nope, does nothing to stop violence. make it harder for criminals to get guns also make it harder for law-abiding citizens to get guns (I will never support that in any form). safety courses - criminals don't takes courses, anyway who designs the courses, who administers the courses, at what cost, is licensing the next step?
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chief wrote:
nope, does nothing to stop violence. make it harder for criminals to get guns also make it harder for law-abiding citizens to get guns (I will never support that in any form). safety courses - criminals don't takes courses, anyway who designs the courses, who administers the courses, at what cost, is licensing the next step?
yes. safety courses should be required. dick cheney needs to take one.
todays latest:azdps.gov/Media/News/View/?p=6…k.com&utm_campaign=bufferits all good -
OzJacko wrote:
I was pissed about the extra. I said it's a shrub. Annie said I think it's a roo, so I fired a shot and killed the shrub to prove her wrong.
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hikerboy wrote:
chief wrote:
nope, does nothing to stop violence. make it harder for criminals to get guns also make it harder for law-abiding citizens to get guns (I will never support that in any form). safety courses - criminals don't takes courses, anyway who designs the courses, who administers the courses, at what cost, is licensing the next step?
todays latest:azdps.gov/Media/News/View/?p=6…k.com&utm_campaign=buffer
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hikerboy wrote:
criminals still have too easy a time of it to get guns
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For once I'd just like to hear myself say, "Great job, self! Why don't you just take the day off." -
Dan76 wrote:
OzJacko wrote:
About 4 or 5 of those weapons I can legally buy here.
I am actually planning on buying a rifle shortly. Last had one about 15 years ago.
To buy a 22 magnum rimfire I have to get a letter from a landowner with more than 1000 acres to say that I can hunt on their property, do a safety test, buy a steel cabinet (about $300) and bolt it to a solid wall in the house, fill in an application specifying why I want it and pay around $300 in fees. Then after at least 6 weeks of processing and police checking of me I can pay $525 and get a Savage bolt action.
About 5 minutes and $200 in Walmart for you?
Full auto has been effectively banned since around 1985. Sure you could try to get an FFL and a class 3 license, but good luck. Even if you manage to get the license for one you're still looking at spending $10,000 or more to buy a pre-ban full auto in decent condition.Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them. -
- Last I checked that "extrordinary number" of kids killed by accidental shooting is around 200 per year in the entire country. Granted that we all wish that number was zero, but to put it in perspective that is slightly less than the average number of children who die in swimming pools each year in the US. And there are more than 100 guns out there for every swimming pool.
My point is that the actual risk of a child being involved in an accidental shooting is far, far lower than what the public perception believes it to be.
hikerboy wrote:
chief wrote:
nope, does nothing to stop violence. make it harder for criminals to get guns also make it harder for law-abiding citizens to get guns (I will never support that in any form). safety courses - criminals don't takes courses, anyway who designs the courses, who administers the courses, at what cost, is licensing the next step?
todays latest:azdps.gov/Media/News/View/?p=6…k.com&utm_campaign=buffer
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.The post was edited 1 time, last by Sarcasmtheelf ().
- Last I checked that "extrordinary number" of kids killed by accidental shooting is around 200 per year in the entire country. Granted that we all wish that number was zero, but to put it in perspective that is slightly less than the average number of children who die in swimming pools each year in the US. And there are more than 100 guns out there for every swimming pool.
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I remember the sudden lack of trust given to the US government about December, 1963.
There were grumblings before that, but not huge numbers of people. ( Hint, right after JFK's murder.)
When I was growing up, in the 1950s and 1960s, people, including high school kids, had gun racks in the back of their pickup trucks, or they had them in the trunks of their cars.
They had them so they could shoot a rabbit or squirells on the way home after school or work, otherwise they didn't eat.
We learned to take our upset out with a fistfight. Anyone puling a gun or knife would get stopped, before the police got there, by the rest of the people there. And they lost the argument whatever it may be about.
Why not get food stamps ? Well, people didn't do that, they felt it was too embaressing. Their relatives of their local church might help, but not for months or years.--
"What do you mean its sunrise already ?!", me. -
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g00gle wrote:
hikerboy wrote:
criminals still have too easy a time of it to get guns
its all good -
I'm on the fence about all of it. Some people are too emotional to carry concealed. And why in the world does a civilian need a weapon that fires 60 rounds a minute?Lost in the right direction.
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SarcasmTheElf wrote:
Last I checked that "extrordinary number" of kids killed by accidental shooting is around 200 per year in the entire country. Granted that we all wish that number was zero, but to put it in perspective that is slightly less than the average number of children who die in swimming pools each year in the US. And there are more than 100 guns out there for every swimming pool.
My point is that the actual risk of a child being involved in an accidental shooting is far, far lower than what the public perception believes it to be.
again, i have no problem with responsible gun owners.none.but putting that aside, how do you address gun violence in this country? without infringing on 2nd amendment "rights"?
about the same amount of people get killed in auto accidents as get killed by guns. i don't propose to take peoples cars away, but its much harder to buy and operate a car without a license than it is to buy a gunits all good -
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OzJacko wrote:
You have over 30,000 people a year dying by gun.
Surely you have to admit you have to start doing something.
We could always start by trying to address the vicious and institutionalized cycle of poverty that is systemic in the US, as this is one of the largest driving factors behind our gun violence, but but that would take real work, it's easier for politicians to blame inanimate objects.
For the record my state does require a "eligibilty certificate" (license) and background check to buy a gun, it doesn't feel like too much of a burden to me.Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them. -
Drybones wrote:
g00gle wrote:
Dan76 wrote:
I find this incident as described not funny, but an extremely sad commentary on this department's view of the community supposedly served.
OzJacko wrote:
I have said before, our gun laws won't work for you.
You would have had to adopt them 100 years ago.
You have had Pandora open the box. You already have the guns and a huge number of gun owners who won't give them up.
Hopefully you can find a solution but I can't think of one.
Despite the expense and hoops I have to jump through I will have no trouble getting a gun. But if I had a violent record etc I wouldn't. I also can buy a gun suited for hunting game. A gun designed primarily to kill people is a different matter. Perhaps that is one area that you can get change. Have a bolt action to hunt deer but why an ak47 with full metal jacket ammo.
its all good -
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who the hell knows.
i think the reported figures are going to vary according the political agenda of the who is doing the reporting.
for example, i did a google search and look what the first 2 results say:
1.The Centers for Disease Control reports that there were 11,078 firearm-related homicides in the U.S. in 2010.
2. Firearms killed 32,251 people in the United States in 2011, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control has data.
i ain't skeered of the woods so the only thing i carry concealed are my brains.2,000 miler -
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Guns make it far easier to kill someone. Intentionally or unintentionally.
There is a marked difference in the ease your average person can pull a trigger versus cut a throat.Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
Drybones wrote:
People never killed people before the gun was invented?
at the same time, the issue of mental illness itself needs to be addressed.its all good -
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max.patch wrote:
who the hell knows.
i think the reported figures are going to vary according the political agenda of the who is doing the reporting.
for example, i did a google search and look what the first 2 results say:
1.The Centers for Disease Control reports that there were 11,078 firearm-related homicides in the U.S. in 2010.
2. Firearms killed 32,251 people in the United States in 2011, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control has data.
i ain't skeered of the woods so the only thing i carry concealed are my brains.
its all good -
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hikerboy wrote:
max.patch wrote:
who the hell knows.
i think the reported figures are going to vary according the political agenda of the who is doing the reporting.
for example, i did a google search and look what the first 2 results say:
1.The Centers for Disease Control reports that there were 11,078 firearm-related homicides in the U.S. in 2010.
2. Firearms killed 32,251 people in the United States in 2011, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control has data.
i ain't skeered of the woods so the only thing i carry concealed are my brains.
Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
OzJacko wrote:
hikerboy wrote:
max.patch wrote:
who the hell knows.
i think the reported figures are going to vary according the political agenda of the who is doing the reporting.
for example, i did a google search and look what the first 2 results say:
1.The Centers for Disease Control reports that there were 11,078 firearm-related homicides in the U.S. in 2010.
2. Firearms killed 32,251 people in the United States in 2011, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control has data.
i ain't skeered of the woods so the only thing i carry concealed are my brains.
its all good -
This video is great (but the guy doing it is much more talented than this single video lets on.) If you are a Pro-2A, you'll probably get a huge kick out of some of his other music videos on YouTube.
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For once I'd just like to hear myself say, "Great job, self! Why don't you just take the day off." -
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socks wrote:
I like Aussies cause they gave us, Vegemite, the boomerang, they babysit many of the planets nastiest snakes, and they gave us "Mick Dundee...from Australia" Olivia too. And cause they like to drink, fight and cuss.
Lost in the right direction. -
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TrafficJam wrote:
socks wrote:
I like Aussies cause they gave us, Vegemite, the boomerang, they babysit many of the planets nastiest snakes, and they gave us "Mick Dundee...from Australia" Olivia too. And cause they like to drink, fight and cuss.
You have accents. New England accents, mid west accents, Louisiana accents, Texan accents etc etc.
We all talk the same. No accent.
Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
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Drybones wrote:
People never killed people before the gun was invented?
Oh they did. Atilla the Hun is reported to have killed a city of around 1 milion people in 3 days.
And as I like to point out, he did it without benefit, er excuse, of video games, movies, or books.--
"What do you mean its sunrise already ?!", me. -
JimBlue wrote:
OzJacko wrote:
You have over 30,000 people a year dying by gun.
Surely you have to admit you have to start doing something.
Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
JimBlue wrote:
Drybones wrote:
People never killed people before the gun was invented?
And as I like to point out, he did it without benefit, er excuse, of video games, movies, or books.
Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
OzJacko wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
Drybones wrote:
People never killed people before the gun was invented?
And as I like to point out, he did it without benefit, er excuse, of video games, movies, or books.
The road to glory cannot be followed with much baggage.
Richard Ewell, CSA General -
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OzJacko wrote:
Agreed but the tool is an issue.
Brother, with all due respect, you're focusing an awful lot on the dangers in this topic.
But something that is far more important to many of us is the safety in this same topic.
The quote, "You cannot invade the mainland United States. There would be a rifle behind every blade of grass." comes to mind.
Some other relevant ones might be:
"God made men. Samuel Colt made them equal."
or
"An armed society is a polite society."
All truisms, my friend!
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For once I'd just like to hear myself say, "Great job, self! Why don't you just take the day off." -
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I'm with Oz on this. The USA is truly "exceptional" with regard to firearm deaths, and not in a good way. We have come to accept the 30,000 figure as normal and unavoidable here. Sigh.
2.bp.blogspot.com/-Bg9T6GlVhjo…ownload%2B%25283%2529.jpg -
Not able to post link as I am not that good with the phone but search I just did on Wikipedia showed homicide rates per 100,000 as being 0.86 for Australia and 8.64 for USA.
And that doesn't count the other 20,000+ gun related deaths you have.
The 2nd amendment doesn't seem to be working for you.
From what I saw the only comparable countries are mostly war zones.Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait.
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