Lol@quebecois-nonsense
....Seriously? Did you just post something xenophobic about me?
Good job on countering my points. I think I got alllll the answers I need from you.
Lol@quebecois-nonsense
I already said this thread was going nowhere new and I was done, so when you showed up after the fact wanting to start shit with me by way of condescending fucknuttery, you get the ration of shit you deserve, you flatulent eunuch.....Seriously? Did you just post something xenophobic about me?
Good job on countering my points. I think I got alllll the answers I need from you.
http://www.politico.com/interactives/2017/gun-lobbying-spending-in-america-congress/GOP Congressman John Thune has a solution: Look for cover at outdoor events so that you know where to hide in case a shooting breaks out.
That's not a joke. That was his response. “I think people are going to have to take steps in their own lives to take precautions to protect themselves. And in situations like that, you know, try to stay safe. As somebody said — get small.”
Oklahoma GOP Senator James Inhofe said "hold my beer" and pinned the responsibility for Sunday night’s massacre on sanctuary cities.
This is bullshit - you were oversimplifying a complex situation to the point of no longer adding anything useful to the discussion.I already said this thread was going nowhere new and I was done, so when you showed up after the fact wanting to start shit with me by way of condescending fucknuttery, you get the ration of shit you deserve, you flatulent eunuch.
I wanted to follow-up on this comment because I see all these discussions with gun enthusiasts shaking their fist at the ever remote potential that they lose the very capacity of being able to have a normal conversations with other humans. They claim over and over and over about their RIGHT to bear arms and the 2nd amendment... but medical treatment in the US right now is "a privilege".Why is comparing gun deaths against certain countries considered acceptable data, but when it comes to healthcare, what works for them won't work for America?
American cherish their gun culture but what the fuck will it take?
Maybe he just wants to be a cowboy, and what better way to be able to be one then by bringing back the Wild West... i mean it can't be any worse then it was at the time, even if guns are now way more accurate.GOP Congressman John Thune has a solution: Look for cover at outdoor events so that you know where to hide in case a shooting breaks out.
That's not a joke. That was his response. “I think people are going to have to take steps in their own lives to take precautions to protect themselves. And in situations like that, you know, try to stay safe. As somebody said — get small.”
You don't even understand what a "right" is. It's abhorrent to have the "right" to someone else's toil and treasure simply by virtue of not having it yourself. The right to keep and bear arms doesn't mean the government buys us guns, and the government doesn't pay for our health care. You know what's even more critical to life than health care? Food. Shelter. Do you think the government should cover everyone's grocery bills and mortgages from top to bottom, too? I mean, isn't it so terrible that food is not a "right?"I wanted to follow-up on this comment because I see all these discussions with gun enthusiasts shaking their fist at the ever remote potential that they lose the very capacity of being able to have a normal conversations with other humans. They claim over and over and over about their RIGHT to bear arms and the 2nd amendment... but medical treatment in the US right now is "a privilege".
Look, if the founding fathers cared about people's right to live, they would have mentioned it somewhere... maybe in some sort of declaration...They claim over and over and over about their RIGHT to bear arms and the 2nd amendment... but medical treatment in the US right now is "a privilege".
Ah yes, the good ol' armed rebellion shtick... remind me again, when was the last successful rebellion against the US government? The Whiskey one? Blair Mountain? The raid on Harper's Ferry? The Civil War?Because private gun ownership IS a vaccine - every Glock, every Bushmaster, every Mossberg is an antibody against tyranny and oppression.
I think i just found the solution to your gun problem... make guns and ammo super expensive.The right to keep and bear arms doesn't mean the government buys us guns, and the government doesn't pay for our health care.
I just had a thought that was too good to wait for morning.
Gun-grabbers like you, Jay, are sociopolitical anti-vaxxers.
Because private gun ownership IS a vaccine - every Glock, every Bushmaster, every Mossberg is an antibody against tyranny and oppression. You, you argue that there's no reason for these anymore, it's been hundreds of years sincepoliooppression was an issue, and so there's no need to continue guarding against them. In fact, thanks to soccermom social media circlejerks, you suspect that the vaccine is worse than the disease, that they cause suffering to the innocent.
It's amazing the parallels that run between the two arguments, really - and it's just as infurating, because even if other countries don't vaccinate, they benefit from the herd immunity the United States provides. An armed populace is the final, ultimate safeguard to keep the United States Federal Government honest - or whatever takes its place when it collapses, and believe you me, it will collapse in our lifetime.
But even if it doesn't, can you imagine a world more horrible than one where the Trump regime is the only armed body in the U.S.? How lucky we are to only have to suffer horrifying tweets instead of the horrifying deeds that inevitably come with the corrupting power of being at the head of the world's most powerful government - and the world's most powerful military by about 8 orders of magnitude.
So sit smug in your quaint little home in your socialist paradise country - where your cherished "free" health care is solvent because the U.S. picks up your national defense bill, and since you all live within 100 miles of the U.S. border anyway it's easy to ferry your emergencies across to actual doctors when the Canadian system fails them as it so often does. Be thankful for it.
And moreso, be thankful that 245 million adults are here to vigilantly watch the golem we've created, and that we're armed.
Frankly, it should be painfully obvious that any rational adult who doesn't own, maintain, and practice with a firearm regularly is in dereliction of their civic duty. They're weakening the vaccine, and in so doing, putting everyone ever that much more at risk. Usually for the same misguided "progressive" principals that always do the most damage to those they purport to help - the little guys.[DOUBLEPOST=1507106174,1507105738][/DOUBLEPOST] You don't even understand what a "right" is. It's abhorrent to have the "right" to someone else's toil and treasure simply by virtue of not having it yourself. The right to keep and bear arms doesn't mean the government buys us guns, and the government doesn't pay for our health care. You know what's even more critical to life than health care? Food. Shelter. Do you think the government should cover everyone's grocery bills and mortgages from top to bottom, too? I mean, isn't it so terrible that food is not a "right?"
And the thing is, that's an argument for not banning guns, not for not regulating access to them based on objective criteria. I mean remember the "well regulated militia" part in the 2nd amendment?There's been far more shootups of churches, schools, and restaurants than of anyone fighting the big, bad, gub'mint. I'm sick of this horseshit argument, yet it gets trotted out every time someone mows down a bunch of people. It's become a parody of itself.
Don't forget the Appeal to Emotion fallacy.Cue the slippery slope fallacy in 3... 2... 1...
As i pointed out above, don't they have guns to shoot the slope if it gets too slippery?Cue the slippery slope fallacy in 3... 2... 1...
To be fair, a guerrilla war could work... you'd just have to invest in more poppy fields, and have Mexico pretend they're not helping you, even though that's where Joe Laden was hiding this whole time.Wait, hang on, we've got one of the most powerful militaries in the world, so much so that it allows us to "babysit" the freedoms of other nations, but average people owning gun are keeping the country safe from Red Dawn? Somehow that doesn't add up. I really don't think the numbers would add up in the scenario if the US government turned it military power against it's own people. Heck, even out police forces are usually better armed than the general populace.A bunch of gun owners aren't going to be able to stop a tank. Like I said before, I think there are some exceptions to having a gun of some kind in a home, but keeping our government in check would be a bloody, losing battle.
This time, sure.Not to mention that, if President Trump decided he wanted a third term without holding elections, I'd bet money on the army being the defenders of the country and the militia fighting in favor of the President, not the other way around.
Several people have made this point, so I guess this bears repeating:I really don't think the numbers would add up in the scenario if the US government turned it military power against it's own people.
How many are we already under?And what happens when a state of emergency is declared.
Indeed. Give the president too much power and national policy swings violently with every change of the guard.[DOUBLEPOST=1507126885,1507126785][/DOUBLEPOST]This time, sure.
--Patrick
We are still a republic. A state generally has to declare a state of emergency to override its rules and allow foreign (ie, federal or other state) forces inside its borders.And what happens when a state of emergency is declared.
Yes. People made fun of Bush the Younger, portrayed him as childish. But with Trump it's like he's actually trying to live up to the caricature.Indeed. Give the president too much power and national policy swings violently with every change of the guard.
And then you have a civil war, and history is written by the victorious. Sorry if I sound skeptical here, there’s just thousands of years of precedent.Indeed. Give the president too much power and national policy swings violently with every change of the guard.[DOUBLEPOST=1507126885,1507126785][/DOUBLEPOST]
We are still a republic. A state generally has to declare a state of emergency to override its rules and allow foreign (ie, federal or other state) forces inside its borders.
The federal government may declare a state of emergency, but they are still not allowed to perform actions inside states without state permission.
I agree with your assessment. If guns are an impediment, they are a minor impediment - but in many such conflicts a minor impediment can change the course of the conflict.And then you have a civil war, and history is written by the victorious. Sorry if I sound skeptical here, there’s just thousands of years of precedent.
In the not so distant past,a six-year-old girl was such an existential threat that federal marshals had to be called in.people have different values regarding threats.
As grim as it sounds, how much grimmer would such a situation be without an armed populace? If the choice is between a grim struggle with little hope and a docile place in line being marched into a camp with no hope at all, which would you prefer? As for "we can't stop tanks," the Finns of the Winter War would disagree with you, as would the goatherds with AKs and improvised explosives that broke our political will and had us leave Iraq with our tail between our legs.Like I said before, I think there are some exceptions to having a gun of some kind in a home, but keeping our government in check would be a bloody, losing battle.
They must have seen Men In Black. Little Tiffany was obviously a threat.In the not so distant past,a six-year-old girl was such an existential threat that federal marshals had to be called in.
No, I agree that in our current state, the government wouldn't be able to instantly roll over the people, but it would end in a loss with heavy casualities on both sides. But since we also don't have mandatory military service, we'll have a lot of guns, but people untrained in combat. Just being able to pull a trigger could do something, but not enough. And you could say "But we'd train people", except the scenario is the government could turn on us at any time. When the amendment was written, the average American was much closer to the maximum firepower our military held. Now it's not even close and we can't run our laws based on a fantasy.Still not a slam dunk, but I don't think we should dismiss one of the foundations for the second amendment which is that an armed populace is harder for the government to repress.
Not impossible, but harder - and that may still be a sufficient reason to maintain it.
For some, obviously, that's not a good reason, and there may be no good reasons for some. But for a large number of people it's a reason for them to exercise and maintain that right.
I'd just like to reiterate that I think incorporating gun safety training - with range time - into the 12th grade curriculum would be a good idea. It'd reduce the number of firearm-related accidents as well as instill basic proper handling and familiarity in the citizenry. And even if a graduate never picked up another gun in their life after that, it'd still help demystify them - mitigate the "ooh scary" factor so many people seem to have. Obviously it wouldn't make every citizen a soldier, but it'd be an improvement on what you rightly call the armed but untrained.No, I agree that in our current state, the government wouldn't be able to instantly roll over the people, but it would end in a loss with heavy casualities on both sides. But since we also don't have mandatory military service, we'll have a lot of guns, but people untrained in combat. Just being able to pull a trigger could do something, but not enough. And you could say "But we'd train people", except the scenario is the government could turn on us at any time. When the amendment was written, the average American was much closer to the maximum firepower our military held. Now it's not even close and we can't run our laws based on a fantasy.
We've run rampant over the 2nd Amendment, like it was handed down from god, and not made by men who said we could adjust as needed. I acknowledge there are a practical need for some guns, but we need to make far tighter rules about who can have guns and how many and what kind. I can't help but feel if we weren't so casual about the presense of guns, especially ones that have large magazines, there are a number of tragedies that might have been intervened or stopped sooner. Not that this can prevent all deaths, someone determined enough can find a way, but a start would be bringing down the number of damage a person can do at one time.
Which would go a long way towards helping them react properly to a threatening situation, rather than freezing in fear, or reacting in a way that makes things worse.And even if a graduate never picked up another gun in their life after that, it'd still help demystify them
Ah yes, the famous american winters, that would impede troop movement and allow for a few snipers to pin down whole battalions.As for "we can't stop tanks," the Finns of the Winter War would disagree with you,
See, the thing is, an actual internal conflict against the majority of your own population would pretty much guarantee there's no "political will" to deplete, or to stop the type of atrocities one needs to counter guerrilla warfare and enemy combatants hiding within the local population.as would the goatherds with AKs and improvised explosives that broke our political will and had us leave Iraq with our tail between our legs.
It's almost like sensible laws, regulations and social programs work or something.And I'll just close by reminding you again that, despite what the media and facebook tell you, we are living in the safest and least violent period in human history.