kittythehare
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2016
- Messages
- 18,562
- Reaction score
- 109,246
Thank you.BBM
"Semi-automatic rifles" is the most accurate way of referring to them.
Thank you.BBM
"Semi-automatic rifles" is the most accurate way of referring to them.
Was everyone afraid of violating Cruzs second amendment rights?
Honest question.
Snip
In February 2016, neighbors told police that they were worried he planned to shoot up the school
https://www.naplesnews.com/story/ne...etails-his-homicidal-intentions-mo/365975002/
Snip
About two months later, an unidentified caller told police that Cruz had been collecting guns and knives.
Snip
A second cousin asked police to take away Cruz's guns after his mom died on November 1.
Snip
After the February 2016 call, a deputy forwarded the information to the Stoneman Douglas School Resource Officer, Deputy Scot Peterson.
It's not just teenagers.
adults use them too..
Terrorists use them
Anti-govs use them.
There's a helluva lot of them out there.
(white house is on lockdown reports nbc, cnn reckon a vehicle struck a security barrier
probably a thing of nothing)
A can of Raid might be more effective, more affordible, more "right now" solution, than the time it will take to debate arming teachers...
Incapacitating flashlight- disorients the perp and makes them vomit.
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/408360/the-incapacitating-flashlight/
and not a word about ar15's.. I know there are very many gun types that fall into the category.. can we decide what we are calling them? I cannot call them dangerous guns... What word can I use?
:bump:
I have been calling them either military grade or assault weapons. I don't know what else to call them
I'm talking specifically about school shooters. School shooters are typically in the 13-18 y/o range. Most 19 y/o are out by then, and raising the age to 21 might help with those disgruntled 18 -20 y/os. If folks have children in the home, their firearms should be locked up. There are easy access safes you can put beside your bed for home protection. I don't care if my kid is 18 or 80, my home, my rules.
Are they all long guns or have the small guns this capacity too and are they widely available?
And if NC had been properly referred for criminal investigation and charges even a few of the many infractions at school, or the 30+ domestic violence calls to the home, then he WOULD HAVE had a criminal record that would have prevented him from legally purchasing his rifle.
That said, I'm fine with raising the age to purchase all guns to 21. I'm fine with banning the rare and not readily available "bump stocks".
Neither of those things will prevent mass shootings, or school shootings. But they are easily agreed on by both sides, so will likely pass into law soon.
But developing a mechanism to permanently remove disturbed kids from mainstream general education? Developing criteria to remove disturbed kids permanently from public schools? Developing a functional residential treatment center network for disturbed adolescents? Increasing outpatient commitments for disturbed youth? These are the strategies we need to be focusing on to make real, effective, long term progress with these disturbed youth. But I don't see any real focus on these things as priorities. It's just so much easier to whip up a frenzy over more gun restrictions.
We will continue to have more school shootings, IMO, until we get serious about getting these disturbed kids properly identified and diagnosed EARLY, into mandatory treatment (including removal from their homes into residential treatment when necessary), processed thru the criminal justice system when they commit violent crimes, threats, and weapons infractions, and permanently removed from general education settings.
A can of Raid might be more effective, more affordible, more "right now" solution, than the time it will take to debate arming teachers...
I have been calling them either military grade or assault weapons. I don't know what else to call them
IMO no. The school and the sheriff were more concerned about lowering arrests of the students.
Guns of all kinds have existed for centuries.
Handguns, hunting guns, and all sorts of guns have been a part of American life for 200+ years.
But only in the past 20 years or so have mass shootings, and school shootings, become commonplace. I think it's necessary to explore WHY that is.
The guns have always been available. It's the PEOPLE who have changed, IMO. Our common values and goals as a society have disintegrated.
Some broad brush, pessimistic observations contribute to that, IMO.
Families have disintegrated on a large scale. Social mores and norms have been obliterated. Children are conceived irresponsibly, and they get older, but are not nurtured, supervised, guided, and raised. Violence, murder, guns, and killing is considered a fun spectator sport and entertainment for even small children, in the form of movies and video games. Kids are completely desensitized to killing and gun violence on TV, in movies, and video games. Kids have fewer attachments to adults, and have less respect for adults than ever before. Education is not valued, and has been watered down. The ethic of hard work is disappearing, and being replaced with entitlement mentality. Youth have no idea how to work hard and consistently at anything, or what it means to have integrity, responsibility, and accountability. Extremist religious, social, racial, and political ideologies proliferate on social media and the internet, gathering new recruits far easier than ever before, and urging violence and destruction. Mental illness and poor coping abilities are commonplace. A rapid influx of people from many areas of the world have not assimilated to common goals and core values, but remain in their tribal enclaves, becoming ever more disaffected. Diversity is killing us, not making us stronger.
Definitely pessimistic, but these are trends in the U.S. I see every day. So then you add easily available guns to the mix of vast social problems and disturbed individuals we have, and these mass killings, suicides, and domestic gun rages are understandable from a sociological perspective.
We need to keep guns out of the hands of the wrong people. We all agree on that. But to do that, we have to clearly identify what behaviors and conditions/ diagnoses constitutes the "wrong" person. We have to have easier mechanisms to COMPEL disturbed people to get diagnosis, and compel treatment. And we can't even get to that point. IMO, we have essentially no functional mental health system in the U.S., which was a direct and intentional result of de-institutionalization. Why? Because effective mental health care is extremely costly and labor intensive, and oftentimes is a lifelong need. Nobody wants to pay for it.
After many of these mass shootings, there have been piles of obvious red flags, reports not followed up on, massively disturbed people. Preventing mass shootings is NOT just about restricting gun access.
I'm talking specifically about school shooters. School shooters are typically in the 13-18 y/o range. Most 19 y/o are out by then, and raising the age to 21 might help with those disgruntled 18 -20 y/os. If folks have children in the home, their firearms should be locked up. There are easy access safes you can put beside your bed for home protection. I don't care if my kid is 18 or 80, my home, my rules.
RBBM. The guns available now are higher powered and can handle much more ammunition than ever before. Dealing with a shooter who had a pistol or a hunting rifle would definitely be easier than handling someone with a military grade weapon that has a huge magazine, and that can be basically upgraded to an automatic.
I believe that in part it is to do with disaffected young men, but the availability of the types of weapons around now can't be ignored.
FYI 44% of school shooters are over 18. Many are over 21. 46% use a gun they got outside the home. So parents locking their guns up would probably reduce the number by about 50%. Maybe not even that much. A lot of school shooters kill their parents first, and then take their guns.
Analysis of School Shootings
Respectfully, Cruz attended six schools in three years, and was kicked out of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2015, I believe.
He hadn't been a student in quite some time. That doesn't mean the school and sheriff weren't worried about limiting arrests back in 2015, but they expelled him. They didn't exactly ignore his problem behavior. They got rid of him. IMO