Anguirus wrote:
I'm just straight-up preferring Dr. Cummings' testimony on the matter to your speculation. Apologies.
Where is Dr. Cummings Testimony, and why is his/her testimony any more than speculation?
That's the only reason to deny anyone any right, when you get right down to it. People create rights, too.
So because we deny people certain rights when people don't like those rights based on perfectly good concerns about the effects of allowing them, that's somehow the same as disallowing them based on the unfounded concerns of the ignorant? Interesting.
Movie stereotypes? First off, do you work on a college campus? Cause I do. So does Alyrium.
No, I don't. However, I encounter plenty of college students, I have been one, and I will have a child becoming one in just a few months. Frankly, I don't trust either of your assessments, especially ADs.
Your line sounds an awful lot like if I were to claim my stereotypes of black people were accurate, and I knew better because I worked in an inner city ghetto.
God forbid you stop using loaded language. Why is it more important to cater to the fears of uninformed, ignorant faculty than allow people to exercise a legal right? See? I can use loaded language to make my argument look stronger too!
It's not the first time, either!
So, quit doing it.
That's nice that you think that. Many of UTs programs are quite literally world-class, and it attracts the best and brightest faculty. Hurting our ability to attract and retain faculty really does wound the school.
I haven't yet seen evidence that it actually will, and the hystrionics of the current faculty aren't terribly convincing, any more than I really thought a bunch of Republicans were going to up and move to Canada if Obama got elected.
Apparently you think faculty are largely interchangeable. Now I don't think Dr. Cummings plans to leave, but let's say that she does. Since I think concealed carry will have basically a zero impact on public safety all around (do try to remember that), her leaving would tip the whole thing pretty squarely into the negative column.
Why? She's irreplacable? There aren't other people as good or better than her?
I haven't seen that the University of Texas has anything close to a monopoly on "world class" in academics. Don't get me wrong, it's a good school and now that we live in Texas my daughter might even transfer there; she applied there for the coming year and decided to go elsewhere for this year. I'm not, however, buying that it has any bounty of fantastic faculty that can't be replaced with equally good faculty from elsewhere. UT is far from cornering the market.
It's not only weak, but rather ghoulish to trot out the prospect of a vanishingly rare campus mass shooting to support increasing the number of guns on campus (which is the stated goal of seemingly every campus CCW supporter), and yet it is a staple argument in the debate. (That, and RIGHTS!! which is irrelevant to me because the legality of minor infringements of the right to bear arms is well-established.)
That's really not my problem, since I have not been the one whipping out campus shootings, and in fact have been arguing a net zero balance of safety. However, I don't think it's particularly ghoulish, since these people are misinformed, unlike the anti-CCW crowd who whip out suicide in desperation after their misconceptions about CCW are pointed out to be wrong... by people like me, who are really more or less neutral. I really don't give a shit; I can carry a weapon anywhere on your campus any time I want to whether you, or your police chief like it or not.
I direct you to
this story Funny, it hurts out that guns enable snap life-ending decisions that might have been reconsidered. No one could have guessed that it takes longer to hang yourself or take pills than shoot yourself in the head!
Yes, so what? This doesn't establish why a college campus is in need of special protections from this.. nor why its an afterthought from the CCW crowd.
People age 65 and over have a higher rate of suicide than college age people. In any case, "guns make suicide easier" is a very weak argument. Why are we arbitrarily drawing a line at how much easier guns make it compared to.. well anything else people use to commit suicide?
They are confusing and frightening, for students carrying as well as students who aren't. Confused, frightened, early twenties gunholders for the win.
You mean like.. young police officers in a shootout? Young soldiers? These people have more training, but they also have more responsibility. Moreover, young early twenties people with guns will be present anywhere else a shooting might occur; there's no reason they should be such a problem on a college campus.
It's also worth pointing out which one of us lives here.
I live in Texas (for the second time, I actually lived here before once), and again, that is not an argument. "I live here, so I get a special veto on public policy that no one else gets on any other matter!" Uh.. no, sorry, we don't live in a dictatorship of the randomly frightened.
Your last sentence is A) your assumption
No it isn't, it's demonstrably true. The minimum amount of harm from a determined, suicidal gunman was realized. Any other shot fired would have been a) neutral or b) had a negative outcome. Moreover, it would have made the police have to be a lot more careful knowing that there are more guns on campus in the hands of jittery students.
Assumption may have been a poor choice of words on my part, but you could not have known in advance, and neither could anyone else, that he was only going to shoot himself. Coming back
after the fact and saying "but he only did the minimum harm!" isn't valid, because that could not be known in advance, and can't be known in any future case. In hindsight, CCW holders could not have helped, but that cannot be generalized to any other case, and if one of them or the police had shot this guy you never would have known that.
As for it making the police "have to be a lot more careful", you mean as careful as we are in the
rest of society where there are all kinds of jittery people with guns? Quit pretending like college students with guns are some sort of special tactical problem.
and B) begging the question. You do not actually know that.
No it isn't. A gun wielder can't stand down a
suicidal man. There was no conceivable way to
lower the harm that was done in the real world by adding more guns. All you have to do is think about the situation in order to come to this conclusion. I'm glad you know the names of some logical fallacies though.
It is begging the question, because you are only able to know that about this particular case and only because of hindsight. You cannot apply it to any other case, so unless you are attempting to discuss that case, in a vaccuum, for its own sake, it is a form of begging the question.
Really, are you even listening to yourself? "Guns couldn't have helped in this situation because he only killed himself!" Yes, so? That was that situation; we cannot assume any future one will be similar.
[quote
]"Almost plugged"? Then he wasn't shot? I don't know of anyone else that was shot by a CCW holder at that rally erroneously, so the evidence is that the CCW holder acted appropriately - as you point out he did not actually shoot the guy. PHrasing it as "almost plugged" is an attempt to make it look like a mistake when it wasn't.
What the hell are you talking about? Since concealed guns were not involved in the subduing of Jared Loughner, and by the time the gun holder arrived on the scene he was contained, the only possible counterfactual is him shooting the innocent hero down.
In the guy's own words, "I could have very easily done the wrong thing and hurt a lot more people." I'm glad that we were able to trust his judgment that day, but I'm the cynical type, and for every X number of people who do the right thing, there will be Y number who do the "wrong." I don't believe that the same person in the same circumstance would do the same thing every time.
[/quote]
But he
didn't do the wrong thing, and none of what you said changes the fact that "almost plugged" is an attempt to make a correct decision sound incorrect.
In any case, all your X and Y crap is just that - crap. That same circumstance will never occur again. It could very easily have been that the person trying to tackle the shooter was unsuccesful. The CCW holder might have successfully then killed the shooter or not. We don't know. The hypotheticals did not happen, and the situation will never be repeated.
Obviously mistakes will be made. They will be made by the police sometimes; when they are made they are roundly and rightly cricticized. No one is touting people carrying guns as some sort of perfect solution (at least, no one with a lick of sense). The point is that, in this highly unlikely campus shooter situation, that there is a possibility an armed person could slow down or stop a shooting rampage before police could respond. These situations will be so rare that each on is a case unto itself; we cannot really analyze probabilities - except insofar as to say that we know that if no one is allowed to carry guns on campus the probability of an armed person being present when a rampage starts is very near zero, and we are simply
assuming that anyone with a CCW would make the situation worse, for no better reason than the fact that some people don't like guns, don't want them around, and are willing to make whatever assumptions they need to in order to make it appear they are some huge boogeyman.
Having a pistol increased the chances of him shooting an innocent man. The course of action he elected to perform--helping to subdue Loughner--did not require his pistol, and he did not employ it at all.
So? Obviously it increases his chance of shooting an innocent man; how would he shoot someone without a gun? He didn't need gun is something we only know in hindsight, and only because it just happened to go that way. No one ever claimed guns were absolutely necessary in every shooting situation. As I pointed out, however, the guy that did the subduing could have easily failed, and been killed, and the shooting continued. The facts in that situation in no way generalize to "a gun in the hands of a civilian can't possibly help in any other given situation."
My lobby? I've said repeatedly I don't particularly care about the issue.
Uh-huh.
Maybe it would help if you didn't insist on demonizing anyone who disagrees with you as a gun nut. It's little wonder you get short shrift when you act this way.
Please demonstrate when I have lied about your position. If this is the case, I did not do so deliberately.
All your comments about me just smelling Second Amendment, and "my lobby" and the like. All of those are a false claim that I'm defending something I'm not. All I'm pointing out here is that your arguments gainst guns on campus are no better than those in favor.
Frankly, you "don't care" about the issue so much that you've decided that despite the fact that you agree with me on all of the facts (CCW will have little/no effect on campus safety, professors' fears are overblown), you've decided that putting more guns on campus is more important than keeping our administration, faculty, and police force satisfied. Perhaps I have mistakenly assumed that you share my utilitarian-leaning ethics. Since we agree that CCW does not make anyone appreciably safer, it is therefore anathema to me to think that the philosophical consequence (don't infringe right to bear arms) and the hypothetical consequence (stop a mass shooting) outweigh the immediate, practical consequence (hurt our ability to hire and retain faculty).
I haven't decided its more important to put guns on campus. I've decided that, UT being a state school, that the wishes of the voters of the state of Texas as represented by their legislators are more important than keeping the professors or the police satisfied, especially since I've seen not one good argument from any of them; especially that police chief who could barely decide what he wanted to talk about.
Frankly, I don't think that the unwarranted fears of the faculty should outweigh the desires of the voters. In fact, if it will hurt the ability to hire and retain faculty, then I would suggest that there will be a net
improvement if faculty is willing to leave over its unwarranted fears based on a trivial change in the campus security situation, then its a net improvement since they will be (we can at least hope) replaced by faculty that focuses on their subject area, rather than trying to use their credentials to claim expertise on a subject they clearly know little about.
Keep in mind, this issue is purely one of amusement for you, in contrast to me and Alyrium. From our perspective, feeling pretty well protected by campus police and such, encouraging more guns to reside on campus makes us if anything less safe--since it is our job at time to end people's ambitions and derail their life plans. Violent crimes of passion, while still astoundingly rare, are much more common that mass shootings.
Yes, and my detachment from the issue ought to be giving you great pause rather than causing you to constantly rant about how personally important it is. I'm not making any of this up out of any ideology; even if I wanted to go to a UT campus carrying a gun it doesn't affect me personaly.
In short, to you, increasing the danger to TAs and faculty by some marginal amount and driving away some marginal number of professors are completely irrelevant to your life, such that arguing the philosophical point that the right to bear arms shouldn't be restricted. To us, it's slightly different. If one member of the EEB faculty leaves, it could negatively impact my career (not to mention my department and institution, which I care about). And if increasing the number of guns on campus leads to even one TA getting shot...to you it doesn't matter, but it could be one of us.
Or marginally decreasing the danger.. we do not know which. I'm not arguing that the philisophical right to bear arms shouldn't be restricted - I'm all for restricting it to CCW holders, and reasonable restrictions on who can get them. I just don't see any good reason a college campus as really needing additional restrictions on that right.
Now, maybe if you made an argument like "they shouldn't be allowed in certain types of academic buildings because of the danger of an explosion if there were an accident" I might be inclined to agree. A chemistry lab might not be the best palce for CCW. But no one has made such an argument. I've just seen "But we live here!" and "In this situation a gun didn't help!"
See? I even helped you out there.
The public comment period on the gun bill. They got swarmed by antis, so much so that Wentworth stopped trying to pass the gun bill legitimately and started adding it to things and trying to ramrod it through when Democrats wanted to go visit Michelle Obama.
Which speaks to the vociferousness of the anti lobby, although not its popularity. I have a hard time believing they represent the overall view of the public in Texas, of all places, without additional information.
In that article, the only dirty tricks I see are Democrats trying to kill their own bill after an attempt to attach the CCW on campus provision to it. I don't necessarily agree with attaching things to unrelated bills, but I have to say that happens so frequently in the legislative process that I see no reason this particular instance is a "dirty trick".
Just because everyone does it makes it ok, right?
No, because everyone does it means that this situation is not worthy of special attention. Is there any campaign underway to eliminate this aspect of Texas legislative process?
What this move says to me is that it demonstrates the fallaciousness of his stand. He asked the people what they wanted and it wasn't what he wanted to hear. So he attaches his provision to unrelated bills to either get CCW on campus passed with a minimum of debate, publicity, and support (1/2 instead of 2/3), or to get the bills (needed for education) spitefully killed. The Democrats don't want this to pass and he knows it. Is it because they are liberal second-amendment-haters? No; this is fucking Texas. It's because their constituents don't like it.
He asked "the people"? When and where? There was a statewide poll?
I'm also a little unclear why needing a simple majority is a problem; man parlimentary actions are based on simple majority.
This isn't some bit of pork or a non-binding resolution. It's a symbolic piece of legislation that has attracted massive amounts of attention. It's just plain dishonest to try and cram it in there after the original bill was stillborn thanks to a massive turnout by UT students and staff. I'm not arguing that it isn't legal, or that it's unprecedented, but it is a dirty trick, and represents an "anything to get the bill passed" mentality.
On the contrary, I'd say given its trivial actual impact its significantly less important than a great deal of pork that wastes actual money.
T
hat's sufficient.
Frankly, I don't see much int he way of dirty tricks there - or rather, I see some, but equally on both sides across the 3 links. I don't agree with manipulating vote times, but I also don't agree with pulling your own bill due to an attachment that was approved by the parlimentarian, and by the required majority vote.
Ooh, I like this philosophy. When one side pulls shenanigans, the other side can't push back! That would be wrong! Guess which major political party has traveled far on that attitude.
I said nothing of the sort. Again, I am pointing out that shennanigans are nothing new, and I see no reason this case deserves special castigation just because of the subject matter. I might be convinced to advocate that the practices that allow these games be ended, but not on the basis that they were responsbile for passing CCW on campus. Is that really the crowning achievement of legislative maneuvering in Texas? I somehow doubt it.
So certain legislators and their constituents who've never spared a second thought for UT in their lives are better judges of campus safety than the people who run the school? Because if they do not come to the "right" decision, their reasoning is suspect and they cannot be trusted?
Seeing as it's the
University of Texas, I find it very hard to believe that there aren't significant numbers of constituents and even some legislators that have attended it - it's their home state university, is it not? It's not at all hard to find Ohio State alums in Ohio.
As for the reasoning of the faculty, the decision isn't what makes their reasoning suspect, its the reasoning itself. It's horrible, and representative of a faculty that has simply made up its mind guns are bad without understanding the issue at all. It is not at all uncommon to find people or organizations that are singularly unqualified to make decisions about certain aspects of their organization or their life for one reason or another.
Congratulations, you are a self-demonstrating example of why we at UT feel ignored and ridden roughshod over. Your and their attitude, of getting the bill passed at any cost rather than listening to or convincing anyone who works on campus, including the cops, is precisely why we risk the negative consequences that most concern me.
My attitude of getting is passed at any cost? Ok, whatever, since you seem to want to hang onto that canard, I hope it makes you feel better. Quite frankly, I have zero sympathy for UT faculty since so far the arguments attributed to them demonstrate they're no more in the land of reality than their opponents.
In other words, you're just like Senator Wentworth; you cloak your ideological agenda in faux-concern for UT staff and students. When 150 of those people tell you to your face that they do not agree with you (not to mention calling, texting, etc), and the other legislators start withdrawing their support, than instead of waiting as little as a year to convince us that CCW on campus is right, just get it passed over them. And then never spare a thought for the issue again.
Yeah, I'm exactly like the Senator.
I doubt very much that any evidence, no matter how powerful, would convince anyone. I ahve found that anti-gun idealogues are just as rabid as those in favor of unlimited carry everywhere.
It's funny how in order to change something, you have to make a positive argument (or be an ass like Wentworth). You've demonstrated no net positive of CCW on campus, and you have not answered my net negative--impact on faculty. You've attempted to dismiss that with 1) they can't be serious and 2) even if they are, they are just a bunch of crybabies who are wrong. The point you seem determined to miss is that it does not matter if they are right or wrong. What matters is what they do.
You also, in a free society, need to make a positive argument to continue a government restriction on people's freedoms in the face of demand to the contrary by the public - and make no mistake, the Senator in question has consituents who elected him ont he basis of his views. CCW in the first place has powerful arguments in favor of it; special restrictions for colleges do not.
Make no mistake: I proudly weigh the concerns of faculty higher than I weigh the concerns of students who want to have guns on campus. (And I weigh both sets of concerns higher than I do those of ideologues who have no stake in the matter whatsoever.)
That's nice. I appreciate your concession that the uninformed objections of faculty are more important to you than the objective realities of the situation.
...what? Are you referring to the fact that I produced that page by performing a search on the student group "Students for Concealed Carry on Campus"? I figured that it would net a pretty good list of the Daily Texan articles on the issue, since they comment on most of these stories.
I'm pointing out that very little, if any, of the content actually appears to be about Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, and most of it appears to be following the legislative maneuvering.
Shit like this is why I'm kind of glad it isn't legal to go around punching people in the crotch. You'd be able to track my movement from orbit from the sheer mass of idiots I'd leave lying on the ground clutching their privates in my wake. -- Mr. Coffee