Super Amputee Cat
Cyburbian
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WT is gonna be WT
WT is gonna be WT
More than you (or any other half-normal Cyburbian) would ever want to know:I want to know more about the IROC-Z police car.
I think this is a former church, not an active one.We should start pulling church tax exempt status for talking politics.
Not Surprising...
Fox has the details of the Indiana Shooting front and center. CNN you need to search for it. I guess they don't want the news to get out as an example of an armed civilian saving lives.
***BTW, this was yet another gun-free zone, but the person with the concealed carry permit is willing to take a risk to be judged by 12 than be carried by 6.
This.The biased news is gonna play. The problem is of course is not how it was resolved, but how it started. A crazy man had access to guns he shouldn't have. Also, I'm assuming the guy who shot back had some kind of training. If the guy returning fire had no training we might have more dead and wounded. The solution to gun violence is not more guns.
It is interesting though that one case of this, versus 20 cases of other scenarios, and yet we continually hear that this is the way to go. Please ignore Uvalde, which clearly shows even LOTS of trained people with guns isn't better than one deranged person with a gun.The biased news is gonna play. The problem is of course is not how it was resolved, but how it started. A crazy man had access to guns he shouldn't have. Also, I'm assuming the guy who shot back had some kind of training. If the guy returning fire had no training we might have more dead and wounded. The solution to gun violence is not more guns.
And this.It is interesting though that one case of this, versus 20 cases of other scenarios, and yet we continually hear that this is the way to go. Please ignore Uvalde, which clearly shows even LOTS of trained people with guns isn't better than one deranged person with a gun.
A Google search of "Indiana shooter" for me pulled up AP and then CNN as top stories. On CNN's landing page, I saw it without scrolling.It's not their top story though - should it be?
It is interesting though that one case of this, versus 20 cases of other scenarios, and yet we continually hear that this is the way to go. Please ignore Uvalde, which clearly shows even LOTS of trained people with guns isn't better than one deranged person with a gun.
You are correct and we need to find a better way to keep guns out of the hands of those who should not have them. You used the word “Crazy” so does that mean that you support the idea of mental health and somehow using that as a mechanism to prevent those with issues from getting guns and getting them help? This would be instead of preventing good people from being able to get weapons to protect themselves?The biased news is gonna play. The problem is of course is not how it was resolved, but how it started. A crazy man had access to guns he shouldn't have. Also, I'm assuming the guy who shot back had some kind of training. If the guy returning fire had no training we might have more dead and wounded. The solution to gun violence is not more guns.
Arming teachers, principals, and others in a school will do little to protect kids against an AR-15 and a person who wants to use it against humanity. More guns will never be the answer.When I go the CNN page directly, it wasn’t on the front page at all. I had to do a search. If this had a different ending, it would be bold letters across the top of the page.
Reality is this story does not meet their anti-gun narrative so they burry it. Reality is a Good Samaritan took action when it was most needed to save peoples lives.
Don’t ignore Uvalde! If anything it shows that the police won’t always be there to stop an shooter. What if there was a properly trained member of admin or even a janitor? How many lives could have been saved before he got into the classrooms? I support the police and many of them that I interact with support the people arming themselves.
As for saying those officers isn’t better than the shooter, how many did they kill? How many did the shooter kill. You and 10,000% in the reality that they failed to do what they should have done. But what did the principal do? Nothing, because laws say he can’t protect those kids.
You are correct and we need to find a better way to keep guns out of the hands of those who should not have them. You used the word “Crazy” so does that mean that you support the idea of mental health and somehow using that as a mechanism to prevent those with issues from getting guns and getting them help? This would be instead of preventing good people from being able to get weapons to protect themselves?
Really is violent crime is at record rates and things are getting worse. We need to find a way to keep the guns out of the hands of those who should not have them, while still allowing good people to protect themselves and those around them.
Arming teachers, principals, and others in a school will do little to protect kids against an AR-15 and a person who wants to use it against humanity. More guns will never be the answer.
In the best case scenario, which is clearly what Indiana worked out to be, the "good guy with a gun" shot and killed the "bad guy with a gun" quickly, and likely before any additional bloodshed. The funny part is that if our laws potentially kept that bad guy from getting a gun, we wouldn't need to arm our teachers, have our kids do active shooter drills, and so on and so on. That guy in Indiana also wouldn't have had to killed a person. I am doubtful that he feels good about taking another human's life. Even if that human is evil. That is a heavy burden we seem to be okay putting on regular people. Or teachers. Or children.
We are so desensitized to the absolute terror that we see every day, that we actually want to create prisons for our children before trying anything related to fewer guns in our society. Every data point, every other country, all logic says that we should ban LOTS of guns, and we would see less shootings, less death, and less terror for our children to bare... yet here we stand wishing there were MORE guns to protect us...
Do you have a better alternative to keep people safe that is actually tangible? Because banning guns isn't working.Look, it's great the guy in Indiana took out the shooter. But the reality is most people (including trained police) are bad shots with a hand gun. And even if you are a great shot you have no idea if you'll be a great shot when the other guy is firing, people are dying and you're amped up. He got lucky in that he hit the shooter instead of another innocent bystander. That happens. A lot. But I guess that's just the price of "freedom" right?
I used the word crazy because you have to be crazy to decide to kill random people. It doesn't matter what weapon you use. We all know what laws need to be put in place. We just need to stop voting in the same jerks and sidetracking good gun laws with bullshit like taking away rights from the mentally ill. I'll bet there is nothing to show this guy was crazy. Never committed or diagnosed.You are correct and we need to find a better way to keep guns out of the hands of those who should not have them. You used the word “Crazy” so does that mean that you support the idea of mental health and somehow using that as a mechanism to prevent those with issues from getting guns and getting them help? This would be instead of preventing good people from being able to get weapons to protect themselves?
The good Samaritan did not get lucky. He fired 10 shots. He was lucky no one else was between him and the shooter.Look, it's great the guy in Indiana took out the shooter. But the reality is most people (including trained police) are bad shots with a hand gun. And even if you are a great shot you have no idea if you'll be a great shot when the other guy is firing, people are dying and you're amped up. He got lucky in that he hit the shooter instead of another innocent bystander. That happens. A lot. But I guess that's just the price of "freedom" right?
Huh? Is it not working because we aren't doing it?Because banning guns isn't working.
I am sorry, you are correct and I should have been more specific in my statement.Huh? Is it not working because we aren't doing it?
Yikes, that sounds like a Trump / NRA talking point if I have ever heard one. I assume you are using a SUPER broad definition of "gun-free zones" like a mall where a sign is posted as "no guns allowed!". Or like most public or private places in the United States, including Waffle House. Or are you just regurgitating something you heard once without actually looking up the data? Or are you defining "most" in some unique way that I don't even know about.I am sorry, you are correct and I should have been more specific in my statement.
Restricting access to guns for those who have gone through proper training and background checks is not working. These are commonly known as gun free zones, it is also the place where most mass shootings occur.
It's not about gun free zones it's about gun free people. If someone is crazy enough to decide to shoot up a place they aren't going to care if it's gun free or not. The places that get shot up are places where people gather like malls or places where the person had a connection like schools or the workplace. Yep, most schools are gun free. Mostly because I don't expect my kid needs to pack heat during math class and I don't think a 45 is going to help teach my kid how to read. Go call your congressman again. We keep doing it, but nothing happens so vote the @sshole out.I am sorry, you are correct and I should have been more specific in my statement.
Restricting access to guns for those who have gone through proper training and background checks is not working. These are commonly known as gun free zones, it is also the place where most mass shootings occur.
Yikes, that sounds like a Trump / NRA talking point if I have ever heard one. I assume you are using a SUPER broad definition of "gun-free zones" like a mall where a sign is posted as "no guns allowed!". Or like most public or private places in the United States, including Waffle House. Or are you just regurgitating something you heard once without actually looking up the data? Or are you defining "most" in some unique way that I don't even know about.
The details and definitions matter. And if you cite the Lott study, we both know that isn't factually accurate, so please just don't cite it, as it has been proven false A LOT since it was published and updated by the author.
Gun-free zones have nothing to do with banning guns. Nor do they actually relate to policy that would regulate guns. They are a "don't step on the grass" measure that do nothing more than try and push back against people who feel the need to hold a gun tight to them at all times, even when it isn't for sport, which is the common claim for the need for many weapons.
Can you elaborate on gun free people? If is disarming everyone, what is your solution to rid everyone but the military and police of guns? More so, do you really think those who are out to commit crimes will turn their weapons in? No one has said anything about arming kids. That is a very bad idea and I don't think anyone would suggest it.It's not about gun free zones it's about gun free people. If someone is crazy enough to decide to shoot up a place they aren't going to care if it's gun free or not. The places that get shot up are places where people gather like malls or places where the person had a connection like schools or the workplace. Yep, most schools are gun free. Mostly because I don't expect my kid needs to pack heat during math class and I don't think a 45 is going to help teach my kid how to read. Go call your congressman again. We keep doing it, but nothing happens so vote the @sshole out.
Make it substantially harder to get the gun in the first place. Then tax it and regulate it like a car. Require insurance. Etc., etc. I mean I think the ideas are out there. The problem is the unwillingness to try them because, "THEY ARE TAKING OUR GUNS!".If you can come up way an effective, and realistic way, to prevent people who want to do harm from entering these places, please let me know.
Do you want to debate the topic at hand or keep going back to my incorrect use of the word ban?Make it substantially harder to get the gun in the first place. Then tax it and regulate it like a car. Require insurance. Etc., etc. I mean I think the ideas are out there. The problem is the unwillingness to try them because, "THEY ARE TAKING OUR GUNS!".
The problem isn't the lack of potential solutions, it is people who think guns are more important than children's lives. That more guns in the hands of people somehow makes the world safer, even though there is NO data on earth that supports that. The fact that as the most greatest bestest amazingness country in the free world, we have a problem that no other nation does. Unless you count Chile... and then, well that isn't exactly a glowing comparison.
We have lots of realistic, effective means to try. You will say they aren't realistic because you don't want to give up your guns. That is fine, but own it. It isn't because there aren't rational, reasonable solutions that would make this better quickly. We just won't do them.
Sadly these are all faulty arguments.
1. You having a gun is just giving you a false sense of safety. If someone wanted to kill you it would happen. Plus I would normally say how often have you been in a situation the required a gun, but it seems more and more that argument is being reduced. Every situation that required me to hold a gun was in the military.
2. People don't shoot up gun free zones because they are gun free. They do it because of some connection. It's either amount of people/damage or personal.
3. There were guns at Uvalde. Held by people trained to shoot guns. They didn't seem to stop the violence. Having guns there or not is not a big priority on the shooter's mind. Once a person decides to go on a rampage rational thought about hey I could get shot or go to jail no longer exists. The reason shooters don't shoot up guns stores, no one is there. I'm sure it also doesn't make headline news because it's not much of a story that one guy got killed in a gun store.
State AGs can be the worst.Changing subjects because we can all argue guns and get nowhere just like the politicians. I'm hoping these idiots learn you can't just say what you want. This doctor in Indiana seems to have a legit defamation case and I hope the court slams the AG for saying dumb lies for political wins. Maybe they'll stop and remember why our past politicians had some amount of decorum or at least didn't comment.
the woke environment at U of M
Aren't sports people just supposed to 'shut up and stick to the sport they perform'?I applaud Harbaugh for having the courage to express his believes on a very controversial topic, especially given the woke environment at U of M. Well done sir.
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Jim Harbaugh tells pro-life event in Plymouth: ‘Let the unborn be born’
Harbaugh, a Catholic, was joined by his wife and Michigan assistant coach George Helow at a fundraiser in Plymouth on Sunday.www.mlive.com
Aren't sports people just supposed to 'shut up and stick to the sport they perform'?
But he's not active in his sport though in the manner Harbaugh is, right?I dunno, ask Hershel.
Depends on which of his personalities shows up on a given day.But he's not active in his sport though in the manner Harbaugh is, right?
I guess if you look at it that way, he can be a man for all people. Surely, one of his personalities leans at least a little left.Depends on which of his personalities shows up on a given day.
If that is a dig at the fact that Harbaugh is a terrible coach 95% of the time, and 99% of the time in games that matter, I am not sure where my support button is located.Depends on which of his personalities shows up on a given day.
It was a mild shot at Herschel.If that is a dig at the fact that Harbaugh is a terrible coach 95% of the time, and 99% of the time in games that matter, I am not sure where my support button is located.![]()
I'm going to pretend that it was then.It was a mild shot at Herschel.
Me, none. Wife, 8. She would tell me stories of some of the crap that was in her classes and that the teachers pressed. Granted she got a degree in Biopsychology, but that is beyond the point.Sounds like you are a man of experience. How many semesters did you spend at U of M? Not trying to rip on you, just hoping you could provide some context. I once got called out as a communist from a classmate because I was the recipient of a Pell Grant. If you've spent some time there, you'd know it is not as woke as you'd expect. The anti-wokesters are there in good ol' a-squared! (Let me tell you about my roommate who was a member of Campus Crusade for Christ, I once had a joyous night of prayer in our dorm room with him and his pastor.)
When they are using their platform for political positions, then yes. But if you would have read the article, he was speaking at a right to life rally. Not an awards show, not a football game, not social media, not a press conference. He was sharing his views at an event where people agreed with him.Aren't sports people just supposed to 'shut up and stick to the sport they perform'?
You know it's the same thing. Don't try to hand wave it away as 'different'.When they are using their platform for political positions, then yes. But if you would have read the article, he was speaking at a right to life rally. Not an awards show, not a football game, not social media, not a press conference. He was sharing his views at an event where people agreed with him.