If you buy game (pheasant, partridge, rabbit etc) in Waitrose, how do you think it got there?
Well the UK supermarkets do not rely on private citizens with guns who go out hobby shooting. So it certainly did not get there from UK gun enthusiasts!
If you buy game (pheasant, partridge, rabbit etc) in Waitrose, how do you think it got there?
Well the UK supermarkets do not rely on private citizens with guns who go out hobby shooting. So it certainly did not get there from UK gun enthusiasts!
There may be overlap.
The idea there are not behavior/mental illness categories here and it's just a coincidental finding seems rather oblivious to the evidence.
I'm not saying most of these shooters bear no fault because they are mentally ill. That's a different subject.
Then do something more constructive with your time. Do something more educational. Something a bit harder than just trying kill things from 100 ft away! ... learn to play a musical instrument ... go and study for a maths or physics degree ... go and help poor and underprivileged or disabled people ... almost anything is better and far more challenging, skilful and educational than firing a gun at an unsuspecting rabbit (or an unsuspecting kid in a school).
Who are you to decide what is a constructive use of time for others?
Who are you to decide what is a constructive use of time for others?
Actually, wing shooting is a highly challenging sport and takes a lot of practice to attain competency. Somehow, as a wing shooter myself, I have managed to learn to also play a musical instrument and found the time to earn an advance degree. So participating has not inhibited my ability to do these other things you feel are constructive.
Wild rabbit tastes quite a bit better than farmed, as do grouse, wild turkey and pheasant. Also, hunting is an environmentally sound practice, unlike most industrial meat farming operations.
Further, my children who also participate, have a greater understanding of where their food comes from, and that meat doesn't just arrive on the supermarket shelves without some sacrifice. This is the most important part IMO.
As for this derail, do you have any evidence that shotgunners/wingshooters have participated in or that the sport has caused mass shootings like we're supposed to be talking about here?
Well the UK supermarkets do not rely on private citizens with guns who go out hobby shooting. So it certainly did not get there from UK gun enthusiasts!
Are mass shooters more likely to have a history of mental illness or of domestic violence?
The 2nd amendment says:
"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."
We need to remember that when the constitution was drafted, guns were not just for hunting or self-defense or target practice. They were the weapons of war, which had just freed our country from the tyranny of the British government.
The reason no one in their right minds wants any kind of ban on guns that prevents guns from being readily accessed and used is to prevent our current government from becoming tyrannical. They have to take away the guns -or just keep making them harder and harder to get- before they can make many inroads against our other civil rights.
But, once it's impossible for the average person to get guns, all the average people are hostage to whatever happens next -the loss of free speech & the free press, being subject to search and seizures (ergo losing any guns they've hidden), etc.
No one in the USA wants that. Or, at least, no one in the USA should want that.
I think if the gun control advocates want to make real inroads toward finding ways to keep guns out of the hands of those who should not have them, and lower the murder rate, they have to approach the issue with the reasons for the 2nd amendment's existence in mind.
Remember: the Constitution is not an ideal, or a best-case-scenario. It's the law.
In some ways, I'm jealous of those in the UK who see their government as a benevolent entity providing for the peoples and working with the overall health of the population in mind.
However, I'm quite American, and at the end of the day I do not -will never- trust our government to put the welfare of the citizens above the person desires of those in power. Nor do I have to go far to find examples of this happening already -from enacting laws forcing people to buy various forms of insurance to seizing assets from those merely suspected of a crime, many of us see the rights to bear arms as a necessity. If our government falls too far out of line with what most of us want, a revolution (or the mere ability to bring one) is the only thing that will protect our free states.
Cruz did commit domestic violence against his mother. Police were called many times.Are mass shooters more likely to have a history of mental illness or of domestic violence?
AFAIK, the latest shooter did not have a record of domestic violence, but that is certainly a common theme among mass shooters.
2: Short to Medium term holds on gun possession based on reporting by mental health professionals.
The fact is that up until the 1970's no one cared about the second amendment - everyone considered it obsolete. That is why no one went to the supreme Court when some cities banned all private guns within their limits.
Today you can only limit sales. Not possession. Nobody knows if you have guns at home or not. And even if they search your home, you might have them hidden elsewhere. For this to work, you would need gun registration. That must be always the first step, IMHO.
I dispute this. In fact, I suggest that just about the only source of game is from organised shoots. People who go on a shoot for a day might kill 10, 20 or 30 birds, yet take only a brace or so home. The rest are left with the organiser of the shoot, who no doubt sells them onto a butcher or game meat dealer. Waitrose presumably takes a certain amount regularly from the dealers. I've often found shot in such meat from Waitrose. (I've a feeling we may even be having a game casserole this evening.)
Do CCW permit holders carry around a firearm in daily public life, or is it an accessory for special occasions or special events?Do you carry around a sword in daily public life, or is it an accessory for special occasions or special events?
Cruz did commit domestic violence against his mother. Police were called many times.
William Parcher's statement, to which I was responding, did not specify when or how the sword was carried. He said that If you carry a sword, unqualified, then you are mentally ill. "No question". He was very clearly implying that all people who carry swords, at any time, for any reason, have a mental illness. Even if that's not what he meant, it's what he wrote.You regularly wear a sword in your everyday life?
I wear a Gladius when I am re-enacting, not doing the shopping.
For a start in the UK parading around the streets with a sword would get you arrested.
Do CCW permit holders carry around a firearm in daily public life, or is it an accessory for special occasions or special events?