HeadphonesandLSD
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2011
- Messages
- 1,768
I agree, but the Constitution is the basis for our entire judicial system as well, so I see interpretation of the 2nd as a federal issue. I see where you're coming from, tho. Tbc, I don't think private citizens should be prevented from owning guns.
Oh it's a federal issue for sure. Just because a state makes a law doesn't mean that the feds can't overturn it. I didn't mean to imply that a state could ban guns outright or impose impossible restrictions. I just think the federal Government has overreached a lot on certain issues and going back to the original intention where states can more freely Govern themselves would probably solve a lot of issues we have these days. It's a fine line but I tend to favor local/small Government. In my own state things like Voter ID will be challenged again at the federal level I'm sure. I've always been fine with that.
Could women do the training, in your view? What about noncombat roles?
Of course, Women have always served an important role in the military. My only issue with the current state of affairs is the front line service aspect. Women on the front lines in combat roles cause a lot of issues that don't otherwise happen. It's hard for Women to remain in the field where they don't have access to hygiene products for example. The main issue is the fact that the men around them will make decisions they otherwise wouldn't. If you have a case where a man would normally be left behind/for dead things change dramatically if you replace that man with a woman. The Army has done several studies on this and found that men will take risks to save a woman that they wouldn't take otherwise. It's just ingrained instinct and the Army has been unable to find a way to train it out of soldiers. Even if that could be trained out it wouldn't solve many other problems that arise in the social structure when you have a co-ed force. For example, the presence of a woman ends up with every man around her competing for attention/sex/companionship. People get jealous of each other (again, instinct) and problems come up that don't happen in an all male social circle.
I know you disagree on this point but there have been several studies done on this that seem to get buried in the name on political correctness. I can recall one incident where women were being flown out every few days for showers while the men were forced to spend many months deployed without leaving base. It's hard to leave a woman in the field without resupply for too long because of the hygiene issue where males can stay out for far longer without worries of suffering major complications. There is also the issue of the Army having to lower standards on physical tests so more women could pass. In the field this would become an issue because they may not be able to render assistance to a fellow soldier due to being unable to lift their weight. Sorry to go on a tangent just pointing out at the very least women on the front lines does make logistics more complicated even if you exclude all the other issues it causes.
This goes deeper than just the Army/front lines. I don't have a problem with co-ed institutions for people mind you. I just think there needs to be a balance where you can have clubs/boys only/girls only being allowed as well. A lot of the issues we are currently having with men probably come from the fact that male-only spaces have been pretty much totally eliminated in society now. This leads to a huge lack of male bonding and places where men can be men. Currently, we live in a society where a male-only club is demonized for not allowing women in but women/girl only clubs are not. We need a healthy balance between co-ed and non co-ed social clubs.
Really interesting posts, Headphones.Got me thinking...
I can't say whether or not SSRIs are a big factor, but I wouldn't be surprised. My ex's cousin, when she was 16, got put on Zoloft, she was getting into drugs and her parents assumed it must be because she was depressed and the psychiatrist and her parents basically forced her onto it. Within a few months, she became crushingly depressed and her personality changed substantially, and she started to become obsessed with the idea of killing her family and herself. Fortunately she had the presence of mind to tell her parents she wanted off Zoloft and why, and fortunately they took her seriously. Once she got off of it, she went back to normal. This was before they started adding the disclaimer that "they may cause suicidal or homicidal ideation in children, teens and young adults" that they use now.
I do think the gross overuse of prescription mood-altering drugs in our society has a variety of insidiously negative repercussions, and could very well be a main underlying factor in why we have mass shootings, especially school shootings.
The SSRIs causing those issues is well documented and some studies have been done on it and pretty much all of them that I've read linked them with suicides/homicides. Most of them do say it right on the warning label that this can be a side effect. In my experience with using them they do cause this type of thinking and can provoke violent outbursts. They also seem to lower inhibitions and/or critical thinking that normally override such thoughts. Thoughts like that are normal but most people know not to act on them and realize that they aren't good ideas. SSRIs really scare me because they are prescribed so liberally and often thrown at someone that doesn't get more screening than a 10-15 minute visit with a family doctor. That's how I got several prescriptions for various SSRIs over the years although I rarely took them. I've been prescribed them multiple times for off-label sleeping problems and found that they don't really work better than benadryl but would cause major changes in my personality. They made me feel like a zombie and would often cause distorted thinking.
I am highly suspicious of big pharma and I'm sure the reason the link between use of SSRIs and mass shootings is suppressed so much is due to the fact that so much money is made off prescribing these drugs to people. I've seen far more bad results from long term use of SSRIs than I have good ones. I currently have a family member that's been attempting to ween off of them for a year now that can never seem to make the jump away from them. Once off of them for longer than a week she gets very moody, violent, and not the person she normally is. On SSRIs she's like a zombie that have no emotion whatsoever. Before she started using them 5-6 years ago she didn't have these issues. I can't remember now why they were originally prescribed but I do know it was off-label and not due to mental issues.
I don't mean to demonize an entire class of drugs I just think we need some restrictions on allowing them to be given out like candy. We've all seen what happens when drugs are treated as "harmless", we're currently living in an opioid crisis due to the very same attitude about prescription drugs. Most people don't realize just how little most doctors don't know about the drugs they're handing out. My own doctor has admitted to me that he has little time to stay on top of this and is forced to trust people advising him about these drugs. The people advising him are pharma reps which obviously aren't medical doctors and are employees of a company mostly concerned with profits. If you have journal access take a look at studies related to SSRIs and shootings/violence and you'll see lots of papers related to this subject. It's scary that it isn't talked about more often. The only person I can recall talking about it on national television was Alex Jones during his "debate" with Piers Morgan. While I respect him attempting to get the information out there most people do not take him serious and he didn't present the information in a way that people would have looked into it deeper.
The Alex Jones/Piers Morgan debate. Took me awhile to find this, CNN has scrubbed most mirrors from youtube and it doesn't come up in search results unless you go way down the list. The main one that comes up now is CNN's copy which is highly edited lol.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XZvMwcluEg
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