Shiftless2
Well-known member
Don't know about prior knowledge but they don't look to be the least bit sad or upset.It does appear they are happy about the shooting, which implies they may have had prior knowledge?
Don't know about prior knowledge but they don't look to be the least bit sad or upset.It does appear they are happy about the shooting, which implies they may have had prior knowledge?
Don't know about prior knowledge but they don't look to be the least bit sad or upset.
If nothing else it distracts people from the Epstein files and the disaster that's Iran.Its almost as if they not only were not nervous, but happy it happened?
There's a diversity of "explanations" (aka "conspiracy theories") w/ varying degrees of implausibility."A shooting would leave me a little scared, since the reality is it would make me aware that anyone at any time could be a shooter.
Its almost as if they not only were not nervous, but happy it happened?" R5 #222
Our OJT CIC flails embarrassingly,"If nothing else it distracts people from the Epstein files and the disaster that's Iran." S2 #223
theconversation.com
Thank you S2."There seem to be a lot of different analyses of the effect" S2 #227
There seem to be a lot of different analyses of the effect
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Studies: Gun Massacre Deaths Dropped During Assault Weapons Ban, Increased After Expiration | United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary
Gun massacres fell 37 percent while ban was in place, rose by 183 percent after ban...www.judiciary.senate.gov
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Did the assault weapons ban of 1994 bring down mass shootings? Here’s what the data tells us
Analysis of the 10 years in which the US banned sales of assault weapons shows that it correlates with a drop in mass shooting deaths – a trend that reversed as soon as the ban expired.theconversation.com
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Did the assault weapons ban of 1994 bring down mass shootings? – commentary • New Hampshire Bulletin
A spate of high-profile mass shootings in the U.S. has sparked calls for Congress to look at imposing a ban on so-called assault weapons – covering the types of guns used in both the recent Buffalo grocery attack and that on an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.newhampshirebulletin.com
Thank you S2.
I've long had the uneasy apprehension when reading on the subject that what I'd previously read was not corroborated.
Utilitarianism may be an undeclared or unofficial objective of democracy.
QUESTION:
The Constitution's Second Amendment (2A) absolutizes this right: "... shall not be infringed ...". But,
Can we bell-curve the benefit of this 2A right?
100% disarmed risks authoritarian government oppression.
100% armament risks genocidal cataclysm, the termination of humanity.
Therefore it would seem the ideal is somewhere in between.
Is that close enough to be an objective toward which we strive?
"INJUNS !" [like in the movies]"Let us not forget that before 1900 there were essentially no police, and there were constant threats ranging from bears and wolves, to Spanish pirates." R5 #230
Historic accounts of that differ."So before 1800, over 90% of the population was rural and armed." R5 #230
The only dude capable of accomplishing that with a muzzle loader would have been Adam, in the Garden of Eden."Meaning that history shows there was little risk of "genocidal cataclysm, the termination of humanity"? R5 #230
Modern repeating firearms are force multipliers. They empower the weak against the strong."The utility of firearms come from the fact the police not only can become a corrupt arm of a decadent government, but that they simply never arrive in time." R5 #230
"One bullet in the hands of a mentally unstable person or a convicted felon is one too many. Six bullets in the hands of a mother protecting her twin nine year olds may not be enough." U.S. Sen.Lindsey Graham (R-SC) [source: NBC-TV News 13/01/30]
Crimes of opportunity?"And we should examine the motivations for shootings?" R5 #230
Never underestimate cowardice."There have always been deadly weapons ranging from blunt weapons to exotic toxins.
So why are these mass shootings increasing?" R5 #230
Difficult to narrow down specifically, in the abstract."I would tend to guess that they are not due to there being more weapons, but that people are more stressed and unhappy because the wealthy elite have an ever growing monopoly over the only means of survival, like rent, jobs, food prices, healthcare, etc.?" R5 #230
"INJUNS !" [like in the movies]
Historic accounts of that differ.
The only dude capable of accomplishing that with a muzzle loader would have been Adam, in the Garden of Eden.
The "100% armament risks genocidal cataclysm, the termination of humanity" #228
in 3rd millennium context is reductio ad absurdum, carrying 2A to absurd conclusion by the extreme of allowing / enabling a doomsday cultist like Jim Jones to have a genuine doomsday weapon, more than a pitcher of kool-aid.
Nukes wouldn't do it. Killing off literally 99% of Earth's human population in 2026 would leave 1% surviving. 1% of 8 Billion is 80 million, substantially more than needed for a viable breeding population.
No. To terminate the human race in 2026 a doomsday weapon would have to be either a planet killer, like sending an Earth-sized projectile direct hit into Earth's orbital path at planet-shattering velocity, leaving only tiny fragments, dissipating our atmosphere, etc. - OR -
A doomsday bio-weapon, a monstrously contagious, spectacularly lethal weapon that would propagate itself through the population.
The purpose of mentioning it in post #228 is, "shall not be infringed" Constitutionally protects such private individual citizen ownership of such weapon.
Bad idea, but in the 18th Century not a realistic concern for Madison to trifle with in wording 2A.
Modern repeating firearms are force multipliers. They empower the weak against the strong.
Crimes of opportunity?
Psychological recompense for a misperception of lifelong victimization?
Never underestimate cowardice.
Difficult to narrow down specifically, in the abstract.
"Food prices" an interesting example. Food insecurity has been a way of life for most of human history. For most of the years humans have trudged, it was common to not know where their next meal, or next day's, or next weeks meal was coming from.
In the U.S. where food is available in unprecedented abundance, and simultaneously where mass shootings are disproportionately common?
I never read The Naked Ape."When I was taking anthropology courses, they said that most of the primitives use to spend less than 3 hours a day on survival things like food.
Since we have increased the daily toil to 10 hours a day, apparently food used to come to primitives much more easily than it does now?
And this was not radicals, but the main stream, like Sir Desmond Morris, Margaret Mead, Strauss, Boas, etc." R5 #232
So the rest of the time they'd watch Oprah, and munch Cheetos? It depends on which century, which millennium we're addressing. But I doubt there was much leisure time for them."... primitives use to spend less than 3 hours a day on survival things like food." R5 #232