Gun Control & RKBA
Related: About this forumU.S. judge denies Texas professors who sought gun ban in their classrooms
Source: Reuters
U.S. judge denies Texas professors who sought gun ban in their classrooms
By Jon Herskovitz | AUSTIN, TEXAS
A U.S. district judge on Monday denied a motion from three University of Texas professors who wanted to ban guns in their classroom after the state gave some students that right under a law then went into effect this month.
The professors had argued academic freedom could be chilled under the so-called "campus carry" law backed by the state's Republican political leaders. The law allows concealed handgun license holders aged 21 and older to bring handguns into classrooms and other university facilities.
But U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel said the professors "have failed to establish a substantial likelihood of ultimate success on the merits of their asserted claims," and denied a motion for an injunction to ban guns.
"It appears to the court that neither the Texas Legislature nor the (university's) Board of Regents has overstepped its legitimate power to determine where a licensed individual may carry a concealed handgun in an academic setting," Yeakel said.
[font size=1]-snip-[/font]
Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-texas-guns-idUSKCN10X2AV
enough
(13,460 posts)Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Since several states already allow this, I am sure they had many cases ready to validate their claims, right? Must be hundreds.
chillfactor
(7,694 posts)I would never teach in a higher education setting if students were allowed to bring guns into my classroom. That is a situation just waiting to explode.
aikoaiko
(34,204 posts)In fact I assume there are people with guns in my classroom even though it is not legal to do so.
DonP
(6,185 posts)10 states already allow campus carry, some for almost a decade, so where is all the blood in the History department?
Must be the same place all that blood from all the concealed carry permit holders is, huh?
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)I am sure the posters here will also come up with at least hundreds of cases over the years. Any minute now, lol
elehhhhna
(32,076 posts)Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)What I said was just factual. Firearms are not a joking matter in my opinion.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Note the dates:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x364698
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x310169
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php/http:/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x322788
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x382537
scscholar
(2,902 posts)Those gun owners can't be trusted.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)scscholar
(2,902 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)As of December 31, 2015
Active License Holders:
937,419
Certified Instructors:
3,458
These numbers reflect the number of licensed individuals and certified instructors
Not a math major, were you?
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)I am sure that poster did not want that number posted, lol
scscholar
(2,902 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Last edited Thu Aug 25, 2016, 12:47 PM - Edit history (2)
Are there any other identifiable groups that you would like to restrict due to the behaviors
of a minority of their members? That approach seems to be quite popular
in certain political circles lately...
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)beevul
(12,194 posts)In the months after her son's death, Graham became active in Mothers on the Move Spiritually, a Prince George's County group that helped organize the Million Mom March last year against gun violence. Graham spoke out at the march and helped memorialize the dead.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/01/24/mother-goes-on-trialin-ambush-shooting/00c9c8e7-38d5-4b0e-b075-8742774dc3a3/
Lets see if hes willing to apply that standard now.
DonP
(6,185 posts)Short answer - none.
No law you can create will stop a criminal from carrying illegally.
But please tell us you are at least able to tell the difference between a criminal and a law abiding citizen that jumped through all the hoops to get a permit?
Now, use all your Google Fu skills and find us a school shooting that was done by a person with a permit. (That is ... if you haven't already looked, found bupkus and are now just grasping at straws to hear the sound of your own voice.)
We'll wait here.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...for to do so would reveal their arguments to be faith-based, at best.
DonP
(6,185 posts)Or just conflating all criminals that use guns with people with lawful carry permits and pretending they don't see any difference.
Then there's always the more universal and "well thought out" Grabnutz argument; "Guns and anyone that has a gun is icky, except for the police ... the same police that I've been whining about for the past year ... only they should have guns".
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Last edited Wed Aug 24, 2016, 02:54 PM - Edit history (1)
I have been fighting it with a remedy that works on all but the most case-hardened
of True Believers: verifiable statistics
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)pablo_marmol
(2,375 posts)Then why hasn't it at learning institutions that allow concealed carry, and have for many years?
Funny how some college professors refuse to look at the data on this issue.
DonP
(6,185 posts)(Probably Social Science or another "soft science"
pablo_marmol
(2,375 posts)One of the things I like about one of my best friends is that he doesn't believe that character correlates with political orientation. Ironically, he's a completely irrational gun hater......and falls for every gun restriction prevarication out there. (Like me, he's never voted GOP)
In an e-mail exchange I had with Dr. Gary Kleck, he commented that criminologists tend to stick with whatever belief system on gun violence they started with........confirming what research has proven. When confronted with evidence that contradicts a person's beliefs, most folks get upset, and double-down on their irrational beliefs.
Edited to add:
http://archive.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2010/07/11/how_facts_backfire/
DonP
(6,185 posts)Wow! Holding to a set of beliefs, regardless of any and all evidence to the contrary.
People like Hemenway and their ilk sound more like a 14th century Jesuit in some remote monastery than "scientists".
If medical science worked that way we'd probably still be bled to remove all the "evil humours" and balance our "bile".
I've always respected Kleck and his work, mainly because he was willing to adapt and change his POV based on what he actually found, even when it was contrary to his initial hypothesis. He didn't take the easy road like so many others have.
pablo_marmol
(2,375 posts)Same goes for liberal criminologists James Wright and Peter Rossi, (RIP) who started their careers assuming a relationship between the raw number of guns and gun violence.....and changed their views as the evidence began to contradict that assumption.
Kleck published Targeting Guns after Point Blank in part to respond to critics of his work. Before going to press, he gave his manuscript to said critics to give them an opportunity to respond to his rebuttals of their critiques. None responded. Telling.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)aikoaiko
(34,204 posts)It all comes down to this:
"There simply is no legal justification to deny licensed, law-abiding citizens on campus the same measure of personal protection they are entitled to elsewhere in Texas."
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)"There simply is no legal justification to deny licensed, law-abiding citizens on campus the same measure of personal protection they are entitled to elsewhere in Texas."
should read:
"There simply is no legal justification to deny licensed, law-abiding citizens on campus the same illusory measure of personal protection they are entitled to elsewhere in Texas."
I added illusory because personal protection is an illusion. Guns give the illusion of protection. If they really protected there would be no police officers killed.
And any minimal protection that they might give will be negated by the increased risk of violence that will be the outcome of allowing thousands of students to carry guns on campus.
aikoaiko
(34,204 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)As DonP observed above:
elehhhhna
(32,076 posts)Hidden.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Last edited Tue Aug 23, 2016, 11:19 PM - Edit history (1)
If so, kindly show it to us. I would think that such a shooting would be all over our
'if it bleeds, it leads' mainstream media.
Rape and assault can be passed off as 'he said, she said' (and too often are)
It's kinda hard to deny a gunshot wound or shooting death.
elehhhhna
(32,076 posts)Re: campus carry so eff off. My thoughts and opinions are as valid as yours gunsucker.
sarisataka
(21,211 posts)Back to homophobia I guess. I predict it won't catch on as much as ammosexual.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)beevul
(12,194 posts)The difference however, is that your thoughts and opinions on this matter don't bounce off of reality nearly as well as those who you go out of your way to attack.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Faith-based movements are also emotion-based...
Straw Man
(6,782 posts)... I give you the voice of reason and enlightenment re gun control.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Actually very sad.
beergood
(470 posts)so you acknowledge that there is a sexual assault crisis on our college campuses, so would it seem to reason to allow those students the proper tools to defend themselves.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Don asked a very legitimate question, do you have an answer?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)These three professors will now be able to sit around faculty parties and tell of when
they stood up against that icky gun culture and how The Man shut them down...
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)any calculus teachers?
virginia mountainman
(5,046 posts)pablo_marmol
(2,375 posts)What utter nonsense. Nobody claims that guns protect 100% of the time......the police certainly don't believe it. It's pretty obvious, however, that without the protection of firearms many more cops would be killed. How childish and dishonest it is to take this all or nothing position!
DonP
(6,185 posts)They seem to have, shall we say, "flexible" standards and situational ethics on these things.
On one hand they demand that a gun must be able to magically protect it's owner all the time and in every situation or carrying is a waste of time and a danger to the public.
On the other hand, every time a concealed carrier actually does protect themselves or their family with their gun, well ... then it's a total fluke, an accident, an anomaly and won't be repeated.
But it's really not a double standard (LoL)
Easy peasy to understand, ... you just have to speak stupid fluently.
Straw Man
(6,782 posts)... why the police carry them, doesn't it? I mean, since they offer no protection and all ...
Nope. Flag on the play: faulty generalization.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)And yet, governments keep as many of them as possible in as wide a variety as possible and it trains to bring as many to bear as quickly as possible.
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,593 posts)"And any minimal protection that they might give will be negated by the increased risk of violence that will be the outcome of allowing thousands of students to carry guns on campus."
"...governments keep as many of them as possible in as wide a variety as possible and it trains to bring as many to bear as quickly as possible."
Good argument for anarchy.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Guilty as charged.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And how safe has that made this country?
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)The state exists to project violence either on behalf of its elite or (in the rarest of cases) its constituents. ALL law is predicated upon the threat of violence for those who would break the law and/or resist the state in enforcing the law. The different levels of law, i.e. infraction, misdemeanor, felony, etc. merely speak to the amount of delay until violence is deemed appropriate but all offenders will be brought to heel either by surrender or by violence.
It is the inseparable definition of nation-state.
Please keep this simple fact in mind as you petition for the state to be the sole possessor of the means of violence.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Other than differences of scale?
If not, why encourage individual violence?
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Why do you resent the former while facilitating the latter?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)An alien occupying force from another planet?
An oppressive overlord crushing the American peasantry?
You do realize that the British left after your revolution, correct?
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)those who hold power?
You neglect post-War for Independence events such as miners protecting themselves from hired "detectives;" the 1946 battle of Athens, Tennessee; Deacons for Defense protecting African American civil rights leaders from the KKK which often included local police and other government officials; The Black Panthers; etc.
Why do you resent individuals protecting themselves and their families but make excuses for the elite protecting their power?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)If so, that explains much of this dialogue.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)If so, that explains much of your resentment towards individuals being allowed to defend themselves.
You saw those cars coming, and you knew who those men were. They wanted you to see them. They wanted you to be afraid of them."
- Lillie McKoy, former mayor of Maxton talking about the KKK
By the mid-1950's the Civil Rights Movement was gaining momentum and the KKK decided they had to fight back. Their campaign of terrorism swept through many of the southern states, but largely fell flat in North Carolina.
James W. "Catfish" Cole, the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan in South Carolina, decided he was going to change that. Cole was an ordained minister of the Wayside Baptist Church in Summerfield, North Carolina, who regularly preached the Word of God on the radio. His rallies often drew as many as 15,000 people. As Cole told the newspapers: "There's about 30,000 half-breeds up in Robeson County and we are going to have some cross burnings and scare them up."
Cole made a critical mistake that couldn't be avoided by a racist mind - he was completely ignorant of the people he was about to mess with.
...
Dr. Perry was a black doctor in Monroe, NC, and helped finance a local chapter of the NAACP. One night at a meeting, the word was received that the Klan threatened to blow up Dr. Perry's house. The meeting broke up and everyone went home to get their guns.
Sipping coffee in Perry's garage with shotguns across their laps, the men agreed that defending their families was too important to do in haphazard fashion. "We started to really getting organized and setting up, digging foxholes and started getting up ammunition and training guys," Williams recalled. "In fact, we had started building our own rifle range, and we got our own M-1's and got our own Mausers and German semi-automatic rifles, and steel helmets. We had everything."
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/01/17/826081/-The-day-the-Klan-messed-with-the-wrong-people?detail=email
You're effectively saying Dr. Perry, his family and friends were obligated to accept whatever fate the government occupied by members of the KKK deemed fitting to dispense.
Why do you resent these people defending themselves while making excuses for the KKK who was seeking the commit violence against them?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Your link does not support this. This was organized violence, not government sanctioned violence.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Why do you resent their defending themselves while making excuses for the KKK?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)a governmental action.
beergood
(470 posts)the movie mississippi burning https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_Burning
The pair find it difficult to conduct interviews with the local townspeople, as Sheriff Ray Stuckey and his deputies exert influence over the public and are linked to a branch of the Ku Klux Klan.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...seems to me to be both ahistorical and frankly Pollyannish.
Consider the more unpleasant implications of a Trump presidency, given many of his
public pronunciations and the behavior of his voters....
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)of the electorate.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And guns make it relatively easy to commit violence.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)And not just 'gun violence'- any violence:
http://www.dps.texas.gov/rsd/chl/reports/convrates.htm
beevul
(12,194 posts)And even more amazing how some never consider it.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)every preferred policy statement is a declaration that those who resist ought to bear the brunt of the state's capacity for violence.
beergood
(470 posts)is not a violent act, its a justified response to violence.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And the idea that carrying a gun makes campuses safer is a solution in search of a problem. Texas college campuses are quite safe, especially compared to the rest of the state. Where the gun carriers are.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Not nearly as much of 'a solution in search of a problem' as trying to prevent people who are statistically more law abiding than police from carrying a gun.
Not nearly as much of 'a solution in search of a problem' as screaming for background checks after an atrocity in which the perpetrator passed one.
Yet you and many like you are not given pause, so why should anyone else be?
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,593 posts)Violence: is a world wide problem; the US does not have a monopoly.
What I infer from your history of assertions on the topic:
'Restricting weapons would have a positive effect on violence.'
My reaction:
THE MOST weapon restrictive areas of the US are prisons.
Prisons are far from non-violent.
My conclusion:
Working on anything that doesn't solve the causes and issues behind violence all of the following:
A waste, a lie, political agenda without a real purpose, a distraction, a talking point for a number of politicians and a means for certain people to hold and maintain power.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Show me a modern society that doesn't rely on violence as the 'stick', regardless of what they use as the 'carrot'.
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)if FBI figures are accurate enough to escape the scourge of "NRAtalkingPoints®." Don't you concede that murder rates -- by gun or anything else -- have gone down?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)why are more guns needed?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...as well as other crimes, even on college campuses- a fact that you're well aware of because
you were reminded of it just last week.
Displays of faux ignorance do not speak well of the person doing the displaying:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1172198417#post121
Murder is not the only crime that occurs on campuses- but you knew that already
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clery_Act
The Clery Act requires all colleges and universities that participate in federal financial aid programs to keep and disclose information about crime on and near their respective campuses. Compliance is monitored by the United States Department of Education, which can impose civil penalties, up to $35,000 per violation, against institutions for each infraction and can suspend institutions from participating in federal student financial aid programs.
The law is named after Jeanne Clery, a 19-year-old Lehigh University student who was raped and murdered in her campus hall of residence in 1986. Her murder triggered a backlash against unreported crime on campuses across the country.[2]
For example: In 2014 (last full year available) UT Austin had:
1 murder
48 rapes
3 fondling:
purpose of sexual gratification, without consent from the victim, including
incidents where the victim is incapable of giving consent because of his/her age
or because of his/her temporary or permanent mental or physical incapacity.
2 robberies
9 aggravated assaults
43 burglaries
http://sites.utexas.edu/compliance/files/2015/09/ASR-9_29_15.pdf
So we have real, reported crime vs. theoretical (and apparently so far nonexistant) harm
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Making Texas campuses very safe places indeed.
Carrying on campus is indeed a solution in search of a problem.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)This is like giving the pollution caused by internal combustion engined vehicles
as a reason to ban electric cars.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Concealed Carry Killers is a resource maintained by the Violence Policy Center that includes hundreds of examples of non-self defense killings by private citizens with permits to carry concealed, loaded handguns in public that took place since May 2007. These incidents include homicides, suicides, mass shootings, murder-suicides, lethal attacks on law enforcement, and unintentional deaths. Only a tiny fraction of these cases are ever ruled to be in self-defense. Any homicide that is legally determined to be in self-defense is documented and removed from the Concealed Carry Killers database and the ongoing tallies.
http://concealedcarrykillers.org/
You can thank me later.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Out of tens if not hundreds of thousands of permit holders.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)The data, released annually, show drops in 2014 to 2015 after a dramatic spike of permits in 2013 the first full year after state law was amended to allow license-holders to carry openly. Previously, the permits were for concealed-carry only.
http://newsok.com/article/5474436
Not quite your hundreds of thousands, but.........
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)So I bet you can figure the percentage of 3 out of 40,000
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Once again, the VPC hopes you are both easily frightened and poor at math
The Violence Policy Center has cranked up its evergreen moral panic
"Concealed Carry Killers"- and the gullible and doctrinaire fall for it:
https://www.google.com/search?q=%22concealed+carry+killers%22&sitesearch=democraticunderground.com
http://www.democraticunderground.com/126210658
Washington, DC Concealed handgun permit holders are responsible for at least 873 deaths not involving self defense since 2007, including 29 mass shootings that killed 139 people, ongoing VPC research shows. Since there is no comprehensive record keeping of fatal incidents involving concealed carry permit holders, this tally most likely represents a small fraction of the actual total.
I couldn't be arsed to look for any 2014 or 2015 screeds from them, so let's
look at one from 2013:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023118413
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 27, 2013
3:18 PM
CONTACT: Violence Policy Center
Avery Palmer, 202-822-8200 x104, apalmer@vpc.org
As Zimmerman Case Begins, VPC Research Details Hundreds of Examples of Innocent Lives Lost to Concealed Carry Killers
WASHINGTON - June 27 - Washington, DC As the trial opens this week over the deadly shooting of Trayvon Martin, research shows that similar fatal incidents are shockingly common. The Violence Policy Center has uncovered hundreds of examples of non-self defense incidents involving private citizens legally allowed to carry concealed handguns. These incidents resulted in 516 deaths including 24 mass shootings and the killing of 14 law enforcement officers.
Doing the math, and according to the VPC, concealed carriers are responsible for 357
deaths over the last three years, or 119 a year.
Lets stipulate, for the sake of this argument, that all of those deaths were murders
even if they were not.
Now comes the part where the wheels fall off the panic mongering.
The lowest estimate I can find for the number of concealed handgun permit holders
in the US is 11.1 million- other figures cited were a high of 12.8 million but
I'll stick with the low one. Taking that number, and using the numbers given by the
VPC, we see that 119/11100000 = a murder rate of 0.93 per 100,000 permit
holders, a rate about one-fifth of the US population as a whole
Source for US murder rate:
https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2014/crime-in-the-u.s.-2014/tables/table-1
https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2015/preliminary-semiannual-uniform-crime-report-januaryjune-2015/tables/table-3
Worse for the controllers, these numbers mean that those 'concealed carry killers'
kill at a lower rate than does the populations of the UK, France,
Australia (where have I heard that name recenly?), Ireland, Canada...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_intentional_homicide_rate
http://rboatright.blogspot.com/2013/03/comparing-england-or-uk-murder-rates.html
and at par with Norway and Sweden
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1172193622#post8
Debunking would indicate the OP was trying to prove the VPC wrong with it's claimed numbers.
The OP accepts all of the VPC numbers as is, with no argument.
They then compare it to the factual number of concealed carriers in the country. That's not debunking, it's what we call "Math"
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1172193622#post19
"Concealed handgun permit holders are responsible for at least 873 deaths not involving self defense since 2007, including 29 mass shootings that killed 139 people, ongoing VPC research shows.
...
In the vast majority of the 684 incidents documented in Concealed Carry Killers (585, or 86 percent), the concealed carry permit holder either committed suicide (293), has already been convicted (222), perpetrated a murder-suicide (53), or was killed in the incident (17). Of the 74 cases currently pending, the vast majority (64) of concealed carry killers have been charged with criminal homicide, four were deemed incompetent to stand trial, and six incidents are still under investigation. An additional 25 incidents were fatal unintentional shootings involving the gun of the concealed handgun permit holder."
http://www.vpc.org/press/latest-concealed-carry-tragedies-include-workplace-shooting-six-year-old-unintentionally-killing-father/
Once incident in DC was about a Texas permit holder who killed 13 with a shotgun at a Navy Yard in DC.
"Alexis purchased his Remington 870 shotgun and two boxes of shells from Sharpshooters Small Arms Range in Newington, Virginia just two days before the shooting. Alexis had a concealed carry permit from Texas and had previously held one issued in the state of Washington."
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Gun enthusiasts apparently feel some need to minimize or explain the 30,000 gun deaths each year.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)How, exactly do you differ from Pamela Geller or Donald Trump, aside from
the identity of your particular bêtes noires?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And your sentence:
is false on its face. If the subgroup was verifiably safe there would be no list of concealed carry killers.
As to Geller and Trump, I am a non-lawyer, differing from Geller, and I am white, differing from Trump.
Again, why do you feel the need to keep splitting gun owners into sub-groups? No matter how you split, the 30,000 are still dead.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)In his 1961 book Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton introduced the term "thought-terminating cliché".This refers to a cliché that is a commonly used phrase, or folk wisdom, sometimes used to quell cognitive dissonance. Though the clichéd phrase in and of itself may be valid in certain contexts, its application as a means of dismissing dissent or justifying fallacious logic is what makes it thought-terminating.
Lifton wrote:
"The language of the totalist environment is characterized by the thought-terminating cliché. The most far-reaching and complex of human problems are compressed into brief, highly reductive, definitive-sounding phrases, easily memorized and easily expressed. These become the start and finish of any ideological analysis."
In George Orwell's 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the fictional constructed language Newspeak is designed to eliminate the ability to express unorthodox thoughts. Aldous Huxleys Brave New World society uses thought-terminating clichés in a more conventional manner, most notably in regard to the drug soma as well as modified versions of real-life platitudes, such as "A doctor a day keeps the jim-jams away".
In her 1963 book Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt described Adolf Eichmann as an intelligent man who used clichés and platitudes to justify his actions and the role he played in the Jewish genocide of World War II. For her, these phrases are symptomatic of an absence of thought. Arendt wrote, "When confronted with situations for which such routine procedures did not exist, he [Eichmann] was helpless, and his cliché-ridden language produced on the stand, as it had evidently done in his official life, a kind of macabre comedy. Clichés, stock phrases, adherence to conventional, standardized codes of expression and conduct have the socially recognized function of protecting us against reality, that is, against the claim on our thinking attention that all events and facts make by virtue of their existence."
beevul
(12,194 posts)And you don't want to explain them?
I thought you said you care.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)ownership is social policy; that is it affects societal conditions. I don't subsume that (though some think more guns equals less crime). I see the larger question as that of personal self-defense. To many gun-owners, the crime rate, though lower, is still enough of a threat to keep and/or bear arms. But long term, the right to keep and bear arms has been very much restricted until the "civil rights era." Now, the Second is enjoying a liberal expansion as have most all other rights, save the Fourth. (I note some casual disregard for the Due Process clause of the 5th as well, esp. in these threads.) That long term "renaissance" probably drives liberal legislation to better enable gun-bearing more than the crime rate.
Having guns, to be clear, is both blamed and lauded as affecting crime rates. Clealy, I can't buy into the blame game as the number of guns has skyrocketed even as gun-homicides have fallen. Converesely, that does not mean that crime rates have fallen as a result of a gun number increase. That has not been studied too well, imo. For now, the answer to falling gun homicides is still out there.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)but mainly to existing gun owners. Indicating that gun ownership is not an indicator of "more people buying guns", but some few people buying many guns.
Again, gun ownership is a solution in search of a problem. And the gun manufacturers laugh as they profit from fear.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)Required for new firearms purchasers and not required for existing firearms owners. By the way, please link to the source or are you just making that up?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)The average gun-owning household now owns an estimated 8.1 guns, compared with 4.1 guns in 1994. But, at the same time, less households actually own guns. The ownership estimates come from the Post's Wonkblog, which analyzed results from surveys and data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.Oct 22, 2015
A new estimate on how many guns the average gun owner has ...
www.chron.com/.../A-new-estimate-on-how-many-guns-the-average-...
Houston Chronicle
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)The argument for years by controllers is "more guns = more crimes." That is how it is stated, guillaumeb. Most arguing this still take ownership of it.
The problem is the fallback position, accepting for the moment that it is the usual suspects purchasing more guns: Controllers now say it is the number of guns IN CIRCULATION that is causing the rise in homicides. Either way, homicides-by-gun are dropping. Admittedly, it is a flimsy fallback, but the "more guns in circulation" is the prevalent one, now.
jmg257
(11,996 posts)Courts often defer to the legislative efforts when laws are constitutional.
ETA:
In the context of firearm regulation, the legislature is far better equipped than the judiciary to make sensitive policy judgments (within constitutional limits) concerning the dangers in carrying firearms and the manner to combat those risks.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Applying those same standards to gun control shows it to be a complete utter failure - if gun control worked, we wouldn't have 30 thousand deaths annually.
On edit: Ok, I'm braced for the impact of the 'wait, that's different' argument, which is all you really have left, other than shamed silence.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)What US history demonstrates is that guns are seen as the solution for some problems. This country has always been at war, has always seen war as the only viable solution, and that is reflected in your attitudes and beliefs.
And the ridiculously high level of gun homicide in this country reflects that distorted world view.
So many, far too many Americans share two beliefs:
1) That guns will somehow protect you from whatever you fear, and
2) that one of the things that you fear is your own government.
Truly insane beliefs, but quite common among a subset of Americans from both political parties.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Tell me more about my attitudes and beliefs, carnac. You don't by chance have a telepsychology diploma signed by someone named hoyt, do you?
1) That guns will somehow protect you from whatever you fear, and
2) that one of the things that you fear is your own government.
Where as you have a couple beliefs yourself (since were engaging in telepsychology and all):
1) That guns never protect anyone from anything - a notion that is laughably false and easily disproven.
2) The one thing you trust no matter what, is your own government. I'll be sure to check back with you on that if by some quirk of fate trump gets elected. In the mean time, I suggest you refer to the archives, and expose yourself to some of the sentiments right here on DU, expressed about our government, circa 2001-2007.
Yes, those war thingies are what happens when one group of people attempt to dictate to another group of people and the group being dictated to says "No", and means it (among other causes).
On edit:
You never addressed this: Applying those same standards to gun control shows it to be a complete utter failure - if gun control worked, we wouldn't have 30 thousand deaths annually.
For the life of me, I can't imagine why you didn't address it.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)The "your" clearly referred to the "Americans" that was the subject of the paragraph. Do not take it as a personal possessive.
And I did not address gun control because there has never been a national level gun ban that was enforced. The US does not have gun control in any meaningful sense. It has a series of state laws that are under-enforced and generally weak.
beevul
(12,194 posts)It almost sounds like you're saying that our gun laws are worthless.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)What an incredible coincidence.
And yes, US gun laws are worthless and were never really intended to limit access to guns. The industry is far too profitable, contributes to many politicians, and gun ownership obviously fulfills some type of American emotional need.
beevul
(12,194 posts)An effort to repeal them all could be started and it wouldn't bother you in the least then, right?
If 'limit access to guns' is your goal, I'd suggest trying it in another nation where 3/4 of the populace don't diametrically oppose such things.
I'm pretty sure that the need to control others fits that definition far more than gun ownership does.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)On a certain level, some few US citizens feel the desire, (called by them a need) to have a gun, and feel the desire/need to carry a gun everywhere that they go.
That fulfilling this desire/need makes people less safe is irrelevant because the desire must be met.
beevul
(12,194 posts)On a certain level, some few US citizens feel the desire, (called by them a need) to have a gun, and feel the desire/need to carry a gun everywhere that they go.
That fulfilling this desire/need makes people less safe is irrelevant because the desire must be met.
I think the key phrase is 'biased control freaks' who have no interest in dealing with problematic individuals and just hate guns/gun owners/people that resist their petty biased need to control others.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)You obviously have that right.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Who is it that I'm trying to control? Whos choices am I trying to dictate? That part being a prerequisite, and all.
The answers to those questions when they're applied to you are obvious: Everyone.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)and the terms of the debate. As do we all.
beevul
(12,194 posts)The fact of the matter, is that you wish to control the actions of tens of millions of people who aren't harming ANYONE, and I do not.
That says about all that needs to be said, and supports my point.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)The illusion of accomplishment to appease people.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)I drive the posted speed limit. Does that mean all people drive the posted limit?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)restrictive as what many GC advocates would see unleashed on good people engaged in sports or self-defense.
beevul
(12,194 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)The Chicago Tribune had a series about straw buyers purchasing guns in Indiana.
beevul
(12,194 posts)I'm referring to gun sales where no background check is done.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)going through a straw purchaser avoids the background check.
I trust that this explanation (that I felt was unnecessary) is obvious enough.
beevul
(12,194 posts)When I said "How often, in practice, are background checks actually avoided?", I was referring to specific times when no background check was done.
Sorry I wasn't clearer.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)and multiple gun sales by gang members,
and out of state multiple gun sales in Mississippi?
All part of the Tribune series.
So are you asking how many times a criminal gets a gun without going through a background check? Probably every time that a criminal buys a gun. And how exactly would statistics be compiled?
beevul
(12,194 posts)A straw purchase not only accesses the background check system, it is unlawful.
I'm referring to when the system is not accessed at all.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)beevul
(12,194 posts)That's becoming a habit with you.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)I said that it is easy to avoid background checks.
You asked for a specific number of people who avoid background checks.
How does one compile such a number? That would be like me asking you:
What number of legal gun owners will go on to commit homicide?
How do we determine in advance which legal gun owner will later commit homicide?
If criminals have no problem getting guns, we can assume that every criminal with a gun has avoided a background check.
beevul
(12,194 posts)I have this habit or requiring substantiation when it comes to problems, before I can be sold on the idea that a solution is required.
Everyone who lives in the reality based community has that same requirement - I.E. most people.
If you can't show that its more than a hypothetical problem, I'm not going to buy into a solution beyond the hypothetical level.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And the NRA solution of carrying guns everywhere is the very hypothetical solution that you claim to oppose. Consistency is key.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)I must admit that there's something almost admirable in your persistence in eliding
those inconvenient truths....
beevul
(12,194 posts)I.E. Act like you care about the deaths rather than the guns.
Like you say, consistency is key.
Nancyswidower
(182 posts)That would be inappropriate to ask....BUT thankfully we have an idea of that data...always in hindsight of course. Minuscule amounts per the data.
There is a question in your post that is of concern...."..How do we determine in advance..."...what, pre crime standards(?).......then you go on to say... "If criminals have no problem getting guns, we can assume that every criminal with a gun has avoided a background check."....silly statement.. on it's face.
Adam Lanza(not subject to back ground checks), a criminal after his actions, killed his Mom ...felony 1. Stole her firearms...felony 2. Stole his mothers car..felony 3(in commission of a homicide). Took stolen firearms onto school property and discharged them...felony 4....and then....26 more felonies later....
MOST criminals do not steal firearms or avoid background checks...again a tiny portion.
You ask..."What number of legal gun owners will go on to commit homicide?" FBI reports on just those data points...not as a prediction but as a tally after the fact....very tiny number but you know that.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)And what leads you to believe that you have the ability to do so?
For that matter, you have also not demonstrated that:
1) Holding political beliefs that clash with yours is a symptom of insanity, or
2) The practice of allowing licensed persons to carry concealed handguns
on college campuses is a dangerous one, claims of 'moral harm' notwithstanding.
Mugu
(2,887 posts)Last edited Tue Aug 23, 2016, 02:59 PM - Edit history (2)
and have some level of dangerous side effects, but I still get immunized.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)and vaccines are not designed to kill.
beevul
(12,194 posts)People do defend themselves with guns quite regularly, but you knew that.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Perhaps in your view it does.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Perhaps in your view that doesn't matter.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Again, an interesting perspective that so-called prolife people use in their debate.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Then the low end starts out at between 6-7 to 1, and the high end around 50 to 1. When the difference is 6-7 to 1 on the low end, and as many as 50 or more to 1 on the high end, absolutely.
You'd have to take that up with one of them.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Which raises a question: What has killed more people- reactions to vaccines, or licensed
non-law enforcement concealed firearms carriers on college campuses?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Vaccine deaths:122.
Comparing 122 to 30,000, which is demonstrably far more dangerous, 300 times more dangerous in fact, than the other?
If you chose guns, you would be correct.
1,244 cases of people reported hospitalized
416 cases of people reporting a disability
122 reported deaths
388 reported life-threatening cases
http://www.politifact.com/punditfact/statements/2015/feb/03/bob-sears/what-cdc-statistics-say-about-vaccine-illnesses-in/
beevul
(12,194 posts)The question you WERE asked is this:
What has killed more people- reactions to vaccines, or licensed
non-law enforcement concealed firearms carriers on college campuses?
Painful to answer that one, is it?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Like asking how many left-hand, red haired piano players have ever been convicted of treason. And given that this supposed "right" has just been enacted, let us wait until the school shootings start to answer.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...a claim that somehow, "school shootings (will) start to answer" is nothing more than Colonism:
Terry Pratchett, Jingo
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)You're complaint is about people who are not a part of law enforcement being allowed to carry a gun.
So, what is the percentage of those people who have undergone the requisite checks who have later gone one to commit an unlawful shooting?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)According to the National Crime Victimization Survey, 467,321 persons were victims of a crime committed with a firearm in 2011.[1] In the same year, data collected by the FBI show that firearms were used in 68 percent of murders, 41 percent of robbery offenses and 21 percent of aggravated assaults nationwide.[2]
http://www.nij.gov/topics/crime/gun-violence/pages/welcome.aspx
The relevant number is 68%.
As to your second point:
"
http://www.guncite.com/gun_control_gcgvmurd.html
So the fact that these non-criminal background people have passed the check proves nothing other than the fact that they have no previous record of violence.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)What percentage of DULY LICENSED people go on to commit gun crimes?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)I suspect we'd sooner get an honest discussion of climate change out of Rick Scott...
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Out of a population of 940,877 people.
This *is* the group of people we are discussing, remember?
There were 108 convictions for all crimes, which yields a rate
of 1 criminal conviction of any sort for every 8711 permittees
http://www.dps.texas.gov/rsd/chl/reports/ActLicAndInstr/ActiveLicandInstr2015.pdf
As of December 31, 2015
Active License Holders:
937,419
Certified Instructors:
3,458
These numbers reflect the number of licensed individuals and certified instructors
I tried to find every sort of conviction which might plausibly have involved shooting someone,
and found the following. YMMV:
http://www.dps.texas.gov/RSD/CHL/Reports/ConvictionRatesReport2015.pdf
Reporting Period : 01/01/2015 - 12/31/2015
AGG ASSLT CAUSES SERIOUS BODILY INJ 1
AGG ASSLT W/DEADLY WEAPON 10
DEADLY CONDUCT 11
DEADLY CONDUCT DISCH FIREARM INDIV(S) 2
MURDER 3
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)When, not if, but when the first case of assault with a weapon happens on campus in Texas, you can tell the survivors or the relatives of the victims that this type of crime is relatively rare. I am certain that will be a huge comfort to them.
Meanwhile, how many murders occurred on Texas campuses in 2015?
Aug. 26, 2015
Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas
1 killed, 1 injured
Oct. 9, 2015
Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas
1 injured
Oct. 9, 2015
Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas
1 killed, 1 injured
http://time.com/4058669/northern-arizona-university-school-shootings-2015/
So the "reason" that these guns are needed is to protect students on campus. There were two murders and three injuries on campus in 2015. And these three murders, compared to the 1184 murders that took place in the state of Texas, shows that schools are quite safe.
http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/txcrime.htm
The so-called need to carry guns on campus is a solution in search of a problem.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...been elsewhere where it is allowed, Borkian claims of 'moral harm' aside?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And if statistics show that campus murder is not a real issue, why the "need" to allow guns on campus? To defend against a non-existent problem?
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)The Clery Act requires all colleges and universities that participate in federal financial aid programs to keep and disclose information about crime on and near their respective campuses. Compliance is monitored by the United States Department of Education, which can impose civil penalties, up to $35,000 per violation, against institutions for each infraction and can suspend institutions from participating in federal student financial aid programs.
The law is named after Jeanne Clery, a 19-year-old Lehigh University student who was raped and murdered in her campus hall of residence in 1986. Her murder triggered a backlash against unreported crime on campuses across the country.[2]
For example: In 2014 (last full year available) UT Austin had:
1 murder
48 rapes
3 fondling:
purpose of sexual gratification, without consent from the victim, including
incidents where the victim is incapable of giving consent because of his/her age
or because of his/her temporary or permanent mental or physical incapacity.
2 robberies
9 aggravated assaults
43 burglaries
http://sites.utexas.edu/compliance/files/2015/09/ASR-9_29_15.pdf
So we have real, reported crime vs. theoretical (and apparently so far nonexistant) harm
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)is carrying guns?
And there is no theoretical harm when guns are involved.
Ask the 30,000 yearly victims of gun homicide.
Sorry, they are all dead and cannot be asked. So you are free to ignore these dead as you seek to put guns everywhere.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Although it is a trivial amount of effort on the galloper's part to make each point before skipping to the next (particularly if they cite from a pre-concocted list of gallop arguments), a refutation of the same gallop may likely take much longer and require significantly more effort (per the basic principle that it's always easier to make a mess than to clean it back up again).
The tedium inherent in untangling a gish gallop typically allows for very little "creative license" or vivid rhetoric (in deliberate contrast to the exciting point-dashing central to the galloping), which in turn risks boring the audience or readers, further loosening the refuter's grip on the crowd.
That post has, in order-
First sentence: a loaded question
Second sentence: a strawman argument
Third sentence: an appeal to emotion
Fourth sentence: another appeal to emotion
Fifth sentence: Two more appeals to emotion followed by another strawman argument
Six sub-fallacies in five sentences (possibly seven, if one counts the implied claim
to telepsychological ability in that last sentence)
Would that others of the Prohibitionist persuasion had such conciseness of style.
I would be happy to engage you in a discussion sans handwaving and
shouting should you choose to engage in one.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Guns are designed to kill.
Putting guns in more places increases the likelihood that killing will take place in those places.
And your verbiage pointing out what you feel are the weaknesses in my arguments ignores the fact that many gun enthusiasts on DU ignore the 30,000 gun homicides each year, or seek to minimize it by "explaining" that 1/2 or more are suicides. As if suicide is no problem.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Last edited Sat Aug 27, 2016, 05:45 PM - Edit history (2)
Of course I ignored it, because I am not those people
Take up your concerns with those unnamed and as yet unidentifed others.
As I said, if you care to discuss without handwaving, shouting,
strawman arguments, or attempts to imply responsibility for
the statements of third parties, I'll be here...
beevul
(12,194 posts)There aren't 30 thousand gun homicides every year. There are 10-ish thousand. Calling them what they actually are, and acknowledging that 20 thousand of your 30 thousand are self inflicted, isn't minimizing them, its correcting the disservice you do them by pretending that they're something else, in order to prop up your failing and faulty arguments.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Suicide is self-killing of a person.
Some gun enthusiasts, in an attempt to minimize the massive gun carnage each year, try to separate out one class of killing a person. A ridiculous argument that also minimizes suicide.
Keep telling yourself that suicide is not homicide.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Properly identifying them as what they are, doesn't 'separate them out' it acknowledges them for what they actually are.
Pretending that violence against others is the same as a decision to end ones own life, is what minimizes them, as you continue to do in an effort to prop up a faulty failing argument.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)As long as it supports the argument that guns are not really responsible for 30,000 homicides every year. It is all part of the NRA mandated "framing the issue" that goes on in every discussion about guns.
beevul
(12,194 posts)We cannot discuss them for what they are, without first acknowledging them for what they are.
I'm willing to do that, you aren't.
Its not an nra argument, its common sense. Inanimate objects can not be responsible for the choices people make.
That's not 'framing', that's reality. Avoid it at your own peril.
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)Brought to you by the Departmemt of Obfuscation, College of Jive.
beevul
(12,194 posts)What gets me is that poster actually thinks it isn't clear as day, that that's exactly what hes doing.
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)"Pump up the volume, pump up the volume, pump up the volume, Dance! Dance!"
It seems close to Orwellian word smithing.
Waldorf
(654 posts)The rest are suicides.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)How about theft of a purse?
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)You assume that:
the victim is aware that rape/assault is intended,
the victim has the gun in his/her hand,
the victim is ready to fire,
the victim can aim under extreme stress,
and finally, and very importantly,
the assailant is totally unaware and does not disarm the victim and use the gun on the victim, thereby adding to the gun homicide total for the year.
But that will not stop you in your belief in the gun as defense.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Gun fantasy generally requires a ready. alert, capable gun owner who always kills the evildoer. But life rarely obliges.
All of my arguments were responding to the silliness that mere possession of a gun protects from anything.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)That poster did not mention killing. You did.
That poster made no such argument, and possession of a gun can protect someone.
There is no guarantee that it will, and no such claim to that effect has been made.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)This fantasy/fallacy that possession of a gun automatically equates to protection is one that persists among many gun enthusiasts.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)persists among many gun enthusiasts.
Were one of these purported 'gun enthusiasts' to show up, even I would argue
with that premise.
But since they have not- and in fact, have only 'appeared' in this thread
in *your* posts, it remains a remarkably persistent strawman argument
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And that is what I said. And again, the poster has said nothing while you seem to insist that you know what was intended.
So are you saying that people do not buy guns for self-protection? I have read numerous posts here that advance statistics purporting to show how many possible crimes have been prevented by gun-owners having weapons. Perhaps you have never read any of these posts.
Or perhaps you have never read any stories such as these:
A national survey finds that nearly half of gun owners (48%) volunteer that the main reason they own a gun is for protection; just 32% say they have a gun primarily for hunting and even fewer cite other reasons, such as target shooting. In 1999, 49% said they owned a gun mostly for hunting, while just 26% cited protection as the biggest factor.
http://www.people-press.org/2013/03/12/why-own-a-gun-protection-is-now-top-reason/
Or this article:
http://www.gallup.com/poll/165605/personal-safety-top-reason-americans-own-guns-today.aspx
So this "straw man argument" as you have termed it, is one that 48-60% of gun owners believe. So I believe that your argument is with them.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)As long as they buy them legally, and own and operate them in a manner that does not
illegally harm others (as legal self-defense may indeed entail physical harm, even death
to an attacker), any objections to their doing so can only be some variation on Robert Bork's
theory of 'moral harm':
victimless. Knowledge that an activity is taking place is a harm to those who find it profoundly immoral."
Robert Bork, The Tempting of America, p. 123
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Just because you want to make baseless derisions doesn't mean others are obligated, legally or morally, to simply lie back and try to relax while rapists have their way.
beergood
(470 posts)friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)But to refresh, here it is:
1) The implication is that a gun is required for defense.
2) My response pointed out all of the preconditions required for a successful defense.
3) Your response was pointless.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)2) Similarly, the preconditions are also entirely yours, apparently based upon an old movie.
3) That is merely your opinion, which you are of course welcome to express.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)This was the question:
Now, given that the OP is about carrying guns on campus, and given the arguments here about using a gun for self-defense, I feel that it is reasonable to assume that the poster was implying the use of a gun to self-defend against rape. Or any other crime. And, the original poster did not actually take exception to my response the way that you did.
You can, if you wish, attempt a lawyerly parsing of responses but such a tactic would require that each response be about 500 words or so to make crystal clear what is/was intended. And that is not how things generally work here.
So I will persist in my belief that the poster did intend to link self-defense with gun possession, and I will continue to assert that:
1) self-defense is not as easy assimply carrying a gun, and
2) statistics show that very few students are killed on campus. This is a solution in search of a problem that just happens to fit the need of gun manufacturers to keep profiting at the expense of the American people.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)That is the very definition of a strawman argument.
Even if some fool, somewhere, had erroneously claimed that self defense
was "as easy as simply carrying a gun" (a notion that I already took up against in
post #141), that would still not somehow invalidate anyone else's carrying
a concealed firearm legally on a college campus.
BTW: if it makes you feel any better,
I devoutly believe that no one who thinks of a guns as magic talisman ought to
own one, much less carry one in public. But these aren't the people we've been
talking about- Texas has rather strict licensing requirements, and their licensees are remarkably
law abiding as has been demonstrated by verfiable statisics to you more than once
Whether you approve of the practice is neither here nor there, because (as Thomas
Jefferson put it) "it neither steals your purse nor breaks your leg".
True- but irrelevant. Statistics also show that there is a non-zero chance that students
may be robbed/mugged, raped, fondled, or assaulted.
beevul
(12,194 posts)It necessitates leaving the decision up to the individual who certainly knows more about their own situation and the particulars, than you possibly could.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Duly licensed civilians are less likely to be involved in criminal gun use than law enforcement officers.
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,593 posts)...paycheck in connection with that "license".
beevul
(12,194 posts)And there it is in all its shining glory: A gun control talking point based on a false premise.
The 'right' you refer to has been in effect in numerous schools for numerous years, so you already have some data with which to draw conclusions.
But you'll draw your conclusions without it, in spite of it, that is your methodology after all.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...the answer as it apparently does not accord with your religious beliefs
Over the years, I've noticed that persons of your ...faith have tended to pretend that
they haven't heard it. Kindly note the dates when the following were posted:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x364698
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x310169
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php/http:/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x322788
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x382537
Straw Man
(6,782 posts)Wrong -- 20,000 of those are suicides.
Comparing 122 to 30,000, which is demonstrably far more dangerous, 300 times more dangerous in fact, than the other?
If you chose guns, you would be correct.
The topic is licensed campus carry. If you want to extend it to all gun deaths, then we should revise the vaccines analogy to include all medical misadventure, don't you think?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Homicide:
https://www.hg.org/article.asp?id=30970
Suicide:
www.dictionary.com/browse/suicide
So, if homicide is the taking of a human life, how is suicide not a form of homicide?
Straw Man
(6,782 posts)Nobody is "defend{ing} gun carnage." And nobody is "minimizing suicide."
Lexical sophistry aside, homicide and suicide are two different terms denoting separate and distinct acts. Even your citations bear this out. Insisting on calling a suicide a homicide muddies the waters and borders on deliberate disinformation.
You might wish to consult additional dictionaries.
: the act of killing another person
Full Definition of HOMICIDE
1: a person who kills another
2: a killing of one human being by another
--http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/homicide
beevul
(12,194 posts)Thats the intended purpose, or the design, of that argument. It isn't accidental or happenstance.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)30,000 deaths due to guns each year is the equivalent of ten Sept 11 attacks. So in what seems to me to be an apparent to minimize this carnage, the NRA apparently decided to separate categories of death. Thus avoiding talk about suicides allows the NRA to frame deaths due to guns as only 10,000 a year.
Straw Man
(6,782 posts)No. One imprecise definition and one precise one.
The NRA didn't create the categories, nor did it ever claim that there are only 10,000 gun deaths a year. The policy implications for reducing suicide and reducing homicide are drastically different. If anything, conflating the two is an attempt to frame the issue as one of guns pure and simple, rather than a complex one involving crime, social issues, and mental health.
beevul
(12,194 posts)Last edited Sat Aug 27, 2016, 06:28 PM - Edit history (1)
September 11 attacks were all for the same reason, all for the same purpose, all with the same goal, and carried out by a group of like minded individuals.
20 thousand of the 30 thousand you refer to, wanted to end their own lives, all for their own separate reasons. The only way they're alike in any meaningful way, is the unrelated yet alike choice they all made. You and your argument ignore those choices and the reasons for them, and pretend they're exactly the same as crime related violence with different causes.
They aren't, and no amount of hand wringing or repetition of absurdities by you can change that.
Every group that tracks deaths differentiates between gun homicides and gun suicides, except gun control groups, and they've been making that distinction for many decades now. That fact in mind, "how it seems to you" really isn't relevant, as it doesn't reflect fact or truth.
You're the one that wants to avoid talking about suicides, you can't even be bothered to count them that way. Your side of this issue is the ONLY side that doesn't make a distinction between homicide and suicide where guns are concerned. Every governmental agency that keeps track, makes that distinction. Blaming the nra for that is laughable, even for you.
Ilsa
(62,263 posts)If I was in a government, history, or philosophy class, I think I'd be less inclined to speak up and debate liberal points in my region, at least until I got a handle on whether there were any crazies in my class. Men have felt perfectly justified in shooting doctors and nurses who provide birth control and abortions. (Maybe women have too, but I haven't read any news reports of women murdering healthcare workers.) I'm glad I'm not a muslim here, too.
Anyway, "if looks could kill,"... I mentioned in a campus hallway to a friend that I voted for Bill Clinton. Some 18yo looked at me like he was going to strangle me and tried to pick a fight with me. I ignored him.
Guns on campus may not make any difference whatsoever. But I know I'm glad I don't have to be there any more.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)It appears that (in Texas, at least) you're less likely to be unlawfully shot by a CCW holder
than a cop...
Ilsa
(62,263 posts)I rarely saw any. I have less desire to return for another degree, though. I don't like being surrounded by guns that can accidentally go off.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)That allow licensed Concealed carry on campus?
Ilsa
(62,263 posts)on campuses. They happen in restaurants, retail stores, automobiles, etc. Why would a classroom be exempt from accidental weapons discharge?
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)It is almost impossible for any modern gun to go off accidentally. 99% are negligent discharges after pulling the trigger. I feel those people should be charged and at least temporarily lose access to any weapon until a fine and they attend firearms training.
Ilsa
(62,263 posts)It's happened, and I don't care if it is called an accident or negligence. It's all the same to me when innocent people are hurt.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)If they were doing everything right and a problem happened out of their immediate control. But I agree with your main point.
Ilsa
(62,263 posts)Sure. The 1% will be the exception.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)I know, that sounds ridiculous. Imagine a US where citizens did not have this desire (disguised as a need) to carry weapons that facilitate dealing out death.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Recent events in Europe show that regardless of how strict gun control laws may be the killers are still armed. Gun free zones only apply to victims.
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,593 posts)And potential victims. The loss of the freedom of effective defense for which one has trained and prepared only serves to add the individual to the pool of potential victims. We call it 'the honor system'.