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NRA's solution to Sandy Hook massacre: "armed guards" in every school

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Before I got concerned about it I would first ask is how many gun crimes are there that utilized semi-automatics that have been converted to full-auto in this manner?
I said many times, if were to be shot at, I'd prefer full auto in almost all situations.
The issue here is how easily the spirit of the law is being violated, I mean, regardless of what your own personal opinion on the subject, we can both agree that this is not the intended result of that regulation?

In fact, I think it speaks to a larger problem in the way we write such laws in this country.
We write these super detailed super prescriptive bills in obtuse legal language, I guess so we can all sue each other afterwards or something.
It doesn't work, and fuck, we really should stop electing so many lawyers into congress, but I (double) digress.

We should just deputize some expert committee that will sit in an office somewhere and decide what is an assault rifle, what is full auto etc.
Those are not difficult questions to answer if you use common sense and judgment, put some congressional oversight to make sure they don't go crazy and we're done.
Fuck, people act like if you couldn't get that specific gun you saw in Call of Duty then the Constitution is dead, seriously, even if we get some of the individual calls wrong, how much does it really matter?
The ATF can probably handle it.
 
I had armed police officers starting in 2001 in our schools. How trained they were I don't know and how much help they would have been is probably minimal, they only carried handguns.
 
I wish a politician would come out and say that. Really shows the respect and trust one has for a free people.

So would you support making gun licenses like drivers licenses, or having mental health screenings? Because that's the idea, you can't trust people with guns until they prove themselves.

It's a distinction I purposefully make because unless a citizen in the US has been found guilty in a court of law they are to be assumed to be a law abiding citizen. Period. And there is a serious attempt to demonize firearm owners and paint them as potential murderous maniacs since they own a firearm. I refuse to assume a citizen in the US that owns a firearm legally is somehow a less "moral" person than one that doesn't carry.

No, the problem with "law abiding citizens" and "bad guys" is that it's an overly simplistic view. It's not one or the other, a person can be both.

The "bad guys" are law abiding citizens too, until they break the law. The idea behind gun restrictions is to take guns away from those "bad guys" while they are still law abiding citizens, and before they go from law abiding citizen to criminals. It's about prevention and not reaction.
 
I understand that some people like to shoot guns at the range. But my question is what's the difference between owning a gun that you only use at a gun range, and RENTING a gun at a gun range and then returning home without the gun? Do you really need to OWN the gun?
 
It's a distinction I purposefully make because unless a citizen in the US has been found guilty in a court of law they are to be assumed to be a law abiding citizen. Period. And there is a serious attempt to demonize firearm owners and paint them as potential murderous maniacs since they own a firearm. I refuse to assume a citizen in the US that owns a firearm legally is somehow a less "moral" person than one that doesn't carry.

This is not true. The point is that anyone can lose their temper, anyone can find themselves in a large bout of depression, or any number of other things. Statistically a good chunk of people will fall into these bad spells, or just turn into or be bad people. The gun obviously doesn't cause it. No one is saying that. No one's demonizing people because they are gun owners. The problem is that if you have a gun, or if everyone has a gun it just makes the potential situation that can arise out of that depression, temper, psychotic breakdown, etc, that much more devastating.
 
Not at all. And I believe I've been completely clear on that point in this thread and many many others. ^.^ But I would agree with legislation attempted to deal with the core cause of violent crime period. You know...

-Poverty.
-Mental Illness.
-Ending the Drug War.

A gun enthusiast AND a dreamer, I see.
 
This is not true. The point is that anyone can lose their temper, anyone can find themselves in a large bout of depression, or any number of other things. Statistically a good chunk of people will fall into these bad spells, or just turn into or be bad people. The gun obviously doesn't cause it. No one is saying that. No one's demonizing people because they are gun owners. The problem is that if you have a gun, or if everyone has a gun it just makes the potential situation that can arise out of that depression, temper, psychotic breakdown, etc, that much more devastating.
Pretty much, and insisting that getting people to stop wanting to commit crime is the key priority is silly. While we can work on that, it's far more productive and realistic to reduce the harm that comes from it. That means deescalating the situation. Less guns, less powerful guns.
 
Outlawing hunting is one of the crazier things in this thread. I'm not a hunter and I don't ever plan to hunt, but hunters are pretty vital. You know what happens when you outlaw hunting? Deer population explodes. You know what happens when deer population explodes? Wolf population explodes. You know what happens when wolf population explodes? The Grey, but with more eating your face off.
 
Outlawing hunting is one of the crazier things in this thread. I'm not a hunter and I don't ever plan to hunt, but hunters are pretty vital. You know what happens when you outlaw hunting? Deer population explodes. You know what happens when deer population explodes? Wolf population explodes. You know what happens when wolf population explodes? The Grey, but with more eating your face off.
Actually, wolf population is down from what it should be because we've been shooting them, and the effects work in reverse. Deer population explodes, trees and grasses get eaten up before they have a chance to grow, and erosion kicks up.

Efforts have been made to bring them back, to some success.
 
Outlawing hunting is one of the crazier things in this thread. I'm not a hunter and I don't ever plan to hunt, but hunters are pretty vital. You know what happens when you outlaw hunting? Deer population explodes. You know what happens when deer population explodes? Wolf population explodes. You know what happens when wolf population explodes? The Grey, but with more eating your face off.

Don't mind Angry Fork. He's just the liberal caricature we keep around to keep things in perspective.

Don't worry Angry, I still like you even if you are pretty goddamned extreme sometimes :P
 
As someone who went to public schools in Los Angeles, I laughed out loud when I heard this.
And not to mention most college campuses have actual police stations. NRA is just showed the world how obtuse and out of touch they are.
 
I'm not anti-gun, but I think it obvious that current regulations are horribly lax. The 'gun show loophole' being a good example.

I remember going to a gun show outside of Houston once with a friend. Clearly there wasn't much regulation going on. But that bothered me less than walking past booths with 'White Power' banners and books and swastikas on display.
 
holy fuck that is the worst idea ever. It sounds like they're just trying to make money off of this. putting armed guards everywhere would cause far more problems and cost a ridiculous amount just to attempt to stop a shooting every once in a while. It's awful, but it won't work.

If it did happen, there would certainly still be another shooting, and their answer of course would be "We need MORE armed guards! In every room!".

fuck off.
 
Would it be possible to put GPS device or some sort of alarming device into the gun itself, so that when a gunman enters no-gun zone, it would alert the nearest police station?

If the manufactures are required to put such device, untamperable (hard to do) on every gun they manufacture, it wouldn't be as costly as having armed guard in every school all the time.

Of course the murders would try to alter the device or disable the device, and have it made illegal to tamper with it - if the device can send the last location with gun's serial number to the authorities, it would be much easier to prevent the illegal activities that one might've been planning....
 
Would it be possible to put GPS device or some sort of alarming device into the gun itself, so that when a gunman enters no-gun zone, it would alert the nearest police station?

If the manufactures are required to put such device, untamperable (hard to do) on every gun they manufacture, it wouldn't be as costly as having armed guard in every school all the time.

Of course the murders would try to alter the device or disable the device, and have it made illegal to tamper with it - if the device can send the last location with gun's serial number to the authorities, it would be much easier to prevent the illegal activities that one might've been planning....

Something like this could be interesting. A story on my local paper's website had someone saying something similar. He was talking about how we've had all these innovations, cool tech things, and regulations added to cars over the year to make them safer, but not much has happened with guns.
 
We should also open up a department of precrime to make sure that nobody has the chance to even think about doing wrong, then we can let everyone have all the guns they want.


Because we shouldn't even think about reducing guns.

I'm pretty sure taking guns away from citizens that have done nothing wrong is already pre-crime in action...
 
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For the love of god...can someone post that gif from boardwalk empire?
 
Would it be possible to put GPS device or some sort of alarming device into the gun itself, so that when a gunman enters no-gun zone, it would alert the nearest police station?

If the manufactures are required to put such device, untamperable (hard to do) on every gun they manufacture, it wouldn't be as costly as having armed guard in every school all the time.

Of course the murders would try to alter the device or disable the device, and have it made illegal to tamper with it - if the device can send the last location with gun's serial number to the authorities, it would be much easier to prevent the illegal activities that one might've been planning....

Yeah, figuring out how to make that tamperproof seems difficult...
 
Would it be possible to put GPS device or some sort of alarming device into the gun itself, so that when a gunman enters no-gun zone, it would alert the nearest police station?

If the manufactures are required to put such device, untamperable (hard to do) on every gun they manufacture, it wouldn't be as costly as having armed guard in every school all the time.

Of course the murders would try to alter the device or disable the device, and have it made illegal to tamper with it - if the device can send the last location with gun's serial number to the authorities, it would be much easier to prevent the illegal activities that one might've been planning....
I generally believe that the less we track our citizens the better.
 
Would it be possible to put GPS device or some sort of alarming device into the gun itself, so that when a gunman enters no-gun zone, it would alert the nearest police station?

If the manufactures are required to put such device, untamperable (hard to do) on every gun they manufacture, it wouldn't be as costly as having armed guard in every school all the time.

Of course the murders would try to alter the device or disable the device, and have it made illegal to tamper with it - if the device can send the last location with gun's serial number to the authorities, it would be much easier to prevent the illegal activities that one might've been planning....

I think technology like this is or similar to this would be huge. I have no problem with tracking where each gun goes.
 
So would you support making gun licenses like drivers licenses, or having mental health screenings? Because that's the idea, you can't trust people with guns until they prove themselves.

No I wouldn't. Driving a car isn't a right. Owning a gun is. In America at least, and I'm thankful it is.

No, the problem with "law abiding citizens" and "bad guys" is that it's an overly simplistic view. It's not one or the other, a person can be both.

The "bad guys" are law abiding citizens too, until they break the law. The idea behind gun restrictions is to take guns away from those "bad guys" while they are still law abiding citizens, and before they go from law abiding citizen to criminals. It's about prevention and not reaction.

The underlined statement is a contradiction of the bolded statement. What makes a criminal a criminal? Breaking the law. Until they do, they're not. It's kinda why we don't arrest people for nothing. I'm ALL for taking guns away from bad guys. But to take my gun away when I haven't done anything wrong is a complete violation of a citizen in a free society.

I agree with prevention and not reaction. To me, a semi-automatic "ban" (that doesn't address the majority of gun violence) being proposed less than a week after a terrible tragedy, is as reactionary as you get. Combined with general ignorance about firearms, their uses, and why many legal owners own them yet aren't murderous criminals is pretty much a guarantee of failed legislation. Which will of course eventually require *more* restrictions because a renewed AWB didn't accomplish anything. Protip: Criminals don't follow laws.

The only thing that's evident to me is that gun regulation and mental healthcare are the problems.

Define "gun regulation"? I've read 129018203 different ideas on what "gun regulation" should be. From "One shotgun per household" to "Only pistols" to "No guns, 2nd amendment is dumb" to "Everyone should have a gun even on the toilet cause you just never know". It's all over the place. I don't think it's easy to regulate a right. I think we should keep guns out of the hands of criminals and the mentally ill and figure out a way to do what without compromising the 2nd Amendment. I know, it'd be so much quicker and easier without those pesky rights....

I generally believe that the less we track our citizens the better.

Agreed. People are not cattle.

not even in the same ballpark, hell not even the same sport.

How so? You're just assuming they MIGHT do something wrong and that they can't be trusted so let's take action to prevent them from maybe doing so. Possibly.
 
No I wouldn't. Driving a car isn't a right. Owning a gun is. In America at least, and I'm thankful it is.

And that is the crux of the problem. The 2nd Amendment as we interpret it today is not at all the way it was intended.

And gun ownership should be a privilege not a right. You fuck up, don't follow rules; no guns for you.
Mammoth Jones said:
How so? You're just assuming they MIGHT do something wrong and that they can't be trusted so let's take action to prevent them from maybe doing so. Possibly.

I work in a refinery as a safety attendant. The whole purpose of my job is to keep track of the various checklists and procedures mandated not only by OSHA and Cal-OSHA but by whatever company owns the refinery not because they expect people to not follow the rules, but because shit happens and it's a way of lowering liability and lowering the cost of lives and possibly millions of dollars. They are very serious about safety. So yes, there are a lot of aspects of life and situations where you need to assume the worst.
 
The underlined statement is a contradiction of the bolded statement. What makes a criminal a criminal? Breaking the law. Until they do, they're not.

To clarify, "bad guy" doesn't equal criminal. This is what I'm picturing.

woRuU.png


I'm ALL for taking guns away from bad guys.

Yeah, and some of those "bad guys" fall in the "law-abiding citizen" category. That's who we're trying to prevent from getting guns in the first place, or at least force them to be responsible in their ownership.
 
And that is the crux of the problem. The 2nd Amendment as we interpret it today is not at all the way it was intended.

I disagree with your first sentence. The right to bear arms is a fundamental right. Firearms 200+ years later is still the main means of self defense for a person. There's a reason it's right after the freedom of speech. And I mean we have a system. That type of change is possible but I don't think it's going to be happening. No matter how often the anti-gun crowd tries to use every tragedy as a soapbox towards that agenda. "Man home alone, shoots burglar" doesn't engender a national conversation. Nor should it to be honest. What happened last week absolutely positively SHOULD cause us to have the conversation we're having in this thread. And to be honest, it's a conversation we NEED to have. As a society. Period. I'm glad we're having this conversation here. I disagree with MANY of you here but I'm seriously thankful that we can discuss stuff like this even on the level of a message board on the internet. I don't think ANYONE wants what happened last Friday to happen again. But we tend to have vastly different ideas on what to do.

There needs to be a focus on gun storage in the home. You want to have guns? Awesome! Buy away! .223? Shit, have at it. Now lock your shit up. The NRA blew an opportunity to really engage with people regarding that and instead chose to bitch about Mortal Kombat and fucking Splatterhouse. What a waste of dialogue there. I think a gun safe in every home that has a firearm by 2020 is a realistic goal. Will it guarantee this not happen again? No. But it's get FAR more support than "The second amendment to the constitution is an outdated relic". And have a tangible impact on guns not getting in the hands of the wrong people.


And gun ownership should be a privilege not a right. You fuck up, don't follow rules; no guns for you.

The bolded is already the law. Felons don't have guns. At least not legally. Criminals lose their 2nd Amendment Rights. I believe in RARE cases they can go to court to get them back. (I think). But like I've said...criminals don't give a fuck about The Rules.
 
The bolded is already the law. Felons don't have guns. At least not legally. Criminals lose their 2nd Amendment Rights. I believe in RARE cases they can go to court to get them back. (I think). But like I've said...criminals don't give a fuck about The Rules.

Not all criminals are felons.
 
The bolded is already the law. Felons don't have guns. At least not legally. Criminals lose their 2nd Amendment Rights. I believe in RARE cases they can go to court to get them back. (I think). But like I've said...criminals don't give a fuck about The Rules.

I think we could tighten up and/or look at some of the rules similar to this. Felons can't legally buy guns, but I think there might be other violent crimes that we should disallow guns, and possibly take them away from a perpetrator. Domestic abuse is a big one, and I believe we have some laws on the books regarding this throughout the states, but some of those states don't cover things like domestic violence occurring between dating partners. Really, all sorts of violent crimes should get your right to purchase a gun revoked, at least for a good time period, and perhaps you should have to go before a court again to get it reinstated after a bit.

And fixing the private selling/gun show loophole would prevent these sorts of people from getting guns anyway in some cases.
 
So would you support making gun licenses like drivers licenses, or having mental health screenings? Because that's the idea, you can't trust people with guns until they prove themselves.

Kind of late to the conversation here, but it's currently easier to get a gun than it is to get a driver's license. For example, if you have a medical condition that may impair you, you have to prove that you're compliant with medications/treatments. There are similar requirements for firearms, but a) actual enforcement is low and b) the robustness of these tests is laughable.

Bringing Canada as an example, a person has to write multiple tests, go through stringent background checks, as well as transport and storage laws.
 
You creates (yet another) a mechanism that tracks people.
There are better ways to approach this issue.
Not sure what tracking would achieve anyway.

Yeah, the tracking part is definitely problematic. The part about it being sensed if it goes inside a "no-gun" area would be interesting. Again, it'd be hard to make that unhackable, but still...

I wonder if there was a sort of material we could mandate guns be made of that would be easily sensed as specifically a gun. Or more interestingly if tampering is a problem I wonder how hard it'd be to put that sort of material in all bullets so that if someone has bullets with them that sensor would go off.

The bullet idea would be easier to implement retroactively, because bullet supply would go through quicker than the actual guns, obviously.
 
I think we could tighten up and/or look at some of the rules similar to this. Felons can't legally buy guns, but I think there might be other violent crimes that we should disallow guns, and possibly take them away from a perpetrator. Domestic abuse is a big one, and I believe we have some laws on the books regarding this throughout the states, but some of those states don't cover things like domestic violence occurring between dating partners. Really, all sorts of violent crimes should get your right to purchase a gun revoked, at least for a good time period, and perhaps you should have to go before a court again to get it reinstated after a bit.

And fixing the private selling/gun show loophole would prevent these sorts of people from getting guns anyway in some cases.

You know, that's far more sensible than arguments about how outdated the 2nd Amendment is and how banning all semi-auto rifles will make a difference in gun crime.

I'd agree with this. I dont want someone convicted of domestic violence getting a gun. Same with just about all violent crimes.
 
I generally believe that the less we track our citizens the better.

I totally agree and that's why I'm saying in "gun free zone" only.
sorta like wifi setup - that if you enter that zone, it would just alarm the police... so the device is pretty much nothing outside of gun free zone like schools.
 
So what? What's your problem with being tracked?
Those things rarely help and are often abused.

I totally agree and that's why I'm saying in "gun free zone" only.
sorta like wifi setup - that if you enter that zone, it would just alarm the police... so the device is pretty much nothing outside of gun free zone like schools.
I don't know that there are many examples of such zoning working.
I know it worked terribly with the drug free zones.
 
No I wouldn't. Driving a car isn't a right. Owning a gun is. In America at least, and I'm thankful for it.

But later you state that having that right mediated by something like not being a criminal is fine.

What would be so bad about ensuring mentally unstable individuals do not have access to guns. The kind of a damage a 17th century lunatic could inflict with period weapons is but a fraction of the offensive power a modern assault weapon offers.

You guys like to talk about how criminals can get guns anyway but in a weapon less society many criminals do not want to use guns! They do not need them since civilians do not carry and if they get caught they get a longer sentence.

No matter how you slice it, guns cost the US thousands of lives per year. At some point having shiny toys that shoot bullets stops being worth it.
 
Question for the gun owners/pro-gun crowd. Why is only the second part of the Second Amendment the only part ever paid attention to?



All I ever hear quoted is "...the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." but it seems that no gun owner really cares about the first part. Why is that?

I'm really not going to get an answer for this, am I?

for the record, I'm genuinely confused by this...I mean, is it like the whole 'take what you want from the bible and ignore what's not convenient' thing? Because if so, I'd be surprised. I really thought the pro-gun people had the constitutional high ground here.

I guess this is the first time I've bothered to read the actual amendment (aside from grade school) was just surprised when half of it was something I hadn't heard much of.
 
I don't know that there are many examples of such zoning working.
I know it worked terribly with the drug free zones.

well, drugs don't have tracking devices within them... ;)

it's something that I as a parent would like to have it done around my daughter's elementary school.

Think of large scale metal detector, which only detects guns... or maybe smoke detector?
 
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