What I want to know is how the hell with all the problems in his past he got a freaking security cleareance. Seems to me that Less Then Honorable Discharge would be a huge flag you do not want to trust this guy with high security stuff.
Yeah, you'd think background checks for security clearances would involve looking into whether or not the applicant is known to the police, especially considering that he has run into them on various occations.
Agreed 100% but for me that the guy got basically kicked out of the Navy would be enough for a huge red flag,regardless of other issues.
Hope Sabrina shows up since she is very knowlegable in this area.
What I want to know is how the hell with all the problems in his past he got a freaking security cleareance. Seems to me that Less Then Honorable Discharge would be a huge flag you do not want to trust this guy with high security stuff.
I noticed yesterday that a local sporting goods store has a separate area for tactical gear. A counter selling AR-15s and similar firearms, "cold steel" knives, camo outfits, night vision gear.
Who buys this stuff?
Hunters, hikers, outdoorsman, fisherman...... BTW, I've bought one of everything you've listed, with the exception of NVG. I've got no use for them. But, if I had a pair....that'd be cool as hell! Not sure what I'd do with them....
I'M ignorant? You're the one pretending I was referring to privately owned guns.`
Even the guy from the NRA didn't refer ONLY to privately owned guns.
It's a naval base. There are guns on it. And yet, this shooting still happened.
Thanks for proving you're ignorant on everything.
Including what 'strawman' means.
Spy on your neighbors? Could be interesting!
My neighbors are old. Like, in their 80's old....
I dunno. I think that is a red flag right there. Discharging your firearm in a residential area (other than in defense of life & limb) should be taken seriously.
That merely makes you willfully ignorant.Tell you this from outside the USA the fact that a massacre can occur carried out by a gun nut on a miltary base looks like the sympton of a systemic breakdown and lack of any real control over weapons.
Incorrect.IIRC the round through the ceiling was the last straw for the Navy and I think he did not get a full honorable discharge.
Or drunk. Or stupid. There's lot's of reasons to behave irresponsibly. He did apparently have some anger issues. Hell, if I'd been raised in Brooklyn or Queens, I might have them too. A few of the news articles provide hearsay evidence that he was very frustrated with the Navy, government, and the trouble getting assistance from the VA ... lately. The other story line is that the 9-11 attacks bugged the hell out of him. No idea what's true, and we won't know since he is now dead.You don't shoot at someone's car unless you are angry, imo. And have control problems.
True, if tragic. He went Postal.I see news are now saying he'd been employed a week and wasnt an ex employee as first reported. One hell of a way to show you hate the job
Sadly, he gave his shotgun a dishonorable discharge into a security guard at the Navy Yard, took that weapon, and another, and ran amok. Ain't nothing to do with gun control here. Out of control, more like.He was in fact granted an honorable discharge.
Standard patient confidentiality.And the VA was not permitted by law to tell anyone, including his employer or the Navy, that he had sought help for symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia.
That merely makes you willfully ignorant.Tell you this from outside the USA the fact that a massacre can occur carried out by a gun nut on a miltary base looks like the sympton of a systemic breakdown and lack of any real control over weapons.
Incorrect.IIRC the round through the ceiling was the last straw for the Navy and I think he did not get a full honorable discharge.
Or drunk. Or stupid. There's lot's of reasons to behave irresponsibly. He did apparently have some anger issues. Hell, if I'd been raised in Brooklyn or Queens, I might have them too.You don't shoot at someone's car unless you are angry, imo. And have control problems.
True, if tragic. He went Postal.I see news are now saying he'd been employed a week and wasnt an ex employee as first reported. One hell of a way to show you hate the job
Sadly, he gave his shotgun a dishonorable discharge into a security guard at the Navy Yard, took that weapon, and another, and ran amok. Ain't nothing to do with gun control here. Out of control, more like.He was in fact granted an honorable discharge.
Standard patient confidentiality.And the VA was not permitted by law to tell anyone, including his employer or the Navy, that he had sought help for symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia.
Hunters, hikers, outdoorsman, fisherman...... BTW, I've bought one of everything you've listed, with the exception of NVG. I've got no use for them. But, if I had a pair....that'd be cool as hell! Not sure what I'd do with them....
I noticed yesterday that a local sporting goods store has a separate area for tactical gear. A counter selling AR-15s and similar firearms, "cold steel" knives, camo outfits, night vision gear.
Who buys this stuff?
He did not get a less-than-honorable discharge. He was in fact granted an honorable discharge.
None of his three or four firearms-related run-ins with police resulted in a conviction, which meant his right to own weapons and carry them concealed was protected (and politically-defended; as in the case of a certain other newsworthy individual we will not name).
And the VA was not permitted by law to tell anyone, including his employer or the Navy, that he had sought help for symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia.
Here a mass shooter went somewhere where he expected there to be guns.
So much for the NRA's claim that mass shooters only go where they know people will be unarmed.
Here a mass shooter went somewhere where he expected there to be guns. So much for the NRA's claim that mass shooters only go where they know people will be unarmed.
Stop that right now. Clinton did not start that. In all my years of active duty, soldiers living in the barracks had to keep their weapons, private or government-issue, in the arms room. They could remove their private weapons to go hunting or to the sportsman's range, but had to sign them in and out.This is a gun-free zone, thanks to the Clinton ban on military bases. Yes, there is armed security, just like there are cops outside of schools, but regular soldiers are not allowed to carry.
Stop that right now. Clinton did not start that. In all my years of active duty, soldiers living in the barracks had to keep their weapons, private or government-issue, in the arms room. They could remove their private weapons to go hunting or to the sportsman's range, but had to sign them in and out.
Soldiers living in family housing had to have their weapons secured and unloaded and could take them out only to go hunting or to the range and had to keep them unloaded until they were at the range or the hunting area, and unload them before returning to quarters.
In both cases, the weapons had to be registered and the soldier's commander had to approve the registration. Those facing disciplinary action or being treated for any behavioral or mental disorder were not permitted to possess private weapons.
Soldiers living off-post, or retirees had to register their weapons to bring them on post for hunting or the range. The registration requirement, at least at Ft Lewis, was only recently dropped, but the weapons could only be transported directly to an authorized location, unloaded, and removed, unloaded, when the activity for which they brought the weapon was over.
Civilians, other than law-enforcement personnel, were not under any circumstances to carry loaded weapons or to carry concealed.
Somebody is peeing on our legs and telling us it is raining, and it had better cease.