America's Gun Violence

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  • tbergstbergs Posts: 10,166
    There is a flaw to this thinking.  Shooters on trial don't ever get to plea insanity because they aren't.  So the screening wouldn't do much in stopping the shootings.

    I do agree that teachers should not carry though.
    Just because you fail a pysch exam doesn't mean you're insane or crazy. That is the flaw of the common populations thinking or how we typically see it get labelled on TV. Being required to submit to a background and a pysch exam and periodic re-evaluations would stop a lot of shootings; suicide and murders. A lot goes in to those exams and if you're elevated in any one area then you can't own a gun, but you're not crazy.
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • tbergstbergs Posts: 10,166
    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.
    Or a puckle gun, according to Dana Loesch. ;)
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • my2handsmy2hands Posts: 17,117
    PJPOWER said:
    If I remember correctly, most airlines started putting armed air marshals on planes after 911...now why do you think they would do that?
    They didn't arm the flight attendants and pilots, they used people whose only job is security/law enforcement... 

    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?

  • my2handsmy2hands Posts: 17,117
    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 that 
  • mrussel1mrussel1 Posts: 30,436
    my2hands said:
    They didn't arm the flight attendants and pilots, they used people whose only job is security/law enforcement... 

    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?

    Nicely put.  Agree with all points and analogy.  
  • PJPOWERPJPOWER Posts: 6,499
    edited February 2018
    my2hands said:
    They didn't arm the flight attendants and pilots, they used people whose only job is security/law enforcement... 

    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?

    I used to counsel “at risk” students and was always amazed at how easily the majority (especially rural) schools could be accessed.  Some even have their main office in the fucking middle of the school where you have to walk past several classrooms to get to it.  That’s not securing a campus in my mind.  I live in TX, and nowhere near the majority schools/campuses have armed security personnel (again, especially in rural communities).  
    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 on
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 42,994
    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.
    Great idea, Kat!
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni











  • riley540riley540 Denver Colorado Posts: 1,132
    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. 
  • 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.
    Then we should demand speedier trials then too...

    The Bill of Rights is a living breathing thing and makes no mention of muskets...
  • pjhawkspjhawks Posts: 12,743
    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. 
    when does the greater good outweigh your individual rights?  everything in this country that kills people (cigarettes, industries, cars, etc.)  we eventually get around to  regulating...except guns.  the NRA is the greatest PR machine the world has ever seen.  it's really fucking sad that some gun owners refuse to compromise even a spec for the greater good. that's why we are where we are.  And now your solution is to just allow law enforcement to profile people...wow.
  • mrussel1mrussel1 Posts: 30,436
    Those 17 children lost ALL their rights so that a small % can retain their right to these weapons of war.  Seems a little fucked up.  
  • riley540riley540 Denver Colorado Posts: 1,132
    pjhawks said:
    when does the greater good outweigh your individual rights?  everything in this country that kills people (cigarettes, industries, cars, etc.)  we eventually get around to  regulating...except guns.  the NRA is the greatest PR machine the world has ever seen.  it's really fucking sad that some gun owners refuse to compromise even a spec for the greater good. that's why we are where we are.  And now your solution is to just allow law enforcement to profile people...wow.
    Profiling is the most affective way to stop bad people from doing bad things. Many airports all over the world do this. Highly trained individuals. Don’t you want intelegent law enforcement that can stop these things? The greater good is that millions of people legally own guns to protect them selves and their families, and a few crooked people decided it was a good idea to shoot up schools/public places. Private gun dealers must do better. Law enforcement must do better. The government must do better. We can keep this stuff out of the hands of shitty people. 
  • mrussel1 said:
    Those 17 children lost ALL their rights so that a small % can retain their right to these weapons of war.  Seems a little fucked up.  
    At which the FBI dropped the ball and the guard became a coward so there is PLENTY of blame to be thrown around.
  • The JugglerThe Juggler Posts: 49,569
    Exactly.

    There will always be some teachers that love the idea of being armed at school but most of these people just want to teach.  They have enough responsibility with that position.  Requiring them to go through training to ward off assault weapon fire is beyond their job descriptions.

    All this talk is going on while tRump and his band of idiot republicans are trying to cut education budgets wherever possible.


    I can't believe some people support this idea. It just seems to crazy to me. Teachers are underpaid to begin with, now we are going to bestow upon some of them the duty of protecting the entire school, in addition to educating these kids?

    How are we going to pay for that?

    How is the training going to be handled?

    What about the insurance/liability implications for having armed teachers walking around school grounds?

    How soon before some kid accidentally gets their hands on their teacher's loaded gun at school?


    This isn't even putting a band on the problem....to me this is pouring gasoline on a fire.


    The rest of the world is laughing at us.

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  • my2handsmy2hands Posts: 17,117
    PJPOWER said:
    I used to counsel “at risk” students and was always amazed at how easily the majority (especially rural) schools could be accessed.  Some even have their main office in the fucking middle of the school where you have to walk past several classrooms to get to it.  That’s not securing a campus in my mind.  I live in TX, and nowhere near the majority schools/campuses have armed security personnel
    Sounds like red states don't like to pay taxes or fund education to me, sorry about your luck...

    i've gone to high schools & middle schools in my state on a weekly basis for 15 years and have seen them make changes and invest in infrastructure...  main offices are at main entrances... must he buzzed into every school... most schools you also gave to be buzzed through the main office so it's at least 2 doors... everybody must show ID... police officer at every school... staff dedicated to discipline/behavior issues/high risk kids... wellness centers with trained therapeutic staff... child protective workers at all elementary & middle schools...


  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 42,994


    I can't believe some people support this idea. It just seems to crazy to me. Teachers are underpaid to begin with, now we are going to bestow upon some of them the duty of protecting the entire school, in addition to educating these kids?

    How are we going to pay for that?

    How is the training going to be handled?

    What about the insurance/liability implications for having armed teachers walking around school grounds?

    How soon before some kid accidentally gets their hands on their teacher's loaded gun at school?


    This isn't even putting a band on the problem....to me this is pouring gasoline on a fire.


    The rest of the world is laughing at us.

    Exactly!  Or shaking their heads in disbelief.

    It blows my mind that people are actually suggested that arming teachers is the solution to the problem.  What kind of world do these people want to live in?  That kind of thinking is a direct line to "Let's just let everybody  have guns and see who is left standing".  If that's the kind of world we want then I'm damn glad I'm getting old because I want no part of it.  But then, I have nieces and nephews and grand nieces and nephews and godchildren and grand-godchildren and I don't want that world for them either so America, cool it with your obsession with guns.  It's NOT making the world a better place.
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni











  • The JugglerThe Juggler Posts: 49,569
    edited February 2018
    PJPOWER said:
    If I remember correctly, most airlines started putting armed air marshals on planes after 911...now why do you think they would do that?


    How would that be the same thing as arming teachers? Wouldn't this analogy work for you more if they started arming flight attendants? Air marshals = security guard/cop in school.


    You know what else happened after 9/11? They banned the weapon the terrorists used to seize control of the planes....

    www.myspace.com
  • pjhawkspjhawks Posts: 12,743
    riley540 said:
    Profiling is the most affective way to stop bad people from doing bad things. Many airports all over the world do this. Highly trained individuals. Don’t you want intelegent law enforcement that can stop these things? The greater good is that millions of people legally own guns to protect them selves and their families, and a few crooked people decided it was a good idea to shoot up schools/public places. Private gun dealers must do better. Law enforcement must do better. The government must do better. We can keep this stuff out of the hands of shitty people. 
    ha ha i love this comment.  i hear it all the time from gun people. where do you live that you need to protect yourself and your family? 99.9% of people never need to protect themselves from a home invasion of any sort. it's just not something that happens. people you don't know aren't coming to kill you in your home.  it's an irrational fear. do you know anyone who has ever had to use a gun to protect themselves in their own  home from the boogie man you gun owners fear? 

    and are you using an assault rifle to protect your family? 


  • The JugglerThe Juggler Posts: 49,569
    pjhawks said:
    ha ha i love this comment.  i hear it all the time from gun people. where do you live that you need to protect yourself and your family? 99.9% of people never need to protect themselves from a home invasion of any sort. it's just not something that happens. people you don't know aren't coming to kill you in your home.  it's an irrational fear. do you know anyone who has ever had to use a gun to protect themselves in their own  home from the boogie man you gun owners fear? 

    and are you using an assault rifle to protect your family? 



    They live in a fantasy world because they've been brainwashed by the NRA over the last 10-20 years. Just listen to LaPierre's speech yesterday. Fucking craziness.
    www.myspace.com
  • OnWis97OnWis97 St. Paul, MN Posts: 5,450
    At which the FBI dropped the ball and the guard became a coward so there is PLENTY of blame to be thrown around.
    That the FBI dropped the ball is really neither here nor there unless we assume all, or even most, future shootings will be as predictable as this one is suggested to have been.
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  • dignindignin Posts: 9,431
    The nerve of Trump and others to call the cop a coward when they have done fuck all to stop this kind of act by banning assault weapons.

    Those spineless politicians are afraid to take a stand against the NRA, and the cop is a coward for not going into a battle with someone armed with an assault weapon.
  • PJPOWERPJPOWER Posts: 6,499
    my2hands said:
    Sounds like red states don't like to pay taxes or fund education to me, sorry about your luck...

    i've gone to high schools & middle schools in my state on a weekly basis for 15 years and have seen them make changes and invest in infrastructure...  main offices are at main entrances... must he buzzed into every school... most schools you also gave to be buzzed through the main office so it's at least 2 doors... everybody must show ID... police officer at every school... staff dedicated to discipline/behavior issues/high risk kids... wellness centers with trained therapeutic staff... child protective workers at all elementary & middle schools...


    Don’t get me wrong, a lot have gone that route and paid heavily to redesign entrances with buzzers and things, but the smaller districts often drop the ball here.  
  • PJPOWERPJPOWER Posts: 6,499
    edited February 2018


    How would that be the same thing as arming teachers? Wouldn't this analogy work for you more if they started arming flight attendants? Air marshals = security guard/cop in school.


    You know what else happened after 9/11? They banned the weapon the terrorists used to seize control of the planes....

    I would be okay with airlines arming pilots and even if the flight attendants had access to a vault with a pistol carrying frangible ammunition, u?
    Post edited by PJPOWER on
  • mrussel1mrussel1 Posts: 30,436
    At which the FBI dropped the ball and the guard became a coward so there is PLENTY of blame to be thrown around.
    So did the children of Sandy Hook, the people in Las Vegas, Pulse, etc. 
  • OnWis97OnWis97 St. Paul, MN Posts: 5,450
    This is from MSNBC, so I suspect it's fake...

    http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/utah-teacher-shoots-herself-the-leg-while-school  
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  • OnWis97 said:
    That the FBI dropped the ball is really neither here nor there unless we assume all, or even most, future shootings will be as predictable as this one is suggested to have been.
    The FBI admitted to dropping the ball so it is here and there.
  • mrussel1 said:
    So did the children of Sandy Hook, the people in Las Vegas, Pulse, etc. 
    I can revisit what went wrong there too if you'd like but I'd rather stay on topic here because we've talked about them already.
  • PJPOWERPJPOWER Posts: 6,499
    The FBI admitted to dropping the ball so it is here and there.
    I think so. It would have been one thing if the agency had followed protocols and this asshat just slipped through the cracks.  It’s entirely another thing when they did not even follow protocol...gross negligence by the agency specifically designed to identify and stop these types of people.  What’s the point of an FBI background check when they don’t even follow protocol in putting the important information in the system???
  • OnWis97OnWis97 St. Paul, MN Posts: 5,450
    The FBI admitted to dropping the ball so it is here and there.
    For assessing blame for what just happened?  Yes.  For improvement in the future?  Sure.  But the problem with shootings is going to usually highlight shooters about whom the FBI is not warned about.  So blaming the FBI in response to "Those 17 children lost ALL their rights so that a small % can retain their right to these weapons of war.  Seems a little fucked up" is neither here nor there. Future children/people will lose their lives for the same reason.  It's not going to be the FBI's fault every time.  
    1995 Milwaukee     1998 Alpine, Alpine     2003 Albany, Boston, Boston, Boston     2004 Boston, Boston     2006 Hartford, St. Paul (Petty), St. Paul (Petty)     2011 Alpine, Alpine     
    2013 Wrigley     2014 St. Paul     2016 Fenway, Fenway, Wrigley, Wrigley     2018 Missoula, Wrigley, Wrigley     2021 Asbury Park     2022 St Louis     2023 Austin, Austin
    2024 Napa, Wrigley, Wrigley
  • OnWis97 said:
    For assessing blame for what just happened?  Yes.  For improvement in the future?  Sure.  But the problem with shootings is going to usually highlight shooters about whom the FBI is not warned about.  So blaming the FBI in response to "Those 17 children lost ALL their rights so that a small % can retain their right to these weapons of war.  Seems a little fucked up" is neither here nor there. Future children/people will lose their lives for the same reason.  It's not going to be the FBI's fault every time.  
    Is this what a "strawman argument" is? 
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