Should US have gun control? | Page 4 | Golden Skate

Should US have gun control?

Joined
Jun 21, 2003
After publication of addresses of gun-owners some of them were killed. And couple were nearly burglarized by people who wanted to get their guns.

There is something ironic about that. Why didn't the gun owners use their guns to protect their lives and property? Isn't that the whole point?
 

katia

On the Ice
Joined
Feb 20, 2006
If the newspaper publishes their addresses, telephone numbers and all data? I think one must be prepared, mentally and physically to the fact that your own data - where do you live, , who are you, what do you own is published in the newspaper and realize that one is a target for some "serious" people. Guns are needed for "normal" protection and not when one is unknowingly and suddenly, thanks to liberal journalists, target for criminals.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
I agree with that. Not so much the part about nefarious journalists, but the part about "ordinary" versus "serious."

If you become the target of serious people you are dead meat, gun or no gun. But you might be able to scare off a teenaged burglar who sneaks in to steal your TV for drug money, thinking no one is home.

The goal should be to get the guns out of the hands of the serious criminals -- but that seems to be impossible.
 

katia

On the Ice
Joined
Feb 20, 2006
The government has a standing army of 2,000,000 trained soldiers.
1,458,219 Active personnel
567,299 Reserve and National Guard personnel
1,129,283 total
Tha's data from 'Wikipedia. However Huffington Post quoting Reuters is saying that "The size of the active-duty Army would be trimmed to 490,000 over five years from its wartime peak of 570,000 in 2010 and the size of the Marine Corps would fall to 182,000 from its high of about 202,000."
So I think you got somewhat carried out.
 

katia

On the Ice
Joined
Feb 20, 2006
I agree with that. Not so much the part about nefarious journalists, but the part about "ordinary" versus "serious."

....... But you might be able to scare off a teenaged burglar who sneaks in to steal your TV for drug money, thinking no one is home.

The goal should be to get the guns out of the hands of the serious criminals -- but that seems to be impossible.
Well, the people who were nearly burglarized, weren't. They had guns and they prevented burglaries. In one case burglars wanted to steal the guns, but the guns were in good safe so the burglars did not get it.
I did not say "nefarious" journalists. I wrote "liberal, anti-gun-activist journalists"
The goal ,as you wrote, is impossible, because it is impossible to eliminate all crime. However, it may be somewhat much more possible if the government (Department of Justice) did not help the criminals, for example by selling guns to Mexican drug barons who of course used these guns on US territory.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Country
United-States
True, but it will be a crime, even if it will not be a homicide. And furthermore you are using similar tactics here like that guy telling people that "according to him" Plushchenko did not have an operation - may be he had may be he had not. Don't you? Why not believe that there are people who attack the guards? And if you are doubting guards, why believe police or the government? How are they better (or worse) then the guards? Is it only because they are bureaucrats?

Under "Stand Your Ground" you can kill someone, and it is not a crime. Of any kind. All you have to do is convince the powers that be that you felt threatened. If you felt threatened, and are in a public place or your own home (with some limitations which vary by state), you can shoot somebody dead and it is up to the police to prove you did not feel threatened.

I kid you not.

There was a particularly sad case where an exchange student knocked on the door of the wrong house, looking for a Halloween party, and the home owner was frightened of him and shot him dead. No crime.

There was a case where the guy lived. He and a neighbor, who had a legal gun, got into an argument over how many garbage bags the neighbor had put out on the street. The neighbor shot him, told him, "That will teach you not to get in arguments with a policeman," and left him for dead on the street, calling neither the police nor 911. Fortunately for the guy, someone else called 911, and he lived. The off duty cop with the gun was not charged with anything, including depraved indifference, because he said he felt threatened.

So you can kill anybody you want in Florida, as long as you have a legal gun, and carry it concealed. Just know the right story to tell.

A 20 something guy in Sarasota county was chased down by a an off duty cop. The kid & a friend were playing the old "ring and run" joke. The cop chased the boys, caught one and killed him. No crime was charged.

The most revealing was 2 drug gangs who got into a gun fight in, I believe Tampa area. Both gangs had carry permits. Both gangs said, "The other guy was firing at me, and I felt threatened (probably true, too)" All of them got off scot free.

I would bet that most guns that people get shot with are legal guns, mainly because it is so darn easy to get guns in the US. 40% are by mail order without background check. How hard is that? The guy at the Sandy Hook school had legal guns, for example.

If you'd like to look at Stand your ground cases in FL, have a look at the Tampa Bay Times database. Have a look at the causes. If you click on any one, it goes to the article on the case.

http://www.tampabay.com/stand-your-ground-law/data
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
I remember that story of the kids going trick-or-treating. I think the dead boy was from Japan, and the combination of the language barrier and the culture gap between the two participants in the tragedy was too much to overcome.

When you think of it, the most heavily armed people are often the least protected against gun violence: cops and teenaged gang members. (I'm not lumping them together, mind you. But it's ironic that they're in similar positions, each group being shot at so often.) For different reasons, both groups carry guns. Their body count, however, is rather high. Repeat after me: a gun is not a shield.

One Supreme Court justice (the quote is variously attributed to several men) has said that the Constitution is not a suicide pact. If both sides worked together, people could work this out without gutting the second amendment.

Another irony of the situation: a lot of pro-gun people say, why don't we instead look at the violence in music, movies, and video games? As Chris has pointed out on another thread, many of the action stars in excessively violent movies are staunch Republicans or conservatives. This includes Bruce Willis , Kurt Russell, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. (I have no information on Quentin Tarantino's affiliation.) I guess these guys just want us to work on the mental illness aspect of the equation and leave everything else alone.
 
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Joined
Jun 21, 2003
1,458,219 Active personnel
567,299 Reserve and National Guard personnel
1,129,283 total
Tha's data from 'Wikipedia. However Huffington Post quoting Reuters is saying that "The size of the active-duty Army would be trimmed to 490,000 over five years from its wartime peak of 570,000 in 2010 and the size of the Marine Corps would fall to 182,000 from its high of about 202,000."
So I think you got somewhat carried out.

I guess I was looking at this Wikipedia page, showing 2,315,958 U.S. military personnel, including reservists (2010 data), in all branched of the service combined.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Armed_Forces

Anyway, one million or two, the question was whether individuals with hand guns and assault rifles in their homes would be able to protect themselves from the U.S. government, should the government start trampling on peoples' rights. This is an argument that NRA president Wayne LaPierre and the gun manufacturers lobby has offered in support of their position. I do not think this is a very compelling argument against gun control.

About liberal newspaper people, I look at it this way.

Suppose an armed intruder comes into your house and shoots you. The number one person that society should be mad at is the armed intruder. The next person we should be mad at is the person who supplied the armed intruder with a gun (otherwise there would have been no armed intrusion).

Way down the list we get to liberal journalists, liberal politicians, President Obama, and liberals in general. Scoundrels one and all no doubt. But let's go after the actual criminals first.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Anyway, one million or two, the question was whether individuals with hand guns and assault rifles in their homes would be able to protect themselves from the U.S. government, should the government start trampling on peoples' rights. This is an argument that NRA president Wayne LaPierre and the gun manufacturers lobby has offered in support of their position. I do not think this is a very compelling argument against gun control.

Yes, for a long time this did not occur to me, but then as we were discussing things on this thread, the realization suddenly came into my mind that it's laughable to imagine that even an advanced weapon can defend against a government with an armed force that can take down entire countries (though it generally doesn't). This idea that somehow instead of being protected by a system of laws, we must once again depend solely on the survival of the fittest is neither enlightened nor conservative, unless one thinks that the Articles of Confederation are superior to the Constitution.

I'm not saying that people shouldn't own guns. But I do think that the logic of counting on them (and on your ability to use one to defend yourself when taken by surprise by someone who bursts in already locked and loaded while you're sitting at dinner, taking a shower, or sleeping) is chancy at best.

And now over the weekend comes news of a second suicide by gun in the same family: country singer Mindy McCready has killed herself and, apparently, her dog several months after the apparent suicide of her boyfriend. Clearly this woman had problems, including addiction of some sort. What was she doing with a gun in her home? I have no right to ask, I guess. But I'm glad she didn't have her kids in the home with her and her gun and her dog when she decided to end it all.
 
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heyang

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
There was also a recent case of an ex soldier who was being treated for ptsd, He shot a former SEAL and his friend at a gun range.
 

CoyoteChris

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 4, 2004
Ref: We are the government. Not any more, sadly. I have to agree with Al Gore in his new book. Democracy has been highjacked by industry and people of wealth. Politicians dont need your vote. They need big bucks to run TV commercials to win elections. One buck, one vote.
Ref: Blink so it can come and get us. Ask the patriots at Lexington...ask the Native Americans at Wounded Knee...ask the US citizens of Japanese descent. Ask the survivors of the camps in Poland. Ask the state troopes I know who are buying their own weapons and asking me how to store ammo, etc. Ask the state Sherrifs organizations that are telling Obama they wont inforce his laws.
Ref: the American citizens that had "their rights taken away" during an hysteria that was inforced unevenly. And were later apologized to and offered a bit of compensation. I guess they trusted their government. I dont trust anyone who puts me 17 trillion in debt. People and the supreame court didnt challange FDR cause of fear and racism. And yes, there were some Germans who did challange Hitler over the Jews. God bless them.
Ref: the Jews. I am no expert on their religion. I dont know what they would have done at the time they were rounded up even if they had guns. But I do know some did get guns and fight in the Warsaw ghetto.
And I do know that a bunch of very bravel people formed a country called Israel and they knew that the only way to keep that country was to arm their citizens and fight anyone who dared to take away their freedom.
I guess my question to every person in the US of Jewish faith is this. If I were to ask a death camp survivor today, with historical perspective in their minds, if they now wished they had possessed an assault rifle with a 30 round mag
on the day they were taken away on those awfull trains...what would they say? I say this. You wanna save lives? Take away alcholhol, tobacco, and cellphones that text. They are not needed and you will save lots of lives doing so.
Unfortunately, guns for honest citizens are a necessity. People are shot in Spokane and there is major crime every day due to gangs and drugs, just like in Chicago. We live in a society we have made because great evil was done when
good people did nothing....where 40 million copies of just one violent video game are sold to people like the Sandy hook shooter...where morning show anchors laugh at video of Bruce Willis machine gunning people...where states like
Massechuttsets wont give the government any information about their mentally ill so they can be stopped from buying guns. I have worked for and with Policemen for 30 years. I dont think I have met one that thinks guns are not a nessesity
anymore. I would urge you to not listen to the police cheifs on tv....they are appointed by politicians and have to answer to them....so, do I trust my government? No. If they take away guns and not alchohol and tobacco, they are trying to
control me, not save lives. As a side note, those of you that did not live through the Vietnam war where LBJ went mad and killed 58,000 American kids for no reason by faking the Gulf of Tonkin incident might not understand "not trusting the govt."
But that is OK. The German People trusted Hitler too cause he brought them out of depression and made them feel good about Germany again...but look what happened....so sad.
I don't like the word trust in this context, Chris. The government isn't a group sitting out there waiting for us to blink so it can come and get us. We are the government. It works as long as we keep an eye on it. If you think the government is the enemy, take a look at countries where there is no functioning government. What kind of a life could you have there, even if you had an arsenal--or a private militia? Ask someone from Lebanon.

Thinking about Mirai and her family, and Kristi's family (who actually were interned--Mrs. Yamaguchi was born in a camp): the Issei and Nisei didn't have their guns taken away. They had their rights taken away by law. There were years of restrictive immigration laws, and then during the War, California and other states (interestingly, not Hawaii) rounded up Japanese-Americans under the authority of a new law, Executive Order 9066. If the Japanese-Americans had stood up with arms, the army would have come in and mowed them down. Also, I am sorry to say, most of the country did not leap to their defense. In fact, most of the country seems to supported rounding them up, because people in those days were scared and suspicious after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and they were also a lot more ignorant about diversity than we are today. (This shows that we have progressed, which is good news.) That's why I think that this hot-button issue isn't a useful argument in this case.

As for Jews during that time, the difference between America and Europe wasn't the fact that Jews in America were armed and Jews in Europe were not. I am Jewish, and my family was the classic immigrant family, growing up in urban tenements. My grandfather was even a tailor. Their guns were not taken away. They didn't have guns. They didn't even have pets. They had food for the next day. They had books, in English, Hebrew, maybe Russian, and Yiddish, and (because learning was the way to success) in French, German, and Latin. It wasn't guns that protected them. It was laws. By contrast, the laws in Europe in 1941 were the Nuremberg laws. European Jews with guns fought, in places like Warsaw and Vilna, but when things come to the point of hiding in ruined buildings and firing on the greatest army in Europe, the odds will not favor the freedom fighters. Most of them died with their guns in their hands. I honor them in memory--I may have been related to some of them--but I would far rather they had had the law on their side, not an extra rifle, or even a rocket launcher.

Government in a democratic country isn't evil. It's inefficient. It's especially inefficient in a country with 300 million people who all disagree with one another. There are people who want to get richer than other people, who manipulate the laws in their favor if they're not closely watched. There are of course criminals. If you feel safer with a supply of guns in your home, be my guest. But I don't think any amount of armaments will protect you against "the government." As you know, they also have an air force.

The Second Amendment isn't going to be removed from the Constitution. Guns are part of American history and consciousness. But are we not to be allowed to ask questions about regulating gun ownership? Of course, we need to think about how we treat the mentally ill, and how violence is used for fun in movies and video games. But we do need to talk about the easy availability of guns.
 

CoyoteChris

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 4, 2004
Lots of stuff on the news about psychology and mass murderers now....
Apparently, many if not most of them are on SSRIs
http://www.ssristories.com/index.php?p=school
Since they change brain chemistry, I can well believe it. There were few school shootings before SSRIs...that doesnt prove much but it is worth looking into....

PBS is broadcasting various shows about different aspects related to Newtown dialog - American society, psychology, etc. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/a...l=1&adxnnlx=1361330746-fGkW4wpp5p4lofm/y8s2IA
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
I agree about the medication, Chris, and I always wonder about pollutants in the air and soil and also chemicals in foods.

Chris, I don't disagree with everything you said earlier, and I'm not trying to argue with you, but I don't agree with all of your solutions. I suppose I'd say that I think there's a difference between not trusting what the government is doing (or allowing to be done) and not trusting the government. I trust our system of government, because I don't see many other forms that are better. (I equate parliamentary democracies with our three-branch setups for the purposes of this argument.) The Bible says that the love of money is the root of all evil, and I think that unfortunately there's a lot of money in play in our country, and this is the source of many of our problems. Also, we're very big, both in terms of economic power and (these days) in terms of sheer population, which means that we're both unwieldy and very influential all over the place. It's a bit of a shock to realize it, but I think we're now the most populous country behind China and India, though they're each far bigger than we are.

One of my points is that having a household gun isn't going to protect you against those big forces. Certainly if you feel that you need guns at home to protect your household from crime, you're more than entitled. I don't think that most anti-gun people want to wipe guns off the face of the continent--that's unrealistic. You have cited groups such as the Jews in Europe and the Japanese here in the war years as examples of defenseless people, and I once more say that a gun in everyone's hands would not have gotten them out of their predicament. Maybe a few would have escaped into the hills, but most would have been mowed down where they stood. I concede that this instant death would have been better than what the Jews faced in the camps, but the Japanese were interned and not put to death, and they mostly survived. So having a gun, or many guns, is not the answer in any of those circumstances, and it would not be the answer today. None of us are the Maccabees. Remember that the only thing that doomed many of the Maccabees (in the Bible) was that the Syrian army just had a lot more people; they were not technologically superior to the Maccabees. These days, and in the days of Hitler, national armed forces are way superior to any individuals or any small groups. Airplanes, remember?

So what I'm saying is that arming yourself isn't a solution to any problems you perceive. What ends up happening with the breakdown of public safety is that you get a lot of militias and scattered groups, and as always, the richest people are the safest, because they have private armies. If anyone wants to see how that works, look at Lebanon or the chancier cities in Brazil. Why would we throw away one of the most beautifully designed government systems to live like that?

Another thing you say in your argument is that the government wants to take away guns but not alcohol or cigarettes. Well, the government did try to take away alcohol. The Volstead Act was enshrined in the Constitution, the eighteenth amendment. Prohibition didn't work that well. And if this is a democracy, taking away alcohol or cigarettes is as unlikely as taking away guns. Democracy is messy. That's its weakness and its glorious strength.

You know that I agree with you about the glorification of violence in movies, music, and video games. I honestly don't know what to do in a democracy. Or in a world where the Internet can't be regulated. I wish that we could somehow just change public opinion, and maybe that can someday be done. Look at how smoking has decreased among the hip and the cool, and how even Arnold Schwarzenegger wears a seat belt in his car.

I also agree with you (and probably everyone here, certainly including Tonichelle) about the situation with the mentally ill. No one benefits from current rules. Parents of mentally ill young adults have gone on record as trying fruitlessly to get help for their sons, but everyone's hands are tied. These parents are often the first ones killed if the young person snaps. I don't know how we get from point A, where we are, to point B, where the mentally ill can be protected from their illness and their own actions, and we can be protected from them. It's definitely part of the problem, especially when you look at the recent spree killings, just about all of which were perpetrated by people with uncontrolled mental illnesses. (Of course, not every mentally ill person is violent, but it's easier to be violent when there's a gun around--one of my fears about guns.)

One piece of hope I give you is the civil rights movement. I know that you lived during that time, as I did, but I didn't appreciate its audacity until I had to study it for work. It is astonishing what was achieved with nonviolent direct action. And it took less time than any movement of "armed struggle" that began around that same time. (I think of the generations of the IRA actions, and the continuing violence in the Middle East.) And the opposition to integration, to simple human dignity was not only entrenched but incredibly violent and powerful. I once had the privilege of talking on the phone to F.D. Reese, who in 1965 was the head of a black teachers' organization in Selma, Alabama. At that time, holding that position, he was not allowed to register to vote. Look up what the power structure in Mississippi was like from the 1880s to the 1960s. It was basically a fascist state. When federal authorities went hunting for Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner in the swamps of Mississippi where they had disappeared, they found more than half a dozen bodies of other people who had just been taken away in the night and dispatched through the years, no questions asked. And yet today, people can vote, run for Government office...the Governor of Louisiana is the son of immigrants from India.

It's more difficult to effect change using the methods of public opinion, positive action, and calling people in power to account, but it's the only way that really works.
 

CoyoteChris

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 4, 2004
OK, finally had the time to watch the PBS special, Guns in America...while full of inaccuracies (the ex com. of NYPD saying the street sweeper held 100 round when it really holds 12) there were truths also. Given the gangs of Spokane and Chicago have guns illegally, what good does passing more laws do? You make people responsible for their actions. Just like people misusing alchohol and cell phones, which is much more likely to get a non gang members killed than an honest person owning a gun, we need to
turn into a responsible society. 10s of thousands of people fail the gun buying backround check every year, including the newtown shooter and the fireman shooter...yet the government does nothing to stop these folk that purger themselves on a witnessed government form. The liberal state of Mass. refuses to give the backround check system a list of its most mentally ill people. And they are not the only state. Felons who own guns are not delt with harshly. I am a civilian who got a 6 week backround check by the state patrol for my job. Then I got another one for my concealed carry permit. I believe in backround checks if used responsibly. (You cant even buy ammo in Illinois without an FOI card. ) I also believe that we should not be kicking out know violent humans back into society.
But the biggest problem with the special is ignorance/bias of the producers. They failed to talk about all the Sherriff's associations that have wrote the President telling him they refuse to enforce his laws. Secondly, they know nothing about weapons. A fully auto M-16, if you could steal one or go through the procedure to become a class 3 weapons dealer, etc. will empty its 30 round mag of .22 cal projectiles in a little over 2 seconds. Pretty awesome killing machine? Huh? Yet a Winchester 1897 shotgun (along with the Mod 1912) will put out 27 .22 cal projectiles in about one second. With another 27 projectiles in the magazine. This weapon was so feared by the WWI German Army that they officially complained about us using it in the trenches and threatened to punish any soldier that had one. (These were the same folks that used poison gas first) And yet, this weapon is a curio and relic and can be sold without a backround check. ) We used this weapon right through Vietnam. Realistically, there is no difference between an AR with one ten round mag and an AR with two ten round mags, except a two second mag change. There is really no differnece between a six shot revolver and an auto pistol. its the person shooting it that makes the difference. The Sandy Hook shooter used four pistols to do his evil. A civil war Cav. Officer very often carried two or more.
Remember that 17 shot Winchester 1866 rifle in the story? You would be suprised at how fast that gun shoots. A gun is a gun and a bottle of gin is a bottle of Gin. Both will kill you in the wrong hands. If your interest is saving lives, work on alchohol, tobacco and cell phones. If your interest is only gun violence, make the feds who refuse to enforce the laws they have accountble and get rid of the gangs. And ask yourselves about the parents of the kids who refuse to raise them or who let their children sit in a darkened basement playing violent games alone and worshipiing Norwegian mass killers. And a society that refuses to treat its mentally ill. A gun is a gun and a car is a car and booze is booze. And there should be some regulation. Just like for violent porn video games.
I do have to comment on Doris' remarks. Even though in WA state I have great power over life and death, I and my retired trooper friends know the consequences. While we all have guns, we are very reluctant to use them. And that is the way it should be.
I have only had to pull my gun twice against people to defend myself, and once on a wild dog pack, and in the two former cases, the mear presence of my willingness to defend myself against violence stopped violence and the perps ran. I am here to tell you that it is not a good feeling to have to pull a gun on a person, but I am also here to tell you I am sooooo glad I had a gun at the time. Druggies breaking into occupied homes is not rare. Sometimes they are so high they have no idea where they are or who they hurt.... Men stealing women's cell phones (Apple Picking) and even pushing the women off of subway platforms in the act, is not rare. If you chose to not own/carry a gun, then I would at least consider a small can of OC10/Mace (get the stream kind) or a taser. Its better than nothing.
Personally, I dont carry a gun when I go walking...I do use OC10. Steal my car and you can have it. But Try to break into my house or my car while I am in them, and its a different story. Try to hurt my wife,and you will find out about my moral code. I dont know one police officer that feels different. If or how you chose to defend yourselves is your private decision. But there can be no doubt that valid threats exist.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Country
United-States
Chris, I know that very few current and retired police happily go around shooting people for trivial reasons.

You're wrong that it is the responsibility of the feds to do something about gangs in a town; it is the responsibility of the police there.

And the assumption that all the guns owned by gangs are illegal guns is simply not true. It's so easy in the US to buy guns in many states that a lot of the guns are legal. Since you can buy guns legally over the internet without a background check, the only reason to go to the trouble to get an illegal gun is because it is cheaper.

I told you about the gang gun fight in Tampa area where both gangs got off for shooting at each other since both invoked Stand Your Ground and the guns were legal did I not? And they had concealed carry permits as well as legal guns.

Here's another one:

Elsewhere in the state, drug dealers have successfully invoked "stand your ground" even though they were in the middle of a deal when the shooting started.

In Daytona Beach, for example, police Chief Mike Chitwood used the "stand your ground" law as the rationale for not filing charges in two drug deals that ended in deaths. He said he was prevented from going forward because the accused shooters had permits to carry concealed weapons and they claimed they were defending themselves at the time.

"We're seeing a good law that's being abused," Chitwood told a local paper.

Another bad case in Florida, invoking Stand Your Ground

While many have argued the law does not allow someone to pick a fight and claim immunity, it has been used to do just that. It is broad enough that one judge complained that in a Wild West-type shootout, where everybody is armed, everyone might go free.

"Each individual on each side of the exchange of gunfire can claim self-defense," Leon County Circuit Judge Terry P. Lewis wrote in 2010, saying it "could conceivably result in all persons who exchanged gunfire on a public street being immune from prosecution."

Lewis was considering immunity motions stemming from a Tallahassee gang shooting that resulted in the death of one of the participants, a 15-year-old boy.

The judge said he had no choice but to grant immunity to two men who fired the AK-47 responsible for the death even though they fired 25 to 30 times outside an apartment complex. The reason: It could not be proved they fired first.



http://www.tampabay.com/news/public...s-some-shocking-outcomes-depending-on/1233133

In nearly a third of the cases the Times analyzed, defendants initiated the fight, shot an unarmed person or pursued their victim — and still went free.

(note: they analyzed over 200 cases)



You are absolutely right about this country doing very little about mental health. One of the most shocking things is the difficulty that people have getting their meds because the meds are expensive, and even if you have insurance, it doesn't pay for the meds.

You'd think that society would want to be sure that any schizophrenic willing to take his meds can get meds very easily, but it doesn't happen that way very much.

However
The American Psychiatric Association’s Paul Appelbaum told Vice President Joe Biden’s gun violence task force that 96 percent of all violence in the United States is committed by people with no mental illness

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/...pill-obamacare-86368_Page4.html#ixzz2Lzs0jF3o

Meanwhile, today's paper had a story about a Florida 3 year old who took a pistol from underneath one of his parent's pillows & shot a family friend in the head. Fortunately, the friend lived, because the 3 year old's aim was not very good.

And my gun collector friend in CT assures me that it is not all that difficult to purchase a real machine gun legally in CT, although the paperwork is a mild pest. It isn't illegal, despite what I had thought. He reports that shooting it is a real blast too. (He's a lawyer, and undaunted by paperwork.)

For the record, what I'd like to see are:

Background checks for all gun and ammunition sales.
Banning selling guns & ammunition over the internet.
Repeal of Stand Your Ground laws.
 

CoyoteChris

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 4, 2004
Sorry if I said that it was the fed's responsibility to control gangs.....its the feds responsibility to control organized interstate crime and stop gang members from Illegally getting guns against federal law.
It is the feds who make many of the drug laws and the DEA helps to enforce them. But if a gang member beats up a druggie for non payment, it is a state issue.
I have no idea of any gun you can buy legally "over the internet" unless it was made before 1898. Do you have an example? The Gun control act of 1968 took care of that. But you are correct, antiques
can be had legally as long as state laws are not violated too.
As far as "Legal" guns being used in crime, what the gangs do is a straw purchase where they get a clean person to purchase a gun and then illegally give it to a gang member. And yes, they can walk through
the gun show loophole....not at my gun show as everyone must have a badge and a backround check, but at most gunshows...and I am in favor of closing that loophole. But yes,
if I were to do a crime of passion, I would use a "legal" gun. I am sure some gang members do have CWPs...but they are few. You have to get finger printed to get a CWP. They dont like that.
Ref machine guns. Yes, that is why I put "etc" in their. Some states like Idaho, you pay a fee, go through the process under the firearms act of 1934, pay a bunch of money, and yes, you are
correct, you can own a machine gun made before 1986. The irony is that when the law was made, the $200 fee was very high price in 1934...now, it is nothing but with the supply of purchasable
machine guns fixed, THEIR price has skyrocketed. But what is money to a drug dealer? Still, the pistol is the weapon of choice of most criminals. IIRC, crimes with legal machine guns you could probably
count on one hand.
It makes me very sad when a child gets ahold of a gun in a house, and shoots something or someone, and it happens to cop's familys too. I know two troopers that have shot themselves...one in the
hand and one in the foot. And I know one trooper who was shot in a hunting accident. Airplanes, cars, guns and cell phones are very unforgiving but these "accidents" were all preventable. Tonight the news
said last year teen age deaths in cars rose 19 percent.....they didnt give a reason but last year there were 200,000 collisions due to cell phones. 3000 dead bodies. These were preventable too.
Mr. Biden's task force opinions are interesting. But take away the gang violence and define mental illness and we can talk. If I put on my artificial legs and shoot my girl friend through a bathroom closet door
after an argument, am I mentally ill? I really cant answer that. But the kids who sit in the basement playing video games and dreaming of death have issues, and the parents dont want to deal with them.
They scare me more than hunting with Dick Cheney. For the record, I am not sure what "Stand your ground" legally means in WA state. I walk away from trouble if I can. If you shoot someone, even legally, you have lots
of problems. I have heard a retired trooper friend tell me that if he had a gun and were at a McDonalds when the shooting started, he would think long and hard before shooting back. I can see his point. I hope
I never have to shoot someone or have to pull my gun again on a human again. And that is probably why I dont carry on my person. But then I hear the latest news today in Spokane, other than the usual gang
violence, where a 9 year old girl had to run away from a man trying to pick her up in front of a school. What would I have done as a caring person if I was there and she was caught and screamed? I hope I can rise
to the challange and not walk away. I hope I have the OC10 and the tasar...
At least most of us here agree that gang violence, mental illness, and child abuse that drives young males to be killers needs to be delt with. It is interesting that very few women are killers out side of crimes of passion
....they are out there, but most are males....good discussion...
Chris, I know that very few current and retired police happily go around shooting people for trivial reasons.

You're wrong that it is the responsibility of the feds to do something about gangs in a town; it is the responsibility of the police there.

And the assumption that all the guns owned by gangs are illegal guns is simply not true. It's so easy in the US to buy guns in many states that a lot of the guns are legal. Since you can buy guns legally over the internet without a background check, the only reason to go to the trouble to get an illegal gun is because it is cheaper.

I told you about the gang gun fight in Tampa area where both gangs got off for shooting at each other since both invoked Stand Your Ground and the guns were legal did I not? And they had concealed carry permits as well as legal guns.

Here's another one:



Another bad case in Florida, invoking Stand Your Ground





http://www.tampabay.com/news/public...s-some-shocking-outcomes-depending-on/1233133



(note: they analyzed over 200 cases)



You are absolutely right about this country doing very little about mental health. One of the most shocking things is the difficulty that people have getting their meds because the meds are expensive, and even if you have insurance, it doesn't pay for the meds.

You'd think that society would want to be sure that any schizophrenic willing to take his meds can get meds very easily, but it doesn't happen that way very much.

However


Meanwhile, today's paper had a story about a Florida 3 year old who took a pistol from underneath one of his parent's pillows & shot a family friend in the head. Fortunately, the friend lived, because the 3 year old's aim was not very good.

And my gun collector friend in CT assures me that it is not all that difficult to purchase a real machine gun legally in CT, although the paperwork is a mild pest. It isn't illegal, despite what I had thought. He reports that shooting it is a real blast too. (He's a lawyer, and undaunted by paperwork.)

For the record, what I'd like to see are:

Background checks for all gun and ammunition sales.
Banning selling guns & ammunition over the internet.
Repeal of Stand Your Ground laws.
 

CoyoteChris

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 4, 2004
By the way, there is a legal way, which I want closed, to buy a gun through the paper or through the web as long as its the same state and shipping isnt involved. If I lived in your state and you had a gun for sale and you put it on the web, we could meet and do a legal exchange. at least in WA you can do that. Federal inforcement of certain situations used to be very spotty. If I go to a gun show in Idaho and buy a rifle, I have commited a federal offense unless I go through a dealer. It is unclear to me what happens if my father dies in California and leaves me a gun in his will and I am there for the funeral and mom gives me the gun. But if I go to Idaho and purchase a pistol from an individual or a dealer, the gun must be transfered to me through a dealer in WA.
There are 20,000 gun laws and I have stumped even the BATFE agents with questions. For instance, if I go to Idaho and purchase a model of 1891 Argentine Mauser made by Lowe, we all know it was made before 1898 as Lowe became DWM in 1897. But if the same gun was made by DWM, we really dont have a good idea of when it was made cause the records are gone. The ruling in my case was since the gun was the same design, I could buy the gun. But later I found out that was not true. Buy a model of 1891 Mosin Nagant for $100 made in 1902, and it is not an antique under the law. Go figure.

Interesting video about the police in Florida and elsewhere...while civilians are usually at the scene of a crime before the police, it is not always so....this is one reason I chose not to be a police officer and instead be a police helper.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Wxtnt1_WIE
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
I can't weigh in right now because I'm at work, but I wanted to say that this is a really interesting, thoughtful conversation, everyone.
 

dorispulaski

Wicked Yankee Girl
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Country
United-States
Yes, in any state, as far as I know, you can buy a gun legally on Craig's List, as long as you aren't going across state lines to pick it up.

There are 24 states that have sweeping Stand Your Ground (aka known as Shoot First or Make My Day) laws, like Florida's. Florida was the first state to have one of these laws, dating from 2005.

This website lists 24 states that it regards as having some version of Stand Your Ground. It has links to the specific laws.:

http://www.propublica.org/article/t...sweeping-self-defense-laws-just-like-floridas

Washington
RCW 9A.16.050

Homicide — By other person — When justifiable.

Homicide is also justifiable when committed either:

(1) In the lawful defense of the slayer, or his or her husband, wife, parent, child, brother, or sister, or of any other person in his or her presence or company, when there is reasonable ground to apprehend a design on the part of the person slain to commit a felony or to do some great personal injury to the slayer or to any such person, and there is imminent danger of such design being accomplished; or

(2) In the actual resistance of an attempt to commit a felony upon the slayer, in his or her presence, or upon or in a dwelling, or other place of abode, in which he or she is.



[2011 c 336 § 354; 1975 1st ex.s. c 260 § 9A.16.050.]

Florida
The 2012 Florida Statutes

Title XLVI
CRIMES Chapter 776
JUSTIFIABLE USE OF FORCE View Entire Chapter

776.013 Home protection; use of deadly force; presumption of fear of death or great bodily harm.—(1) A person is presumed to have held a reasonable fear of imminent peril of death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another when using defensive force that is intended or likely to cause death or great bodily harm to another if:
(a) The person against whom the defensive force was used was in the process of unlawfully and forcefully entering, or had unlawfully and forcibly entered, a dwelling, residence, or occupied vehicle, or if that person had removed or was attempting to remove another against that person’s will from the dwelling, residence, or occupied vehicle; and
(b) The person who uses defensive force knew or had reason to believe that an unlawful and forcible entry or unlawful and forcible act was occurring or had occurred.
(2) The presumption set forth in subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) The person against whom the defensive force is used has the right to be in or is a lawful resident of the dwelling, residence, or vehicle, such as an owner, lessee, or titleholder, and there is not an injunction for protection from domestic violence or a written pretrial supervision order of no contact against that person; or
(b) The person or persons sought to be removed is a child or grandchild, or is otherwise in the lawful custody or under the lawful guardianship of, the person against whom the defensive force is used; or
(c) The person who uses defensive force is engaged in an unlawful activity or is using the dwelling, residence, or occupied vehicle to further an unlawful activity; or
(d) The person against whom the defensive force is used is a law enforcement officer, as defined in s. 943.10(14), who enters or attempts to enter a dwelling, residence, or vehicle in the performance of his or her official duties and the officer identified himself or herself in accordance with any applicable law or the person using force knew or reasonably should have known that the person entering or attempting to enter was a law enforcement officer.
(3) A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony.
(4) A person who unlawfully and by force enters or attempts to enter a person’s dwelling, residence, or occupied vehicle is presumed to be doing so with the intent to commit an unlawful act involving force or violence.
(5) As used in this section, the term:
(a) “Dwelling” means a building or conveyance of any kind, including any attached porch, whether the building or conveyance is temporary or permanent, mobile or immobile, which has a roof over it, including a tent, and is designed to be occupied by people lodging therein at night.
(b) “Residence” means a dwelling in which a person resides either temporarily or permanently or is visiting as an invited guest.
(c) “Vehicle” means a conveyance of any kind, whether or not motorized, which is designed to transport people or property.
History.—s. 1, ch. 2005-27.

Some of the 26 other states have "Castle Laws" that allow you to shoot people when you are in your own home, but not in the public street

Other states require you to have made some attempt to retreat or do something else that demonstrates when you shot someone, it was in self defense.


The requirements in FL to legally kill someone:
1. You must own your gun legally.
2. You must be in something like the public street or your house
3. You claim, and are believed, that you felt in fear of your life.
4. You cannot be proved to be doing something illegal.

That's it.

In fact, I suspect that's why I keep seeing gang folk killing people with legal guns and having concealed carry permits.
They can literally get away with murder. The dead guy does not contradict you.

As I said above, quoting the Tampa Bay paper, over 30% of the over 200 cases of Stand Your Ground they were able to document (that's more than 60 people) got shot or otherwise attacked while being unarmed and retreating, and the Stand Your Ground person was pursuing them.

That's just wrong.

I know 2 cases where a black guy playing music loud in a car was shot to death, and the shooter made "Stand Your Ground" work for himself.

But it's no wonder that we have felons with legal guns in FL-having a legal gun is a defense against a murder charge. It gives you one free murder; and maybe more, since if your first Stand Your Ground case works for you, you are blameless and can go out and murder someone else.

How to Buy a Gun over the Internet in Southwest FL
http://mynationalarmory.com/Page4.html

ABC News on buying guns over the internet
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/IndustryInfo/story?id=3049709&page=1

Josh Horwitz, executive director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, said that about 60 percent of guns are purchased through licensed dealers. The other 40 percent are sold at gun shows, person-to-person sales and through the Internet.
 
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