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Politics?
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AAAAAAHHHHHHH!!!! RUN AWAY!!!!!!!!  58%  [ 108 ]
Total votes : 187
 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 16th, '16, 05:55    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
Right now the Democrats are filibustering in the Senate until an agreement is reached on AT THE VERY LEAST banning people on the no fly list from buying guns. Which is basically the most obvious, common sense, universally supported step they could take. Of course, Republicans who are bought off by the NRA are opposing it. People are trying to reach an agreement, but one fell apart earlier today when the lead Dem found out the lead Republican had sent their working amendment to the NRA to get their permission.

Fuck. That.

So right on Senate Dems! If the filibuster is still going tomorrow morning, I'll call my senators first thing. Too sleepy this evening. I went to another vigil in my own community tonight. Over one thousand people showed up, which was so incredible in my small rural community. I don't often cry in public, but I did tonight.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 16th, '16, 22:18    


kotori

Joined: May 20th, '16, 04:58
Posts: 32
Hugs: 2043
Website: https://kfarwell.org/
Location: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Just like we shouldn't ban non-criminals from using cars and alcohol because some people commit murder with them, we shouldn't ban non-criminals from defending themselves with guns.

There is a reason shootings occur in gun-free zones like this club: the fear of being shot is a strong deterrent elsewhere. You don't see shooters storming police stations.

You can't keep guns out of the hands of murderers. Do our drug bans keep drugs off the streets? At best you can replace shootings with bombings and stabbings.

https://mises.org/blog/fbi-us-homicide-rate-51-year-low
http://www.ronpaullibertyreport.com/arc ... ep-us-safe

Looking at the no-fly list specifically: banning those who are on it from owning a gun would be consistent, but it would be consistently wrong. We need to consider first the unconstitutional lack of due process involved with the no-fly list itself. A government that can arbitrarily place someone on a list and ban them from defending themselves is tyrannical.

https://www.aclu.org/blog/speak-freely/ ... s-freedoms

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 17th, '16, 00:24    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
First, I want to thank you for your comment. There's a lot of agreement on this thread and I always really appreciate when people offer a dissenting opinion.

I want to put my answer to your points within the narrow context of mass shootings but before I do that I want to address each of the sources you provided.

Article #1: Contrary to what Ryan McMaken of the Mises Institute suggests, I am perfectly and completely aware of the downward trend in homicides for the past few decades, though I do not believe the correlation between a drop in homicides and a rise in weapons manufacturing is anything even remotely resembling a causation. The drop in homicide rates can be largely attributed to the advancement in law enforcement technology and strategy, the improvements in the field of mental health, as well as the overall decrease in the factors that contribute to violent crime such as poverty, starvation, political unrest, etc. If you go into any neighborhood where crime is lower today than it was before, you will find people who worked night and day for years and years to make that happen. They deserve the credit for that. Not guns.
I also do not agree that just because things have gotten better, we should accept them as they are. We can and should do better.
Today around 60% of all homicides are from gun violence, and that ratio has stayed steady for most of our recent history, with the exception of the massive spike of gun violence in the 1970s--a spike that was also marked by social and political unrest around the world, which was only ended with the implementation of gun control in the early 80s. (Such as the Brady Act)
And there is a difference between mass shootings and other types of homicides. Its a nuanced distinction, but the motivating forces and the devastation wrought are supremely different.

Article #2: Oh, Ron Paul, I do love you, but of course we hire the police to protect us, though as public instead of private citizens. That's what taxes are. (Yes, I know, you don't agree with taxes either, do you Rep. Paul?) And believe me, none of the gun control advocates are pointing at Obama and saying he should have protected us. You're thinking of the Congressional Republicans. Most of us are under the impression that he tried, which is far more than can be said about Congress. On a more serious note, mass shooters often choose targets with armed security, from college campuses to military bases to nightclubs. Pulse in Orlando had armed guards, but guns are not shields against bullets. And our current system gives criminals an edge in procuring guns in that it is as simple and easy as going down to your local super store. The ease and speed of procurement of weapons of mass destruction is a far more pressing threat to personal safety and national security than the hypothetical question of whether an average American would be unable to defend themselves with a handgun instead of an AR-15. Even if, in that hypothetical scenario, the violent criminal also had an AR-15, it would not make a difference what kind of gun you had. It's not a matter of how many guns or how big those guns are, it's about who shoots first. Owning an AR-15 won't change that. Banning them would lower the number of criminals who have them. Perhaps not entirely, but that's no excuse not to try.

And as for the third and final article, well, let me combine that with my own personal response.

You don't need to tell me that the No Fly List is an unjust horror show. My grandfather was on it in the early 2000s as a result of his legal challenge to the Patriot Act. I spent hours at the airport locked in a room with other terrified children while my mother was questioned. And for years that happened every single time we went through security, long after my grandfather's name was taken off the list. I care about the No Fly List. I care about the Patriot Act. I care about privacy and individual freedoms. But you know who doesn't give a fuck? The federal government. They can ground you, arrest you, read your emails and spy on you through your webcam, pull you from your home in the middle of the night and detain you for however long they want for whatever reason they decide in the name of "national security", but when the person the FBI has been following walks into a gun show that's when they start getting squeamish about the Constitution? The FBI and the entire intelligence community has made it very clear that they don't give a fuck about due process and that, in their eyes, their one and only job is to keep Americans safe. Changing this loophole in the system that violent offenders abuse to procure weapons will not make the government any more or less tyrannical. But it might save some human lives.

At this point in our society, I don't think we should be focusing our energies on whether ALL guns are good or bad or whether people have the right to defend themselves. Of course people have a right to defend themselves. I mean, duh. Just duh. I know people who need to hunt for food to make it through the winter. I've lived in the woods my whole life, and while I don't hunt I know so many people who do, and with one exception I have never had any problem with hunters.
That one exception? When I was in 4th grade, I was at the edge of my school playground and some idiot was hunting in the woods way too close to the school and didn't look where he was pointing his gun. I bent down to pick up an acorn, heard this huge crack, and when I straightened up there was a bullet lodged in the tree behind where my head had been only seconds before. I heard someone swearing in the bushes and then run off. But that was one idiot, and I figured he learned his lesson after almost murdering a little kid, so I didn't even bother to tell the teachers. I'm really not the kind of person who thinks that all guns are bad or that people shouldn't own them.

But guns that can shoot 13 bullets in a single second? Guns that can row down a room full of people before anyone can even reach their holster? Yeah. Yeah, those are bad. Because if that idiot in the woods had an AR-15 instead of a regular, plain old hunting rifle that just fired one bullet, I would be dead. I would have stood up and died in a rain of bullets.

As for replacing shootings with stabbings and bombings, well...stabbings have a much higher survival rate and are far easier to defend against than machine guns. Bombings are an entirely different thing entirely. They are grotesque. They are horrifying. I survived that experience once when I was traveling in Israel and North Africa. I don't want to ever have to go through that again.

But none of these acts of violence are what scare me. Bad things happen all the time. I am perfectly capable of accepting that. But when something bad happens you're supposed to learn from that experience, and to change your behavior so that the bad thing doesn't happen again. That's the whole point of even having big brains. What scares me is that the same thing is happening over and over and over and over again and we are doing nothing, nothing to change our behavior, nothing to stop it from happening again. And we all know its going to happen again! These mass shootings happen every single day. Seriously. There has been a mass shooting, defined as 4 or more people dead from gun violence including the shooter, every single day this year. It's gotten so bad that some people have even lived through multiple mass shootings.

Banning people from the No Fly List would not have changed what happened in Orlando. But if the Democratic Senators and Congressmen think this this is all they can get their Republican counter parts to agree to right now, then I say power to them because at this point inaction is worse than making a mistake. Inaction is compliance, and that is completely unacceptable to me.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 17th, '16, 00:35    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
And also, I don't understand why people keep talking about "criminals" as if they're some kind of Other, like they're fucking unicorns or something. Criminals are just ordinary, every day people like you and me. In fact, most if not all of us are technically criminals at one point or another. Most of the time it's little stuff, jay walking or not paying parking tickets--in some parts of the country, that can even land you in jail.

I just mean, we all have the capacity for evil, to cause suffering and pain to the people we love or to complete strangers. It's dangerous and unhealthy not to acknowledge that I, too, am capable of making a terrible mistake in a moment of terrible rage. Now, a couple years ago I thought long and hard about whether or not I wanted to learn how to use and eventually own a gun. I decided against it, because I am occasionally prone to suicidal tendencies and sometimes in my darkest moments the effort it would take to end it was the only thing keeping me going. I didn't want to make the act of destroying myself any easier. I'm not trying to purge the world of guns. I'm just saying, we need to be more responsible with guns than we currently are.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 17th, '16, 17:10    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
Here is one proposal from Senator Collins of Maine. Her proposal would mean a ban on buying guns if you are on the no fly list or the selectee list (which means you're not grounded, but you have to go through a lot of extra security). Her proposal also involves an appeal process that would award attorney fees to anyone who successfully challenged the ban. This would mean that while people on that list would not be able to buy a gun until after their case was ruled on in court, they would be financially compensated.

I think that's fair. I'm not saying it's perfect or that it will solve our problems completely, but I think it is a reasonable bi-partisan effort.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/18/us/po ... v=top-news

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 18th, '16, 11:19    


kotori

Joined: May 20th, '16, 04:58
Posts: 32
Hugs: 2043
Website: https://kfarwell.org/
Location: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Some good points. I'm continually impressed with the coherence of arguments on this forum :)
Pwale wrote:The drop in homicide rates can be largely attributed to the advancement in law enforcement technology and strategy, the improvements in the field of mental health, as well as the overall decrease in the factors that contribute to violent crime such as poverty, starvation, political unrest, etc. If you go into any neighborhood where crime is lower today than it was before, you will find people who worked night and day for years and years to make that happen. They deserve the credit for that. Not guns.
For sure, there are a lot of factors improving the rate. Even if there is a negative effect of increased gun ownership, then the other factors must be so effective that they (at least collectively) tip the trend well in the opposite direction. Maybe the focus should be on furthering these less controversial factors that don't compromise freedom for security.
Pwale wrote:And there is a difference between mass shootings and other types of homicides. Its a nuanced distinction, but the motivating forces and the devastation wrought are supremely different.
I don't understand.
Pwale wrote:Pulse in Orlando had armed guards, but guns are not shields against bullets.
I don't know how many armed guards were there, but it sounds like only one shot back. If the shooter's hostages had been armed, this might have gone differently. Even with just one person shooting back, they were able to force the shooter into the bathroom where the police were able to rescue his hostages and kill him.
Pwale wrote:It's not a matter of how many guns or how big those guns are, it's about who shoots first.
It wouldn't stop a mass shooting, but several armed defendants would lessen the damage. Mateen was able to reload three times.
Pwale wrote:But you know who doesn't give a fuck? The federal government. They can ground you, arrest you, read your emails and spy on you through your webcam, pull you from your home in the middle of the night and detain you for however long they want for whatever reason they decide in the name of "national security", but when the person the FBI has been following walks into a gun show that's when they start getting squeamish about the Constitution? The FBI and the entire intelligence community has made it very clear that they don't give a fuck about due process and that, in their eyes, their one and only job is to keep Americans safe.
Amen. Hey, not all of us constitution nuts are inconsistent ;)
Pwale wrote:Changing this loophole in the system that violent offenders abuse to procure weapons will not make the government any more or less tyrannical.
If the no-fly list was a list of convicted violent offenders, I would be all for banning them from buying guns.

Banning the purchase of arms isn't tyrannical in and of itself but it enables a tyrannical government. The purpose of the second amendment was first and foremost to defend against a future tyrannical government. An AR-15 is not necessary for hunting, but it does help defend against a government that has AR-15s. The government isn't tyrannical now and it might never be. But if it ever is, Americans will be a lot better off than were Jews in Nazi Germany and dissidents under Stalin, Mussolini, Mao, and so on.
Pwale wrote:What scares me is that the same thing is happening over and over and over and over again and we are doing nothing, nothing to change our behavior, nothing to stop it from happening again.
Looking at homicide in general, we are doing something, whether it's having more guns or improving technology and researching mental health. We should do more of the same. Looking at mass shootings specifically, we can certainly do with change. I'm with Dr. Paul in that a policy of interventionism is to blame for rising terrorism.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 19th, '16, 17:59    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
Some good points. I'm continually impressed with the coherence of arguments on this forum :)
Right?! :mccute: I love having these kinds of intense conversations, and I'm always so excited when I find people who are willing to actually think about big things.
I don't understand.
So the term "mass shooting" is pretty unscientific. There's no universal agreement as to what exactly constitutes a mass shooting. For example, I think we can all agree there's a difference between a mass shooting (defined as four or more victims, including or not including the shooter depending on who you ask) where one person murders the rest of their family and then themselves, all within their own home, and something like what happened at Sandy Hook, where someone with no personal connection murdered 26 people.

With the first example, it's still heart wrenching, but most of us can probably understand the emotional trajectory involved, and how factors like mental illness or alcoholism or abuse or extreme poverty, etc., can combine and feed off each other until the person experiencing those factors reaches a nightmarish climax of violence. It's not right and it's not acceptable, but most of us can still see the darker side of humanity within such an act. And I think a good way to address those sorts of murders would be to seriously reform the way we as a society deal with domestic violence. In those sorts of cases there are almost always plenty of opportunities to intervene. A few months ago I was listening to a former victim of domestic violence. Her former partner had murdered two people, and she was explaining how she'd tried to find help for years. She knew he was bipolar and violent, but every time she tried to get help the cops would show up. They'd either question him and leave, which would leave her at the mercy of her abusive angry partner, or they'd arrest him and take him to jail. He would get out in a few weeks, but then he would come home even sicker and more violent than before. And she couldn't cut him out of her life either, because she was unemployed (mostly as a result of the trauma and hospital time necessitated by the abuse) and they had a son, and since her partner had income and she didn't the courts wouldn't let her get a restraining order to protect her and her son. Obviously, she wasn't going to let her son be alone with his abusive father.

I think the most important issue in that situation is the prohibitive cost of quality mental health care. If that woman had someplace she could turn, where she could check her partner into a care facility, where he could have access to therapy and medication and other people who understood what he was going through, he could have ended up like the millions of people who are bipolar and are not violent or abusive. And I don't think that shooting this man would have been a good solution either. The woman made very clear in her interview that this man had a lot to offer the world, that he was a talented artist and a loving father when he wasn't having an episode. To her, even after everything that had happened, he was worth saving. But she couldn't get him the help he needed and every time she tried he just got worse, until it was too late. That's a story that repeats itself every day in this country. And, to me at least, that is unacceptable.
Especially since I also have relatives with severe mental illness. Every time my cousin or my uncle are having a psychotic episode I live in absolute terror that they'll attack someone or each other or get themselves shot by the cops. I love my uncle and cousin a lot, in fact my cousin is probably the one person in this world who actually gets me, but I live on the other side of the country from both of them on purpose because I'm not an idiot and I know they're dangerous when they're having an episode. My uncle threatened to kill me when I was three and until a couple years ago it was my job as the oldest of the offspring to make sure he stayed away from my sisters and other cousins at family gatherings, because I'm the only member of my generation (other than his son, obviously) who's actually seen him during an episode before. There have been long nights when my mother and I wait next to the phone, because we know my uncle and cousin are fighting and each has threatened to kill the other. And there have definitely been close calls.

But events like what happened at Sandy Hook and at Pulse in Orlando are different. There's no understandable emotional trajectory for the violence. At least, I can't understand it. I don't have any kind of personal experience to connect it to, which is how I best understand things, so maybe that has something to do with it but still. Events like those are more like war crimes, especially in terms of mass civilian casualties, but even the worst war crimes are committed by soldiers who have lost their own humanity in the fog of war. I can understand that's a survival trait, even if the results turn my stomach and make me feel guilty for paying taxes. No one is quite sure why people commit public mass shootings, but they don't have the excuse that war criminals do because they are part of civilian life, not traumatized by the battlefield.

Some law enforcement agencies make a distinction between "mass shootings" (4 or more dead) and "public mass shootings" (4 or more victims selected indiscriminately). In that sense, the difference is whether or not there is a personal connection between the shooter and his victims (I say his because mass shooters are almost exclusively male, with one or two rare exceptions).

Personally, I think there's another difference. I think your average murderer isn't really thinking beyond the act itself. But mass shooters want attention. They want the news coverage to be all about them afterwards. They're trying to cause as much emotional devastation to as many strangers as possible. It's not just about the violence in the moment, its about the pain and suffering that will come afterwards. I think they're trying to wound the world itself, as much as the people they're actually shooting.

Is this making any sense? I feel like I'm getting too emotional to make much sense, so let me know.
I don't know how many armed guards were there, but it sounds like only one shot back. If the shooter's hostages had been armed, this might have gone differently. Even with just one person shooting back, they were able to force the shooter into the bathroom where the police were able to rescue his hostages and kill him.
I still can't bring myself to read the full timeline of what happened at Pulse. I just tried again and started to cry. One of the victims used to live in my community, and I've been meeting her loved ones over the last week and I just can't read the fucking timeline, it's too...So I'll have to try and talk about this without having all my facts totally straight, so please bear with me.

So the shooter barricaded himself in the bathroom when the police arrived. I know that. I also know that people who were hiding in the bathroom were shot and killed while in there. I know that the police held back because the shooter was threatening to strap himself and the hostages with explosives. While that ended up being a lie, it was a possibility. If he had been wearing an explosive and someone had shot him every single person there would have died. That's the kind of problem you have to think about when you're considering arming people who don't have extensive training, neither firearms training nor training for how to deal with an active shooter. It's an incredibly complicated situation. One wrong move can turn a tragedy into a cataclysm.

I don't think it would have made much of a difference if everyone had guns. I think more people would have died from friendly fire, and we still don't know if that happened in this instance with the cops who might have accidentally shot some of the victims--the investigation is ongoing. Consider what happened last year in Waco, Texas. A shootout broke out at a meeting of different biker gangs. 9 people died and 18 were injured. And most of those deaths and injuries were because you had everybody shooting at the same time, bullets flying in all directions, and it was absolute chaos.

Also, I don't want to go to a nightclub full of guns. It's already hard enough to escape from drunk, aggressive men who won't take no an answer on the dance floor or the bar. I've been groped and grabbed, but I don't even want to think about what might have happened if those men had been armed. When it's just physical contact, which I can duck, dodge, shake off or slip away and find a bouncer, that's something I can deal with even if all I want to do is dance my stress away and flirt with pretty girls. But I'm just imagining the last guy who was too aggressive. Before he grabbed me and dragged my torso into his groin (I'm short), he made a huge deal of telling me how many women he had control over in his job as a correction's officer at a women's prison. It was very Orange Is The New Black. He showed me his work ID and he kept telling me I couldn't even imagine what he had to do on a daily basis to those "animals."

Of course, I'm sitting there thinking, buddy, if this is your way of hitting on women at a club then I think those women at the prison need help, because you are clearly unbalanced. Now, at the time I was able to escape him when a friend to came over and pretended to cry and then we went and got a bouncer and they kept an eye on him for the rest of the night, and it was all peachy keen. But he got really angry when I pulled out of his grip, and given his obvious control issues and his level of intoxication at the time I shudder to think what might have happened if he had a gun.
Banning the purchase of arms isn't tyrannical in and of itself but it enables a tyrannical government. The purpose of the second amendment was first and foremost to defend against a future tyrannical government. An AR-15 is not necessary for hunting, but it does help defend against a government that has AR-15s. The government isn't tyrannical now and it might never be. But if it ever is, Americans will be a lot better off than were Jews in Nazi Germany and dissidents under Stalin, Mussolini, Mao, and so on.
An AR-15 ain't gonna do jack shit against a drone. The firepower of the American government is so far beyond the scope of guns, it's almost funny. They've already killed some American citizens with drone strikes even though they're not supposed to, and I'm willing to bet that in the event of an actual insurrection all bets are off.

And there were plenty of Jews who armed themselves and fought back against the Nazis. They were outnumbered and outgunned and they died first.

Guns don't keep you safe from a tyrannical government. Love and community does. My great-grandparents were able to escape Hungarian fascists because their neighbors warned them that the army was coming to arrest all the Jews. I had a teacher whose mother survived because some friends of her parents agreed to hide her and she spent the entirety of WWII pretending to be so severely mentally retarded that the Nazi soldiers didn't even want to bother sending her to a camp. My grandmother's roommate escaped from a Nazi work camp a week before the entire camp was sent to Auschwitz because she had friends who lived in a nearby town who rescued her. And yes, sometimes armed resistance is necessary, but by the time it becomes necessary your rights have already been violated to the point of no return.

Like most Jews, I was grew up hearing over and over from my elders, "It's happened before. It will happen again." There's no "can" or "maybe" or "if" about it. American Jews have been through so much persecution over the millennia that preparing for it has become part of our cultural heritage. Times will get bad again, but we survive those times by following our beliefs and by staying educated. It's how we survived the Dark Ages. It's how we survived the Spanish Inquisition. It's how we survived the Holocaust. And, God forbid, it might end up being how we survive a Trump presidency.
So as humans we survive the darkness by staying true to yourself. And that means that if you live under a tyrannical government and you're the kind of person who would violently resist a tyrannical government, no law is going to stop you. But that kind of person sounds like a reasonable enough individual to me, so an ideal gun control solution for our country and culture in it's current state would protect the rights of reasonable stable people. Hopefully.
Looking at mass shootings specifically, we can certainly do with change. I'm with Dr. Paul in that a policy of interventionism is to blame for rising terrorism.
I agree, but I also think the world is too small for isolationist foreign policy. I think we should totally re-evaluate the goals of our foreign policy. Like, imagine how different things would be if the Security Council or anyone, literally anyone, had been able to get Assad out of office before his army started bombing Homs? Before the peaceful protests turned violent? Before the fundamentalist extremists from Iraq that eventually became known as Daesh (which I've decided to use instead of ISIS because Isis is a beautiful powerful mother goddess who is supposed to protect slaves so these bastards should not get to use her name)? Back then we weren't talking about a complete and total shit show. We were talking about many thousands of young people dancing in the streets as a form of protest. That's how the war in Syria began.
I don't think we should have interfered militarily, but what if instead of just trying to kill enemies as they arrived we used the unprecedented resources and power of our country to address the underlying causes of these conflicts? What if, instead of occupying entire countries, we put all those trillions of dollars to use and built universal education? It's not a perfect solution, but it would help a lot of people and give many poor children in rural areas options other than joining the local militia--which for far too many young people in the world is the only job available. So by doing that we'd drastically cut recruitment numbers, as well as increasing prosperity and stability world wide. We know that poverty and ignorance are two of the biggest contributors to national and international strife.

I think the world has moved beyond conventional warfare. Globalization cannot be undone, especially since the introduction of the internet. I think we need to start changing our behavior drastically. But I also think isolationism won't work, because so many of us live and love and think and work on a global scale. Things that happen in other countries can affect me personally, so I can't just not do something to help the people I care about who are living in Denmark or Israel or Morocco or Thailand or Japan or Australia or wherever.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 19th, '16, 18:55    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
Oh, and I also want to share this because it made me throw up a little in my mouth.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/pre ... -profiling

I can't even express how much I loathe Trump's co-opting of the phrase "common sense."
No, racial profiling isn't common sense. It's the opposite. The literal common sense on this subject is "You can't judge a book by its cover." What the fuck. Presumption of guilt based on physical appearance, skin color or whatever, doesn't make any sense. That's what evidence is for. Son of a bitch, this stuff makes me so angry.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 19th, '16, 21:03    


Pwale

Joined: Jul 16th, '08, 15:30
Posts: 493
Hugs: 17587
Location: On top of a hill all covered in trees
And back to the gun thing....

So on August 20 2013 there was an active shooter at an elementary school in Georgia. A man who was struggling with mental illness and was off his medication went to the school with an AK-47 and barricaded himself in the school's front office. The only shots he fired were directed at approaching police officers, and no one was injured. He was apprehended peacefully.
Law enforcement credit this to Antoinette Tuff, a bookkeeper who was in the front office and who managed to connect with the shooter and convince him to give himself up peacefully. The whole thing was recorded in the 911 call.

(Full version of 911 call)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kVpipSXRKA

And here's an interview with her:
http://www.npr.org/2014/01/31/268417580 ... l-shooting

I don't want to suggest this kind of approach would work in every situation, but it is a powerful piece of evidence against the favored line of the NRA that "the only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun." Because that is complete and total nonsense.

I don't really believe that people are good or bad. I think we're all capable of both, and that sometimes people end up warped on the inside. Sometimes its because of trauma or mental illness or sometimes its just because people are born without empathy, and sometimes people make horrible choices because they feel they have to. There are lots of reasons, and god knows I've met my fair share of people who are cruel and stupid and abusive, but the one thing that always holds true is that people are complicated.

It seems in this particular situation the man in question still had enough self control to realize he didn't actually want to do what he was doing. I think most people who struggle with mental illness can relate to the experiencing of knowing you're doing something wrong and not being able to stop yourself on your own. Luckily, he happened upon someone who could relate to his experience and show him love and compassion in the moment when he most needed it, who could be that voice of reason when his own brain could not.

And it was enough. There's no one size fits all, but speaking as someone who manages to find myself in more than my fair share of dangerous situations, compassion has saved my life more times than running or fighting.

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 Post subject: Re: Trump
Posted: Jun 20th, '16, 18:47    


saiyouri

Joined: Apr 28th, '10, 03:07
Posts: 2122
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Mood: Sleep & Winter where are you
Location: In the secret world of pajamas
Just finished reading everything and may I say Pwale, I congradulate you on everything you and your family have been through.

I am happy to hear that people are actually working to fix a portion of the gun control issue. It might not be perfect but at least it's a step in the right direction and that is what matters right now.

I read the title of the article that made you throw up and shut the page immediately. Didn't even want to bother with the vomit coming. And the first thing that popped in my head when you said he was talking about profiling was, 'You can look at my mom, a short, round white woman and think she's innocent.' Which is complete bullshit. She yes can be nice but if you do the slightest thing wrong in her eyes, then get the hell out of the state. Because she will not rest until you are completely destroyed, been on that end too many times and it still happens at times though I am in a different state now and barley talk to her. Something that make my life so much better.

I'm a bit speechless to be honest on everything I read, I am slowly taking it all in since it was such a deep saddening subject.

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