I have one. If anybody broke in my apartment, chances are I would use a kitchen knife instead. More handy, just grab it and go. As lethal as gun in close quarters. No danger of a ricochet hurting some of the family.
So, you felt your gun use was responsible? Did your gun ownership contribute in some way? Did the shooter get his inspiration from watching you target shoot? Or did holding the gun make you want to do the same thing the shooter did? I mock, yes.Leaford, can I tell you a story? Twenty years ago I was quite involved in target shooting, nothing heavy calibre, just paper punching, at the time completely legal. My wife and I were moving house and we put an offer in on a house, We lost, no big deal, bought another house instead.
A few years later I was sitting in the newsroom of my employer at the time, trying to fix their computer systems, I spent the whole day looking with increasing horror at the rushes coming in. On that day Thomas Hamilton shot dead 16 primary kids and their teacher.
If we had got that house earlier, my son would have been in that classroom. The day after is happened I handed my Firearms Certificate and guns in. I've never touched a gun again.
And if that isn't just the absolute worst mischaracterization of what I've said, I don't know what is.Guns DO KILL PEOPLE. end of story. If you want to justify the personal holding of firearms, please try, but shooting the British is no longer a valid reason.
well i dont know that many 8 year olds and teachers carry guns as standard classroom equiptment.
You just gotta look at American campus shootings, ( take your pick , there's plenty to choose from ) to see Guns serve no purpose in civilian hands.
I have one. If anybody broke in my apartment, chances are I would use a kitchen knife instead. More handy, just grab it and go. As lethal as gun in close quarters. No danger of a ricochet hurting some of the family.
So, you felt your gun use was responsible? Did your gun ownership contribute in some way? Did the shooter get his inspiration from watching you target shoot? Or did holding the gun make you want to do the same thing the shooter did? I mock, yes.
But the serious point is, the shooter is evil, not the gun.
Now here's a story of my own. A few years ago there was a school shooting incident here, too, at the Appalachian Law School. Well, of course the US has had several, but in that particular one, an off duty policeman and a private citizen with a concealed carry permit STOPPED AND APPREHENDED the perpetrator with handguns they retrieved from their vehicles. He had already killed 3 people, but he was stopped before he could continue killing more. This was before the campus police arrived, long before they could have arrived.
Another time, in Pearl, Mississippi, a principal retrieved a handgun and apprehended a student shooter who was trying to escape after his rampage. The damage was done, but who knows how much more the kid might have done if he had escaped?
I like those stories much better than the ones like Columbine, Virginia Tech, or your story; where "gun-free" zones become killing grounds for people who KNOW no one will be able to stop them.
And if that isn't just the absolute worst mischaracterization of what I've said, I don't know what is.
Really, everything I wrote, and you take away from it "to shoot the british?" That's what you think I said? REALLY?![]()
You can't SEE humor on the net, that's why the Net Gods gave us Smilies.Well Leaford, I'm sad that you can't see a small attempt on my part to bring humour into a serious situation.
I try to argue the evidence, so sufficient evidence would convince me, but the evidence is on my side, at least in the urban US. Crime rates have gone up when handguns have been banned, and gone down when concealed carry laws were passed.If it is more difficult to get hold of guns, gun crime goes down, look at the relative violence rates, look at the deaths. I know I will never convince you, if you like guns.
And how would that stop that one evil person? Was he in your gun club? Would he not have gotten his if you hadn't had yours? Sorry, but you and your gun have NOTHING to do with him and his. Evil people do the evil that they do with guns, knives, baseball bats,cars, bombs. Disarming yourself does nothing to stop that, it just leaves you defenseless.As for Dunblane, did I feel my owning a gun contributed? Yes Absolutely. If there had been less people interested in guns, less gun clubs, less guns.
Both my examples were against ARMED perpetrators. Good people with guns stopping evil people with guns. And if the Baddies have guns, but the goodies don't? Columbine.The US by it's very constitution is a gun culture, that's something you have to live with.
The argument of guns saving life only applies if the Goodies have guns and the Baddies don't.
Of course. Every cop in the US is armed. Most of them go through their careers without shooting anyone. But they use their guns every day. To stop, hold, and apprehend criminals. Or even without drawing it, cooling off potential violence with the silent threat of the holstered gun. Actual shootings are statistically rare. But just ask any cop if their gun has saved their life, or the lives of others, whether they've fired it in action or not.Are you seriously saying that in the US more lives are saved by guns than taken by guns?
Hamilton was no more a convicted criminal than me for example. He held his guns and ammunition legally.
there is no place in civilian hands for Guns...period
Glad you can admit that you are a fool. So I am to believe that you were involved in the decision to drop the bombs and you care less about your soldiers? Stating it as absolute fact means you must have been there first hand and been a deciding factor on it. Otherwise you are just another anti-government crybaby too scared to fight a war and too scared to fight against it except on an e-smoking forum. If you know all the answers, maybe you should share it with the rest of the world who is obviously too dumb to grasp what you seem to have been born knowing.
Revisionist theorizing. The historical documents show the discussions at the time focused on the war effort, and the US lives that would be lost in an invasion.
Leaford, looks like you're swinging in the wind out there, so I'll chime in to say I'm 100% with you on the gun thing. But I also know it does no good to argue it with the antis.
Those of you from other places, quoting U.S. stats, need to look deeper. Our highest crime is in cities with gun bans. Look at those stats and not the U.S. as a whole. The campus shootings are taking place in gun-free zones. There are some changes happening on that front though. Some school districts and college campuses are reversing the policy.
I have a choice and I'm glad to have that choice. I choose to protect myself, and yes that includes many hours of frequent practice, training, licensing, background checks. All the things the criminals do not have to do. But my circumstances are a bit different than most. I live rural. Nobody can hear me scream from here. I'm ready to protect myself if need be, and I'm capable of doing so. I fail to see anything horrid about that.