Las Vegas Shooting

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Lonestar
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Lonestar »

Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 06:32pm
That sounds like something a Democrat-run Supreme Court could fix with a simple ruling. Especially as a requirement to store your weapons safely is no more onerous a law than not shouting fire in a crowded building is to free speech.
The thing is, I don't think it needs to be fixed. And since you've accepted further up that Bubba 20-guns is not the problem, your premise that it's nessecary to engage in an invasion of privacy is pretty flawed.

And the ruling was about falsely shouting "Fire!" in a crowded building dipshit, IOW, actively engaging in a way to hurt other people.

I, unsurprisingly, have no issues with them having done so. The people who left their weapons insufficiently secured broke the law, they should have left them on the first floor and made an insurance claim or stored their weapons on an upper floor in the first place. If they didn't have insurance, well, you get that shit when you live in a flood-prone area lest this happen.
Yeah, so, this is the part where you admit you are arguing in bad faith and view incremental "reasonable" gun control laws as just a frog-in-pot method of eventual ban from civilian ownership.
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Jub
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

Lonestar wrote: 2017-10-03 06:56pmThe thing is, I don't think it needs to be fixed. And since you've accepted further up that Bubba 20-guns is not the problem, your premise that it's nessecary to engage in an invasion of privacy is pretty flawed.

And the ruling was about falsely shouting "Fire!" in a crowded building dipshit, IOW, actively engaging in a way to hurt other people.
Failing to properly secure weapons is a way to cause harm. How many news stories of kids blowing themselves away with a handgun that was left loaded in a drawer do we need before that point is clear to you?
Yeah, so, this is the part where you admit you are arguing in bad faith and view incremental "reasonable" gun control laws as just a frog-in-pot method of eventual ban from civilian ownership.
Yes, or at least to Canadian levels of heavy restriction. I don't think I've hidden my views on this in this thread or any other.
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Dominus Atheos
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Dominus Atheos »

3 things.

1. I don't own any guns, or have ever even fired a gun in my life.

2. I am opposed to a gun ban for the same reasons I am opposed to outlawing drugs or alcohol prohibition. (wouldn't work, black markets, excuse to throw non-violent people in jail, etc)

Lastly,

3. WHAT THE FUCK DO PEOPLE THINK SEMIAUTOMATIC MEANS???

Just saw a statement from a doctors group, included these lines:
Specifically, we call for a ban on the sale and ownership of automatic and semiautomatic weapons. These are military-style “assault” weapons that were designed to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible.
No seriously, what do people think "semiautomatic" means? Can someone who supports gun control tell me what you think it means?
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 07:02pm 3 things.

1. I don't own any guns, or have ever even fired a gun in my life.

2. I am opposed to a gun ban for the same reasons I am opposed to outlawing drugs or alcohol prohibition. (wouldn't work, black markets, excuse to throw non-violent people in jail, etc)

Lastly,

3. WHAT THE FUCK DO PEOPLE THINK SEMIAUTOMATIC MEANS???

Just saw a statement from a doctors group, included these lines:
Specifically, we call for a ban on the sale and ownership of automatic and semiautomatic weapons. These are military-style “assault” weapons that were designed to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible.
No seriously, what do people think "semiautomatic" means? Can someone who supports gun control tell me what you think it means?
Semi-automatic weapons are weapons that fire a round with each pull of the trigger without the need for manual cycling of the action between shots. Semi-automatic weapons are used, with high capacity magazines and often with burst fire capability, by most militaries around the world to put down high rates of fire without the waste of ammunition that fully automatic fire can cause.
Last edited by Jub on 2017-10-03 07:09pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Simon_Jester »

Okay, that is PRETTY MUCH everything except Jub's big wall of stuff. Responding to THAT is gonna take some time, and a lot more patience than I have right this minute.

FLAGG, please note that I would like to reconcile with you a bit, because I think there's been a bit more mud-slinging than I think either of us deserves to have slung. I apologize for the slinging I have done.
Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 05:01pmAnd frankly, I think out of the people in this thread on the side of “let’s figure out a way to prevent our American tradition of yearly gun massacres” I’ve been eminently reasonable. I’m not proposing “scary looking weapons” bans, or total confiscation. I’m trying to find practical solutions while at the same time pointing out that the gun industry is like no other industry in this country. They don’t risk being sued if they put out a faulty product. There are tons of loopholes that allow criminals to get their hands on guns and the gun industry is opposed to even talking about closing them. Any time some lunatic mows down a movie audience or a class of first graders they say “well clearly we need more guns with less regulation!”

If you want to pretend that isn’t a really fucked up problem to make your super logical emotionally and empathy detached points, then don’t respond because we have nothing to discuss.
See, my thing is, I don't actually have a problem with gun control. I have a problem with not making any goddamn sense.

So Flagg, if you want to specifically home in on "fuck the gun industry," you have my agreement. The gun industry can go get fucked; if that's bad for their business model so be it. Fucking over the gun industry makes sense. If there's a reason to do it, go for it.

My objection is to the people masturbating over mass confiscation of firearms because it appeals to their fetish for making us all live in neat rectangular grids. And to the people saying "well, this plan works well on a random island on the other side of the world, clearly it will work well in an entirely different place among very different people, and anyone who opposes it is just being a My-Country-Exceptionalist!" And to the people who entirely without a sense of irony can one day say "we need to add clauses to the list of human rights," and the next day say "I don't think this is a right, even though half the people in [country-over-here] disagree, it should be stricken from their constitution."

To me... None of that makes any goddamn sense.
Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 06:32pmNo Simon, you don't get to duck me after asking for citations and proof. Debate or concede on all points or I WILL get a moderator involved.
Jub you whiny fuckwit, I am making a good faith effort here and asking you to show enough basic fucking maturity to recognize that things take time. If you want a detailed analysis, you're going to need to be patient to get one.

With enough logorrhea, you can "win" any debate, especially against people busier than yourself. It's a generalization of the "Gish gallop" tactic.
Simon_Jester wrote: 2017-10-03 06:29pmI mean, suppose a Canadian and a Guatemalan are arguing about building codes in Nigeria. The Canadian says that the Guatemalans need to enact stricter, more rigorous codes about insulation and heating to keep their buildings warm in the winter. The Guatemalan protests that winter in Guatemala is not very cold, and that Canadian building codes would result in dangerously overbuilt, stuffy, overheated, and uncomfortable buildings by Guatemalan standards.
Except that insulation is a two-way street and helps to keep homes cool in the summer and warm in cooler weather. This is a retarded argument and one that I wouldn't expect from you.
:lol:

Missing the point so very, very badly. But in an attempt to engage with your grimly humorless technocratic fetishes one more time...

In all seriousness, a building well designed to weather Canadian winters is NOT going to look exactly like a building well designed for the climate of Guatemala. Guatemalans build structures that do not always look like the structures found in Canada. They do this for good reasons other than "lol stupid Guatemalans don't know how to build a building right."

If you do not know this, you are too ignorant to have opinions on building design.

More generally, I submit that you are too ignorant of how to comprehend the views of other humans. So much so, that you are not really qualified to have opinions on topics that involve the lives and rights and situations of other humans. Unqualified to hold political views or participate in political debate.

In the original Athenian sense of the word, you are an "idiot."
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by MKSheppard »

Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 04:43pmBut the gun industry is legally protected and insulated.
They're protected from false torts, because of the 1990s/2000s attempts to bankrupt firearms manufacturing companies by the anti gun groups.

But they're still subject to product lawsuits etc from manufacturing defects, etc. Just look at the Remington Model 700 safety issue.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Dominus Atheos »

Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 07:05pm Semi-automatic weapons are weapons that fire a round with each pull of the trigger without the need for manual cycling of the action between shots. Semi-automatic weapons are used, with high capacity magazines and often with burst fire capability, by most militaries around the world to put down high rates of fire without the waste of ammunition that fully automatic fire can cause.
...

Yes, that is what gun control supporters believe it means, but the second sentence is just completely wrong.

Is that what you think it means, or is that your understanding of what gun control supporters think it means?
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by ray245 »

Simon_Jester wrote: 2017-10-03 06:29pm Everyone who advances the argument "well, the police can always protect you adequately against criminals, and I don't know what you're complaining about" should be made to read parables about dogs and geckos on the subject of what "privilege" means until their eyes bleed.
So why is it possible for law enforcement to be sufficiently adequate in other countries that gun-ownership is not required to keep yourself safe? Is the US somehow incapable of matching the Australian law enforcement? Is it not possible for the law enforcement in the US to be improved?
FOR THE RECORD: I am here going to put on the hat of a person who has a firm, unambiguous belief in the right to bear arms. I am going to exaggerate the strength of this belief, so that you are at least presented with a credible challenger in hopes that you will address the argument seriously. This involves me doing a debate-team-esque thing and making claims I personally do not fully believe, for the sake of playing the role of the "gun rights guy." Please, everyone, be aware that I am doing this, for the sake of us actually being able to have a meaningful debate on this issue.

I, Gun Rights Guy, would argue that bearing arms is a human right, at least for full citizens of the state they occupy, and should only be denied in specific cases where there is unusual reason to think a person incapable of exercising this right without unusual harm to bystanders.

And yes, even though I, Gun Rights Guy, believe that this is a universal human right, I acknowledge that democratic countries can function without gun ownership. That's not unusual. Democratic countries can function without a lot of human rights being fully in place.

I, Gun Rights Guy, would argue that democratic countries can function when the vote is restricted to certain fractions of the population, too. Many nineteenth-century republics were functional in that their governments did not collapse into dictatorship... even though women, racial minorities, and in some cases the poor, could not vote.

This does not mean that modern democracies should restrict the vote once again, as they used to do. Nor does it mean that I, Gun Rights Guy, would approve if they started doing it again. A universal right is not always a right that is respected by the government of your country. Even governments that pride themselves on how humane and enlightened they are may nonetheless disrespect important human rights that don't fit into their mental picture of what "humane and enlightened" means.
That's still no real argument why gun ownership ought to be a right. All you did is to argue about the harms of taking away rights, but not about actually defending or defining why gun ownership ought to be one in the first place.

There are multiple approaches to justifying this, I, Gun Rights Guy, am going to take the opening steps to one of the approaches.

To summarize, I believe there is a flaw in your approach to identifying which things are "rights." The flaw can be rationalized around to preserve rights a person thinks is important... But can still be used easily to justify dropping rights you do not value. This creates inconsistency and intolerance of the rights and needs of others. And it all has its roots in how we decide which things are "rights."

Without first establishing my reason for using a different rule to identify "rights," our continued disagreement will be very hard to resolve.

...
So what's stopping people from randomly declaring anything they want to do as a "right"? What is the difference between a "right" and merely a "want"?

In particular, I see a flaw in the way you regard things as being rights because they are 'essential,' and that nonessential rights are things to be withheld as privileges, presumably by the state. This definition is problematic, because you can live without a lot more things than you realize.

You use free speech as an example of something democratic society "cannot really function without." This invites two related questions. One is, what do you mean by "really?" How low-functioning does a society have to be before we say "this isn't really functional, people have a right not to experience this?" For example, one-party tyranny is a very stable form of government! Countries have lasted for decades without collapsing into anarchy under one-party rule. Is it really true to say that a society "is not really functioning" just because it's under single-party rule due to the lack of free speech?
Any functioning societies require restricting things from individuals. The idea of the state existing in the first place requires it to monopolize violence. Determining how much access people have to violence is pretty much one of the very basic purposes of the state. States that couldn't monopolize violence cease to exist in any functional way.

So it boils down to what are the thing people cannot live without? What is the baisc, primary necessities that everyone wants to have? What are the trade-off people have to make?

Does one-party system provide the things that people want? Perhaps, but that comes at a trade-off in giving up free speech. If people think that democracy is fundamental, then the structure of the society have to take that into account to make such a system work in the first place.
Secondly, why "democratic" societies? Why is tyranny unacceptable in and of itself? What about tyranny makes it so bad? Your model doesn't have a good answer for this, so while you can use it to justify why people have a right to food and shelter, you can't use it to justify why they have a right to free speech or due process. A society that lacks due process and free speech can be quite functional, in that the average citizen leads a productive life, raises children and so on. In China, freedom of speech is severely curtailed, but society is 'functional.' Arguably more functional than it is in some nominally democratic countries, certainly more so than in some democracies of the past. Why do we have any preference for democracy over tyranny, if all that matters is that we are provided with the things we can't live without? Sure, there's an instrumental argument that democracy provides the necessities better on average... but that is not a good argument for opposing tyranny as such.
The notion of autocratic rule is not in itself unacceptable. The question is what sort of society people are happy to live in. There are people that are happy to trade freedom of speech for greater security (be it perceived or real). Freedom of speech is needed for democratic society to function, which is different from society itself.

The decision to basically forgo freedom of speech lies in the idea that giving up that would ensure greater security, or in a way allow people to access other basic rights such as sufficient food, proper housing, and safety.

I don't feel you have satisfactory answers to these questions, so I propose an alternate definition of "rights" that DOES answer them.

Rights exist to ensure the security, dignity, and autonomy of the individual.

...

A right which is necessary to the basic security, dignity, and autonomy of the individual is a right, regardless of whether we can in some sense find a way to live without it.

We can live without free speech, but we cannot live autonomous lives without the freedom to speak, to raise grievances, to propose changes to our way of life.

We can live without the vote, but we cannot have dignified lives, free of subjugation, in such a society. It is a grave offense against human dignity to take fully functional adults and tell them "you are second-class citizens, you have no say in how this country operates."

We can live without guarantees of due process of law in our courts, but the security of accused prisoners is immediately in danger in such a society.

In general, all the 'intangible' rights work far better when viewed as necessary protection for the security, dignity, and autonomy of the individual, than they do when viewed as "things we can't live without." Freedom of speech, freedom from torture, freedom of religion, due process rights, the right to privacy, the right to travel... There are a huge number of such rights, many of them very well recognized by (for example) the U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

To justify why we "cannot really live without" these rights requires tortured arguments full of epicycles. The sad reality is, all these are things we can live without. Most of humanity lived without them for most of history. Many of these rights are things we could theoretically make society "more functional" by selectively ignoring.

But we cannot ignore them and preserve security, dignity, and autonomy for everyone.

Thus, security, dignity, and autonomy of the individual are a much firmer grounding for whether or not something is a "right" than the standard you propose would be.

Ok. So how does gun ownership falls into that? Why is gun ownership fine, but the right to form a private army not allowed? Where do you draw the line between what is allowed and what is banned?

Maybe rural Japan and the rural UK have lower violent crime rates than certain parts of the rural United States.

I mean, suppose a Canadian and a Guatemalan are arguing about building codes in Nigeria. The Canadian says that the Guatemalans need to enact stricter, more rigorous codes about insulation and heating to keep their buildings warm in the winter. The Guatemalan protests that winter in Guatemala is not very cold, and that Canadian building codes would result in dangerously overbuilt, stuffy, overheated, and uncomfortable buildings by Guatemalan standards.

Is this "Guatemalan exceptionalism?" No, it's basic common sense. If a problem does not exist in my country, I do not need to take special measures to protect against it. Conversely, it is not "Canadian exceptionalism" for the Canadians to feel the need for laws or rights that people in other countries do not desire so strongly, that address specific issues of Canadian climate and culture.

Is it that heretical to just listen to people who live in an area, or have close family that lives in an area, when they say "the needs of this area include XYZ, and do not include things that you, a city-dweller on the literal other side of the world, think are necessary?" Or when they say "your proposed changes to our society would be actively harmful to us, you don't know enough about our society?"

I mean, follow this pattern far enough and you wind up tearing down whole cities to rebuild them in accordance with your rectangular grid fetish, and that's such a passe, twentieth-century obsession.
The problem is when you apply the needs for a more rural community onto a more urban city as if there won't be any major consequences. Massed shooting in America has to my limited knowledge, caused by relatively easy access to guns. So what works for a more rural environment can cause huge potential risk and danger to a more urban population. So the question is whether easy access to guns for rural communities is worth the harm caused to an urban population? Before resorting to easy access(relative to other countries) to guns as the primary solution for self-protection for people living in more rural areas, the question is whether it is possible to improve law enforcement that you could potentially not over-rely on guns and self-protection in the first place.

I see it as American exceptionalism because other countries with similar geography like Canada or Australia managed fine with more restrictive gun laws and the people still feel that they can rely on the police force. And if you think that the problem lies with American being more naturally violent than others, how is adding guns into the equation better for people?
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by MKSheppard »

SCRawl wrote: 2017-10-02 11:30pmAs has been discussed, it's practically impossible to obtain automatic weapons legally.
Why does everyone believe this?

It's not impossible. Just merely expensive and time consuming.

https://dealernfa.com/product-category/ ... hine-guns/

"Excellent condition"

If you're okay with your gun looking like a beat up POS, knock off a few thousand or so.

Market price is fixed due to a limited number being available (pre 1986 manufacture) for sale to private citiizens, and the number of people who want one increasing each year while inventory slowly decreases due to house fires, etc.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

Simon_Jester wrote: 2017-10-03 07:08pmJub you whiny fuckwit, I am making a good faith effort here and asking you to show enough basic fucking maturity to recognize that things take time. If you want a detailed analysis, you're going to need to be patient to get one.
"Okay, this debate has rapidly outpaced my capacity to keep up on sheer volume. I will respond to these things from earlier in the thread, try to respond to some other specific points, but I can only do so much."

You didn't put a time provision in your quoted statement and I called you out on that. I do expect a reply though given that YOU are the one who asked for evidence which I took the time to provide.
Missing the point so very, very badly. But in an attempt to engage with your grimly humorless technocratic fetishes one more time...

In all seriousness, a building well designed to weather Canadian winters is NOT going to look exactly like a building well designed for the climate of Guatemala. Guatemalans build structures that do not always look like the structures found in Canada. They do this for good reasons other than "lol stupid Guatemalans don't know how to build a building right."

If you do not know this, you are too ignorant to have opinions on building design.

More generally, I submit that you are too ignorant of how to comprehend the views of other humans. So much so, that you are not really qualified to have opinions on topics that involve the lives and rights and situations of other humans. Unqualified to hold political views or participate in political debate.

In the original Athenian sense of the word, you are an "idiot."
You would have a point if I held up Canadian houses as the ideal house for all climates and locations. I didn't, I simply pointed out that insulation is a good thing no matter the climate.

The best house varies depending on a lot of factors but, where possible, I favor packed earth for insulation even going so far as to dig in if soil conditions allow for such. This is great for both heating and cooling as well as providing structural strength for things like a rooftop garden to replace the typical yard. One can use angled and possibly mirrored shafts for natural light and airflow.

I'm not going to start drawing technical diagrams, but this is an area I've looked into.

----------
Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 07:15pm...

Yes, that is what gun control supporters believe it means, but the second sentence is just completely wrong.

Is that what you think it means, or is that your understanding of what gun control supporters think it means?
It's not wrong at all. The M16 has progressively had it's automatic fire capability removed from service and is now a safe-semi-burst rifle.

"The FN M16A4, using safe/semi/burst selective fire, became standard issue for the U.S. Marine Corps and is the current issue to Marine Corps recruits in both MCRD San Diego and MCRD Parris Island."

Fully automatic capability is generally being pushed into the hands of specialists armed with squad automatics or other means of suppression.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Dominus Atheos »

Ok, let me try asking this a different way.

What guns are NOT semiautomatic or fully automatic? What guns would still be legal under a semiautomatic ban?
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 07:32pm Ok, let me try asking this a different way.

What guns are NOT semiautomatic or fully automatic? What guns would still be legal under a semiautomatic ban?
Bolt, pump, and lever-action would still be allowed in terms of long guns. Revolvers and manually slide operated pistols would also be allowed.

Firearms companies would have to start making new models in these actions, but you'd have functional weapons for hunting/pest control.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

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Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 07:42pmBolt, pump, and lever-action would still be allowed in terms of long guns.
You know the aussies are shitting themselves about the Adler A-110 Lever action?

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-10-19/w ... ow/7945316

You think Americans aren't paying attention to what goes on in other countries? :)
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Flagg »

Simon_Jester wrote: 2017-10-03 07:08pm Okay, that is PRETTY MUCH everything except Jub's big wall of stuff. Responding to THAT is gonna take some time, and a lot more patience than I have right this minute.

FLAGG, please note that I would like to reconcile with you a bit, because I think there's been a bit more mud-slinging than I think either of us deserves to have slung. I apologize for the slinging I have done.
Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 05:01pmAnd frankly, I think out of the people in this thread on the side of “let’s figure out a way to prevent our American tradition of yearly gun massacres” I’ve been eminently reasonable. I’m not proposing “scary looking weapons” bans, or total confiscation. I’m trying to find practical solutions while at the same time pointing out that the gun industry is like no other industry in this country. They don’t risk being sued if they put out a faulty product. There are tons of loopholes that allow criminals to get their hands on guns and the gun industry is opposed to even talking about closing them. Any time some lunatic mows down a movie audience or a class of first graders they say “well clearly we need more guns with less regulation!”

If you want to pretend that isn’t a really fucked up problem to make your super logical emotionally and empathy detached points, then don’t respond because we have nothing to discuss.
See, my thing is, I don't actually have a problem with gun control. I have a problem with not making any goddamn sense.

So Flagg, if you want to specifically home in on "fuck the gun industry," you have my agreement. The gun industry can go get fucked; if that's bad for their business model so be it. Fucking over the gun industry makes sense. If there's a reason to do it, go for it.
Yeah, I’ll agree that we’ve both been flinging too much shit at each other and I apologize for my part as well because I think that if there is daylight between our positions it’s more along the lines of what outside criticism we are willing to tolerate. I also think you were mistaking me for somone who wants to gather up every gun in the nation and melt them into statues of multi-ethnic children holding hands around a globe or something. I mean it would be nice, but as a former and future gun owner I don’t see that happening.
My main objections are to the brick wall of “fuck dead children” in response by the gun lobby to the attempt to prevent crazies and criminals (or to at least make it harder) to get their hands on firearms and to put reasonable limits on magazine capacity because the only honest argument against the latter is “But I don’t want to have to reload ammo into my 10-12 round magazine when target shooting because it hurts my thumbs!”

You see the same argument in this thread with the push right now by the gun industry to ease restrictions on suppressors/silencers because “I don’t want to have to buy ear plugs for target shooting!” To which my response is: “Then go deaf.”
My objection is to the people masturbating over mass confiscation of firearms because it appeals to their fetish for making us all live in neat rectangular grids. And to the people saying "well, this plan works well on a random island on the other side of the world, clearly it will work well in an entirely different place among very different people, and anyone who opposes it is just being a My-Country-Exceptionalist!" And to the people who entirely without a sense of irony can one day say "we need to add clauses to the list of human rights," and the next day say "I don't think this is a right, even though half the people in [country-over-here] disagree, it should be stricken from their constitution."

To me... None of that makes any goddamn sense.
I’m not for mass confiscation except maybe for fully automatic weapons if someone who jumped through the miles of hoops to qualify and the following miles to maintain the permissions to possess them legally went bugfuck and killed dozens (or Gods forbid, hundreds) of people. And even then...

That said, I can fully understand how somone from a modern industrialized nation that already outlawed the kind of firearm possession we have here can look at us and say “They’re a bunch of crazy fuckers, we haven’t had a classroom lit up like The Matrix in 40+ years, they should get with the times!”

It’s easy enough for people who live within US culture to feel like mass confiscation is the way to go, so for somone on the outside looking in... It really doesn’t offend me. But I get how you and others can find it offensive, especially after
What we had yesterday.
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MKSheppard
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by MKSheppard »

Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 07:50pmMy main objections are to the brick wall of “fuck dead children” in response by the gun lobby
I believe this is relevant meme:

Image
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by TheFeniX »

Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 06:18pmOk, so it’s the just victims of gun crime that cannot seek legal recompense if a criminal gets their hands on a gun. Thanks for the clarification everything I read on it was pretty murky.
The problem with opening up the creators for illegal use is you essentially open flood-gates. Now, I've got more than a few bones to pick with gun lobbyists and the NRA. But you can't let companies get sued for people using their products illegally (provided they aren't enabling), especially when it's up to law enforcement to stop illegal use of an otherwise legal item.

The floodgates would lead to shit like Ferrari getting sued because their cars can do 150MPH. So, when some dumbass wrecks his into a schoolbus full of nuns, Ferarri has to pick up the tab. Or imagine the guy who coded P2P file sharing (read: torrents) getting sued by the RIAA because other people used his code to pirate music. It's just bad news all around.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Gandalf »

TheFeniX wrote: 2017-10-03 07:55pmThe problem with opening up the creators for illegal use is you essentially open flood-gates. Now, I've got more than a few bones to pick with gun lobbyists and the NRA. But you can't let companies get sued for people using their products illegally (provided they aren't enabling), especially when it's up to law enforcement to stop illegal use of an otherwise legal item.

The floodgates would lead to shit like Ferrari getting sued because their cars can do 150MPH. So, when some dumbass wrecks his into a schoolbus full of nuns, Ferarri has to pick up the tab. Or imagine the guy who coded P2P file sharing (read: torrents) getting sued by the RIAA because other people used his code to pirate music. It's just bad news all around.
Like Metallica v Napster?
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Just for breathing in the air they wanna leave me in the chair
Electric shocking body rocking beat streeting me to death"

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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

MKSheppard wrote: 2017-10-03 07:48pm
Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 07:42pmBolt, pump, and lever-action would still be allowed in terms of long guns.
You know the aussies are shitting themselves about the Adler A-110 Lever action?

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-10-19/w ... ow/7945316

You think Americans aren't paying attention to what goes on in other countries? :)
Is it wrong that I agree that it should be reclassified in line with the other Australian guidelines? It's not your typical lever action shotgun and with that high capacity it likely should end up in a more restrictive category based on what it can do.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Dominus Atheos »

Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 07:42pm
Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 07:32pm Ok, let me try asking this a different way.

What guns are NOT semiautomatic or fully automatic? What guns would still be legal under a semiautomatic ban?
Bolt, pump, and lever-action would still be allowed in terms of long guns. Revolvers and manually slide operated pistols would also be allowed.

Firearms companies would have to start making new models in these actions, but you'd have functional weapons for hunting/pest control.
Your first definition didn't include double action revolvers, most pistols, non-Elmer Fudd style double barrel shotguns or most hunting rifles. It only included "assault style" rifles. So you admit you were wrong?

It is my suspicion that gun control advocates think "semiautomatics" means "any gun that makes me go tinkle in my underoos, especially things like pistol grips or dark colors (black guns matter?)" and are willing to throw a lot of people in jail over their misconception.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Flagg »

MKSheppard wrote: 2017-10-03 07:54pm
Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 07:50pmMy main objections are to the brick wall of “fuck dead children” in response by the gun lobby
I believe this is relevant meme:

Image
Thank you for the daily dose of psychopathy, I can skip Facebook today. :lol:
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by MKSheppard »

You're welcome.
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Flagg »

TheFeniX wrote: 2017-10-03 07:55pm
Flagg wrote: 2017-10-03 06:18pmOk, so it’s the just victims of gun crime that cannot seek legal recompense if a criminal gets their hands on a gun. Thanks for the clarification everything I read on it was pretty murky.
The problem with opening up the creators for illegal use is you essentially open flood-gates. Now, I've got more than a few bones to pick with gun lobbyists and the NRA. But you can't let companies get sued for people using their products illegally (provided they aren't enabling), especially when it's up to law enforcement to stop illegal use of an otherwise legal item.

The floodgates would lead to shit like Ferrari getting sued because their cars can do 150MPH. So, when some dumbass wrecks his into a schoolbus full of nuns, Ferarri has to pick up the tab. Or imagine the guy who coded P2P file sharing (read: torrents) getting sued by the RIAA because other people used his code to pirate music. It's just bad news all around.
The problem is that by using the NRA as a front group to prevent legislation that would help keep their weapons out of criminal hands they are effectively perfectly willing to let criminals buy their guns. It’s a “wink-wink” “nudge-nudge” thing going on. But then we have a SCrOTUmS that has decided money is free speech (yet prostitution is still illegal, go figure) so even then... :roll:
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Flagg »

MKSheppard wrote: 2017-10-03 08:20pm You're welcome.
Hey, I laughed, I’m just as guilty.
We pissing our pants yet?
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You got your shittin' pants on? Because you’re about to
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by Jub »

Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 08:12pm
Jub wrote: 2017-10-03 07:42pm
Dominus Atheos wrote: 2017-10-03 07:32pm Ok, let me try asking this a different way.

What guns are NOT semiautomatic or fully automatic? What guns would still be legal under a semiautomatic ban?
Bolt, pump, and lever-action would still be allowed in terms of long guns. Revolvers and manually slide operated pistols would also be allowed.

Firearms companies would have to start making new models in these actions, but you'd have functional weapons for hunting/pest control.
Your first definition didn't include double action revolvers, most pistols, non-Elmer Fudd style double barrel shotguns or most hunting rifles. It only included "assault style" rifles. So you admit you were wrong?

It is my suspicion that gun control advocates think "semiautomatics" means "any gun that makes me go tinkle in my underoos, especially things like pistol grips or dark colors (black guns matter?)" and are willing to throw a lot of people in jail over their misconception.
I gave you a top of the head list of certain actions and weapon types that would still be allowed and never claimed to be giving a complete list. So kindly fuck off and try again.
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Re: Las Vegas Shooting

Post by MKSheppard »

You all realize that the perp had a private pilot's license until a few years back?

All he had to do to equal this was get a nice big plane, a twin prop/turboprop job; fly into Vegas, and then call an inflight emergency and abort to McCarran; and once there, just kamikaze into the crowd with a nearly full load of fuel.

Money was not apparently a problem with him, as he apparently booked other rooms around Vegas with views leading up to this event, probably trying to find the perfect shooting spot.
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
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