America's Gun Violence
Comments
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benjs said:Can we summarize the suggested actions (for either handling the gun problem in schools or public areas)? Not the reasons behind them, just strictly the actions themselves. At this point, I think I’ve heard:
1. Arm teachers with tasers
2. Arm teachers with guns
3. Deploy armed guards in schools
4. Deploy armed guards in public facilities
5. Ban guns
6. Ban assault type weapons
7. Increase gun control
Have I missed any?
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
The straw man I keep mentioning, that keeps getting used still, is the assertion that we are talking about forcing librarians to carry AR-15's and that we want every teacher packing and ready to be a total badass commando.
That's not what we propose, but it's easier to argue against than the idea of a select few vetted and trained volunteers in a controlled system.
And then the slippery slope always follows, "what's next, kindergarteners with assault rifles?".Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
rgambs said:mrussel1 said:tempo_n_groove said:tbergs said:tempo_n_groove said:mrussel1 said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:Ok, a teacher sacrifices his life to save students and a security cop cowered outside and the conclusion you draw is ass-backwards.
The lesson I'm hearing is that if the security cop didn't save the day a teacher never could...uh.
DUH! A teacher did!!! How can you ignore such a doublethink??
My wife and I agree that if teachers are armed in our school, they will be home schooled.
I know a bunch of cops that don't practice shooting.
I know a bunch of cops that retired NEVER un-holstering their weapon.
The cop that was there at the Florida school resigned for a reason, he should have never been there in the first place.
So what if your teacher who wants to carry a gun fails his mental health/psych check or training? What impact will that have on their teaching and their job security? This isn't a straw man theory, it's a strong possibility to consider. Any teachers on here that had to pass a pysch/mental health background to become a teacher? Serious question. All cops in MN have to pass a psych to get hired. You take an MMPI and meet with a pyschologist. Sometimes you even need to take the California Psych. Inventory. Are we going to ensure the same standard for our armed teachers.
It's fucking dumb that not all gun owners at least need to pass an initial pysch/mental health screening. It would decrease gun violence and suicide by so much.
I do agree that teachers should not carry though.
I do not think that it makes sense to restrict the rights of someone simply because they are being treated for a mental health issue, though, as the vast majority of people getting treatment for depression or anxiety are probably not homicidal maniacs. We do need to do a better job at correctly evaluating those that are, though.
I think that this is yet another place where the US healthcare system drops the ball compared to other countries.
Post edited by PJPOWER on0 -
rgambs said:The straw man I keep mentioning, that keeps getting used still, is the assertion that we are talking about forcing librarians to carry AR-15's and that we want every teacher packing and ready to be a total badass commando.
That's not what we propose, but it's easier to argue against than the idea of a select few vetted and trained volunteers in a controlled system.
And then the slippery slope always follows, "what's next, kindergarteners with assault rifles?".
But the slippery slope argument is valid and should be considered and debated. At what point do we draw the line?0 -
dignin said:rgambs said:The straw man I keep mentioning, that keeps getting used still, is the assertion that we are talking about forcing librarians to carry AR-15's and that we want every teacher packing and ready to be a total badass commando.
That's not what we propose, but it's easier to argue against than the idea of a select few vetted and trained volunteers in a controlled system.
And then the slippery slope always follows, "what's next, kindergarteners with assault rifles?".
But the slippery slope argument is valid and should be considered and debated. At what point do we draw the line?Post edited by PJPOWER on0 -
PJPOWER said:dignin said:rgambs said:The straw man I keep mentioning, that keeps getting used still, is the assertion that we are talking about forcing librarians to carry AR-15's and that we want every teacher packing and ready to be a total badass commando.
That's not what we propose, but it's easier to argue against than the idea of a select few vetted and trained volunteers in a controlled system.
And then the slippery slope always follows, "what's next, kindergarteners with assault rifles?".
But the slippery slope argument is valid and should be considered and debated. At what point do we draw the line?
Eventually these soft targets will be hit and you know the NRA and idiots like Trump will be screaming for these places to have civilians protecting them with guns.0 -
rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:Ok, a teacher sacrifices his life to save students and a security cop cowered outside and the conclusion you draw is ass-backwards.
The lesson I'm hearing is that if the security cop didn't save the day a teacher never could...uh.
DUH! A teacher did!!! How can you ignore such a doublethink??0 -
tbergs said:Leaving it up to someone with a gun to stop a shooter, or shooters, is a crapshoot. You can get a hero type who would lay down their life when unarmed, a loose cannon type like a George Zimmerman that may shoot someone they perceived as a threat or a licensed cop milking his/her retirement who isn't in the least bit interested in taking on someone with an assault rifle. None of them are a solution to making schools safer. They're feel good responses from people who have seen too many movies where the good guy always wins under pressure. Focusing on the idea of arming more people allows for nothing to change while people get a false sense of security.
If all airports did after 9/11 was allow more "good guys" to carry guns on planes would that have been an acceptable solution to anyone here?0 -
PJPOWER said:rgambs said:mrussel1 said:tempo_n_groove said:tbergs said:tempo_n_groove said:mrussel1 said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:Ok, a teacher sacrifices his life to save students and a security cop cowered outside and the conclusion you draw is ass-backwards.
The lesson I'm hearing is that if the security cop didn't save the day a teacher never could...uh.
DUH! A teacher did!!! How can you ignore such a doublethink??
My wife and I agree that if teachers are armed in our school, they will be home schooled.
I know a bunch of cops that don't practice shooting.
I know a bunch of cops that retired NEVER un-holstering their weapon.
The cop that was there at the Florida school resigned for a reason, he should have never been there in the first place.
So what if your teacher who wants to carry a gun fails his mental health/psych check or training? What impact will that have on their teaching and their job security? This isn't a straw man theory, it's a strong possibility to consider. Any teachers on here that had to pass a pysch/mental health background to become a teacher? Serious question. All cops in MN have to pass a psych to get hired. You take an MMPI and meet with a pyschologist. Sometimes you even need to take the California Psych. Inventory. Are we going to ensure the same standard for our armed teachers.
It's fucking dumb that not all gun owners at least need to pass an initial pysch/mental health screening. It would decrease gun violence and suicide by so much.
I do agree that teachers should not carry though.
I do not think that it makes sense to restrict the rights of someone simply because they are being treated for a mental health issue, though, as the vast majority of people getting treatment for depression or anxiety are probably not homicidal maniacs. We do need to do a better job at correctly evaluating those that are, though.
I think that this is yet another place where the US healthcare system drops the ball compared to other countries.
What I really want is the pysch tests and in person evaluation. That will deter and make it near impossible for people who are already at a crossroads. Beyond a sociopath, very few people would be able to fake those psych questions they ask you 10 different ways over the course of 500 other questions and then personally evaluate you. Now, if I am ok at 21 and can pass, that doesn't mean I'm ok at 31, so I think a periodic re-evaluation would need to take place. Maybe like a driver's license, every 4 or 5 years unless you commit a crime. Again, this would also require a registry of guns and gun owners. If you truly want to lower gun violence these steps would significantly reduce pre-meditated and emotionally motivated reaction incidents from occurring.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
I think the Second Amendment should be followed exactly as the Founding Fathers intended. Everyone with a modern gun should turn it in and get a musket exactly like the ones the FF were talking about when that amendment was written. That will take care of assault rifles.
Here's hoping the insanity will stop.Falling down,...not staying down0 -
tempo_n_groove said:tbergs said:tempo_n_groove said:mrussel1 said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:The Juggler said:rgambs said:Ok, a teacher sacrifices his life to save students and a security cop cowered outside and the conclusion you draw is ass-backwards.
The lesson I'm hearing is that if the security cop didn't save the day a teacher never could...uh.
DUH! A teacher did!!! How can you ignore such a doublethink??
My wife and I agree that if teachers are armed in our school, they will be home schooled.
I know a bunch of cops that don't practice shooting.
I know a bunch of cops that retired NEVER un-holstering their weapon.
The cop that was there at the Florida school resigned for a reason, he should have never been there in the first place.
So what if your teacher who wants to carry a gun fails his mental health/psych check or training? What impact will that have on their teaching and their job security? This isn't a straw man theory, it's a strong possibility to consider. Any teachers on here that had to pass a pysch/mental health background to become a teacher? Serious question. All cops in MN have to pass a psych to get hired. You take an MMPI and meet with a pyschologist. Sometimes you even need to take the California Psych. Inventory. Are we going to ensure the same standard for our armed teachers.
It's fucking dumb that not all gun owners at least need to pass an initial pysch/mental health screening. It would decrease gun violence and suicide by so much.
I do agree that teachers should not carry though.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
Kat said:I think the Second Amendment should be followed exactly as the Founding Fathers intended. Everyone with a modern gun should turn it in and get a musket exactly like the ones the FF were talking about when that amendment was written. That will take care of assault rifles.
Here's hoping the insanity will stop.It's a hopeless situation...0 -
PJPOWER said:tbergs said:Leaving it up to someone with a gun to stop a shooter, or shooters, is a crapshoot. You can get a hero type who would lay down their life when unarmed, a loose cannon type like a George Zimmerman that may shoot someone they perceived as a threat or a licensed cop milking his/her retirement who isn't in the least bit interested in taking on someone with an assault rifle. None of them are a solution to making schools safer. They're feel good responses from people who have seen too many movies where the good guy always wins under pressure. Focusing on the idea of arming more people allows for nothing to change while people get a false sense of security.
If all airports did after 9/11 was allow more "good guys" to carry guns on planes would that have been an acceptable solution to anyone here?
Your support for arming teachers, is the same as arming the flight attendants, not using air Marshalls
Do people realize most public schools in america have an armed presence already? Every public school in my state has an armed police officer present
PJPOWER... do you have any ideas you support besides guns in America's classrooms?
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Just remember folks... decades of millions and millions and millions of dollars worth of propaganda campaigns and politcal contributionstom the gun lobby have NOTHUNG to do with your safety or your right to BEAR arms...
It's all about the right to SELL arms... LOTS of them
The sooner you figure out you're nothing but a customer, and this has squat to do with your safety or rights, the better off this shithole will be. It gives me hope seeing these kids understand that0 -
my2hands said:PJPOWER said:tbergs said:Leaving it up to someone with a gun to stop a shooter, or shooters, is a crapshoot. You can get a hero type who would lay down their life when unarmed, a loose cannon type like a George Zimmerman that may shoot someone they perceived as a threat or a licensed cop milking his/her retirement who isn't in the least bit interested in taking on someone with an assault rifle. None of them are a solution to making schools safer. They're feel good responses from people who have seen too many movies where the good guy always wins under pressure. Focusing on the idea of arming more people allows for nothing to change while people get a false sense of security.
If all airports did after 9/11 was allow more "good guys" to carry guns on planes would that have been an acceptable solution to anyone here?
Your support for arming teachers, is the same as arming the flight attendants, not using air Marshalls
Do people realize most public schools in america have an armed presence already? Every public school in my state has an armed police officer present
PJPOWER... do you have any ideas you support besides guns in America's classrooms?0 -
my2hands said:PJPOWER said:tbergs said:Leaving it up to someone with a gun to stop a shooter, or shooters, is a crapshoot. You can get a hero type who would lay down their life when unarmed, a loose cannon type like a George Zimmerman that may shoot someone they perceived as a threat or a licensed cop milking his/her retirement who isn't in the least bit interested in taking on someone with an assault rifle. None of them are a solution to making schools safer. They're feel good responses from people who have seen too many movies where the good guy always wins under pressure. Focusing on the idea of arming more people allows for nothing to change while people get a false sense of security.
If all airports did after 9/11 was allow more "good guys" to carry guns on planes would that have been an acceptable solution to anyone here?
Your support for arming teachers, is the same as arming the flight attendants, not using air Marshalls
Do people realize most public schools in america have an armed presence already? Every public school in my state has an armed police officer present
PJPOWER... do you have any ideas you support besides guns in America's classrooms?
Mandate regular security audits for schools and fine/temporarily close those that do not meet certain standards. Not sure where that baseline would be, but I am sure schools would take security more seriously if it is tied to state or federal funding. Schools are mandated to have fire marshals come in and inspect for deficiencies, so why not do the same for general classroom security? Also, I believe that the public should be notified when public schools are deficient in security standards.
I know that a lot of businesses out there higher professional “security experts” to advise them about building security and what to look out for...do schools?
I know this doesn’t touch other places, like malls, etc, but I feel that children at school are the most vulnerable population of society and where our main focus on safety should start...and NOW.Post edited by PJPOWER on0 -
Kat said:I think the Second Amendment should be followed exactly as the Founding Fathers intended. Everyone with a modern gun should turn it in and get a musket exactly like the ones the FF were talking about when that amendment was written. That will take care of assault rifles.
Here's hoping the insanity will stop.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Second amendment states that there needs to be a well “regulated” militia. In my opinion, we have laws surrounding guns but people don’t do their jobs well enough, so shitty people are able to get guns.
Im for registering guns, and I’m for people doing their jobs better.
Im for the right to protection, in what ever legal fashion you feel necessary.
Im for keeping guns away from kids, and crazy people.
I think rubio made a good point in saying that an assault rifle ban wouldn’t have changed anything.
Also, there is no legal definition for “assault” rifle or weapon, so creating laws would be challenging. What is an assault weapon? The way it looks? The type of bullet it has?
People dont understand that all guns, besides revolvers are semi-automatic. You pull the trigger once, and one bullet comes out. The AR15 shoots the same way that a Cult 45 band gun shoots. One bullet at a time.
The second amendement was written at a time when a group of people broke from a shitty government, and it proved challenging. It was written so something like that wouldn’t happen again. It wasn’t written for hunting. A civilian has every right to own a fire arm.
Why cant people admit that 99% of gun owners don’t commit crimes with guns? They don’t shoot people.
I think we need people to be better about actually enforcing current laws. Law enforcement should be trained to stereotype people and make sure communities are safe. parkland law enforcement failed miserably at this.
People should do their jobs better.0 -
Kat said:I think the Second Amendment should be followed exactly as the Founding Fathers intended. Everyone with a modern gun should turn it in and get a musket exactly like the ones the FF were talking about when that amendment was written. That will take care of assault rifles.
Here's hoping the insanity will stop.
The Bill of Rights is a living breathing thing and makes no mention of muskets...0 -
riley540 said:Second amendment states that there needs to be a well “regulated” militia. In my opinion, we have laws surrounding guns but people don’t do their jobs well enough, so shitty people are able to get guns.
Im for registering guns, and I’m for people doing their jobs better.
Im for the right to protection, in what ever legal fashion you feel necessary.
Im for keeping guns away from kids, and crazy people.
I think rubio made a good point in saying that an assault rifle ban wouldn’t have changed anything.
Also, there is no legal definition for “assault” rifle or weapon, so creating laws would be challenging. What is an assault weapon? The way it looks? The type of bullet it has?
People dont understand that all guns, besides revolvers are semi-automatic. You pull the trigger once, and one bullet comes out. The AR15 shoots the same way that a Cult 45 band gun shoots. One bullet at a time.
The second amendement was written at a time when a group of people broke from a shitty government, and it proved challenging. It was written so something like that wouldn’t happen again. It wasn’t written for hunting. A civilian has every right to own a fire arm.
Why cant people admit that 99% of gun owners don’t commit crimes with guns? They don’t shoot people.
I think we need people to be better about actually enforcing current laws. Law enforcement should be trained to stereotype people and make sure communities are safe. parkland law enforcement failed miserably at this.
People should do their jobs better.0
This discussion has been closed.
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