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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 1:13 PM, Tom Del Rosso wrote: > > >> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an > >> assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine > >> with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? And I am not interested > >> in answers that say "it would be a first step in taking away Second > >> Amendment rights," because that is not logical. > > > > In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he was > > able to run away. > > Hit six times and "ran away"????? > I'll need a cite for that. > > > Hit 5 times out of 6 shots, and if not "ran" away at least got away into his vehicle which he then crashed a few blocks away. This incident in Georgia was widely reported in the media just a week or so ago. |
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Dave Smith wrote:
> > In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he was > > able to run away. > Hit six times and "ran away"????? > I'll need a cite for that. Would you believe.... she used a BB gun? |
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On Jan 23, 12:38*pm, George M. Middius > wrote:
> John J wrote: > > >or making up stupid nicknames for the other side. *They disagree, but civilly. > > > An art you haven't mastered yet. > > Can we call you John-John? John Boy. |
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![]() "Dave Smith" > wrote in message ... > On 23/01/2013 1:13 PM, Tom Del Rosso wrote: > >>> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an >>> assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine >>> with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? And I am not interested >>> in answers that say "it would be a first step in taking away Second >>> Amendment rights," because that is not logical. >> >> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he >> was >> able to run away. > > > Hit six times and "ran away"????? > I'll need a cite for that. > Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. So much for training, eh? |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 14:13:03 -0700, "graham" > wrote:
> > > Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) > but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, > some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. > So much for training, eh? > I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from the general gun toting public? -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 10:20:03 -0800 (PST), Bryan
> wrote: > I don't listen to Progressive media any more than Conservative media. I > stick to public radio, where they'll have one person on from Heritage, > and another from Brookings, or one from The American Enterprise > Institute, and another from Mother Jones. On the issue of gun control, > they'd have someone from the NRA, and another person from Brady. In no > case is there yelling, or making up stupid nicknames for the other > side. They disagree, but civilly. Someone from the NRA providing lies and misinformation may have been speaking in a well-mannered way, but it wasn't "civil". |
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On 2013-01-22 22:16:05 +0000, Nancy2 said:
> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an > assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine > with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? If the ordinary citizen is a gun lobbyist, it's to ensure maximum profits for gun manufacturers. If the ordinary citizen is someone whose brain is addled by NRA's dark fantasy: When the US government turns into a tyrannical dictatorship and they begin disarming citizens, the owners of such weapons want to be able to kill as many police, National Guard, and military as possible and thus save the country. > And I am not interested in answers that say "it would be a first step > in taking away Second Amendment rights," because that is not logical. "Not logical" is the basic approach of that side of the argument; purely emotional is all you will hear as an argument. |
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![]() sf wrote: > > On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 14:13:03 -0700, "graham" > wrote: > > > > > > Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) > > but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, > > some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. > > So much for training, eh? > > > > I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops > ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from > the general gun toting public? Pretty simple, the "general gun toting public" trains more than most cops. Unless on a SWAT team or similar most cops qualify a couple times a year and little more. This is also backed by the fact that most states have had concealed carry for many years and it has simply not happened (I've had a CHL for some 18 years). |
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On 2013-01-22 23:43:27 +0000, Chemo said:
One of many misleading elements of "history": > In 1929, the Soviet Union established gun control. From 1929 to 1953, > about 20 million dissidents, unable to defend themselves, were rounded > up and exterminated. Assuming the USSR had not established gun control, what reason is there to believe that these dissidents would have managed to avoid being killed in their hiding places rather than in a compound with their peers somewhere a week later? Does somebody think that if the police came to get a dissident who has a gun, they just go away? Does that seem reasonable? As John Stewart pointed out the other night, the Germans came after the "French" and despite the fact that they had an army with jillions of guns they lost and many of them were killed and/or sent to death camps. |
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On 23/01/2013 3:56 PM, George M. Middius wrote:
> Dave Smith wrote: > >>> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he was >>> able to run away. > >> Hit six times and "ran away"????? >> I'll need a cite for that. > > Would you believe.... she used a BB gun? > > LOL |
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On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 4:03:17 PM UTC-6, gtr wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 10:20:03 -0800 (PST), Bryan > > > wrote: > > > > > I don't listen to Progressive media any more than Conservative media. I > > > stick to public radio, where they'll have one person on from Heritage, > > > and another from Brookings, or one from The American Enterprise > > > Institute, and another from Mother Jones. On the issue of gun control, > > > they'd have someone from the NRA, and another person from Brady. In no > > > case is there yelling, or making up stupid nicknames for the other > > > side. They disagree, but civilly. > > > > Someone from the NRA providing lies and misinformation may have been > > speaking in a well-mannered way, but it wasn't "civil". A semantic disagreement. Even if I think someone's position is uncivilized, if the person is "speaking in a well-mannered way," I call the *discussion* itself, "civil." --Bryan |
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On 23/01/2013 4:13 PM, graham wrote:
> "Dave Smith" > wrote in message > ... >> On 23/01/2013 1:13 PM, Tom Del Rosso wrote: >> >>>> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an >>>> assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine >>>> with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? And I am not interested >>>> in answers that say "it would be a first step in taking away Second >>>> Amendment rights," because that is not logical. >>> >>> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he >>> was >>> able to run away. >> >> >> Hit six times and "ran away"????? >> I'll need a cite for that. >> > Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) > but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, > some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. > So much for training, eh? > > Yep. I remember reading about that one a few years ago. There were at least five cops shot .... by "friendly fire" Along a similar line was the case in New Orleans <?> where a guy bought his grandmother a gun for self defence. For some reason, the cops tried to raid her house. The original story was that she shot 5 cops before gunned gunned her down. The subsequent investigation determined that the cops were all shot by other cops. I just don't get this whole firearms for self defence stuff. There are lots of guns up here, but you have to jump through hoops to get the licence to buy or own them, and they have to be safely stored here. There is no doubt that there are some people who think they need them to guard their castles but there are some facts to deal with.... like that you can't do that here. You can only use lethal force to counter a likely lethal force, and forget about using a handgun, because that will be locked up and trigger locked and ammo stored elsewhere... by law. If you have time to go and get the gun and unlock it and get the ammo.... you weren't in that much danger. The overwhelming majority here seem to like it that way, including this gun owner. Go figger... our murder rte is lower, our firearms homicide rate is much lower. People here just don't feel a need to be armed for self defence, and there are fewer victims. If guns were useful for self defence, you should expect the exact opposite. |
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On 23/01/2013 4:37 PM, sf wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 14:13:03 -0700, "graham" > wrote: > >>> >> Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) >> but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, >> some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. >> So much for training, eh? >> > > I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops > ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from > the general gun toting public? > You end up with people accidentally shooting a daughter who is playing a joke on her father, a nine year old dressed up as a skunk at Halloween getting shot by an idiot uncle, a guy shooting to escaping burglars at a neighbour's castle... despite being told by the cops not to shoot them, lost foreign students being shot when going to the wrong house for a party.... |
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On 23/01/2013 5:41 PM, gtr wrote:
> Assuming the USSR had not established gun control, what reason is there > to believe that these dissidents would have managed to avoid being > killed in their hiding places rather than in a compound with their peers > somewhere a week later? > > Does somebody think that if the police came to get a dissident who has a > gun, they just go away? Does that seem reasonable? > > As John Stewart pointed out the other night, the Germans came after the > "French" and despite the fact that they had an army with jillions of > guns they lost and many of them were killed and/or sent to death camps. > Maybe you have to consider the possibility that the people in some cultures tend to be nuts. Maybe they aren't certifiably crazy in vast numbers, but they have different cultural ideals. People often point to the oppression regimes in the USSR and China as the evil of communism. I have known a number of Russians over the years and I decided long ago that it wasn't communism that caused the problem. It was Russians. Some cultures, not just the Russians, seem to be prone to crime and corruption. The pro gun lobby will point to places like Washington DC and New York NY as examples of high gun violence areas in places with strict controls. For me, it is a chicken and egg issue. I would suggest that the gun violence problem is the reason for the strict controls, not that they controls are the reason for the crimes. |
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On 23/01/2013 3:54 PM, Pete C. wrote:
> > Dave Smith wrote: >> >> On 23/01/2013 1:13 PM, Tom Del Rosso wrote: >> >>>> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an >>>> assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine >>>> with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? And I am not interested >>>> in answers that say "it would be a first step in taking away Second >>>> Amendment rights," because that is not logical. >>> >>> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he was >>> able to run away. >> >> Hit six times and "ran away"????? >> I'll need a cite for that. >> >>> > > Hit 5 times out of 6 shots, and if not "ran" away at least got away into > his vehicle which he then crashed a few blocks away. This incident in > Georgia was widely reported in the media just a week or so ago. > Okay.... no cite.... but he didn't exactly "run away". |
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On 23/01/2013 5:28 PM, Pete C. wrote:
>> >> I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops >> ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from >> the general gun toting public? > > Pretty simple, the "general gun toting public" trains more than most > cops. Unless on a SWAT team or similar most cops qualify a couple times > a year and little more. This is also backed by the fact that most states > have had concealed carry for many years and it has simply not happened > (I've had a CHL for some 18 years). > Oh that is absolute bullshit. Cops have to qualify on a regular basis. Joe Public does not. Even up here where handguns are strictly regulated just about anyone can get a licence to own a handgun. If you want a permit to transport it to a gun club to shoot you have to take an safety course and an orientation shoot..... no "qualification". Most gun owners do not undergo any kind of qualification. OTOH< there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend themselves. |
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On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 5:37:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote:
> > there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to > be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend > themselves. Like George Zimmerman or Michael Dunn, the killers of Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis, respectively. --Bryan |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 5:28 PM, Pete C. wrote: > > >> > >> I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops > >> ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from > >> the general gun toting public? > > > > Pretty simple, the "general gun toting public" trains more than most > > cops. Unless on a SWAT team or similar most cops qualify a couple times > > a year and little more. This is also backed by the fact that most states > > have had concealed carry for many years and it has simply not happened > > (I've had a CHL for some 18 years). > > > > Oh that is absolute bullshit. Cops have to qualify on a regular basis. Yes, they typically qualify a couple times a year. > Joe Public does not. Yes, they do. I just did on my CHL renewal a few months ago. > Even up here where handguns are strictly regulated > just about anyone can get a licence to own a handgun. If you want a > permit to transport it to a gun club to shoot you have to take an safety > course and an orientation shoot..... no "qualification". Most gun owners > do not undergo any kind of qualification. Again, here we most certainly have qualification for a CHL. It's changing at the moment, but it's around 4 hr class time and an hour or so of range time. The state specified target is the same silhouette target the police qualify on. > OTOH< there are always seems > to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to be practising in the > hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend themselves. Those who practice are not nuts, they are the responsible ones who want to ensure that should they need to defend themselves, they will hit and neutralize their target and not hit innocent bystanders like NYC police do. |
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On Jan 23, 4:43*pm, Bryan > wrote:
> On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 5:37:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote: > > > there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to > > be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend > > themselves. > > Like George Zimmerman or Michael Dunn, the killers of Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis, respectively. > > --Bryan Zimmerman hasn't gone to trial. Wait...you're a right winger who's already convicted him. |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 4:37 PM, sf wrote: > > On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 14:13:03 -0700, "graham" > wrote: > > > >>> > >> Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) > >> but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, > >> some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. > >> So much for training, eh? > >> > > > > I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops > > ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from > > the general gun toting public? > > > > You end up with people accidentally shooting a daughter who is playing a > joke on her father, a nine year old dressed up as a skunk at Halloween > getting shot by an idiot uncle, Yep, idiots do stupid things, and they do them with or without firearms. Would you prefer those incidents to be someone getting clubbed to death with a baseball bat? Would that make you feel better that there was no evil gun involved? > a guy shooting to escaping burglars at a > neighbour's castle... despite being told by the cops not to shoot them, > lost foreign students being shot when going to the wrong house for a > party.... To be clear, 911 operators are not cops and have no authority to tell the person on the phone to do anything. |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 4:13 PM, graham wrote: > > "Dave Smith" > wrote in message > > ... > >> On 23/01/2013 1:13 PM, Tom Del Rosso wrote: > >> > >>>> Someone please explain to me: why does any ordinary citizen need an > >>>> assault-type weapon, and why does any ordinary citizen need a magazine > >>>> with more than 6 or 7 rounds of ammunition? And I am not interested > >>>> in answers that say "it would be a first step in taking away Second > >>>> Amendment rights," because that is not logical. > >>> > >>> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he > >>> was > >>> able to run away. > >> > >> > >> Hit six times and "ran away"????? > >> I'll need a cite for that. > >> > > Wasn't there a case not long ago where a guy tried to rob a bar (?in NYC) > > but didn't know it was where the cops drank? In the resulting shootout, > > some of the cops were wounded by their colleagues. > > So much for training, eh? > > > > > > Yep. I remember reading about that one a few years ago. There were at > least five cops shot .... by "friendly fire" > > Along a similar line was the case in New Orleans <?> where a guy bought > his grandmother a gun for self defence. For some reason, the cops > tried to raid her house. The original story was that she shot 5 cops > before gunned gunned her down. The subsequent investigation determined > that the cops were all shot by other cops. Those cops got in trouble as well for their negligence. > > I just don't get this whole firearms for self defence stuff. It seems you won't "get it" until you find yourself in the position of needing to defend yourself. The fact that you have not yet been in such a situation in now way invalidates the thousands of people who are in such situations daily and who successfully defend themselves with firearms, most cases you never hear about. > There are > lots of guns up here, but you have to jump through hoops to get the > licence to buy or own them, and they have to be safely stored here. > There is no doubt that there are some people who think they need them to > guard their castles but there are some facts to deal with.... like that > you can't do that here. You can only use lethal force to counter a > likely lethal force, and forget about using a handgun, because that will > be locked up and trigger locked and ammo stored elsewhere... by law. If > you have time to go and get the gun and unlock it and get the ammo.... > you weren't in that much danger. Denying people the basic human right of self defense is a crime against humanity. > > The overwhelming majority here seem to like it that way, including > this gun owner. Go figger... our murder rte is lower, our firearms > homicide rate is much lower. People here just don't feel a need to be > armed for self defence, and there are fewer victims. If guns were useful > for self defence, you should expect the exact opposite. Your murder rate in your big cities is fast approaching those of our festering big cities. Our crime rates outside of those festering big cities are little different than your crime rates. Anti-gun types like to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 3:56 PM, George M. Middius wrote: > > Dave Smith wrote: > > > >>> In a recent case a woman shot a home invader and hit him 6 times, and he was > >>> able to run away. > > > >> Hit six times and "ran away"????? > >> I'll need a cite for that. > > > > Would you believe.... she used a BB gun? > > > > > LOL ..38 revolver, undetermined ammunition type. http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/10/us/hom...hts/index.html |
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On 2013-01-24 00:45:15 +0000, Chemo said:
> On Jan 23, 4:43*pm, Bryan > wrote: >> On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 5:37:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote: >> >>> there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to >>> be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend >>> themselves. >> >> Like George Zimmerman or Michael Dunn, the killers of Trayvon Martin >> and Jordan Davis, respectively. >> >> --Bryan > > Zimmerman hasn't gone to trial. So what? Whether he goes to trial or not some facts are already known: 1) He's drives around with a gun looking for the criminals. (Gun nut!) 2) He certainly seems to be practicing for confrontation. 3) He shot and killed and unarmed man. None of this is contested by Zimmerman. |
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On 23/01/2013 7:47 PM, Pete C. wrote:
> >>> >>> I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops >>> ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from >>> the general gun toting public? >>> >> >> You end up with people accidentally shooting a daughter who is playing a >> joke on her father, a nine year old dressed up as a skunk at Halloween >> getting shot by an idiot uncle, > > Yep, idiots do stupid things, and they do them with or without firearms. > Would you prefer those incidents to be someone getting clubbed to death > with a baseball bat? Would that make you feel better that there was no > evil gun involved? Sometimes people say stupid things too. While I have read and heard of a number of accidentally shootings and mass shootings, I honestly don't recall any news articles about accidental clubbings or multiple clubbing deaths. > >> a guy shooting to escaping burglars at a >> neighbour's castle... despite being told by the cops not to shoot them, >> lost foreign students being shot when going to the wrong house for a >> party.... > > To be clear, 911 operators are not cops and have no authority to tell > the person on the phone to do anything. Yes....and? |
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On 23/01/2013 7:55 PM, Pete C. wrote:
>> >> The overwhelming majority here seem to like it that way, including >> this gun owner. Go figger... our murder rte is lower, our firearms >> homicide rate is much lower. People here just don't feel a need to be >> armed for self defence, and there are fewer victims. If guns were useful >> for self defence, you should expect the exact opposite. > > Your murder rate in your big cities is fast approaching those of our > festering big cities. Our crime rates outside of those festering big > cities are little different than your crime rates. IF that were true, our respective murder rates would be similar. They aren't. The US murder rate is double that of Canada. > Anti-gun types like > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 18:07:50 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: > Sure... go out and steal some guns to take to the buy back ?? Take an old gun to a buy back program for seed money on a newer, more lethal weapon. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 18:39:45 -0800, gtr > wrote:
> On 2013-01-24 00:45:15 +0000, Chemo said: > > > On Jan 23, 4:43*pm, Bryan > wrote: > >> On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 5:37:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote: > >> > >>> there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to > >>> be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend > >>> themselves. > >> > >> Like George Zimmerman or Michael Dunn, the killers of Trayvon Martin > >> and Jordan Davis, respectively. > >> > >> --Bryan > > > > Zimmerman hasn't gone to trial. > > So what? Whether he goes to trial or not some facts are already known: > > 1) He's drives around with a gun looking for the criminals. (Gun nut!) > > 2) He certainly seems to be practicing for confrontation. > > 3) He shot and killed and unarmed man. > > None of this is contested by Zimmerman. > What would Pete advocate doing if somebody was stalking him the way Zimmerman stalked Trayvon? He'd advocate pulling out a gun and defending himself. Trayvon didn't have a gun. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: > > Anti-gun types like > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > > > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. LOL! Checkmate. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:15:04 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: >On 23/01/2013 7:47 PM, Pete C. wrote: >> >>>> >>>> I remember it as happening a few years ago, but as you say - if cops >>>> ended up shooting each other, how can we expect better results from >>>> the general gun toting public? >>>> >>> >>> You end up with people accidentally shooting a daughter who is playing a >>> joke on her father, a nine year old dressed up as a skunk at Halloween >>> getting shot by an idiot uncle, >> >> Yep, idiots do stupid things, and they do them with or without firearms. >> Would you prefer those incidents to be someone getting clubbed to death >> with a baseball bat? Would that make you feel better that there was no >> evil gun involved? > >Sometimes people say stupid things too. While I have read and heard of a >number of accidentally shootings and mass shootings, I honestly don't >recall any news articles about accidental clubbings or multiple clubbing >deaths. > Sure you have-- We do that with cars. With alarming frequency-- more often than with guns-- but then, I think we have more cars. Jim |
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On 24/01/2013 7:49 AM, Jim Elbrecht wrote:
>> Sometimes people say stupid things too. While I have read and heard of a >> number of accidentally shootings and mass shootings, I honestly don't >> recall any news articles about accidental clubbings or multiple clubbing >> deaths. >> > > Sure you have-- We do that with cars. With alarming frequency-- > more often than with guns-- but then, I think we have more cars. Perhaps you are confusing that with using a car to go out clubbing. |
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![]() sf wrote: > > On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 18:39:45 -0800, gtr > wrote: > > > On 2013-01-24 00:45:15 +0000, Chemo said: > > > > > On Jan 23, 4:43 pm, Bryan > wrote: > > >> On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 5:37:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote: > > >> > > >>> there are always seems to be a small contingent of gun nuts who seem to > > >>> be practising in the hopes that they might one day get a chance to defend > > >>> themselves. > > >> > > >> Like George Zimmerman or Michael Dunn, the killers of Trayvon Martin > > >> and Jordan Davis, respectively. > > >> > > >> --Bryan > > > > > > Zimmerman hasn't gone to trial. > > > > So what? Whether he goes to trial or not some facts are already known: > > > > 1) He's drives around with a gun looking for the criminals. (Gun nut!) > > > > 2) He certainly seems to be practicing for confrontation. > > > > 3) He shot and killed and unarmed man. > > > > None of this is contested by Zimmerman. > > > > What would Pete advocate doing if somebody was stalking him the way > Zimmerman stalked Trayvon? He'd advocate pulling out a gun and > defending himself. Trayvon didn't have a gun. No, he'd advocate responding in a civilized manner when questioned by someone as to what they were doing in a private gated community that they don't live in rather than physically attacking the person asking the question. Trayvon physically assaulted someone for asking a question he didn't like, and he found he wasn't the good little thug he thought he was. |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > > On 23/01/2013 7:55 PM, Pete C. wrote: > > >> > >> The overwhelming majority here seem to like it that way, including > >> this gun owner. Go figger... our murder rte is lower, our firearms > >> homicide rate is much lower. People here just don't feel a need to be > >> armed for self defence, and there are fewer victims. If guns were useful > >> for self defence, you should expect the exact opposite. > > > > Your murder rate in your big cities is fast approaching those of our > > festering big cities. Our crime rates outside of those festering big > > cities are little different than your crime rates. > > IF that were true, our respective murder rates would be similar. They > aren't. The US murder rate is double that of Canada. We have more big cities with gang problems as noted. Again this has little effect on those who do not live in those geographically small areas. > > > Anti-gun types like > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. Joe Homeowner has plenty of reason to be concerned when a tiny minority of paranoid anti-gun nuts is attacking their constitutionally guaranteed right. The second amendment says "people", not "political elite", says "right", not "privilege" and says "infringed", not "prohibited". |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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![]() sf wrote: > > On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > > wrote: > > > > Anti-gun types like > > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > > > > > > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > > LOL! Checkmate. Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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On 2013-01-24, Dave Smith > wrote:
> On 24/01/2013 7:49 AM, Jim Elbrecht wrote: >> Sure you have-- We do that with cars. With alarming frequency-- >> more often than with guns-- but then, I think we have more cars. > > Perhaps you are confusing that with using a car to go out clubbing. LOL!..... |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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On Thursday, January 24, 2013 8:05:24 AM UTC-6, Pete C. wrote:
> sf wrote: > > > > > > On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > > > > wrote: > > > > > > > > Anti-gun types like > > > > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > > > > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > > > > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > > > > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > > > > > > > > > > > > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > > > > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > > > > > > LOL! Checkmate. > > > > Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the > > right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel > > free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. > > I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. If one of the dads of one of those kids who got killed in Newtown filled a truck with McVeigh style explosives and drove it into the convention hall during the annual conference of the NRA, I would do a major happy dance. A bunch of weapons freaks turned into hamburger by a weapon. Beautiful! --Bryan |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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![]() John J wrote: > > On Thu, 24 Jan 2013 08:05:24 -0600, "Pete C." > > wrote: > > > > >sf wrote: > >> > >> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > >> > wrote: > >> > >> > > Anti-gun types like > >> > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > >> > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > >> > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > >> > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > >> > > >> > > >> > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > >> > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > >> > >> LOL! Checkmate. > > > >Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the > >right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel > >free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. > >I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. > > Total firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population in one year: > > US: 10.2 > UK: 0.25 > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate Distorted numbers. UK firearm related deaths are pretty evenly distributed, US very localized and if you aren't in that local then it doesn't affect you. Additionally that number includes police and defensive civilian shootings further invalidating the number. Violent crime in the UK is much more prevalent and widespread whether it involves a gun or not. Dead is dead and shot or stabbed makes little difference. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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![]() "Pete C." > wrote in message ... > > John J wrote: >> >> On Thu, 24 Jan 2013 08:05:24 -0600, "Pete C." > >> wrote: >> >> > >> >sf wrote: >> >> >> >> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith >> >> > wrote: >> >> >> >> > > Anti-gun types like >> >> > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly >> >> > > all >> >> > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other >> >> > > criminal gang >> >> > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the >> >> > > US and >> >> > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need >> >> > to >> >> > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. >> >> >> >> LOL! Checkmate. >> > >> >Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the >> >right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel >> >free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. >> >I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. >> >> Total firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population in one year: >> >> US: 10.2 >> UK: 0.25 >> >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate > > Distorted numbers. No! Your distorted thinking. Murder rates US 4.8 UK 1.2 Canada 1.6 |
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![]() graham wrote: > > "Pete C." > wrote in message > ... > > > > John J wrote: > >> > >> On Thu, 24 Jan 2013 08:05:24 -0600, "Pete C." > > >> wrote: > >> > >> > > >> >sf wrote: > >> >> > >> >> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > >> >> > wrote: > >> >> > >> >> > > Anti-gun types like > >> >> > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly > >> >> > > all > >> >> > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other > >> >> > > criminal gang > >> >> > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the > >> >> > > US and > >> >> > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need > >> >> > to > >> >> > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > >> >> > >> >> LOL! Checkmate. > >> > > >> >Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the > >> >right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel > >> >free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. > >> >I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. > >> > >> Total firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population in one year: > >> > >> US: 10.2 > >> UK: 0.25 > >> > >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate > > > > Distorted numbers. > > No! Your distorted thinking. > Murder rates > US 4.8 > UK 1.2 > Canada 1.6 The UK is a tiny spec of a country, less that 1/3 the size of Texas alone. It is not a valid comparison to begin with. Your growing muslim youb problem is not unlike our gang issues. I'll stay in my free country where the basic human right of self defense is recognized. Feel free to stay in your crumbling socialist utopia. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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![]() graham wrote: > > "Pete C." > wrote in message > ... > > > > John J wrote: > >> > >> On Thu, 24 Jan 2013 08:05:24 -0600, "Pete C." > > >> wrote: > >> > >> > > >> >sf wrote: > >> >> > >> >> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > >> >> > wrote: > >> >> > >> >> > > Anti-gun types like > >> >> > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly > >> >> > > all > >> >> > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other > >> >> > > criminal gang > >> >> > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the > >> >> > > US and > >> >> > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need > >> >> > to > >> >> > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > >> >> > >> >> LOL! Checkmate. > >> > > >> >Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the > >> >right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel > >> >free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. > >> >I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. > >> > >> Total firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population in one year: > >> > >> US: 10.2 > >> UK: 0.25 > >> > >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate > > > > Distorted numbers. > > No! Your distorted thinking. > Murder rates > US 4.8 > UK 1.2 > Canada 1.6 Subtract the gang related murders which are largely confined to probably 1/100 of 1 percent of the total US land area and the rates look very very different. Those who live in tiny specs of a country have difficulty comprehending this fact. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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On Fri, 25 Jan 2013 01:20:39 +1100, John J > wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Jan 2013 08:05:24 -0600, "Pete C." > > wrote: > > > > >sf wrote: > >> > >> On Wed, 23 Jan 2013 22:25:18 -0500, Dave Smith > >> > wrote: > >> > >> > > Anti-gun types like > >> > > to hype up total US homicide rates, but the reality is that nearly all > >> > > of those homicides are criminal gang members killing other criminal gang > >> > > members in very small geographic areas. The vast majority of the US and > >> > > of the US population is entirely unaffected by those gang issues. > >> > > >> > > >> > If it is just gang members killing each other there isn't much need to > >> > Joe Homeowner to be so concerned. > >> > >> LOL! Checkmate. > > > >Sorry beotch, the second amendment says that I (the people) have the > >right (not privilege) to keep and bear arms. If you don't like it, feel > >free to move to some country full of disarmed victims, perhaps the UK. > >I've been there recently and it's a festering crime cesspool. > > Total firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population in one year: > > US: 10.2 > UK: 0.25 > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ted_death_rate Pete C and his ilk needs to wake up and smell the coffee - the rest of us think the right to own a gun is trumped by the right not to be shot by one. Somalia comes to mind as the perfect place for him and his fellow thinkers to swagger around toting their guns and feeling manly. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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