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#81
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On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 19:33:11 -0400, "CB" wrote:
"Rich Travsky" wrote in message ... dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n2698141.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. Don't confuse CB with facts. Just think if Holocaust survivor Professor Liviu Librescu threw a pullet at loon murderer Cho Seung-Hui rather than him self, the bloodshed would have ended there. Yes, throwing young chickens is known to scare the bejezus out of mass murderers... |
#82
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "Rich Travsky" wrote in message ... dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n2698141.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. Don't confuse CB with facts. Just think if Holocaust survivor Professor Liviu Librescu threw a bullet at loon murderer Cho Seung-Hui rather than him self, the bloodshed would have ended there. |
#83
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 19:33:11 -0400, "CB" wrote: "Rich Travsky" wrote in message ... dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n2698141.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. Don't confuse CB with facts. Just think if Holocaust survivor Professor Liviu Librescu threw a pullet at loon murderer Cho Seung-Hui rather than him self, the bloodshed would have ended there. Yes, throwing young chickens is known to scare the bejezus out of mass murderers... Especially frozen chickens... those things can leave a nasty bruise! |
#84
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 22:34:52 -0400, "CB" wrote:
Just think if Holocaust survivor Professor Liviu Librescu threw a bullet at loon murderer Cho Seung-Hui rather than him self, the bloodshed would have ended there. I threw a bullet at someone once - it bounced harmlessly off of his arm. |
#85
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "Jeffrey Turner" wrote in message ... CB wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message ... "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n2698141.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Of course you've got a test for a "criminal mind"? Like all the traders at Enron? If ever a test was passed, it was by Alec Baldwin -- CB China and Russia sell arms to Syria and Iran. Iran and Syria supply their surrogates, in Hezbollah, el Qaeda and the rest, America is forced to fight Islamo-fascism for fear of them coming to her shores and Libs fight to keep America's President down while preventing America from being Energy independent of OPEC, the perfect storm. |
#86
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() CB said: Of course you've got a test for a "criminal mind"? If ever a test was passed, it was by Alec Baldwin Hmm.... He's not in jail, not awaiting trial, not even accused of a crime. Are you blaming him for one of his brothers' didos? -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#87
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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wrote:
On Sat, 21 Apr 2007 23:41:43 -0600, Rich Travsky wrote: wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 12:21:22 -0400, "CB" wrote: And the law made an even more ludicrous error in deciding that 'only criminals are allowed to have guns on campus'. Where did the law say that? WHich criminals are you referring to? RT The one saying the campus was a 'gun free zone'. BY definition, if you carry a gun on campus, you are a criminal. No, it is not an arrestable offense. It's campus rules. You can get expelled. Therefore, anyone who wishes to NOT commit a crime, must leave their gun at home. Homicidal maniacs, bring theirs. |
#88
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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CB wrote:
"Rich Travsky" wrote in message wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 12:21:22 -0400, "CB" wrote: "Mitchell Holman" wrote in message wrote in On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message ... "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...ico/main269814 1.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. There's an attempted mugging or rape in a dark parking garage, the CCW holder shows his/her gun, attacker runs away, CCW holder gets in car and drives off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. Or Home-owner sees someone lurking around the bushes, peering in the windows, etc, goes outside with his/her gun and chases them off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. What it comes down to is the RIGHT ( not 'priviledge' ) of self defense. Our entire legal system is founded on the concept of 'protection of the rights of the innocent', even when they have the undesired effect of protecting the rights of the guilty. Our entire legal system is based on the concept of 'better that 10 guilty men go free than that one innocent man goes to jail'. The same applies to self-defense - it is not acceptable for even one person to be stripped of their RIGHT to self-defense, regardless of whether there are criminals in society who find in that a way to twist it to their advantage. So Cho was just exercising his "right to self defense" when he walked on to campus with all those guns? Man you are one dumb som-bitch The loony-ben system failed to protect society after he was found a danger to him self, Libs run the asylum for the most part. The skoo failed their student body for having a loony policy of protecting loons from being expelled or even suspended. And the law made an even more ludicrous error in deciding that 'only criminals are allowed to have guns on campus'. Where did the law say that? WHich criminals are you referring to? Did you understand what P.M. said? Better than you do. Where law abiding citizens are barred from caring firearms on campus, criminals are free too. These are kids, you moron. "When contemplating college liberals, you really regret once again that John Walker is not getting the death penalty. We need to execute people like John Walker in order to physically intimidate liberals, by making them realize that they can be killed too. Otherwise they will turn out to be outright traitors." - Ann Coulter, at the Conservative Political Action Conference How sad, true and ironic her words have become Coulter? The plagiarist? HAHAHAHHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAH |
#89
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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dave weil wrote:
On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 19:33:11 -0400, "CB" wrote: "Rich Travsky" wrote in message dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n2698141.shtml The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. Don't confuse CB with facts. Just think if Holocaust survivor Professor Liviu Librescu threw a pullet at loon murderer Cho Seung-Hui rather than him self, the bloodshed would have ended there. Yes, throwing young chickens is known to scare the bejezus out of mass murderers... We mustn't be so hard on CB - he was trying so hard to use English for once. RT |
#90
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Tue, 24 Apr 2007 20:18:42 -0600, Rich Travsky
wrote: wrote: On Sat, 21 Apr 2007 23:41:43 -0600, Rich Travsky wrote: wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 12:21:22 -0400, "CB" wrote: And the law made an even more ludicrous error in deciding that 'only criminals are allowed to have guns on campus'. Where did the law say that? WHich criminals are you referring to? RT The one saying the campus was a 'gun free zone'. BY definition, if you carry a gun on campus, you are a criminal. No, it is not an arrestable offense. It's campus rules. You can get expelled. OK - so 'the rules ( not the law ) say that anyone with a gun can get expelled ( or fired, if employed there, I assume )'. Same effect - people who follow the law ( and the 'rules' ) are disarmed, those who ignore 'the rules' bring guns if they choose. Net result - same as if it were a law. Therefore, anyone who wishes to NOT commit a crime, must leave their gun at home. Homicidal maniacs, bring theirs. -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#91
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Tue, 24 Apr 2007 20:23:13 -0600, Rich Travsky
wrote: CB wrote: "Rich Travsky" wrote in message And the law made an even more ludicrous error in deciding that 'only criminals are allowed to have guns on campus'. Where did the law say that? WHich criminals are you referring to? Did you understand what P.M. said? Better than you do. Where law abiding citizens are barred from caring firearms on campus, criminals are free too. These are kids, you moron. They are adults, moron. Over 18, often up to 22, and legally adults in every sense. Employees, of course - easily 50 - 60 + years old in many cases. Thus, also adults. "When contemplating college liberals, you really regret once again that John Walker is not getting the death penalty. We need to execute people like John Walker in order to physically intimidate liberals, by making them realize that they can be killed too. Otherwise they will turn out to be outright traitors." - Ann Coulter, at the Conservative Political Action Conference How sad, true and ironic her words have become Coulter? The plagiarist? HAHAHAHHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAH -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#92
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote:
"We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. |
#93
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Apr 20, 5:42 am, MiNe 109 wrote:
In article , wrote: dw: I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. You'd think Britain would be depopulated by now. Just what RAO needs, a gun thread. Stephen It wouldn't be such a big deal if the anti-gun side would simply be honest enough to look at all the data in context. |
#94
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On 25 Apr 2007 08:58:46 -0700, avidlistener
wrote: On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. If they were, we'd have to ban gasoline, fertilizer, cars, sticks, and a few other things. BTW - case in point - I don't recall the 9/11 hijackers using guns. -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#95
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. America 'is' 28th in the world for gun violence, after most EU and Latino countries. |
#96
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 8:16 am, Jenn wrote:
In article , George M. Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast . net wrote: Jenn said: 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. snip That would be one in three Americans. Sorry, not believable. More like 1 in 300. (Did you skip your morning caffeine dosage?) Opps. Still.... It's hard to get truly accurate data on the subject since most people don't bother to fill out a police report when they scare away a criminal with their gun. |
#97
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 8:16 am, Jenn wrote: In article , George M. Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast . net wrote: Jenn said: 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. snip That would be one in three Americans. Sorry, not believable. More like 1 in 300. (Did you skip your morning caffeine dosage?) Opps. Still.... It's hard to get truly accurate data on the subject since most people don't bother to fill out a police report when they scare away a criminal with their gun. **Got any proof of that? -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#98
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. **There is, however, a DIRECT connection between lax, stupid and haphazard gun control laws and the number of people shot to death: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...rms-per-capita It is not the number of guns in a society that is a problem. It is WHO is able to access those guns. The US is unique compared to all the other Western, developed nations, WRT the sale of guns (in many jurisdictions) without the requirement of background checks. This was amply demonstrated by the events in Vermont. Worse, in the US secondary gun sales (in many jurisdictions) require no background checks whatsoever. In the cases where they are, there are hopelessly inadequate checks and balances to back up such requirements. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. **I'll make sure that the parents of those killed in Vermont know this fact. I'm sure they will be comforted. Alternatively, you could pull your head out of the sand and admit that the rate of gun violence in the US is simply unacceptable. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#99
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. **Bull****. Those "estimates" are nothing but wild speculation. There are somewhat less than 200 DGUs (Defensive Gun Uses) resulting in the death of the perp each year in the US. A handful more result in injury. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. **Then how the **** can you say that 1,000,000 DGUs occur each year? The ONLY DGUs of interest are the ones which are reported to police. Anything else is a delusion. How can you collect accurate data from people who don't file police reports when they scare away a criminal? There's an attempted mugging or rape in a dark parking garage, the CCW holder shows his/her gun, attacker runs away, CCW holder gets in car and drives off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. Or Home-owner sees someone lurking around the bushes, peering in the windows, etc, goes outside with his/her gun and chases them off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. **Great way to get criminals off the street. NOT! You'll never get them off the stree, but you don't have to allow yourself to be a victim. What it comes down to is the RIGHT ( not 'priviledge' ) of self defense. **A gun is not necessarily the best method for acheiving that. All the other Western, developed nations allow for self defence for their citizens. They're just not allowed to carry guns around the streets to do it. And amazingly enough, fewer people get shot to death in the process. But what about the other ways to get yourself killed? Removing guns does not mean reducing crime. http://www.gunsandcrime.org/ Look at the facts about Australia: GUN CONTROL IN AUSTRALIA An excerpt. What Has Happened, and How 20 Oct 01 The AIC and the media worked on maintaining high support for the new gun laws. On November 4, 1996 the AIC released "Violent Deaths and Firearms in Australia: Data & Trends." About 70 percent of this 96- page report (RPP04) is about firearm deaths. The rest is about Australian homicide over the years. On the same day the AIC also issued a media release entitled "Lax firearm laws mean more deaths." The actual report is a generally professional statistical analysis with some scattered bias, like constantly referring to "firearm caused" deaths. But the media release was blatantly biased and drew unwarranted conclusions about firearms prevalence and death rates. The media release opened by declaring that the AIC report "shows that Australian states in which guns have been more easily available have significantly higher death rates than the national average"-and listing 1994 firearm (not total) death rates for the states and territories. The media release title and opening statement tried to make the public think something about deaths in general although the material was only about those deaths in which firearms were the instruments used to cause such deaths. Then, among findings mentioned, the media release stated that the firearms death rate had fallen over the past decade "as legislation of the late 1980s in some states has made firearms somewhat more difficult to obtain," that "those states in which firearms regulation and licensing have been less stringent have had significantly higher [gun} death rates than the national average" and that the usual small group of countries have less gun homicides than the USA because the USA has more guns. All these statements were attempts to make the public think that the legislation in some states and countries had reduced gun death rates and that states/countries with less stringent control had higher death rates as a result, ignoring the possibility that the higher and lower gun death rates might be caused by something other than gun laws or gun prevalence. The report actually had no facts upon which to base such conclusions. Note that the AIC switched to addressing homicide rather than total deaths when discussing international comparisons since some of the countries have higher suicide rates than the USA. The media release used the usual gun controller tricks of addressing "firearm" deaths, and also including accidents and suicides. They focus on "firearm" deaths/injuries because they can always show reductions in these if firearm availability is reduced, even though total deaths and injuries are not affected and such availability reductions might actually cause more deaths/injuries than they prevent. They include accidents and suicides in their discussions because Australia has so few firearm murders and other homicides that the numbers and rates would not tend to upset people much, especially in comparison to other types that are much more numerous. Also, because the numbers are so small, they vary a great deal randomly from one year to the next so that a plot will not clearly show a definite trend over time. Gun controllers are able to upset the public much more by including suicides in their death figures. What the gun controllers don't want people to know is that it has been proven (and confirmed) that reducing the prevalence of firearms does not reduce (total) suicide rates even though it does in fact reduce firearm suicide rates. People wanting to commit suicide simple use another tool/method when a firearm is not available. [Doctors typically don't believe this because they know that a firearm is more certain to kill than some other methods that are frequently used, and they've told each other that some large portion of suicides are impulsive, spur of the moment events. What they fail to account for is that there is no shortage of equally deadly methods, and a person who fails in a suicide attempt is very likely just to try again and again (often without others even knowing) until he or she succeeds.] The truth is that the claim about availability was unfounded from a scientific research standpoint. The report had not even addressed "availability" in the various states, even by reference to some existing analysis, much less quantified it. (They couldn't reference an analysis because there had not been one.) What the data in the report actually showed (in combination with what GunsAndCrime.org has been able to learn about gun laws in the late '80s and early '90s) was that: 1. The "gun death" rate for NSW rose progressively for three years after effectivity ('90) of the NSW Firearms Act 1989, before finally falling for just the last two years of the period (meaning the gun death rate reduction was not caused by the law); 2. The final drop in the NSW gun death rate did occur upon effectivity of the major '91 amendments to the law, but this was only for two years (not enough to qualify as a statistically significant trend) and the pattern actually resulted from a rather random combination of ups and downs of gun homicide and gun accidents added to a minor drop in gun suicides. 3. The gun death rate for Tasmania showed no statistically significant change in the two years of effectivity ('93 & '94) of the Tasmania Guns Act 1991, and the small reduction was entirely the result of the rate being artificially high in '92 because of an abnormally high suicide rate for that year (i.e., there was no reason to think that the law had any impact on gun death rate); and, 4. Only Queensland had a sustained decline that started with the effectivity of its new gun law, the Firearms Act 1990, and extending through '94. Our entire legal system is founded on the concept of 'protection of the rights of the innocent', even when they have the undesired effect of protecting the rights of the guilty. Our entire legal system is based on the concept of 'better that 10 guilty men go free than that one innocent man goes to jail'. **Better tell that to the Texas legislators. Why are they somehow more corrupt than other legislators? I doubt it. The same applies to self-defense - it is not acceptable for even one person to be stripped of their RIGHT to self-defense, regardless of whether there are criminals in society who find in that a way to twist it to their advantage. **Where did you get the impression that any rights of self defence should be removed? If you remove a method of self defense, then you have removed part of the right. The way to control crime is to control criminals, not law-abiding people. It's a lot tougher task, granted, because law-abiding people are amenable to obeying the law ( duh ), while criminals routinely break it. **What makes sense is this: Allowing nutters easy access to guns is bad public policy. Vermont does exactly this. Nutters get guns anyway despite every law. Law abiding citizens should not be left with less defense because of the few nut cases who will kill anyway. |
#100
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "CB" wrote in message ... "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. America 'is' 28th in the world for gun violence, after most EU and Latino countries. **It is #8 for gun related homicide: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...rms-per-capita Sandwiched right there between Uruguay and Costa Rica. The next Western, developed nation is way down at #19. Don't fool yourself: Having a gun related homicide rate which is amongst a bunch of third world ********s is nothing to be proud of. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#101
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On 25 Apr 2007 12:43:23 -0700, avidlistener
wrote: On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: wrote in message **What makes sense is this: Allowing nutters easy access to guns is bad public policy. Vermont does exactly this. And has the lowest crime rates in the country. Go figure. Nutters get guns anyway despite every law. Yep. Law abiding citizens should not be left with less defense because of the few nut cases who will kill anyway. -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#102
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. **Bull****. Those "estimates" are nothing but wild speculation. There are somewhat less than 200 DGUs (Defensive Gun Uses) resulting in the death of the perp each year in the US. A handful more result in injury. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. **Then how the **** can you say that 1,000,000 DGUs occur each year? The ONLY DGUs of interest are the ones which are reported to police. Anything else is a delusion. How can you collect accurate data from people who don't file police reports when they scare away a criminal? **You can't, so you ignore them. People who don't report criminal activity, are probably engaged in criminal activity of their own. ALL good, law abiding citizens should report criminal activity when they see/experience it. "Scaring criminals away" merely transfers the problem to someone else. It does nothing to solve the problem. And trust me when I say this: I know Americans. They bitch and complain whenever they can about everything they can. They WILL report criminal activity. That they do not, suggests that the figures of 1 million or more and just nonsensical. There's an attempted mugging or rape in a dark parking garage, the CCW holder shows his/her gun, attacker runs away, CCW holder gets in car and drives off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. Or Home-owner sees someone lurking around the bushes, peering in the windows, etc, goes outside with his/her gun and chases them off. No shots fired, no police report, no statistics. **Great way to get criminals off the street. NOT! You'll never get them off the stree, but you don't have to allow yourself to be a victim. **You WILL get them off the street. In fact, the US has the highest incarceration rate of any Western, developed nation: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...ers-per-capita What it comes down to is the RIGHT ( not 'priviledge' ) of self defense. **A gun is not necessarily the best method for acheiving that. All the other Western, developed nations allow for self defence for their citizens. They're just not allowed to carry guns around the streets to do it. And amazingly enough, fewer people get shot to death in the process. But what about the other ways to get yourself killed? Removing guns does not mean reducing crime. **Who said anything about "removing guns"? Certainly not me. Try to pay attention. http://www.gunsandcrime.org/ Look at the facts about Australia: GUN CONTROL IN AUSTRALIA An excerpt. What Has Happened, and How 20 Oct 01 The AIC and the media worked on maintaining high support for the new gun laws. On November 4, 1996 the AIC released "Violent Deaths and Firearms in Australia: Data & Trends." About 70 percent of this 96- page report (RPP04) is about firearm deaths. The rest is about Australian homicide over the years. On the same day the AIC also issued a media release entitled "Lax firearm laws mean more deaths." The actual report is a generally professional statistical analysis with some scattered bias, like constantly referring to "firearm caused" deaths. **Well, gee whiz, that's a surprise. Now, what was the title of that paper again? Sheesh! Of course it referred to firearm caused deaths. But the media release was blatantly biased and drew unwarranted conclusions about firearms prevalence and death rates. The media release opened by declaring that the AIC report "shows that Australian states in which guns have been more easily available have significantly higher death rates than the national average"-and listing 1994 firearm (not total) death rates for the states and territories. **Can't argue with the facts. The media release title and opening statement tried to make the public think something about deaths in general although the material was only about those deaths in which firearms were the instruments used to cause such deaths. **What was the title of that paper again? Was it about workplace deaths? Motorcycle deaths? Alcohol related deaths? No, it was entitled: Violent Deaths and Firearms in Australia: Data & Trends. Read it again. Then, among findings mentioned, the media release stated that the firearms death rate had fallen over the past decade "as legislation of the late 1980s in some states has made firearms somewhat more difficult to obtain," that "those states in which firearms regulation and licensing have been less stringent have had significantly higher [gun} death rates than the national average" and that the usual small group of countries have less gun homicides than the USA because the USA has more guns. **Does it say that? Find me the quote. I'll wait. All these statements were attempts to make the public think that the legislation in some states and countries had reduced gun death rates and that states/countries with less stringent control had higher death rates as a result, **Again, can't argue the facts: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...rms-per-capita There's the US at #8. There's Australia, way down at #27, with nearly 1/10th the rate of the US. There's the UK way, way down at #32 with 1/20th the figure of the US. Germany #21 Denmark #28 Etc. The US, OTOH, is up there with a bunch of third world ********s. Way to go. ignoring the possibility that the higher and lower gun death rates might be caused by something other than gun laws or gun prevalence. The report actually had no facts upon which to base such conclusions. Note that the AIC switched to addressing homicide rather than total deaths when discussing international comparisons since some of the countries have higher suicide rates than the USA. **Switched? Did it? You certain about that? The media release used the usual gun controller tricks of addressing "firearm" deaths, and also including accidents and suicides. They focus on "firearm" deaths/injuries because they can always show reductions in these if firearm availability is reduced, even though total deaths and injuries are not affected and such availability reductions might actually cause more deaths/injuries than they prevent. They include accidents and suicides in their discussions because Australia has so few firearm murders and other homicides that the numbers and rates would not tend to upset people much, especially in comparison to other types that are much more numerous. Also, because the numbers are so small, they vary a great deal randomly from one year to the next so that a plot will not clearly show a definite trend over time. Gun controllers are able to upset the public much more by including suicides in their death figures. What the gun controllers don't want people to know is that it has been proven (and confirmed) that reducing the prevalence of firearms does not reduce (total) suicide rates even though it does in fact reduce firearm suicide rates. **You'd better provide some proof of that. People wanting to commit suicide simple use another tool/method when a firearm is not available. [Doctors typically don't believe this because they know that a firearm is more certain to kill than some other methods that are frequently used, and they've told each other that some large portion of suicides are impulsive, spur of the moment events. What they fail to account for is that there is no shortage of equally deadly methods, and a person who fails in a suicide attempt is very likely just to try again and again (often without others even knowing) until he or she succeeds.] **Prove it. The truth is that the claim about availability was unfounded from a scientific research standpoint. The report had not even addressed "availability" in the various states, even by reference to some existing analysis, much less quantified it. (They couldn't reference an analysis because there had not been one.) What the data in the report actually showed (in combination with what GunsAndCrime.org has been able to learn about gun laws in the late '80s and early '90s) was that: 1. The "gun death" rate for NSW rose progressively for three years after effectivity ('90) of the NSW Firearms Act 1989, before finally falling for just the last two years of the period (meaning the gun death rate reduction was not caused by the law); **A fall is a fall. You think that is a bad thing? Can you prove that the gun control law did not influence that fall? 2. The final drop in the NSW gun death rate did occur upon effectivity of the major '91 amendments to the law, but this was only for two years (not enough to qualify as a statistically significant trend) and the pattern actually resulted from a rather random combination of ups and downs of gun homicide and gun accidents added to a minor drop in gun suicides. 3. The gun death rate for Tasmania showed no statistically significant change in the two years of effectivity ('93 & '94) of the Tasmania Guns Act 1991, and the small reduction was entirely the result of the rate being artificially high in '92 because of an abnormally high suicide rate for that year (i.e., there was no reason to think that the law had any impact on gun death rate); and, 4. Only Queensland had a sustained decline that started with the effectivity of its new gun law, the Firearms Act 1990, and extending through '94. **All very well, but in 1997 a proper, cohesive set of gun control laws were introduced across the entire nation. I suggest you examine the data in light of this facts. Our entire legal system is founded on the concept of 'protection of the rights of the innocent', even when they have the undesired effect of protecting the rights of the guilty. Our entire legal system is based on the concept of 'better that 10 guilty men go free than that one innocent man goes to jail'. **Better tell that to the Texas legislators. Why are they somehow more corrupt than other legislators? I doubt it. **Texas kills more innocents than any other state. The same applies to self-defense - it is not acceptable for even one person to be stripped of their RIGHT to self-defense, regardless of whether there are criminals in society who find in that a way to twist it to their advantage. **Where did you get the impression that any rights of self defence should be removed? If you remove a method of self defense, then you have removed part of the right. **I see. So your rights to owning thermo-nuclear devices, machine guns, and biological wepaons is a removal of your rights to self-defence? The way to control crime is to control criminals, not law-abiding people. It's a lot tougher task, granted, because law-abiding people are amenable to obeying the law ( duh ), while criminals routinely break it. **What makes sense is this: Allowing nutters easy access to guns is bad public policy. Vermont does exactly this. Nutters get guns anyway despite every law. **Cho purcahsed his weapons legally and without impediment. Had he tried to purchase in another jurisdiction (NYC, for instance), he would have been refused. Law abiding citizens should not be left with less defense because of the few nut cases who will kill anyway. **Why are you bleating about self-defence? The problem with Vermont gun control laws do not relate to the removal of ownership of guns by sane people. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 20, 5:42 am, MiNe 109 wrote: In article , wrote: dw: I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. You'd think Britain would be depopulated by now. Just what RAO needs, a gun thread. Stephen It wouldn't be such a big deal if the anti-gun side would simply be honest enough to look at all the data in context. **The YOU present your data, which shows why Vermont gun laws make any kind of sense. Take as much time as you need. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#104
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. **Bull****. Those "estimates" are nothing but wild speculation. There are somewhat less than 200 DGUs (Defensive Gun Uses) resulting in the death of the perp each year in the US. A handful more result in injury. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. **Then how the **** can you say that 1,000,000 DGUs occur each year? The ONLY DGUs of interest are the ones which are reported to police. Anything else is a delusion. By studying the data and how it was arrived at hehttp:// www.gunsandcrime.org/dgufreq.html THE KLECK (AND GERTZ) STUDY ON FREQUENCY OF DEFENSIVE GUN USES (and Gun Controller Criticism of It) RESULTS 222 of the 4799 respondents reported having at least one DGU in their household in the past 5 years. After correcting for oversampling in some regions, this figure drops to 66 personal accounts of DGUs in the preceding year, indicating that 1.326 percent of adults nationwide had experienced at least one DGU. When multiplied by 1.478, the average number of DGUs reported per DGU claimant for the preceding year, and by the total adult population, an estimate of 2.55 million DGUs per year was arrived at. However, Kleck reviewed the record associated with each reported DGU and flagged every report for which: (1)it was not clear if the respondent had actually confronted the perpetrator; (2)the respondent was a police officer, soldier, or security guard; (3)the interviewer had not properly recorded exactly what the respondent had done with the gun, so it was not certain that the respondent had actually used the gun; or, (4)the record did not state a specific crime the respondent thought was being committed. When all such cases were eliminated, the results were 1.125 percent of adults had used guns defensively an average of 1.472 times each, for a total of 2.16 million DGUs per year. This, then is the K-G conservative estimate of annual DGUs. So, rather than saying that K-G found that there are 2.5 million DGUs per year, we should say that there are up to 2.5 million, or be more conservative and say something like over 2 million. Note that an average of 1.472 DGUs per person implies that some people are involved in DGUs much more frequently than others. In their report K-G say that the sampling error for 95 percent confidence interval is plus or minus .32 percent for the unpurged 2.55 million estimate for DGU frequency. The corresponding sampling error for the more conservative 2.16 million estimate would be something greater because the purging would have reduced the sample size. However, do not assume that the results are actually this accurate since these sampling errors do not account for any biases in the survey. |
#105
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On 25 Apr 2007 13:16:28 -0700, avidlistener
wrote: By studying the data and how it was arrived at hehttp:// www.gunsandcrime.org/dgufreq.html THE KLECK (AND GERTZ) STUDY ON FREQUENCY OF DEFENSIVE GUN USES (and Gun Controller Criticism of It) RESULTS Also, there is the simple fact that self-reporting a defensive gun display is utterly stupid. Given a scenario for example 'Walking through parking deck to car. Mugger jumps out. You take your gun out, point it, he runs.' If you call the police to report it here's what happens : Officer - "We have a report that you pointed a gun at someone !" You - "Yes, it was a mugger. He ran away when he saw my gun" Officer - "Let me see your CC permit, ( and other papers if any )" Other Officer - "Where have you been tonight ? Let me see your DL. Where were you going ? Can you prove it ? There was a shooting on this block on the second Tuesday of last month - where were you between the hours of 10 PM and 1 AM on that night, and who can we verify it with ? You don't mind if we search your car, do you ? Turn around, I'm cuffing you for your protection and mine, you're not under arrest yet. What's this in your pocket ? Do you have any drugs or needles that are going to stick me ?" and on and on and on..... 1 hour later Officer - "We're going to confiscate your gun as evidence, you can call the DA in a few months to see if he lets you have it back" 1 month later DA calls - "We have a report that you pointed a gun at someone, and you confessed to it. Since there are no witnessess to prove you had a NEED to do it, we can only assume you were endagering the public. You - "What about the guy who tried to mug me ?" DA - "That case is closed. There was no proof that any crime occurred. Now we're looking into you going around pointing a gun at people on the street. We plan to prosecute, have your lawyer contact us, this is a serious felony and we will be seeking jail time." Suuuuuureeee-bob, people are going to report it !!!!! Riiiiight !!!! -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#106
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() Trevor Wilson said: And trust me when I say this: I know Americans. They bitch and complain whenever they can about everything they can. They WILL report criminal activity. Read this: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/04/19/60minutes/main2704565.shtml?source=RSSattr=HOME_2704565 -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#107
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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wrote:
Suuuuuureeee-bob, people are going to report it !!!!! Riiiiight !!!! Pointing a gun at someone is assault. Don't do it. Intend to fire when you draw. Practice drawing aiming and firing as a single exercise. The concealment of a concealed weapon is part of the weapon. Once you draw a weapon and do not fire it, the bad guy knows you hesitated, and it weakens your position. |
#108
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Wed, 25 Apr 2007 14:27:58 -0700, James McGill
wrote: wrote: Suuuuuureeee-bob, people are going to report it !!!!! Riiiiight !!!! Pointing a gun at someone is assault. Wrong. It depends on the circumstance. It may be self-defense, it may be assault. Same as actually firing it. Same as hitting someone. Don't do it. Intend to fire when you draw. Wrong. **Be prepared** to fire it, yes. Never draw it UNLESS you're prepared to fire it. BUT - that does not mean you 'intend to fire it'. In fact, until the instant you HAVE to pull the trigger, your hope should be to NOT fire it. Practice drawing aiming and firing as a single exercise. That is one technique to practice, among many. The concealment of a concealed weapon is part of the weapon. No, it is not. It is facilitation of having it present and available. Once you draw a weapon and do not fire it, the bad guy knows you hesitated, and it weakens your position. Bull****. What he knows is it's in your hand and ready to kill him. Your hand has a gun in it - a moment ago it was empty. He knows the balance of power has changed, and if you and he are both lucky, he will adjust his behavior accordingly. If not - you will shoot him. -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#109
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. **Bull****. Those "estimates" are nothing but wild speculation. There are somewhat less than 200 DGUs (Defensive Gun Uses) resulting in the death of the perp each year in the US. A handful more result in injury. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. **Then how the **** can you say that 1,000,000 DGUs occur each year? The ONLY DGUs of interest are the ones which are reported to police. Anything else is a delusion. By studying the data and how it was arrived at hehttp:// www.gunsandcrime.org/dgufreq.html THE KLECK (AND GERTZ) STUDY ON FREQUENCY OF DEFENSIVE GUN USES (and Gun Controller Criticism of It) RESULTS 222 of the 4799 respondents reported having at least one DGU in their household in the past 5 years. After correcting for oversampling in some regions, this figure drops to 66 personal accounts of DGUs in the preceding year, indicating that 1.326 percent of adults nationwide had experienced at least one DGU. When multiplied by 1.478, the average number of DGUs reported per DGU claimant for the preceding year, and by the total adult population, an estimate of 2.55 million DGUs per year was arrived at. However, Kleck reviewed the record associated with each reported DGU and flagged every report for which: (1)it was not clear if the respondent had actually confronted the perpetrator; (2)the respondent was a police officer, soldier, or security guard; (3)the interviewer had not properly recorded exactly what the respondent had done with the gun, so it was not certain that the respondent had actually used the gun; or, (4)the record did not state a specific crime the respondent thought was being committed. When all such cases were eliminated, the results were 1.125 percent of adults had used guns defensively an average of 1.472 times each, for a total of 2.16 million DGUs per year. This, then is the K-G conservative estimate of annual DGUs. So, rather than saying that K-G found that there are 2.5 million DGUs per year, we should say that there are up to 2.5 million, or be more conservative and say something like over 2 million. Note that an average of 1.472 DGUs per person implies that some people are involved in DGUs much more frequently than others. In their report K-G say that the sampling error for 95 percent confidence interval is plus or minus .32 percent for the unpurged 2.55 million estimate for DGU frequency. The corresponding sampling error for the more conservative 2.16 million estimate would be something greater because the purging would have reduced the sample size. However, do not assume that the results are actually this accurate since these sampling errors do not account for any biases in the survey. And this last line is the key --- biases in the survey. For in fact the survey is multply biased toward reporting DGUs, and accepting reports for what they are. That is, the person pulling the weapon defines the incident, not both parties involved let alone an independent third party. Thus the most common DGU reported is something like "I saw a scary person, I brandished my gun, and he ran away". An analysis of Kleck's numbers, even after they are vetted to remove reports even Kleck finds unreliable, show most rspondents could not_prove_ that a crime was committed or that the person supposedly doing the threatening was, in fact, armed. That is, the DGUser was actually the agressor. Additionally, the statistical methods used by Kleck and others to come up with such large numbers are suspect. From the above they do not report the sampling error for the "validated" data because this sample size is too small, instead reporting the sample error from the unvalidated data. This is a no no, using known bad data to calculate the integrity of a smaller sample size. There is also a hint of another problem wiith Kleck's data --- an acknowlegement that in reality a smaller number of people account for the bulk of reported incidents because the average reports of incidents is 1.4 That is, in reality the sample size is really much, much smaller than they indicate (it should be number pf people, not number of reports), making the data even more unreliable. (the larger the sample size, the more accurate the data, the more reliable the conclusions. Below a certain sample size you cannot support any conclusions) Larry |
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 20, 12:23 pm, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:10:43 -0500, dave weil wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 07:36:57 -0400, "CB" wrote: "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action Yesterday, one of the major proponents of Right To Carry laws was on CNN once again during Virginia Tech coverage claiming that people packing guns kept the crime rate down, if teachers were allowed to be toting handguns things like this wouldn't happen, blah, blah, blah. His major claim was that the crime rate dropped everywhere Right To Carry laws were instituted. So I decided to do a quick survey and it turns out that yes, crime rates have dropped in those states. However, crime has dropped roughly the same rate in the two states that still don't have any concealed carry laws at this date, Illinois and Michigan. Crime has generally been dropping since the mid-80s whether or not concealed carry laws have been put on the books. He also trotted out one of those occasions where vigilanties prevented crime. Well, with 12,000 plus gun-related murders a year, and something like 30,000 gun deaths of all kinds a year, I'm not sure if it really matters that a handful of lives have been saved by some amateurs lucky enough not to have killed bystanders or themselves. 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. **Bull****. Those "estimates" are nothing but wild speculation. There are somewhat less than 200 DGUs (Defensive Gun Uses) resulting in the death of the perp each year in the US. A handful more result in injury. Of course, they can ONLY be SWAG's because, by the nature of the situations, 90 % + of them go unreported. **Then how the **** can you say that 1,000,000 DGUs occur each year? The ONLY DGUs of interest are the ones which are reported to police. Anything else is a delusion. By studying the data and how it was arrived at hehttp:// www.gunsandcrime.org/dgufreq.html THE KLECK (AND GERTZ) STUDY ON FREQUENCY OF DEFENSIVE GUN USES (and Gun Controller Criticism of It) RESULTS 222 of the 4799 respondents reported having at least one DGU in their household in the past 5 years. After correcting for oversampling in some regions, this figure drops to 66 personal accounts of DGUs in the preceding year, indicating that 1.326 percent of adults nationwide had experienced at least one DGU. When multiplied by 1.478, the average number of DGUs reported per DGU claimant for the preceding year, and by the total adult population, an estimate of 2.55 million DGUs per year was arrived at. However, Kleck reviewed the record associated with each reported DGU and flagged every report for which: (1)it was not clear if the respondent had actually confronted the perpetrator; (2)the respondent was a police officer, soldier, or security guard; (3)the interviewer had not properly recorded exactly what the respondent had done with the gun, so it was not certain that the respondent had actually used the gun; or, (4)the record did not state a specific crime the respondent thought was being committed. When all such cases were eliminated, the results were 1.125 percent of adults had used guns defensively an average of 1.472 times each, for a total of 2.16 million DGUs per year. This, then is the K-G conservative estimate of annual DGUs. So, rather than saying that K-G found that there are 2.5 million DGUs per year, we should say that there are up to 2.5 million, or be more conservative and say something like over 2 million. Note that an average of 1.472 DGUs per person implies that some people are involved in DGUs much more frequently than others. In their report K-G say that the sampling error for 95 percent confidence interval is plus or minus .32 percent for the unpurged 2.55 million estimate for DGU frequency. The corresponding sampling error for the more conservative 2.16 million estimate would be something greater because the purging would have reduced the sample size. However, do not assume that the results are actually this accurate since these sampling errors do not account for any biases in the survey. **Kleck's survey is STILL a survey. It is not fact. It is also highly flawed. There is no independent verification for any of the following: * That the person who claimed a DGU (or DGUs) actually defended themselves. * That the person who claimed a DGU for that time period, actually did use a gun defensively during that time. Here are the words from an official US government report into the DoJ's survey into DGUs (the DoJ report claimed around 108,000 DGUs): --- "Evidence suggests that this survey and others like it overestimate the frequency with which firearms were used by private citizens to defend against criminal attack." And: "The evidence of bias in the DGU estimates is even stronger when one recalls that the DGU estimates are calculated using only the most recently reported DGU incidents of NSPOF respondents; as noted, about half of the respondents who reported a DGU indicated two or more in the preceding year. Although there are no details on the circumstances of those additional DGUs, presumably they are similar to the most recent case and provide evidence for additional millions of violent crimes foiled and perpetrators shot. False positives. Regardless of which estimates one believes, only a small fraction of adults have used guns defensively in 1994. The only question is whether that fraction is 1 in 1,800 (as one would conclude from the NCVS) or 1 in 100 (as indicated by the NSPOF estimate based on Kleck and Gertz's criteria). Any estimate of the incidence of a rare event based on screening the general population is likely to have a positive bias. The reason can best be explained by use of an epidemiological framework.[15] Screening tests are always subject to error, whether the "test" is a medical examination for cancer or an interview question for DGUs. The errors are either "false negatives" or "false positives." If the latter tend to outnumber the former, the population prevalence will be exaggerated. The reason this sort of bias can be expected in the case of rare events boils down to a matter of arithmetic. Suppose the true prevalence is 1 in 1,000. Then out of every 1,000 respondents, only 1 can possibly supply a "false negative," whereas any of the 999 may provide a "false positive." If even 2 of the 999 provide a false positive, the result will be a positive bias--regardless of whether the one true positive tells the truth. Respondents might falsely provide a positive response to the DGU question for any of a number of reasons: o They may want to impress the interviewer by their heroism and hence exaggerate a trivial event. o They may be genuinely confused due to substance abuse, mental illness, or simply less-than-accurate memories. o They may actually have used a gun defensively within the last couple of years but falsely report it as occurring in the previous year--a phenomenon known as "telescoping." Of course, it is easy to imagine the reasons why that rare respondent who actually did use a gun defensively within the time frame may have decided not to report it to the interviewer. But again, the arithmetic dictates that the false positives will likely predominate." --- -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#111
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On Wed, 25 Apr 2007 20:49:41 -0400, "Larry Hewitt"
wrote: And this last line is the key --- biases in the survey. For in fact the survey is multply biased toward reporting DGUs, and accepting reports for what they are. That is, the person pulling the weapon defines the incident, not both parties involved let alone an independent third party. Thus the most common DGU reported is something like "I saw a scary person, I brandished my gun, and he ran away". Kee-****ing-H-christ. Let's say the victim DIDN'T have a gun, got mugged or raped, and reported it. Are you going to make the same comment THEN ?? 'Well, there was no independent third party witness, so it didn't happen' ? An analysis of Kleck's numbers, even after they are vetted to remove reports even Kleck finds unreliable, show most rspondents could not_prove_ that a crime was committed or that the person supposedly doing the threatening was, in fact, armed. That is, the DGUser was actually the agressor. What would make you happy as 'proof', a trip to the hospital ? What if someone reports getting mugged, their jewelry and wallet stolen - there's no proof they didn't just leave them at home that day instead, right ? Or maybe the necklace FELL off a while ago, and the lady didn't notice until now. So, according to you, there can not have been any crime ? Face it - there's NOTHING that you're going to admit proves the case that having a gun is a valid self-defense measure. So - buh by, plonk -- Click here every day to feed an animal that needs you today !!! http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ Paul ( pjm @ pobox . com ) - remove spaces to email me 'Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.' 'With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.' HVAC/R program for Palm PDA's Free demo now available online http://pmilligan.net/palm/ |
#112
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#113
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "Bert Hyman" wrote in message ... In wrote: Face it - there's NOTHING that you're going to admit proves the case that having a gun is a valid self-defense measure. As far as these guys are concerned, a defensive gun use requires that somebody ends up dead. **Not so. It's just that the dead guys SEEM to be the only ones which are reported. All the other alleged DGUs are kept secret. It's all just a bit hard to believe. I am certain that there are SOME DGUs where the bad guy does not end up dead. Just how many, is a source of mystery. It would seem reasonable to collate police reports and work out the real numbers from those reports. Blood thirsty *******s, aren't they? **Remind me: Who are the ones that want to point guns at people? -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#114
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 7:34 am, dave weil wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr2007 10:19:49 -0400, George M. Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast . net wrote: dave weil said: Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. I actually didn't say this, but that's OK. Not true. The accurate estimates run between 275 per year and -63,000,000. The larger number is negative because that's the number of victims who weren't attacking the gun-toter. Did you know that fully 60% of all gun-related deaths are caused or influenced by atmospheric carbon monoxide? Well, then we have to also ask how many times that guns were used in the commission of a crime but actually wasn't used (bank robberies, enebling break-ins by giving a burglar confidence that he or she is being protected) and by taking a page from the same book, all of those "unreported" millions of times that a criminal used a gun to intimidate someone or used in the commission of a crime. Of course, we've got vice presidents shooting people in the face as well (OK, all of you literalists, back off, it's just an ironic comment). Personally, I'd also like the right to interact with the public without the hidden presence of guns, but that's just my own personal preference. Then report back as soon as you find a place where evil does not exist, so there would be no need for such protection. |
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 9:12 am, Jenn wrote:
In article , wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr2007 15:16:21 GMT, Jenn wrote: In article , George M. Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast . net wrote: Jenn said: 'handful' my ass. Most estimates put it at over 1,000,000 per year. snip That would be one in three Americans. Sorry, not believable. More like 1 in 300. (Did you skip your morning caffeine dosage?) Opps. Still.... 'Still' my ass. 30 % vs 0.3 % - bit of a difference, don'cha think ? You talk about your ass a lot. Anyway, yes of course it's quite a difference. And it's still not believable, IMO. Talk to the FBI and the people computing the stats. You'll find that's it's not as far fetched as you think. |
#116
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 10:07 am, George M. Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast .
net wrote: CB said: Clinton told (Larry) King: "People can quarrel with whether we should have more troops in Afghanistan or internationalize Iraq or whatever, but it is incontestable that on the day I left office, there were unaccounted for stocks of biological and chemical weapons." http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/...otu/index.html Let's see you 'relatively' compare that quote Clinton would have been smart enough to find them. Only if they had been under his dick.. |
#117
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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On Apr 20, 12:02 pm, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote: "CB" wrote in message ... "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! **How's that working for ya? Let's see: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...p-crime-murder... There's the US at #8, with 0.0279271/1,000 people. Now, where's the next nearest Western, developed nation? Here it is. Down at #19, with 0.00534117/1,000 people. Can the Swiss carry concealed guns around the streets? Nope. In fact, no other Western, developed nation allows it's people to carry concealed guns around the streets. Only in the US. In fact, the Swiss, like all the other Western, devloped nations have very tough, sane and homogenous gun control laws. By an amazing coincidence, the US also has the highest (by a very considerable margin) homicide rate, via the use of firearms, of any Western, developed nation. It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action **Yadda, yadda, yadda. You suck up that **** shovelled to you by the NRA. It's working real well for you. NOT! -- The stats are from the FBI and they have been the same regardless of administrations. The NRA does not run the government, they just keep reminding folks of the reason the 2nd amendment was included and how many other rights have been chipped away. |
#118
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "avidlistener" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 20, 12:02 pm, "Trevor Wilson" wrote: "CB" wrote in message ... "nebulax" wrote in message .. . "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... The more guns 'LAW ABIDING CITIZENS' have the less a dirt bags will have to carry out dirt deeds! **How's that working for ya? Let's see: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...p-crime-murder... There's the US at #8, with 0.0279271/1,000 people. Now, where's the next nearest Western, developed nation? Here it is. Down at #19, with 0.00534117/1,000 people. Can the Swiss carry concealed guns around the streets? Nope. In fact, no other Western, developed nation allows it's people to carry concealed guns around the streets. Only in the US. In fact, the Swiss, like all the other Western, devloped nations have very tough, sane and homogenous gun control laws. By an amazing coincidence, the US also has the highest (by a very considerable margin) homicide rate, via the use of firearms, of any Western, developed nation. It's not the gun you ass, it's the criminal mind that puts thought into action **Yadda, yadda, yadda. You suck up that **** shovelled to you by the NRA. It's working real well for you. NOT! -- The stats are from the FBI and they have been the same regardless of administrations. ***WTF are on about? The NRA does not run the government, they just keep reminding folks of the reason the 2nd amendment was included and how many other rights have been chipped away. **No. The NRA acts in the political system to ensure that the gun manufacturers have their needs served (to sell as many guns as they can), by whatever means they find necessary. The NRA bullies and cajoles to ensure that occurs. The NRA has employed primitive, but effective methods to brainwash large segments of the US population to believe that the NRA and the Second Amendment are necessary to their well-being. The NRA is pure evil. They have zero interest in the long term well-being of the US. They are acting for purely commercial reasons. This was not always the case. The NRA was once a noble and decent organisation, which cared for the welfare of the working man. Sometime in the 1960s, their purpose became perverted and twisted. Shame on you for not being more circumspect. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#119
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message .. . "CB" wrote in message ... "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. America 'is' 28th in the world for gun violence, after most EU and Latino countries. **It is #8 for gun related homicide: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...rms-per-capita Sandwiched right there between Uruguay and Costa Rica. The next Western, developed nation is way down at #19. Don't fool yourself: Having a gun related homicide rate which is amongst a bunch of third world ********s is nothing to be proud of. I know it's not. I wonder though, in the stats you quoted, is there any breakdown on the ethnicity of those who used guns in the commission of a murder? I doubt it, not too PC. The "28th" I quoted was from "Boortz" -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#120
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Posted to alt.politics.usa.republican,rec.audio.opinion,talk.politics.misc,triangle.general
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![]() "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message .. . "avidlistener" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 20, 12:14 am, "nebulax" wrote: "We are captives, the majority here, of the NRA. To hell with the NRA! What about the society? I don't get it." - Rep. Alcee L. Hastings, D-Fla http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...tico/main26981... http://www.iza.org/index_html?lang=d...Select=seminar As much as people try to claim otherwise, there is no connection between guns and increases in violence. **There is, however, a DIRECT connection between lax, stupid and haphazard gun control laws and the number of people shot to death: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...rms-per-capita It is not the number of guns in a society that is a problem. It is WHO is able to access those guns. The US is unique compared to all the other Western, developed nations, WRT the sale of guns (in many jurisdictions) without the requirement of background checks. This was amply demonstrated by the events in Vermont. Worse, in the US secondary gun sales (in many jurisdictions) require no background checks whatsoever. In the cases where they are, there are hopelessly inadequate checks and balances to back up such requirements. The random acts of a few nut cases who are intent on killing people are not a reason to enact more gun control. **I'll make sure that the parents of those killed in Vermont know this fact. I'm sure they will be comforted. Alternatively, you could pull your head out of the sand and admit that the rate of gun violence in the US is simply unacceptable. Just glancing at the chart on NationMaster I see that Spain is 29th. According to Boortz the other day, Span has more homicides by guns than America. I don't recall the site (CDC?) Boortz was quoting from -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |