JessFR
Bluelight Crew
why apart from? why not as well as? false dilemma is false.
alasdair
Seems to me very few people want to talk about the gun side AND the everything else side. Seems most people are all one or the other.
why apart from? why not as well as? false dilemma is false.
alasdair
I didn't say completely ignore gun reform, but I did earlier prove that gun laws do not have a significant enough influence on homicide rates for them to be the main issue.why apart from? why not as well as? false dilemma is false.
I think people just don't feel their humanity any more. We are so disconnected with everything. Just give us our processed shit. If you feel suicidal, might as well go down the street and get a machine gun. Take some people with you. Who cares, the planet is dying anyways. Imbeciles and zealots in charge of everything.
Knives are designed for utilitarian purposes, yet are sometimes used as weapons. The same could be said of hammers, baseball bats, and crowbars. Like knives, their intended purpose was not to be a weapon yet they have been used as weapons. However, guns are specifically designed to be used as weapons.
That doesn't mean all guns should be banned. However, steps should be taken to ensure that the mentally unstable don't have access to them.
Some employees removed high heels to prepare to flee the building. Others hid. One pulled two handguns out of his desk drawer for self-defense.
How did this attacker get smoke grenades? Are they purchased legally?
In the United States, grenades are classified as destructive devices, a form of Title II weapons under the National Firearms Act. They must consequently be registered with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, are taxed, and are illegal in states that ban Title II weapons.
^That's confusing to me. Drawing a parallel between smoke grenades and guns is not an argument I would ever make . . . though I would support, say, not selling smoke grenades to kids or whatever.
indeed."Is there a cut-off for tragedy?
classy. classier, certainly than our president.Mr Buckley said his wife talked him out of pushing ahead without the President's approval and lowering flags in Annapolis, the capital of the US state of Maryland.
"At this point in time, it would start to polarise people and I don't want to make people angry," Mr Buckley said.