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Quantum_Squirrel
Krakatoa
Quantum_Squirrel
reply to post by MysteriousHusky
Although i believe that guns are so inherent in American culture to ever remove them.
Americans seem to not grasp the basic correlation between.....
Lots of lots of people having guns...
And lots and lots of people getting shot...
So far (it seems the actual data and events show) that lots and lots of people in a "gun free zone" get shot. So, does that sound safer to you?
Please let me browse your 'Data' and proof of this statement
All of these rights are subject to the limitations clause (section 1) and some of these rights are subject to the notwithstanding clause (section 33). The limitations clause in section 1 allows governments to justify certain infringements of Charter rights.
macman
reply to post by Quantum_Squirrel
Oh, so people don't get shot in the UK?
That is nice.
mwood
reply to post by MysteriousHusky
Sometimes having a good guy with a gun around is the only way to stop a crazy person with a gun.
That's not really the answer to me though.
I am not sure what the answer is to be blunt. I feel I know what the problem is maybe.
When did people become so non-caring?
When did human life become so cheap?
When did we decide that killing for a couple dollars was ok, or because someone said something you didn't like, or someone was walking somewhere you felt they shouldn't?
People will kill someone for the most minor reason and feel absolutely zero remorse.
Guns are not the problem, for whatever reason people have become the problem.
I have owned guns since I was 9 years old, hunted since I was 12 years old and own more than 25 firearms today.
I have gotten so mad, disgusted, hurt, disrespected and pissed off at times in my life I couldn't see straight
or think clearly and sometimes made some bad choices....But I NEVER once thought about taking a gun and ending someones life over it....never!
I am not religious but I have some morals and it is just wrong to kill someone except in self defense.
Is it because of violent video games? Do Violent movies teach us it's ok? Does the lack of religion and the fear of a god make it easier? I don't know, maybe a little of all the above.
Although I am not religious I can look back when people were more religious and most of them had more moral fiber than we do today. Even though I don't believe the Bible, It did give a lot of people guidance.
I think we should leave the guns alone and maybe Ban people...
Maybe license your reproductive organs and you have to show you are responsible before you turn out a bunch of kids.
Maybe get people and kids off all the crazy drugs they put everybody on now days.....
Maybe when somebody shows signs of being unstable.....have them checked out.
People that commit violent crimes should be removed from society permanently, no repeat offenders!
Maybe work on keeping families together so kids have 2 parents...
Maybe quit paying people to stay home, not work and pump out 10 kids with no fathers..
I really just don't know..........
MysteriousHusky
Summary
Thanks to everyone who voiced their opinion on this controversial right. In summary, here are some points I picked up (feel free to add more summary points in replies)
1. A right is a right even if you disagree with it.
2. The right to bear arms, while referenced as being outdated, is still close to heart as many Americans use keep personal firearms for protection while travelling etc.
3. More "good guys with guns" is one solution, but so is asking people on camera phones recording the incident to help the guy or girl getting beaten up and stop recording the incident.
4. Government may not have your best interests at heart as it takes on the role of a parent.
Thanks again to all who added to the lively discussion, all those who flagged thread, and all those who just like ATS.
MysteriousHusky
—unless they are authorized law enforcement personnel. [Starbucks]
Krakatoa
macman
reply to post by Quantum_Squirrel
Oh, so people don't get shot in the UK?
That is nice.
Yeah, and the IRA didn't terrorize the English population, ever.
And, England does not have a southern border with hordes of illegals crossing and rampant drug lord violence shooting and decapitating people. It's a wonderland, with fluffy clouds and pixie dust in the air....
macman
reply to post by Quantum_Squirrel
Oh, so people don't get shot in the UK?
That is nice.
bigfatfurrytexan
reply to post by Quantum_Squirrel
But you also seem to ignore that the culture on this side of the planet is wholly different than on your side of the planet.
My grandfather was still shooting at indians when he was a kid. I know one of Pancho Villa's girlfriends from way back in the day (or did know, she died last year).
This is not all that far removed from the wild frontier. Most of America is similar, with the east and west coasts being exceptions.
Besides, the whole "don't tread on me" mindset. I have a flag flying outside my house, and 1 hanging behind me at my desk at work. Its just the fabric I am stitched from.
An off-duty member of the SAS emerged as a hero of the Nairobi siege yesterday, after he was credited with saving up to 100 lives. The soldier was having coffee at the Westgate mall when it was attacked by Islamists on Saturday. With a gun tucked into his waistband, he was pictured helping two women from the complex. Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk... Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
so there is this incident to point out that yes armed citizens or in this case off duty military (good guys with guns) can make a huge impact in these kind of things at least for the people they saved
He is said to have returned to the building on a dozen occasions, despite intense gunfire. A friend in Nairobi said: ‘What he did was so heroic. He was having coffee with friends when it happened. ‘He went back in 12 times and saved 100 people. Imagine going back in when you knew what was going on inside.’ Sources said the soldier was with the Special Air Service, or SAS. He cannot be named for security reasons. The British Special Forces regularly train and operate out of Kenya, and have been involved in tracking UK citizens involved with hardline Islamists in Somalia and Yemen. Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk... Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
MysteriousHusky
Source: NBC article
National Rifle Association leader Wayne LaPierre argued on NBC’s Meet the Press that “there weren’t enough good guys with guns" to confront the shooter responsible for last week's Washington Navy Yard rampage and he insisted that "when the good guys with guns got there, it stopped.”
However, more "good guys with guns" is potentially counter-productive as increases the likelihood of these tragedies when one of the "good guys" goes through a phase and snaps.
Additionally, more "good guys with guns" would create the atmosphere of a military state and likely increase corruption.
In his appearance on Meet the Press last December LaPierre warned that, “We have a mental health system in this country that has completely and totally collapsed. We have no national database of these lunatics.”
Heightened database record-keeping brings the U.S. closer to a security state where everyone is under surveillance. Perhaps only those who choose to exercise their Constitutional right to bear arms should be in a database ensuring the privacy of those who opt out of getting a firearm.