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Just for my own curiosity:
dksuddeth, (#edit# or anyone else, since he's not online right now) I'd like to know what time it takes for you to (from a relaxed, eating your meal in a restaurant position) pull your gun, take aim and fire on a moving (60yr old tramp) target. |
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I'm not going to bother responding to all your post because this sums it up nicely. He never said crime doesn't happen. Neither did anyone else. But because your arguments are BS and you know it, you're trying to make it look like we're saying stupid shit that we're not actually saying. Distract, obfuscate, misdirect. Get the audience to look at the (fake, completely made up) bright shiny argument, and they won't notice that your arguments are full of holes. |
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It would take me about 3 seconds to go from relaxed to alert red. But, you must also remember that I've trained with firearms. I don't just have one sitting in the closet 'just in case'. |
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I've briefly mentioned this before but, it seems that when we read the exact same article we come to polar opposite conclusions.
Maybe it's genetic? ..and for the record, I couldn't care less how you choose to arm yourself, just as long you keep it sub-intercontinental. :thumbsup: |
Friendly reminder - play nice, people. (So far so good, but this could go south any minute. From a seated, relaxed position, how long does it take you to hit the "delete" button?)
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3rd dennys shooting in 3 days
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As soon as you wrote "Way to show that religious compassion." you lost your argument. Once you leave the realm of the facts presented and the opinions about them and strike out at the other person, you've lost. This discusssion OBVIOUSLY has nothing to do with religion, but you decided to bring it up to make your side seem more correct. |
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robberies, rapes, murders....they happen every day. you choose to break it down to a percentage validation claim to support your argument that only law enforcement should have guns which really means that those civilian victims lives dont mean that much to you. I do not misunderstand your POINT, the only thing I misunderstand is that you are comfortable with the odds in your families favor of never being a victim. The one time you are wrong though could prove disastrous. I hope that works out for you. My family is worth more than that to me though. Quote:
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We all live with dangerous odds every day. The aforementioned almost car crash made me a statistic. I'm more likely to be involved in an auto accedent than be robbed or have my home invaded. Do I carry a gun in my car? Of course not. Quote:
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Fact: The courts have consistently ruled that the police do not have an obligation to protect individuals. In Warren v. District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department, 444 A.2d 1 (D.C. App. 1981), the court stated: `Courts have without exception concluded that when a municipality or other governmental entity undertakes to furnish police services, it assumes a duty only to the public at large and not to individual members of the community.' Well, except for politicians that receive taxpayer-financed bodyguards. Fact: There are not enough police to protect everyone. Currently, there are about 150,000 police officers on duty at any one time. • This is on-duty police. This includes desk clerks, command sergeants, etc. – far fewer than 150,000 cops are cruising your neighborhood. • There are approximately 271,933,702 people living in the United States. • Thus there is only one on-duty cop for every 1,813 citizens! Fact: Former Florida Attorney General Jim Smith told Florida legislators that police responded to only 200,000 of 700,000 calls for help to Dade County authorities. Fact: The United States Department of Justice found that, in 1989, there were 168,881 crimes of violence for which police had not responded within 1 hour. Fact: 95% of the time police arrive too late to prevent a crime or arrest the suspect.Do I really? I don't doubt that most every cop out there WANTS to protect everyone. It's that feasibly they cannot. Quote:
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Luke 22:36 - He said to them, "But now if you have a purse, take it, and also a bag; and if you don't have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one. |
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[QUOTE=dksuddeth]You'd be wrong, hopefully not dead wrong. Show me I'm wrong. Quote:
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I'm glad you brought that up. I'm a part of our society, and so are you. They are responsible for me and you and the rest of society. Quote:
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If you're going off the bible for your directions about killing: the bible also says that it's okay to murder for reasons such as working on the Sabbath, being gay, cursing your parents, or not being a virgin on your wedding night. |
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an interesting read. Quote:
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Stopping people with the intent to hurt or kill is good. Killing people is not. |
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A sizable percentage? What size would that be? I don't have an accurate percentage because the FBI and most law enforcement are still categorizing home invasions as burglaries/robberies. By frequenting the few pro-gun sites that I do, I read at least 1-5 violent home invasions (on average) on a weekly basis and authorities say this is slowly increasing. You'll read more on this in that link I posted earlier. Quote:
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(forgive my math, I'm pretty sure these are close) Odds of being the victim of a violent home invasion : maybe 13,500,000 to 1 Odds of dating a supermodel: 88,000 to 1 Odds of being murdered: 18,000 to 1 Odds of being considered possessed by Satan: 7,000 to 1 Odds of finding out your child is a genius: 250 to 1 (Willravel crosses fingers) Odds of writing a New York Times best seller: 220 to 1. http://funny2.com/odds.htm Quote:
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You will never be able to completely stop all illegal and straw purchases, but punish enough of the ones that do, severely, and you can certainly contain it. Gun bans will never work without doing a nationwide sweep like new orleans after katrina and even then it would have to be done numerous times. That will never fly though. you'd get that uprising then. the assault weapons/automatic weapons issue....this is going to sound crazy to you but I think that it should be completely lawful for people to own them....lots of them. I picture gang bangers afraid of doing drive by shootings knowing that they could potentially have the crap shot out of them by the angry people trying to put a stop to the killing in the streets. ok, thats a fantasy of mine, I don't really wish for people to shoot wildly in the streets. |
Back to the dennys shooting of yesterday
I'm trying to find a news link for this, but what i'm hearing is that Harold Hatley, 73, left his seat and confronted the gunman letting others flee to safety. The gunman shot Mr. Hatley 5 times, then turned the gun on someone else. RIP Mr. Hatley, your heroism should be honored.
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Well, whatever the solution, we need to work towards the common goal of disarming criminals. I think we can all agree on that. Whether you or I have a gun is personal choice, but it's very important to remove weapons as powerful as guns from the criminal element. |
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If, for whatever reason, I get caught up in something and my gun is taken after i've been killed, why should the gun dealer or manufacturer be held responsible? That doesn't make any sense. |
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Do you not read your own posts? If a cop can have his gun taken away from him and get shot with it, a civilian certainly can. That's how it would make you LESS safe. But then you also mentioned that in the $50 situation you'd pull your gun, which frankly is a pretty stupid move. You pull a gun that close to someone and you're BEGGING them to take it away from you. I'm starting to really wonder if you ever actually have been in a self defense situation. Those of us who have know that posturing with weapons is stupid, and would never try it. Quote:
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And I also call total and utter bullshit on your premise that arming everyone makes everyone safe. You having a gun does not make me safe at ALL. Especially after reading your discussions on how you would use the gun in various situations. |
forget it, shakran. you're a murder statistic looking for an opportunity. good luck with that.
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Don't call people dumb asses and tell them to shove things up their asses. That's WAY over the line. To everyone else, I'm sorry it took so long for someone to catch this.
Consider this a strike 1 public warning. |
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Board rage..... My strongest objection against the average citizen lawfully carrying a concealed hand gun, in public, is that emotions rise, sometimes suddenly and uncontrollably. The words spoken in anger, can be retrieved with a sincere apology. The shot fired in anger is not so easily retrieved. |
It seems to me that when you talk to people, the ones who carry guns are more likely to say that they have been in situations where they needed it than those who didn't. Kind of like those who like to fight get into fights.
I was mugged once while delivering pizzas. They called up, sent me to an empty apartment and when I was walking out a guy walked towards me said "my friend is in the van behind you and has a rifle pointed at you" Would a gun have helped? Probably not. If someone tells you that their friend (who you cannot see because he's behind you) has a rifle pointed at you, you need to act like its true. There would be no possible way to draw a weapon and kill both of them before they could kill you. He was probably bluffing because what are the chances that two people are prepared to commit murder over an unspecified amount of money between $20-200? Stranget things have happened though. There would have been one way to find out and in the end one of us would have been dead. |
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What makes you think it would have gone different if he had a gun?
Tell me, once someone has a gun out and pointed at you, what good is your gun (even if it's stashed in your pants)? Do you think you can draw, aim, and fire before they get a shot off? Not resisting IS the best thing to do. In most cases, if you comply it's over in a few seconds and they are out of there. Unless you walk around with your gun in hand pointed at everyone as they walk by, they have the element of surprise and their gun is pointed at you before you know it. I know, it works in the movies but this is real life. |
Alot of people think that, but most of your criminals aren't that prepared.
watch this video. The bad guy walks in and has his weapon drawn already. http://www.wimp.com/robbershot/ |
Sure, that is totally the same as a mugging that took place on a street where the robber is at point blank range. :crazy:
Also, that man was an asshat for opening up right there. First he uses a co-worker as cover then keeps shooting with a toddler right there. How close did he come to shooting the toddler? How many shots did he fire? It didn't look like he shot the robber, where did the other bullets end up? I for one would like to get shot by an errant bullet because some jackass decided to play Diehard over protecting someone else's money. |
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As an aside, the clerk/shooter is an NRA certified CCW instructor. After the shooting, the mother of the toddler signed up for one of his courses and obtained a CCW. This was an incident that happened in OCT of 05 in ohio. The 'perp' was a college student just about ready to graduate, it was his first conviction ever, and now he's sitting in prison for 9 years. |
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Good for him that nobody else got hurt and that lady wasn't pissed. I would have freaked out on that guy for escalating the situation like that. http://www.streetgangs.com/topics/20...403bullet.html Quote:
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I also wanted to add, it's been said by many gun owners/carriers that I know that you shouldn't pull it if you don't intend to shoot, why shouldn't we maintain that standard when it concerns bad guys? should we just sit on our thumbs and think 'if i'm real still, maybe he'll just go away'? I'm curious, in your two shootings of random injuries that you cited, was it ever determined that the gunfire came from a law abiding citizen licensed to carry? or from people that weren't carrying legally anyway and were in the process of committing crimes? edit: found my answers. In the county of Los Angeles, with a population of over 8.5 million, only 400 private citizens have a license to carry a handgun. So the odds are pretty damn high that she wasn't hit by a licensed owner anyway. I see that the second one is in wisconsin. Since Concealed carry there isn't legal anyway, only open carry is (and in any major city is going to get you arrested for disturbing the peace regardless), odds are that that shot came from a criminal as well. So what relevance do those two shootings have when it concerns licensed and trained citizens obeying the law? |
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