if you just give up before you start, you lose every time.
alasdair
alasdair
I am anti gun-control
I know here in SA almost every household has a gun be it illegal or not and we don't see mass shootings like in the States.
We do indeed have very violent crimes like armed robberies etc but not mass shootings.
I actually wonder if this guy had a brain tumour or something like that because nobody in their right mind would do something so heinous IMO.
Unfortunately that’s not true. People can do this sort of thing and be entirely in their right mind. Look around this thread, so many people refusing to really understand other people’s points of view, the evil gun lobby, etc etc. The point is people simplify other people’s views, it’s easier to believe they are evil and wrong or corrupted and selfish rather than having a different but legitimate point of view.
Little by little, this can become so extreme that eventually people really do see the people they don’t agree with as evil, and they need to die. There are endless excuses, religion, etc, but really it all comes down to humans deciding that the existence of other humans they don’t agree with simply can’t be tolerated.
Ignorance, intolerance, simplification. Everyone does it. And unchecked, eventually it can reach a point where people decide their enemies can’t continue to exist. And of course, and this is where we do start getting into biology more than human nature. Sometimes some people really are evil. It’s rare, but sometimes it’s that simple. But like I said, rare. Most of the time nobody is really evil, just little by little they’ve really become this exteme. And unlike being truly evil and bad, with which we know there are biological influences, a lot of otherwise normal humans have the potential to reach such extremism that they’d kill.
My point is, there need not be any brain tumor, or any biological “problem” at all. But I don’t expect many will agree with me. Which is exactly my point. It’s far too gray a point of view for most to tolerate. But that’s my view.
I've given the Oklahoma city bombing and others as an example countless times but it just goes ignored.
... it's important for law abiding citizens to be able to own guns.
There isnt one. Americans as a society are just going to have to learn to live with this type of stuff
In 1966, Charles Whitman killed seventeen people and wounded thirty-one from his perch in the tower at University of Texas at Austin in 96 minutes before he was shot and killed by police officers.
One of his shots killed an unborn child with a bullet to the skull. The mother survived.
Not simply to be morbid, which this is, but to point out that a former Marine with the skills of a sharpshooter can do a great deal with semiautomatic weapons. Whitman was shooting a person every two minutes.
I don't want to stigmatize people who have been discharged (honorably or not) from the military, but the skills of a sniper or sharpshooter separate them from others and I think a psychological or psychiatric evaluation is in order upon exit from a theater of war if they were engaged in combat and upon discharge.
Mental health care needs to be available for those who need it and a debriefing process focused on combat veterans would be a good start, I think.
~1,230 feet from the window to the grounds.
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alasdairm said:GenericMind said:The problem is not nor has it ever been about gun control. The problem is our society and foreign/domestic policies.
Our foreign policies of dropping millions of dollars of bombs on other countries and killing countless thousands of civilians has created anti-American extremism all over the world.
At home, the socioeconomic conditions that we've created by allowing the rich and powerful to shape this country have gotten so bad that domestic terrorism is now a real threat. No, not everyone that picks up an assault rifle and starts shooting people does so because of Islam. People in America are working 2 or 3 jobs just to feed their families. Most of them can't afford proper medical care or education for their children. They're drowning in debt while multi-billion dollar banks charge them 15%-25% and $35 overdraft fees. They spend their entire lives struggling and worrying while a tiny percentage of Americans soak up 90% of all new wealth coming into the country. They feel, and rightfully so, that the entire system is rigged against them and that their own government is constantly plotting ways to exploit them to the benefit of rich corporations. They see that 1-in-every-5 children in the richest country in the planet's history live under the poverty level and are terrified of what kind of life their own children will have. They feel helpless and hopeless. Is it any wonder then why things like these mass shootings happen? There are lots of other countries with similar gun laws to ours and NONE of them have a problem with mass shootings like we do.
When you make people feel like they're trapped in a corner and drive them to insanity, they'll do insane things. It doesn't matter what our gun laws are. These shootings will continue until people start realizing what the true nature of the problem is.
not sure i agree that "[t]he problem is not nor has it ever been about gun control", but i think it certainly is related to the sort of imperial oligarchy that the USA has become in the last half century or so.
richest nation in the world, yet so many people live in abject poverty like a "3rd world" nation. the working and middle classes feel like they can never get ahead, and some folks struggle to keep their heads above water, despite working several jobs.
that sort of inequality and social injustice is going to breed fucked up, toxic culture, any way you slice it.
But his proclaimed motive, even a real motive, if it was possible to know such things, is irrelevant. To find out that he just really hates country music (understandable) instead of owes the casinos a bunch of money, gets us nothing.
The question of illness is important, but not the end either. Would it help us to know he had a brain tumor? Would we demand MRIs for every male in the country? I think mental health care obv. needs improvement anyway, but it would be too late for him, and he supposedly had money to pay for treatment. (right? someone said he was rich).
Really, there's one common factor to all mass shootings. Key is in the word "shoot".
Jess, I'm curious what the nuanced take from the gun lobbies is? You are right, I tend to simplify that one. I can even knock it down to a single word: money. If you want to rep their complex point of view, I'll listen.
The dude was rich.
What's a 'lone wolf'? It's the special name we give white terrorists
We have a double standard in the United States when it comes to talking about terrorism. The label is reserved almost exclusively for when we’re talking about Muslims.
Consider Stephen Craig Paddock, the shooter in Sunday’s massacre in Las Vegas. Is he a terrorist? Well, the authorities aren’t calling him one, at least not yet.
This is all the more remarkable because Paddock’s actions clearly fit the statutory definition of terrorism in Nevada. That state’s law defines terrorism as “any act that involves the use or attempted use of sabotage, coercion or violence which is intended to cause great bodily harm or death to the general population”.
Stephen Craig Paddock shot and killed at least 59 people and injured more than 500 others. If that doesn’t qualify as a textbook definition of Nevada’s terrorism law, I don’t know what does.
Yet, when asked at a press conference in Las Vegas if the shooting was an act of terrorism, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo replied: “No. Not at this point. We believe it’s a local individual. He resides here locally,” suggesting that all terrorism is foreign in nature.
Lombardo didn’t call Paddock a terrorist, but he did label him a “lone wolf”, which in our lexicon is that special name we use for “white-guy terrorist”.
Nor is this oversight limited to Lombardo. Las Vegas’s mayor, Carolyn Goodman, also described Paddock not as a terrorist but as “a crazed lunatic, full of hate”. No doubt many other people will repeat the same sentiment in the days to come.
And Donald Trump, who craves every opportunity to utter the words “radical Islamic terrorism”, avoided any mention of the word “terrorist” when discussing the tragic events of Sunday night.
Speaking from the White House, the president instead called the mass shooting “an act of pure evil”. Rather than offering sensible policy changes, such as greater gun control, the president had other ideas. He thinks we should pray more.
Donald Trump calls Las Vegas gunman 'demented' - video
Paddock’s act though is, by definition, terrorism. Even under the stricter federal definition of terrorism, Paddock’s murderous rampage should qualify. The federal code defines “domestic terrorism” in part as “activities that appear intended to affect the conduct of government by mass destruction”. It’s hard, if not impossible, to understand how committing one of the largest mass shootings in American history is not “intended to affect the conduct of government”.
But one reason, beyond outright racism, why white people are less frequently charged with terrorism than Muslims in the United States lies with the little-known fact that while federal law does define “domestic terrorism”, it does not codify “domestic terrorism” as a federal crime. (At least 33 states do, however, have anti-terror legislation.) This is partly out of concern that such a statute could go a long way toward criminalizing thought and trampling on the first amendment.
Federal law does contain “hate crime” provisions, but in our present war on terror, it’s one thing to be convicted of “hate” and quite another of “terrorism”. Someone who hates is considered a bad person. Meanwhile, in the eyes of many, someone who is a terrorist doesn’t even deserve to be human.
What this legal reality translates into is a world where the vast majority of the high-profile terrorism prosecutions brought in this country, the ones announced by the justice department with great fanfare and heralding a safer future, basically never revolve around domestic terrorism.
This became clear recently when the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, surprisingly said that the death of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville, Virginia at the hands of a white nationalist sympathizer constituted “domestic terrorism”. But lawyers repeatedly pointed out that at the federal level, domestic terrorism “doesn’t constitute an independent crime or trigger heightened penalties”, according to the website justsecurity.org.
Instead, the high-profile terrorism cases that do trigger heightened penalties are the foreign terrorism cases that almost always involve Muslims, especially since the justice department’s prosecutions of international terrorism is determined by a list of some 60 designated “foreign terrorist organizations”, most of whom are active in Muslim-majority countries. Even material support cases directly related to domestic terrorism are rarely prosecuted in federal court.
A bias, in other words, is embedded in the structure of our laws and how we prosecute them. Foreign terrorism prosecutions put the focus on Muslims and foreign conflicts, while domestic terrorism gets downplayed in our federal courts.
Any predisposition one may have already had that it’s Islam that produces terrorism is thus repeatedly reinforced in who gets prosecuted under our laws. And those attitudes, bolstered by the law, become mainstream in our news media, on our television screens, and in our day-to-day conversations with friends and neighbors.
But in the United States far more people, by orders of magnitude, are killed by gun violence than terrorism carried out in the name of Islam. We just don’t pay attention.
In 2017 alone, there have been 273 mass shootings, about one a day, and 11,671 deaths due to gun violence, according to Gun Violence Archive. Those numbers may surprise you. They did me, and they’re abysmal.
In our society, the federal government often directs the attentions of the people through their policies and priorities. Today, especially under Donald Trump, federal authorities seem even less interested in talking about domestic terrorism.
When a mosque in Minnesota was bombed earlier this year, for example, the White House didn’t even bat an eyelid. Meanwhile, acts like Trump’s Muslim ban reinforce the idea that anyone, anyone at all who comes from one of the barred countries – almost all of whom are Muslim-majority – ought to be considered a security threat.
The answer to this kind of institutionalized and deeply ingrained Islamophobia is to recognize how this clear double standard lets too many domestic terrorism perpetrators off the hook.
We should explain to our government that the interests of justice are served when the terrorism label is fairly and accurately applied.
We should point out to the government that, in their zeal to make the country safe from outsider threats, they are enabling domestic threats to proliferate. And we must hope that this administration in particular will see our warnings as a caution and not as a plan.
Although mass shootings are often viewed as some of the worst acts of gun violence, they seem to have little effect on public opinion about gun rights, based on surveys from the Pew Research Center. That helps explain why Americans’ support for the right to own guns appears to be rising over the past 20 years even as more of these mass shootings make it to the news.
Agreed and if you look at my earlier post I mentioned in his autopsy they found he had a brain tumour the size of a pecan nut which also could have been what led him to do this.