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| Miscellaneous Discussion of non-Trek topics. |
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#106 | |
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Captain
Location: At star's end.
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
The punchline would be - both the frequency and number of victims are MUCH higher in SUA/countries with loose gun control. Statistics along those lines are easy to find. Feel free to check them out (although I suspect you don't want to confront these facts because you really don't like their inevitable conclusion). All your rhetoric or bias can't change these figures. And the mental health care "proposals" are but weak attempts to obfuscate said figures.
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"Let truth and falsehood grapple ... Truth is strong" - John Milton |
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#107 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Great Britain
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate Put just to pull a few details (homicides) US 2.98 per 100 000 UK 0.04 per 100 000 Japan 0.02 per 100 000 As countries like the UK and Japan have some of the most strict gun laws in the developed world, the facts speak for themselves. (of course other crimes such as Knife crimes might be higher in those countries).
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On the continent of wild endeavour in the mountains of solace and solitude there stood the citadel of the time lords, the oldest and most mighty race in the universe looking down on the galaxies below sworn never to interfere only to watch. |
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#108 |
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Captain
Location: At star's end.
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
In 1996, Australia changed its gun laws following a particularly bad mass shooting: banning assault rifles, severely restricting other types of fire-arms, limiting magazines to five rounds (three for pump-action shotguns, auto-loaders were banned outright). Researchers compared the rate of mass shootings before and after - using fixed criteria, not just what "felt" like a mass-shooting - and found that the rate dropped from one every 18 months before the change, to just one event in the 16 years since the change. There were no other noticeable changes that might be responsible for the reduction; no reduction in poverty, or improvements in mental health treatment. And judging by other crime rates, there wasn't a significant change in culture or economics or policing. Hell, even the number of firearms in society recovered within a few years. And the only things that did change in Australia, it shared with the US. There was an increase in antidepressant use in Australia, but so too in the US. Video-games violence became more photorealistic, and so too in the US. It's such a perfect experiment: Similar culture. Only one major change, gun laws. And one clear result, the virtual elimination of mass shootings. If you want to reduce the rate of mass shootings in the US by an order of magnitude, Australia can tell you how to do it. But your country won't like the taste of the medicine. Indeed, in USA, many DE FACTO accept mass shootings as the one that just happened (as long as they are not the victims, of course) if that's the price to pay for them to keep having assault rifles, high-capacity magazines, etc.
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"Let truth and falsehood grapple ... Truth is strong" - John Milton Last edited by Edit_XYZ; December 16 2012 at 02:51 PM. |
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#109 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Great Britain
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
Would you still support the current gun laws if your child/sibling/mother/father etc.. was murdered by one?
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On the continent of wild endeavour in the mountains of solace and solitude there stood the citadel of the time lords, the oldest and most mighty race in the universe looking down on the galaxies below sworn never to interfere only to watch. |
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#110 | |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Massachusetts
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
As for the gun issue, you could make them as illegal as could be a someone determined enough could still get one on the black market. Drugs are illegal and people get them all the time. As for the culture of violence, I agree with this mostly. Violence is glorified in TV and movies. If there aren't enough explosions and bodies, we complain it was dull and lacked action. Video games are even worse. There's another shoot 'em up. game every 5 minutes. You're actively fantasizing about mowing down space aliens or the Taliban. As for the guns, I would say leave the semi-automatic weapons to law enforcement and the military. You want a gun for hunting or self protection or just to fire off a few rounds at the range, great. But what do you need an uzi for? Worried about the zombie apocolypse? |
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#111 |
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Captain
Location: At star's end.
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
They DO NOT translate into mass shootings. In Australia and the other countries with strict gun control, certain guns being illegal DOES NOT translate into every loser who wants to shoot people because he's depressed being able to get his/her hands on one via the black market. As such, both of these arguments are obviously fallacies, merely empty rhetoric whose purpose is to avoid addressing the real problem: the ubiquity/easy access to assault guns/high-capacity magazines/etc in the USA.
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"Let truth and falsehood grapple ... Truth is strong" - John Milton |
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#112 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: somewhere boringly picturesque
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
to anyone saying this isnt the time to talk about gun control, open your eyes. this is the perfect time to make a change that will save lives. the statistics bare it out. maybe something could come from this tragedy. (i'm sure i put forward this arguement in another thread once upon a time and was laughed of as a communist by some gun nut. ) take all the guns. melt them down.
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Les yeux sans visage, Eyes without a face, Captain. - Harry Kim Hello to Jason Isaacs!
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#113 | |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
Drugs are illegal and people get them all the time, yes. Now imagine a world were all drugs are perfectly legal.
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lol
l /\ |
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#114 | |
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Admiral
Location: Italy, EU
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
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Scientist. Gentleman. Teacher. Fighter. Lover. Father. |
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#115 | |
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Writer
Location: Yorkshire
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
__________________
"I got two modes with people- Bite, and Avoid" ![]() Reading: The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien) Blog- http://lonemagpie.livejournal.com |
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#116 | |
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Writer
Location: Yorkshire
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bath_School_disaster
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"I got two modes with people- Bite, and Avoid" ![]() Reading: The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien) Blog- http://lonemagpie.livejournal.com |
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#117 |
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Writer
Location: Yorkshire
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
On Livejournal I was asked my opinion on gun ownership, related also to knives (think of the Chinese school attack yesterday)- this is what I replied: Both knives and guns have practical uses in certain situations (knives in the kitchen, guns in defending yourself against wild animals in some parts of the world, for example) and are easily misused elsewhere. I really think the problem with most people's contributions to debating gun ownership - on whichever side, in whichever country - is that they think there's some universal value about it, and don't get that different countries have different societal and cultural contexts as a result of their histories and populations. So people will say "oh, what worked in... Japan, say, will work in the US." But it won't, because one is a country that been ethnically homogenous for millennia, and spent centuries evolving a tiered social structure in which everyone knew where they fit in, and the other is a random mashup of peoples who came together in a war against a colonial centre... (In the UK, by the time handguns came along, they were already established as upper-class duelling weapons, not something of use or interest to the lower classes, for whom the shotgun was a more practical game-hunting and pest control device - which is why the UK never had that big a handgun lifestyle) To discuss whether gun ownership is good or bad, right or wrong - and to discuss what the nature of that ownership should be - you have to be discussing it about a specific society and with and understanding of how and why they are the way they are. That said, the US constitution was designed, contextually, to evolve and be amended over time, and the Second Amendment - written to cover swords, muskets, and pikes (there were *no* repeating weapons then) - was intended to be used for something akin to Switzerland's defence force laws, not to become the religious fetish totem that it has become, and they really need to think about updating it as it was always intended to by the Founding Fathers. Also, I'm with Chris Rock on the matter of ammo, which would solve a lot of problems!
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"I got two modes with people- Bite, and Avoid" ![]() Reading: The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien) Blog- http://lonemagpie.livejournal.com |
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#118 | ||
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Writer
Location: Yorkshire
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
books/games/music/comics have always been easier targets that sell papers. End of.
At the very least, though, they really need to *control*the guns more - following at least the pre-ban models of the UK/Australia/japan etc with licensing, fitness checks, etc. Even that would make a huge difference. But I can't see it happening in a country where interest groups block even minor legislation to track the resale of weapons previously used in crimes, as if that somehow translates to "they're taking our toys away!"
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"I got two modes with people- Bite, and Avoid" ![]() Reading: The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien) Blog- http://lonemagpie.livejournal.com |
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#119 |
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Captain
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
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#120 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Warped off into the sunset. With fond memories of most of you, and not a little sorrow at leaving.
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Re: MASSIVE Elementary School Shooting in CT *12-24 Maybe be dead
And I don't mean the tired old fallacies commentators are trotting out about violence in video games, etc. That's just another example of how people fall back into comfort zones and easy arguments rather than challenging anything. And, yes, for certain ideological groups it's a convenient scapegoat for having to confront the gun control question. They don't want to touch that because many of their supporters would be alienated, so they settle on video games as the demon. But I think the gun control question isn't that far removed itself from being, if not a scapegoat, then another means by which American society (and apparently the rest of us too) distracts itself from tackling the deeper social issues that plague any large nation. Of course the easy availability of guns in the US is significant and contributes to the ease and frequency of crimes like this, but when some people argue that it's not about guns, they mean that it's always preferrable to dig out the roots of the weed rather than just cut off the stalk and then aggressively monitor it so it doesn't grow back.
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We are all the sum of our tears. Too little and the ground is not fertile and nothing can grow there; too much, the best of us is washed away. |
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