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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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This link, which is supportive, can still only cite 24 occasions in 30 years where an armed civilian has ended or prevented a mass shooting. http://memepoliceman.com/list-of-mas...med-civilians/ Compare that to the 1,624 mass shootings that there were in just the last 5 years! https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...s-gun-violence I don't know how many mass shootings there have been in the last 30 years, but if you extrapolate from the last 5 you would get something like 9,700. 24 is 0.2% so a educated estimate of how many mass shootings have been stopped by armed civilians is a whopping 0.2% The reasons are obvious: - Most people (even if they have a licence to carry a gun/own a gun) don't take them to church, cinema, school, concert etc. - Even if they did have a gun on them, the panic and confusion would probably prevent them from pinpointing the shooter - the shooter may have an AR15 or other automatic weapon and the civilian just a hand gun - Joe public is generally not Dirty Harry, and if someone is shooting, 99% of people, even if they have a gun, would not run towards the gunfire. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
Isn’t it funny how facts can kill a discussion stone dead. The silence is deafening..................................
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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When someone mentions banning or controlling guns, there is the usual flurry of indignant responses citing freedom, the Constitution, defending your home, etc. The argument gets deflected and muddled, as intended, so that the specifics of any gun control suggestion get lost and when the smoke dies down, no progress is made. This all by design. However, when someone cuts through the smokescreen and gets to the specifics, like your post, the silence is, as you say, deafening. 3 weeks ago, I made a similar post in another thread. Again, no responses ... The Gun Lobby strategy is clear & deliberate: take it to an emotional place and obfuscate the argument until you have either worn down your opponent or rundown the time available. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
or perhaps everyone just got bored of the same thing being posted again and again.
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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First, if someone stops a mass shooting before it becomes a mass shooting then no mass shooting occurred so those who wish to ban guns don't count it in their statistics. Second, the majority of mass shootings occur in places where lawful gun owners are prohibited from carrying firearms. If a lawful gun owner is prevented from being armed then they really can't stop anything. Third, it's nearly axiomatic that when a rampage shooter is engaged by an armed defender they "self terminate". The anti-gun crowd generally doesn't count that as an armed responder stopping the massacre. For example, in 2012 a 20 year old kid with an AR-15 went into a shopping mall in Clackamas Oregon. The kid shot up the area outside a department store killing two people. He was confronted by a civilian who was carrying a concealed handgun. The civilian didn't shoot because of the potential to hit someone in the crowd but the assailant took that opportunity to head into a stairwell and commit suicide. The event isn't considered to be a "mass shooting" because less than 4 people were killed. Last November a deranged man walked into a Costco (warehouse style retail store) in Lenexa, Kansas. The man announced that he was an off duty US Marshall and that he was there to kill people. An off duty Kansas City police officer confronted the deranged man, ordered him to drop the gun and killed him when the suspect turned to shoot. Again, no mass shooting will get counted because no mass shooting occurred. In this case it was stopped before it even got started. In June of 2016 a man started shooting at a crowd outside a nightclub in Lyman, South Carolina. Someone in the vicinity was armed and returned fire. The shooter was struck in the leg and stopped shooting. Again, it isn't counted as a mass shooting because it doesn't fit the criteria. When impossible or unrealistic parameters are put on any reply to a given argument it becomes useless to respond. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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---------- Post added at 07:52 ---------- Previous post was at 07:37 ---------- Quote:
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You (again) have avoided the main problem i.e. the access to semi-automatic weapons by civilians. Look at the guns used in the most deadly mass shootings: Deadliest mass shootings since 1949 If these were banned, in the same way as fully automatics are then the numbers of people killed would reduce. You are obviously in favour of Gun ownership so I will ask this question yet again: why do gun owners in the US need, not want, semi-automatic weapons? Just to clear so we don't go down the rathole of "they want to take away all my guns!", I am discussing gun categories that fall outside of the group deemed appropriate to defend you, your family and your home. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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This disadvantage was recognized well before the invention of the semi-automatic firearm. It was not at all uncommon for an infnatryman using a musket to be supported by a loader and two or more backup weapons. The infantryman would fire a round, hand the musket off, take a loaded one and fire again as the first weapon was reloaded. In later years this lead to the development of the cartridge which improved loading times compared to component loads. I would also note that firearms are not required to commit a mass casualty attack. In 2014, in Kunming, China, 8 assailants stabbed to death 31 bystanders and injured another 140. The attackers, by the way, were stopped by a responder with either a fully automatic or semi-automatic firearm. THAT is the purpose of modern firearms and that is why self defense minded people want and need them. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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You *want* one; all else is self-serving waffle. You aren’t self-defence minded, you’re just self obsessed, determined to defend an idea of freedom that is about as far as it is possible to get from the desire for self-determination felt by the white Europeans who founded your country. As I’ve said already, your society has a sickness deep in its soul. The so-called gun control debate is so far from rational that I’m just glad that it’s not my fight. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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In the US the homicide rate is driven primarily by gang culture (suicide is the single largest factor in gun deaths but that's a different matter). Certain neighborhoods in certain cities tend to heavily skew the homicide rate. It is the resistance of local authorities in those areas to actively enforce laws which facilitates those homicides. Ultimately the difference is cultural, not a matter of the rate of gun ownership. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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---------- Post added at 22:36 ---------- Previous post was at 22:31 ---------- Quote:
I Just keep reading it back to myself. Surely aversion to homicide is normal human nature. Are you suggestion the USA has a cultural passion for homicide? |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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As far as sports cars go, I've got one. I'm also satisfied with my genitals. Admittedly, I do have a bit of disagreement with my bladder at 2am from time to time but that's not really a genitals issue. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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I have tried looking for the source of that stat, and the most commonly quoted source is a CDC press release - http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr61/nvsr61_06.pdf There is nothing in that press release to support the 80% statistic. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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While there are several studies by ostensibly partisan groups available I prefer to go with something simple from the US Center for Disease Control. This study is a bit dated but I'll link to source data that is current. - https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6103a2.htm Quote:
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This can create a "Gang Violence" category that is underreported because many gang related homicides will then fall into the "Arguments" or "Drug Involvement" categories, both of which are often tied to gang activity. This data - https://wisqars.cdc.gov:8443/nvdrs/nvdrsController.jsp gives an overview of homicides by circumstance for 5 relatively low crime states. The data from the study cited in the first link covers certain high crime cities but uses the same definition of "Gang Violence". Because of the narrow definition of "Gang Violence" used in these studies it's difficult to come up with hard data. The CDC study, however, emphasizes gang activity as a significant factor in, especially, the youth homicide rate. This study by the National Gang Center (also a government entity) is a bit more clear regarding the impact of gangs on homicide rate, especially in more populated cities - https://www.nationalgangcenter.gov/s...-gang-problems Quote:
I noticed that one of the links goes to a data page that can't render outside of my search. The search parameters for that link were entered from this page - https://wisqars.cdc.gov:8443/nvdrs/nvdrsDisplay.jsp - and included: 1. Violent death counts by Known Circumstances 2. Checked off only Homicide 3 & 4 were "all" 5. was all years, all states, all everything else |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
A depressing but not unsurprising revelation that the Supreme Court nominee is a Gun Nut:
https://twitter.com/igorvolsky/statu...54753896992769 Quote:
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