Pterodactyl
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2013
- Messages
- 1,280
The cops are too aggressive. The cops aren't aggressive enough.
Everyone's a critic and no one's ever happy.
Everyone's a critic and no one's ever happy.
The part that is confusing me is, why in the hell are Enterprise, Wyndham, Hertz, Best Western, etc giving discounts to NRA members in the first *********** place?
Why should the NRA get special treatment?
I also heard that airlines are ending their special group deals for NRA events.
My wife is a vet. Airlines don't give group discounts to AVMA members for travel to AVMA events (hotels do, in convention cities, but they do with all conventions).
Since when do public advocacy organization members get business discounts? Other than the AARP, that is.
This starts to sound like the script to "Paths of Glory" Kubrick, 1957, in which WW1 soldiers are Court martialed because they refused to get mowed down by German machine guns.
Yep.
Like I said last night, instead of complaining about how the guy(s) didn't do their job, why not acknowledge that it shows how even people trained to handle weapons can't handle this type of a situation?
Let's face reality
US schools should have manned guard towers
Preferrably only one entry/exit point and any visitors should only have contact through thickened glass screens
Also, unless the British are lying about it, soldiers executed for being mentally unable to face the fighting. The idea of marching or even running in the open was insane. And I am not even mentioning "in often deep mud!!!"
Or so the writer claims. Who was the writer anyway? I asked you for a single example of a car manufacturer that was held liable for the criminal misuse of one of the cars they built. What do you have to support your argument?
But it goes against the mantra of the government is supposed to protect you and it must not be evidenced that the gun-grabbers are wrong.But that goes against the mantra of good guys with a guns and it must not be evidenced that the NRA are wrong.
Don't forget the concertina wire, sally ports, and electrified 12 foot double chain-link fences.
You're right they didn't need it. Because there isn't a loud and sizeable segment of society bent on prohibiting their products by any means possible, and if they can't get it in the law or by favorable court rulings, they'll do it by lawsuit.You know what? I don't know of one. But I do know that carmakers, power tool makers, builders etc. didn't need a unique federal law to shield them from such suits.
You're right they didn't need it. Because there isn't a loud and sizeable segment of society bent on prohibiting their products by any means possible, and if they can't get it in the law or by favorable court rulings, they'll do it by lawsuit.
You know what? I don't know of one. But I do know that carmakers, power tool makers, builders etc. didn't need a unique federal law to shield them from such suits. Why should gunmakers alone benefit from a special prohibition that prevents anyone from even filing suit under existing statutes and case law and making their argument to a judge and jury?
You're right they didn't need it. Because there isn't a loud and sizeable segment of society bent on prohibiting their products by any means possible, and if they can't get it in the law or by favorable court rulings, they'll do it by lawsuit.
Let's face reality
US schools should have manned guard towers
Preferrably only one entry/exit point and any visitors should only have contact through thickened glass screens
No, they are afraid of being continuously sued under flawed theories of liability and they'll be unable to stay in business due to crushing legal costs.Which is also an entirely legal procedure that results in decisions by juries composed of citizens who are members of the community. And you think that's so sinister it needs to be arbitrarily blocked? Maybe the gun lobby is afraid the plaintiffs are right.
First of all, you're making the utterly unfounded assumption that every person who doesn't own a gun favors your desire to restrict them.And that "loud and sizeable segment of society" is actually a large majority. Nearly 80 percent of Americans don 't own any firearms. But we are all in danger from them.
But that goes against the mantra of good guys with a guns and it must not be evidenced that the NRA are wrong.
But that goes against the mantra of good guys with a guns and it must not be evidenced that the NRA are wrong.
The seemingly common ability to masquerade oneself as a "good guy" with a gun is a damn fine argument for restricting the amount of ordinance in private hands IMO.This wasn't a "good guy" scenario.
A good guy with a gun would've rushed in defense of the children and faculty with no regard for his personal safety. Then end result ideally being 0 to minimal casualties and the threat neutralized.
Deputy Peterson, for whatever reason, is not a good guy with a gun. Apparently he was only masquerading as one.
Hell of a way to have the mask come off though.