nasim aghdam was a u.s. citizen.
i think you touch on an important point.
when this broke, i'm sure some people just assumed this was an attack by a muslim. the shooter was not muslim. or she had to be an illegla immigrant, right? she was not. but she didn't fit the comfortable narratives associated with gun violence so people just started making them up: People Are Molding Their Responses to Nasim Aghdam to Fit the Shape of Their Bigotry
this case is notable because she didn't fit the profile of common shooters in incidences like this one. but there is one common factor: she chose a gun.
alasdair
Yeah my point is that we're lucky that she didn't, she could have killed many more people with a bomb than a gun.
She failed to kill anyone.
The real solution to the gun violence is enacting policies and laws to once again strengthen the middle class and quit trying to redistribute everything to the already-wealthy, and for the political machine to quit spreading dissent and driving in a wedge between two imaginary groups of people, and for our society to get real with itself. Not gun control. However, I do believe large magazine semiautomatic/automatic weapons don't belong in the hands of citizens. And I think gun shows are insanity, why even have laws if you can easily skirt them legally?
Spree shooters just have a bad day or get upset over fick all, good thing they have guns easily got to kill people with. Its their right to bear arms so maybe just deal with it.
If you're ever held at gunpoint or are a victim of gun violence, you'll wish you had one. Not that they get banned.
Why don't we ban knives next?
If you're ever held at gunpoint or are a victim of gun violence, you'll wish you had one. Not that they get banned.
Why don't we ban knives next?
If you're ever held at gunpoint or are a victim of gun violence, you'll wish you had one. Not that they get banned.
Why don't we ban knives next?
Never been held at gun point. It's really uncommon in Australia for armed robbery to feature a gun.
Which is kinda the point.
If the laws changed, do you really think lots and lots of people would buy them and just start shooting each other? Do you think the crime rate would explode?
I suspect many people would go about their daily lives as if not a lot had changed...
If the laws changed, do you really think lots and lots of people would buy them and just start shooting each other? Do you think the crime rate would explode?
I suspect many people would go about their daily lives as if not a lot had changed...
The only thing that would change is that eventually there would be another spree shooting. Most likely there will be another one eventually anyway it'll just take much much longer with the current gun laws than without. That and more crimes would be committed with guns, but based on history, it shouldn't have any effect on how many people die.
I suppose you can argue saving those few dozen people is worth taking away the freedoms. I don't, because I don't wanna live in a society so pathological obsessed with safety that everything gets banned to save a handful of people while social problems that kill thousands are ignored all because of people's perceptions. But it's an argument you could make.
It seems obvious to me even without knowing the statistics, I've seen how easy it is to get a gun illegally in Australia. Which means all gun control changes is it keeps guns out of the hands of criminals who don't want to actually kill anyone to start with, who then use knives instead. So no noticeable change happens to the number of dead. And the criminals who really wanna kill someone were always uncommon and are still able to get guns of they want them.
Seriously, Australians make me laugh when they talk about how happy they are there aren't any guns. Cause I've seen criminals armed to the teeth.
It does stop spree killers, because they aren't usually career criminals. So they don't have the sources to get a gun. But compared to all the crime that barely even makes the news, statistically they amount to nothing.