Doggone it! You done blew our cover.LIES! If that were the case you would have referred to it as a 'fiddle'![]()
It's really interesting reading a european (predominantly UK i presume) take on this, compared to all the flaming in the other thread.there's a 'discussion' of this incident in ce&p right now: http://www.bluelight.org/vb/threads...b-shooting-in-Orlando-FL-by-Islamic-terrorist
gm made a great post:
it is a complex issue with many factors. until i moved here i was not aware of the power of the gun lobby in u.s. politics. there are many 'ordinary' u.s. gun owners who will readily admit that they believe massacres like these are the price the u.s. pays for their freedom to own a gun.
alasdair
What's interesting to me is how little insight into how - and why - the rest of the world thinks American culture's gun fetish is simply insane.
Don't get me wrong - i hate a lot about australia - but knowing that people around me are most likely not carrying a firearm makes me feel more relaxed, secure and...free than when i'm in the US.
The USA is a an amazing country with some great things about it, but the gun thing is creepy to me. Not just creepy like "irrational fear of being randomly shot" - but just the amount of people that don't question it.
Also, this guy in Orlando wasn't a member or ISIS.
But ISIS are known to use US Military weapons. IMO the USA is more responsible for ISIS' very existence than ISIS is to blame for this nightclub massacre.