slingblade
Unregistered
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2005
- Messages
- 23,466
If you can't get a gun, you can't shoot someone.
Can you still kill someone?
If you can't get a gun, you can't shoot someone.
Can you still kill someone?
Of course you can. Who has claimed otherwise? Not me.
Are you saying - and I am asking - that people will kill, regardless of what weapons they have available? It doesn't matter what weapon they have, they will kill, exactly the same number?
Without taking a side here, I must say that the last few posts are indicative of unnecessary talking-past-one-another.
Who on Earth doesn't understand that the contention here is that it's a lot easier to kill with a gun. Slingblade, don't you know that's what Claus means? Claus, why don't you just say it?
Thread participants? Probably not.
But you know, there are lurkers here. I'm sure there are people here who do little or no posting, but a lot of reading. They're windowshopping in the marketplace of ideas, trying some of them on and accepting or rejecting them. Those of us who argue amongst ourselves will doubtless change very few minds amongst ourselves, but there are always people who haven't made up their minds yet.
My opinions on gun control, the death penalty, and abortion rights are not the same as they were thirty years ago. That is not the result of my brain's neurons one day spasmadically rearranging themselves; I was exposed to other ideas, and found some of them persuasive, and others wanting.
Think for a minute what the "E" in JREF stands for. These gun threads, abortion threads, death penalty threads, all serve that purpose. They educate.
Purchase a 50cal BMG. That'll teach 'em. I always said, "walk softly and Carry a rifle with a 2,800 fps muzzle velocity, a 2,000 yard maximum effective range and the ability to punch a hole through 1" plate steel." (paraphrased).So here's my question. What do you intend to do with this information?
May I just interrupt here with a rousing "Who gives a [rule8]?"
Thanks.
Guns were much more readily available when I was in school. Their availability is not the primary reason for "it happened again." It is a contributing factor, certainly, if only because you can't shoot up a school if you don't have a gun.
It seems, however, that every time this horror happens, people want to talk about where the kid got the gun (if it's a kid, that is), how easy it is for kids to get guns, how we need to re-examine gun control....
This is not the problem.
My saying that, however, doesn't mean I can identify the problem. I have some ideas. I have a little insight. Most of us do. But we simply have to quit focusing on the guns. The guns are a symptom, and a tool, but they are not "the" problem.
There is no one place to put the blame, and there is no one answer or one solution. There may not be solutions. But kids having guns is not the problem.
A handful of kids wanting a gun, and wanting a violent solution to whatever problems they have or feel they have, is the problem.
How do we fix that? Can we fix that?
Think for a minute what the "E" in JREF stands for. These gun threads, abortion threads, death penalty threads, all serve that purpose. They educate.
Intellectual honesty, now that I like. Some day if I'm ever wrong I hope to be able to admit it.Judging by people's responses so far it appears you were right and I was wrong.
I hate that!![]()
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I can help you out with that.Intellectual honesty, now that I like. Some day if I'm ever wrong I hope to be able to admit it.![]()
I can help you out with that.![]()
When I was 12 (ca.1958), my brother (10) was gifted with an Italian WWII Italian carbine. In the shipping material with it, one page offered an anti-tank gun for 99.00 and shells for it at app. $10.00 each. If I had had $300.00, history might have been some different!![]()
Yeah, I had a similar upbringing. We would get together for boy scout hunts or to go deer hunting and every one had a riffle. I had a 30.06, 22 rifle and of course a Daisy Air Rifle when I was 12.Oh yeah, I sure do remember THOSE from that time. The one I'm thinking of was called-honest- a "Boys rifle". ("Hey Ma, I want a Boys rifle for Christmas." The real reason for the name having nothing to do with young men....)
I do have to agree with Slingblade however. I grew up with firearms- had a .22 when I was 10 and a high power rifle and shotgun by the time I was 12. Most kids in my Penna suburban school hunted and the older ones often carried their firearms and ammo to school in the trunks of their cars. Heck, even our school bus driver carried a shotgun with him on the bus. (To hunt with after his bus route was completed.) Here in Vermont kids barely out of diapers could, and often did, use all kinds of firearms. Yet school shootings were unheard of. I can remember major flaps at school when someone was seen with a penknife in his lunchbox or when one kid called another a "dirty communist".
So no, I am not convinced it's something as simple as just the availability of firearms that is behind recent school shootings.
OK, what am I missing?
Remove the easy access to guns. If you can't get a gun, you can't shoot someone.
No one ever shot anyone in public simply because a gun was available, at least as far as I know.
Yeah, but not much. Nothing a kit and a screwdriver can't fix.