Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Thank you.Good thing that is the opposite of what Skeptic Ginger is doing.
Thank you.Good thing that is the opposite of what Skeptic Ginger is doing.
Yep.Avoiding the nuances of the issue is on par with ignoring the problem. Doing so makes discussion pointless, unless the goal is to just complain.
Straw man, false dichotomy, take your pick.
Really? Could you quote where I said that?What Skeptic Ginger was doing was, in effect, saying that the vast majority of mass shootings aren't worth discussing.
Again with the categorization equals reduction thing. ??
I thought I understood from your posts that categorization of the types of mass murder would eventually lead to something positive or advantageous. Presumably reduction in the deaths from mass murders is a positive. If categorization is just an academic exercise and a reduction in deaths is not a/the goal then why bother?
You can own a machine gun. If it was made or imported before 1968 or registered before 1986 All you need is a bit of extra paperwork and a few hundred dollars to pay the fee.[/B]You can have an M16, a Vickers, an M60 or a Bren gun etc.
Because there is a limited expensive to buy.
Even some M16s are now more than 50 years old and count as 'Collectables and Relics'
You can own a howitzer, and AA gun or an RPG. They are classed as 'Destructive Devices' and you need the appropriate paperwork and pay the appropriate fee.
So as I said... not "as of right"
My post wasn't the least bit nuanced.I pick neither. The thread is about mass shootings. The thread is pointless. You said so yourself. Others here think your post was nuanced. I do not.
Where was the FBI? It turns out that the Colorado grocery store shooter Ahmad Alissa was known to the FBI and had ranted online about “racist islamophobes” hacking his phone. The FBI failed to stop another shooting where they knew the gunman but weren’t watching him as he purchased a gun six days ago.
Of 160 active shooter incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013, over 80 percent (132) occurred at work, according to the FBI’s first study of the subject.
The agency defined an active shooter incident as when an individual actively engaged in killing or attempting to kill people in a populated area through the use of firearms.
The study found that 1,043 people were either killed or wounded in all 160 incidents, excluding the shooters. There was an average of 6.4 incidents per year from 2000-06, but the rate increased to 16.4 incidents per year from 2007-13. The incidents occurred in 40 states and in Washington, D.C.
Of the 132 worksite shootings, 73 incidents (45.6 percent) took place at businesses, 39 (24.4 percent) at schools, 16 (10 percent) at government sites, and four at health care facilities (2.5 percent).
I'll take this as an indicator that you either don't read the posts or are arguing in bad faith. If it's not the latter I ask that you re-read my posts and perhaps we can start at the same place.
No one has made this claim.
Categorization happens in all areas where people are trying to fix a problem, do you oppose it across the board or only on this topic? Categorizing different kinds of cancers has not lessened or eradicated them. But that categorization leads to a better understanding that could lead to something that helps the problem.
My post wasn't the least bit nuanced.
Again, please quote what I said so I can help you understand it.
You are missing the point which is this is a pointless thread.
Really? Could you quote where I said that?
You are describing what some people here think I said. Perhaps if you quoted me I could clear this falsehood up.
Let's start with this one:
Now "something that helps the problem" or is useful in "trying to fix a problem" in the case of mass murders would be something that reduces the total number of mass murders and the number of persons who die that way. Do you see some other way of help(ing) the problem, leading from categorization, that does not involve a reduction in both occurrences and deaths? If categorization is to have a material effect it must lead to reduction.
Bad faith. Got it. Thanks for your time, I guess.
Seriously, if you think having a simple, non-detailed discussion about a complex, important issue is more helpful than the converse, then so be it.
As for categorization, everything is categorized by people who are serious about improving and or studying/understanding those situations - be it crime, diseases, areas of science, politics, etc. If you truly think that since categorization does not equal immediate reduction/positive effects it is therefore pointless, then what are you doing on a critical thinking forum?
This post is the one where you defined a "mass shooting" so as to exclude the vast majority of mass shootings.

So cherry picking it is then. Did you really miss everything I said?
Can't say I didn't try.
Bizarre! I'm out.
ETA immediate reduction? Talk about bad faith! my whole point re reduction is that it will take years or decades for statistics to show it.
Someone who sets off to murder complete strangers, or everyone at a workplace or school.
It does not include the guy who murders his spouse/girlfriend and takes out any family members that had the unfortunate luck of being there.
It doesn't include armed robbery, or gang-related murders. It doesn't include road rage.
That doesn't mean all those other deaths from gun violence don't matter. They do. But the only way to address any of this is to define shooters by groups of characteristics one can use to address the problem.
To address mass shooters we need to know what their characteristics are, what they have in common, what are the triggers, the warning signs and then those need to be incorporated into planning.
The FBI has a good paper on 'the school shooter' and what schools need to do to prevent those incidents. And there are things that can be done. Schools need risk assessment tools and plans. I've linked to it before.
There is also a workplace shooter plan, identifying who is at risk like blaming others among other things, and establishing a plan, how to get law enforcement involved and so on. I've been to conferences on 'going postal' that advise employers on how to establish such a plan.
In the latest shooting at Sooper's that might have been prevented by better educating people who are worried about family members and taking away roadblocks. For example, police have to stop shooting mentally ill people in a crisis when someone calls for help. Would you call the police to help you with your schizophrenic child knowing how often they just shoot the person?
Family members need resources and education. This one is a little loftier of a goal but we can still begin to address it.
Do you see how none of those address these kinds of shooters:
The Way We Think About Mass Shootings Ignores Many Black Victims
The article bemoans the fact these murders don't get the same press coverage. And that is a valid complaint.
That is not the school shooter, not the schizophrenic shooter, not the workplace shooter.
While they obviously need attention, and news coverage, they are a different animal. Equal attention doesn't mean they should all be lumped together into "gun violence" because that really limits the actions we need to be taking.
- Why are some categories specifically excluded from the definition of a mass murder?