). (Yeah, I know: SEE: Irony 101).
ERGO: Islam has no place in America.

(in reply to jlf1961)
Profile   Post #: 453
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:34:19 AM   
lovmuffin


Posts: 3759
Joined: 9/28/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux

Regarding the zimmerman kind of fuck up.
If you wanted to mandate that schools were concealed carry - it might work. It would lower the chance of random zimmerman types attacking.


LOL I meant some freak of nature type of thing where a teacher packing a weapon fucks up and shoots the wrong person or shoots when it could have been avoided. Worse yet a "white Hispanic" teacher who shoots a black student.

_____________________________

"Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank. Give a man a bank and he can rob the world." Unknown

"Long hair, short hair—what's the difference once the head's blowed off." - Farmer Yassir

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 454
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:39:50 AM   
Phydeaux


Posts: 4828
Joined: 1/4/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

This simply is not true my friend... she bought and taught him to use the weapons... this would be illegal... she did not have them properly stored... this would be illegal. She had weapons that would be illegal to store at her home under my suggestions. There would have been a good possibility that this tragedy could have been prevented.

Butch


I agree that she bought weapons.
I agree that she arranged shootng lessons.

None of which would have been prevented.

I completely disagree that making it illegal would have made her properly store them.
If you won't do it because its a good idea - then the odds are real good you won't do it because its the law. It is the law in many, many jurisdictions - and every year it is violated time and time again.

More or less, he would ask her for the keys, saying he wanted to go to the shooting range. She'd agree and we're back to the same scenario.

There is *no* possibility that your list of banned weapons will ever pass.

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 455
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:40:33 AM   
EdBowie


Posts: 875
Joined: 8/11/2013
Status: offline
Zimmerman didn't attack a school.

And I don't know when the last time you were inside a school, but they also have employees like bus drivers, maintenance and janitorial crew, lunch room and clerical staff.... I highly doubt these people are 8-1 anti-gun.

In any case, the untrained CCW holder shooting the wrong person worst case scenario would hold true with even a small number .

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phydeaux

Teachers at the college level break 8-1 democrat. At the highschool level its not as bad - in the neighborhood of 4:1.
Most teachers are women.

The demographics are such that even in a school of 50-100 teachers you will have probably at most 2-3 people with permits. Mostly in rural areas, or women that have been victimized before. I just do not see a situation occurring where you will have 20-30, unless you are paying for guards - and no school district can afford that much per school anyway.

This is why even in when they vote mandatory carry, most schools opt out.

Regarding the zimmerman kind of fuck up.
If you wanted to mandate that schools were concealed carry - it might work. It would lower the chance of random zimmerman types attacking.

But I don't think it solves the fact that the biggest cause of this kind of violence is student -on - student bullying or violence.

Which more or less I think occurs because we take juvenile delinquents and force them into school. Hard to expect them to become angels.

My proposed solution:

A). Carry law - as above.
B). Small juvie schools oriented around vocational training. Wood, Metal shop etc.
C). Better screening.




quote:

ORIGINAL: EdBowie

Why do you think that 20 - 30 is an unreasonable number to have carry permits?

I'm not envisioning the little red schoolhouse, I'm talking about a school of 1,000 or more kids, and a hundred or more employees.

As far as track record, I only know that Arkansas passed such a law, and most schools in that state opted out on a faculty vote.


quote:

ORIGINAL: lovmuffin

You're probably right about spending the money. If we dropped the gun free zones designations and just let school employees who have permits carry, there wouldn't be any additional costs. However if this is adopted by most schools, I'm sure some Zimmerman type of fuck up would eventually happen though certainly nothing to the extent of 30 teachers running around waving guns.

Now I'm curious what the history has been with the 3 states and parts of Texas that have been allowing concealed carry in their schools. I believe Utah has recently approved it and it's under consideration in other states.







_____________________________

Reading for understanding, instead of for argumentation, has its advantages.

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 456
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:47:04 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
quote:

To have a full federal ( i.e. an actual FBI agent going door to door revisiting 2nd grade teachers et al) background check annually would seem unworkable and ineffective


I am not proposing a federal agent going door to door. I just think a comprehensive uniform federal requirement in all states for ownership is important.

quote:

On 3, I'd argue against that sort of labeling. 'Under the care of' would take the right of armed self defense away from rape and abuse victims undergoing counseling, not to mention people being treated for anorexia, agoraphobia, sex addiction and a whole host of mental health issues with no visible connection to violence. It would also open the door for throwing due process right out the window, and disenfranchising people for merely falling into a category, like disabled.
I'm much more comfortable with requiring a judicial hearing complete with defense attorneys, and a finding of 'danger to self and others'. I would be in favor of adjusting the mental health system instead of the laws, so as to get suicides, and violence prone individuals assessed earlier.
In fact, I think that this is one of the most important changes that American society could look into.


My suggestions were strictly in general with no specifics and certainly what would be considered is what mental illness would be considered dangerous.

quote:

On 4, the more safety and scenario based training the better.
On 4b... Making it a crime to be the victim of a crime, again violates basic tenets of due process. What happens if the thief takes the safe and all, and cuts it apart? I would stick to current standards for negligence, on a case by case basis.


If the weapons were properly secured and still stolen it would not be a violation in the law.

quote:

On 6 I don't see that as too different from what is in place now.


Yes it would be different... The proper documentation would need to be presented at the time of the sale which would include background and mental health documentation.

quote:

On top of those, I would look for a way to stifle the copycat effect from the media oversensationalizing these events


In this I totally agree and it could be done easily.

I do appreciate your input and these were only suggestions that would of course have to be refined. It is just my belief that half measures will not work and sacrifices by gun owners, which I am one, will need to be made.

Butch

< Message edited by kdsub -- 12/22/2013 10:54:03 AM >


_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to EdBowie)
Profile   Post #: 457
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:51:41 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
She would have been breaking the law...we will never know but she seemed to be law abiding so perhaps she would have had her weapons properly secured where he could not get them and she may not of bought and taught him to use them. We just don't know.

Butch

_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to Phydeaux)
Profile   Post #: 458
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:58:00 AM   
EdBowie


Posts: 875
Joined: 8/11/2013
Status: offline
Have the government screen everyone for sanity annually ? I'd be in favor of that before allowing parenting, driving, or holding public office.

Other than that it looks like we are mostly using different terminology for similar ideas.


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

To have a full federal ( i.e. an actual FBI agent going door to door revisiting 2nd grade teachers et al) background check annually would seem unworkable and ineffective


I am not proposing a federal agent going door to door. I just think a federal requirement in all states for ownership is important.

quote:

On 3, I'd argue against that sort of labeling. 'Under the care of' would take the right of armed self defense away from rape and abuse victims undergoing counseling, not to mention people being treated for anorexia, agoraphobia, sex addiction and a whole host of mental health issues with no visible connection to violence. It would also open the door for throwing due process right out the window, and disenfranchising people for merely falling into a category, like disabled.
I'm much more comfortable with requiring a judicial hearing complete with defense attorneys, and a finding of 'danger to self and others'. I would be in favor of adjusting the mental health system instead of the laws, so as to get suicides, and violence prone individuals assessed earlier.
In fact, I think that this is one of the most important changes that American society could look into.


My suggestions were strictly in general with no specifics and certainly what would be considered is what mental illness would be considered dangerous.

quote:

On 4, the more safety and scenario based training the better.
On 4b... Making it a crime to be the victim of a crime, again violates basic tenets of due process. What happens if the thief takes the safe and all, and cuts it apart? I would stick to current standards for negligence, on a case by case basis.


If the weapons were properly secured and still stolen it would not be a violation in the law.

quote:

On 6 I don't see that as too different from what is in place now.


Yes it would be different... The proper documentation would need to be presented at the time of the sale which would include background and mental health documentation.

quote:

On top of those, I would look for a way to stifle the copycat effect from the media oversensationalizing these events


In this I totally agree and it could be done easily.

I do appreciate your input and of course these were only suggestions that would of course have to be refined. It is just my belief that half measures will not work and sacrifices by gun owners, which I am one, will need to be made.

Butch



_____________________________

Reading for understanding, instead of for argumentation, has its advantages.

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 459
RE: Anotther school shooting. - 12/22/2013 10:59:52 AM   
TheHeretic


Posts: 19100
Joined: 3/25/2007
From: California, USA
Status: offline
FR

The shooting event which prompted this particular discussion was carried out by someone armed with a manual action shotgun, molotov cocktails, and a machete. What does a semi-auto ban have to do with anything?

_____________________________

If you lose one sense, your other senses are enhanced.
That's why people with no sense of humor have such an inflated sense of self-importance.


(in reply to EdBowie)
Profile   Post #: 460
Page:   <<   < prev  21 22 [23] 24 25   next >   >>
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Anotther school shooting. Page: <<   < prev  21 22 [23] 24 25   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2024
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.422