My favorite aspect of this "boycott:NO MORE BUD LIGHT! NO MORE BUD LIGHT! NO MORE BUD LIGHT!
I don't drink it because it sucks, but that's a legitimate reason.
Fan the fire....
Every day, about 32 people in the United States die in drunk-driving crashes — that's one person every 45 minutes. In 2020, 11,654 people died in alcohol-impaired driving traffic deaths — a 14% increase from 2019. These deaths were all preventable - NHTSA.
229 children ages 0–14 years were killed in crashes involving an alcohol-impaired driver in 2020 - CDC.
Why no outrage at this number of 0-14 killed? Likely similar a number of 0-14 every year. The DUI death number will certainly increase when including ages 15-18 (to match school-age children) are included but could not locate that statistic. Far higher than school deaths per year shown below. Why no outrage at the overall DUI death number? Why no cry to ban alcohol as is done with firearms? Each is unacceptable, but not entirely preventable no matter what law is in effect.
Should we ban alcohol? Tried that - didn't work. Should be keep alcohol locked up and you have to check it out to use? Is alcohol vital to life? Has it prevented life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness of many? Absolutely. If the argument that firearms are not needed and should be banned, same holds true with alcohol. Think of how many needless DUI deaths can be prevented if only near beer was legal. You are far more likely to be injured or killed by DUI than a victim of a school shooting. But what about other shootings? What about other types of vehicle accidents? NHTSA projects that an estimated 42,915 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes last year, a 10.5% increase from the 38,824 fatalities in 2020. Thousands of people are killed in vehicle accidents which are caused by 99% human error. But we need vehicles. Well, I need my firearms. Which, incidentally, have never been used in a crime, along with million of others.
Should we have an absence of laws? Absolutely not. With laws, crime will still exist as this is human nature. Do laws prevent some crimes from happening? Yes, and that is best we can ask for since such activity can never be eliminated.
The school shooting data below includes stats from 1970 to 2021. Partial 2022 data can be found on the CHDS website - chds.us via campussafetymagazine.com.
About 90% of school-associated youth homicide incidents from 1994-2016 involved only one victim - CDC.
- There have been 1,924 school shooting incidents since 1970.
- 2021 had the greatest number of incidents, with 249. The next highest year was 2019 with 119.
- Since 1970, 637 people have died in shootings at schools. Additionally, 1,734 were injured and 73 suffered minor injuries.
- 2018 was the year with the highest number of people killed, including the shooter, with 51 killed. This was the year of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shooting, which claimed 17 lives.
CDC.gov:
View attachment 59912
nces.ed.gov
Violent deaths at school*
2018/19 - 39
2017/18 - 56
2016/17 - 42
2015/16 - 38
* A school-associated violent death is defined as “a homicide, suicide, or legal intervention death in which the fatal injury occurred on the campus of a functioning elementary or secondary school in the United States,” while the victim was on the way to or from regular sessions at school, or while the victim was attending or traveling to or from an official school-sponsored event. Victims may include non-students as well as students and staff members.
No child (or anybody) should be a victim of a violent crime. However, there will never be utopia where this exists. With freedoms, comes risks.
We were awarded a grant through the Safe Streets and Roads for All program (along with like a third of the country). Since working on the application, I've been hyperaware whenever I hear of a fatality in our region. I sincerely tell my husband to be careful every time he leaves the house. I try to remind him that driving is an inherently risky activity, and I often think about the amount of trust it requires of us to instill in the other people we are on the road with.I find this post interesting because, although this may not be the point you were making, I do find the lack of outrage on road safety and fatalities, as well as drunk driving, quite concerning and depressing. On top of that I am worried we are actually going down the same path with gun safety and mass shootings. In other words, things will stay exactly the way they have been, the trends either stay the same or more likely get worse, and US media/politics/culture in general keeps collectively shrugging about it until it finally becomes fully normalized and we lose the imagination to even envision a culture where the conditions are better. To think that we might not be far away from a reality where people react to news stories about mass shootings with the same detachment as news stories about traffic fatalities is pretty horrifying to me.
That was part of the reason for the post. If the ultimate goal is to protect our youth, why not the outrage at child DUI deaths as there are shooting deaths? Is an average of 200 under 14 years of age an acceptable number? Is one here, one there, acceptable? Alcohol prohibition will never happen again so it will always be around. The public seems good with enforcing existing laws even though many die from DUI. And to add more fuel, how many beverage companies are held responsible when there is a DUI death? None that I'm aware of. Firearm manufacturers are held responsible more and more, at least by lawsuit count, when a shooting occurs, even though the company did nothing illegal, the shooter was the responsible party. When a DUI death occurs, it is always the fault of the drinker and not Anheuser-Busch or Chevy. Maybe a bar gets sued for serving an intoxicated customer.I find this post interesting because, although this may not be the point you were making, I do find the lack of outrage on road safety and fatalities, as well as drunk driving, quite concerning and depressing. On top of that I am worried we are actually going down the same path with gun safety and mass shootings. In other words, things will stay exactly the way they have been, the trends either stay the same or more likely get worse, and US media/politics/culture in general keeps collectively shrugging about it until it finally becomes fully normalized and we lose the imagination to even envision a culture where the conditions are better. To think that we might not be far away from a reality where people react to news stories about mass shootings with the same detachment as news stories about traffic fatalities is pretty horrifying to me.
They are not quiet. A Tribute editorial responded to this incorrect talking point when it appeared during the Obama presidency. Post-presidency, Obama started My Brother's Keeper specifically to work on this.BLM is quiet, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are silent, when Obama was president, he was silent (and still is) and it was his city.
That was part of the reason for the post. If the ultimate goal is to protect our youth, why not the outrage at child DUI deaths as there are shooting deaths? Is an average of 200 under 14 years of age an acceptable number? Is one here, one there, acceptable? Alcohol prohibition will never happen again so it will always be around. The public seems good with enforcing existing laws even though many die from DUI. And to add more fuel, how many beverage companies are held responsible when there is a DUI death? None that I'm aware of. Firearm manufacturers are held responsible more and more, at least by lawsuit count, when a shooting occurs, even though the company did nothing illegal, the shooter was the responsible party. When a DUI death occurs, it is always the fault of the drinker and not Anheuser-Busch or Chevy. Maybe a bar gets sued for serving an intoxicated customer.
When a shooting is a few or "mass" or at a school then we are vocal? Other locations occur and not saying those are not an issue (Pulse, Mandalay, etc.). The Chicago Tribune reports as of April 10, 125 murders have occured in the city. Likely many of you did not know that. Not a peep in the media. Why? Because of the overwhelming majority occur in the urban neighborhoods and gang/drug related and likely zero use of an AR firearm so the public does not care. BLM is quiet, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are silent, when Obama was president, he was silent (and still is) and it was his city. I always thought he would make change in Chicago. Rahm? Lori? Murder is okay in the urban neighborhood because the AR is not the firearm of choice. And for the record, I own firearms, lean Republican but think Trump is an idiot.
As bribribike stated, the Chicagoland region and State of IL are certainly not silent. They are trying hard to get rid of many guns in IL - 2023 assault weapon ban legislationThey are not quiet. A Tribute editorial responded to this incorrect talking point when it appeared during the Obama presidency. Post-presidency, Obama started My Brother's Keeper specifically to work on this.
I'd recommend looking at who's talking in your media consumption if it appears like the above folks are silent. I found it helpful to review the demographics of what podcasts and radio stations I was listening to, the authors of the books I was reading, and noticed I wasn't seeing the perspective of a lot of Americans.
As bribribike stated, the Chicagoland region and State of IL are certainly not silent. They are trying hard to get rid of many guns in IL - 2023 assault weapon ban legislation
Plus - all major cities are having gun crime problems throughout the nation. In Chicago, it's easy to move illegal guns from IN into IL since you can literally step over the state line from IN into the City of Chicago.
Just to be clear, a single-shot gun, was likely what the founders intended as protection. They didn't even know what a bullet was when they made that legislation. If we want to be originalist, we should focus on types of guns that were intended by the founders.Allow limited use single-shot only with locking up in a central location with check in/check out by public safety.
Freedom of the Press was intended by the founders as newspapers and books/magazines, to use the same rationale. Should we make the internet, tv, radio, etc., illegal?Just to be clear, a single-shot gun, was likely what the founders intended as protection. They didn't even know what a bullet was when they made that legislation. If we want to be originalist, we should focus on types of guns that were intended by the founders.
Although I personally think we need to update our constitution for the 21st Century, as the interpretations we have for today are getting more and more stupid, if we want to sit on originalism, than why can't we limit guns to single-shot? Or do we now think the founders meant AR-15 style weapons when they didn't understand anything beyond muskets?
People down around my way like to talk all the time about crime and murder in the big cities especially Chicago, New York and Baltimore. I got a "fatherly" warning before going to Philly because of all of the crime. But the fact of the matter is that my city's per capita homicide rate is right around Chicago's and way higher than New York.And that will not change the Chicagoland area murder rate. The majority of murders in Chicago, and all firearms murders, are not made with "assault weapons". Gang/drug violence is done overwhelmingly with the easily concealable pistol. So the weapons ban will not change Chicago. You point out the border issue, but he issue is a law is already then being broken. Pass another which will be broken. Nature of criminals. Not saying to don't have laws but criminals don't follow laws. That is what makes them criminals. The only true way to reign in the problem, but some level of the problem will always exist, is to completely ban firearms and mandate turn in/destruction. Allow limited use single-shot only with locking up in a central location with check in/check out by public safety. Not going to happen.
3,579 children died as a result of firearms in 2021 and is the #1 cause of death of children in the U.S. and has only increased over time. Motor vehicle accidents are the #2 cause of death of children but that has decreased over time. Why? Better technology in cars such as front and rear view cameras with automatic breaking when an object/person is detected, highly engineered car seat and child restraint systems, stricter laws about the use of car seats and booster seats until children are 7-8 years old, consistent messaging from child advocacy groups, etc. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/12/14/magazine/gun-violence-children-data-statistics.html (Childhood’s Greatest Danger: The Data on Kids and Gun Violence)That was part of the reason for the post. If the ultimate goal is to protect our youth, why not the outrage at child DUI deaths as there are shooting deaths? Is an average of 200 under 14 years of age an acceptable number? Is one here, one there, acceptable? Alcohol prohibition will never happen again so it will always be around. The public seems good with enforcing existing laws even though many die from DUI. And to add more fuel, how many beverage companies are held responsible when there is a DUI death? None that I'm aware of. Firearm manufacturers are held responsible more and more, at least by lawsuit count, when a shooting occurs, even though the company did nothing illegal, the shooter was the responsible party. When a DUI death occurs, it is always the fault of the drinker and not Anheuser-Busch or Chevy. Maybe a bar gets sued for serving an intoxicated customer.
When a shooting is a few or "mass" or at a school then we are vocal? Other locations occur and not saying those are not an issue (Pulse, Mandalay, etc.). The Chicago Tribune reports as of April 10, 125 murders have occured in the city. Likely many of you did not know that. Not a peep in the media. Why? Because of the overwhelming majority occur in the urban neighborhoods and gang/drug related and likely zero use of an AR firearm so the public does not care. BLM is quiet, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are silent, when Obama was president, he was silent (and still is) and it was his city. I always thought he would make change in Chicago. Rahm? Lori? Murder is okay in the urban neighborhood because the AR is not the firearm of choice. And for the record, I own firearms, lean Republican but think Trump is an idiot.
As we now have a professional active duty military backed up by reserve services....does this really hold true any more?A good reminder for us all.
The Second Amendment of the United States Constitution reads:
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
If you are an originalist, I guess so. My point is that originalism is stupid. The idea that we need to live by the 2nd Amendment because it means so much to this country is stupid. We are a much different place today than we were 200+ years ago.Freedom of the Press was intended by the founders as newspapers and books/magazines, to use the same rationale. Should we make the internet, tv, radio, etc., illegal?
What a way to get rid of one's spouse!
For the country it would be turning the clock of social progress back a century, for him, though, it would just be an annulment.What a way to get rid of one's spouse!
Sort of like if Clarence Thomas voted against interracial marriage.
He did say at one point his law degree was worth "15 cents". As Ms Hill reminded us, Clarence likes to look at pictures...maybe not much of a reader.We are supposed to believe that Associate Justice Clarence Thomas misunderstood an instruction on his financial disclosure form that led him not to report his wife's income, but he can interpret the founding fathers' meaning in the U.S. Constitution.
Okay, got it.
that is some pretty easy math, even for a news organization that doesn't value facts.I guess when you cost the company a few million they might look down on that.
My favorite fact about Tucker Carlson is that his mother left him $1 in her will, indicating he was intentionally cut out.
Tucker Carlson out at Faux News
Carlson ends up at Newsmax or does a podcast that is way to successful.
He has a cult following. The cult will follow.
Oof. I read the Sports Illustrated article about it and the following quote just highlights so much that's wrong with a society where capital is the primary, or only, value and form of power :Have you read about the Oakland A's financial dealings/mess - Wow can you say public finance extortion.
What use is a boycott when that only plays directly into ownership’s hands? What use is a reverse boycott when it puts money in their pockets? What power do fans have against an ownership class that lacks capacity for shame?
...walking on eggshells now.jModerator note:
This is a warning regarding your tone and demeanor with this post. This is a very charged and volatile time online in the US and we do not want negative attention and extremism focused on our good community here in Cyburbia. Please refrain from further extremist rhetoric. If not, suspension or worse will likely be warranted.
This also applies to all of us in this thread.
Was that all there was to the post? The link?...walking on eggshells now.j