Heartbroken for Los Vegas

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  • #75398
    TSRF
    Participant

    From Sandy Hook to Los Vegas: I grieve.

    #75402
    Billy_T
    Participant

    From Sandy Hook to Los Vegas: I grieve.

    I’m more than heart-broken, TSRF. I’m outraged. And in my view, the blood of the dead is on the hands of anyone who fights against gun control — from either party. Strict gun control. They are indirectly responsible for all 59 deaths and everyone injured. And I don’t give a shit about anyone saying it’s not time to talk about guns. It’s ALWAYS time to talk about our insane laws, or lack thereof, that make this possible.

    The Second Amendment doesn’t protect anyone’s right to slaughter Americans. If it did, then that’s all the more reason to end it. There is no Second Amendment protection for buying unlimited weapons, with unlimited firepower, world without end. All that amendment says is that if you’re in a state militia — which no longer exist — you can keep and bear arms. It doesn’t protect bullets, or using arms. Just keeping and bearing them, and bearing them meant presenting them at the time in military processions.

    We can do serious gun control under the SA, now. The ONLY thing standing in our way are right-wing, anti-American, hate-filled, gun fanatic cretins who only care about their own gun fetishism and their own desire to compensate. There are zero legal obstacles to serious gun control, and that would include banning any kind of weapon we want to. As long as we leave just ONE kind of gun on the market, we fulfill the “keep and bear arms” part of the SA. And since the amendment offers NO protection for bullets, or usage of guns, we could also ban the thing that makes them usable.

    My own suggestions for saving tens of thousands of lives each year are the following:

    1. Test, license and register all guns/gun owners. Just like car and driver. Retest them yearly.
    2. Ban all detachable ammo containers. Ban the parts. Ban all guns that can use them. Ban all magazines, clips, etc.
    3. Limit guns to internal chambers only. Must hand load bullets, one at a time. Limit of six chambers per gun.
    4. Universal background checks. No exceptions
    5. Smart gun tech. Required on all guns.
    6. Mass, nationwide gun buyback program. Melt them down.
    7. End the ban on government studies of gun violence. Establish permanent departments for year-round study in the CDC, HHS and NIH, completely independent from partisan interference.
    8. Push Hollywood to stop glorifying guns and gun violence. If they don’t voluntarily change, establish restrictions via ratings and taxation. Make it very, very expensive for Hollywood to continue depicting slaughter if it’s gratuitous and romanticizes violence.
    9. End conceal carry laws in all states through a federal override. End all open carry laws through a federal override. End all “stand your ground” laws through a federal override.
    10. Educate American kids that gun ownership radically increases the risk of death, in the home and on the street.

    For starters.

    #75411
    zn
    Moderator

    Yeah this is all insane.

    #75428
    PA Ram
    Participant

    I can’t think of a time I’ve been alive where this country has been more crazy.

    And it doesn’t matter how many of these happen, how many die–it will NEVER be the time to do anything about these type of weapons or have sensible gun legislation. This country would give up lives before guns.

    It already does.

    Sad and sick. There’s nothing to say about it anymore.

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick

    #75440
    wv
    Participant

    Gun Stocks are up after the shooting. As per usual:
    guns:http://money.cnn.com/2017/10/02/investing/las-vegas-shooting-gun-stocks-sturm-ruger-american-outdoor-brands/index.html

    ========================

    House of Reps poised to pass legislation legalizing gun Silencers:
    “…the House is poised to pass legislation legalizing the use of gun silencers as early as this week, a move that critics say could make it more difficult to identify where gunshots are coming from during a mass shooting like the one that took place in Las Vegas Sunday night.
    RELATED CONTENT
    Police officers stand along the Las Vegas Strip the Mandalay Bay resort and casino during a shooting near the casino, Sunday, Oct. 1, 2017, in Las Vegas.
    At Least 50 Dead, 200 Injured in Las Vegas Shooting

    A provision called the Hearing Protection Act, tucked into the bipartisan Sportsmen Heritage and Recreational Enhancement, or SHARE Act, would eliminate restrictions on silencers and instead treat them as ordinary firearms….”
    Guns:https://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2017-10-02/house-poised-to-pass-law-easing-sale-of-gun-silencers-after-las-vegas-shooting

    #75462
    Zooey
    Participant

    I don’t know why it’s taken this long.

    For YEARS I have murmured that taking out huge numbers of people would not be difficult for somebody who actually thought the thing through. You find lots of people. You hit them from a position they can’t identify readily. And you have multiple mass-firing weapons. Easy. Just takes planning.

    And…after nothing happened in this country after Sandy Hook…it appeared nothing would ever wake the country up. If the slaughter of first graders didn’t do it…nothing will. Nothing.

    This country is totally insane. America, as a nation, deserves to be in a straight-jacket.

    It is hard to believe what is going on right in front of our eyes. No sensible people would permit this.

    #75470
    wv
    Participant

    “…Compared to 22 other high-income nations, the United States’ gun-related murder rate is 25 times higher. And, even though the United States’ suicide rate is similar to other countries, the nation’s gun-related suicide rate is eight times higher than other high-income countries, researchers said.

    The study was published online Feb. 1 in The American Journal of Medicine…”
    link:https://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-u-s-gun-deaths-compare-to-other-countries/
    =================

    And this is now the country that can aim drone-guns at people in other countries and blow them away. And its all done in secret. For secret reasons.

    And the American people get all misty-eyed at the national anthem.

    w
    v

    #75484
    wv
    Participant

    Deadliest shooting only if you dont count black lives:

    link:https://www.theroot.com/this-is-only-the-deadliest-shooting-in-u-s-history-bec-1819112938

    w
    v

    #75498
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Listening to various Republicans talk about why we can’t prevent this drives me up a wall. Their slavish devotion to a radically stupid interpretation of the 2nd Amendment — an archaic, totally unnecessary “right”, set up to protect the state FROM American citizens, especially slaves — is the true “anti-American” position.

    By definition, we could stop this carnage. No rational human being can make a legitimate argument that we can’t.

    The gunman purchased 47 weapons, legally — that we know of so far. Most had rapid fire capabilities, and long range. He killed dozens of people and wounded more than 500 BECAUSE he could shoot rapidly and from far away. By definition, if you make that impossible, he can’t do that.

    Ban all weaponry with detachable ammo. Max out the firepower of weaponry at a six-shooter, with internal chambers only. No possibility to slap in dozens of rounds in one motion, in seconds. Force the shooter to reload by hand, one bullet at a time, and stop the manufacture, sale, import, export, trade, exchange, gifting, etc. etc. of long-range weaponry. There is no justification, via self-defense, or hunting, for long-range capabilities, or rapid-fire capabilities, and the 2nd Amendment doesn’t protect them. It only protects “keep and bear arms” if you’re in a state militia, which also means bullets have no Constitutional protections, either. Or usage of any weapon.

    It’s not in that amendment. Nothing about bullets or actually using the weapon. And if someone says, “Well, that’s all assumed.” No, it’s not. It was assumed at the time that people would load their single-shot weapons when needed. They didn’t walk around with them loaded. And “bear arms” means “present arms.” It says noting about actually firing them.

    Almost no one is talking this, but the 2nd amendment is actually toothless. It can EASILY be bypassed via several routes, the most devastating one, at least for gun fanatics, is the one about bullets. We could literally ban every bullet on the market and we’d still adhere to the 2nd amendment, even if we throw out the part about militias.

    It’s time to attack this insanity from that and so many other angles. It’s time to end this carnage.

    #75500
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Another major point here: Even Republicans in Congress accept that we can ban automatic weapons. Right off the bat, that blows anyone’s argument that gun rights are absolute and we can’t regulate them. The ban on automatic weaponry blows that insane idea out of the water. It sets a limit. So the issue starts out with regulations already in place, and it’s just a question of WHERE we draw the line.

    If it can be drawn at automatic weaponry, it can be drawn at detachable ammo containers. It can be drawn at six bullets max per gun, with hand-loading, one at a time, being necessary. It can be drawn at limiting range, and quantity, and lethality. It can be drawn at no armor piercing bullets, etc.

    Get folks to the table for compromise on this by being every bit as maximalist as the gun nuts. You want to stick with your absolutism? We have an answer. We ban ALL bullets. Want to get some of those bullets back? Come to the table and negotiate in good faith.

    #75505
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Listening to various Republicans talk about why we can’t prevent this drives me up a wall. Their slavish devotion to a radically stupid interpretation of the 2nd Amendment — an archaic, totally unnecessary “right”, set up to protect the state FROM American citizens, especially slaves — is the true “anti-American” position.

    They use the same argument now for climate change. Even if WE cut back on emissions other countries like China and India are increasing emissions. So….we shouldn’t hurt our economy to save the planet because others aren’t going to do that.

    This has changed a bit from….there is no global warming.

    Now it’s pretty much, so what? We can’t do anything about it.

    Those talking points work with a large segment of Americans.

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick

    #75506
    PA Ram
    Participant

    Here’s a video on how easy it is to make semi-automatic into automatic through a “bump stock”. The bump stock is perfectly legal by the way.

    http://money.cnn.com/video/news/2013/09/11/n-rifle-machine-gun-slide-fire.cnnmoney/index.html

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick

    #75507
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Here’s a video on how easy it is to make semi-automatic into automatic through a “bump stock”. The bump stock is perfectly legal by the way.

    http://money.cnn.com/video/news/2013/09/11/n-rifle-machine-gun-slide-fire.cnnmoney/index.html

    Which is why it’s not even enough to try to limit the kinds of semi-automatics we allow via number of rounds. For the Dems, this is usually 10.

    To me, that’s just insane. Make them ALL illegal. Dial back the capacity of weaponry to six shots, max, which must be loaded by hand, one bullet at a time. The reason why ANY kind of semi makes mass shooting easy is because you can slam in a magazine in seconds and start firing again.

    Gun nuts want zero restrictions on that or numbers of rounds. Dems counter with limiting the rounds. Both are dead wrong.

    Just limit all legal weaponry to internal chambers only. Problem solved. You can’t gerry-rig that to fire automatically. It’s internal chambers only.

    Just flat out make it illegal to have detachable ammo containers of any kind, regardless of rounds.

    One’s “self-defense” is kept in place. “Keep and bear arms” is kept in place. But you save lives.

    I honestly don’t see how anyone could argue against that, or for the need for more firepower and capacity.

    #75513
    waterfield
    Participant

    “All that amendment says is that if you’re in a state militia — which no longer exist — you can keep and bear arms.”

    The problem Billy is that from a purely literal standpoint that is simply not true. There happens to be a comma between “State” and “the”. In pertinent part the amendment reads as follows:

    “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
    infringed.”

    Because of the comma that sentence can be taken two ways: 1) The right of people in the militia to bear arms shall not be infringed. And that would “appear” to be the intent-at least to me. But if that WAS the intent-so the argument goes-why didn’t congress be more specific and clear?
    2) It can-also because of the comma-be read “A well regulated Militia shall not be infringed AND the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed as well.

    So at the very least there IS an argument as to the intent of the language.

    In any even I may have a solution-borrowed from the Navy. If one truly needs “protection” he can register and keep his small weapon (revolver, etc) at home. However, if one wants an automatic assault weapon or one converted to such, in order to go out and shoot up cans or whatever in the dessert all they need to do is go to a dispensary and check one out for the day-“ONE” that is. And you don’t get another until you check it back in. I know that won’t prevent what happened in San Bernardino and maybe not Vegas but it will reduce the proliferation and sales of assault weapons. While driving around Tennessee this summer Barb and I saw this enormous sign alongside the highway: ” MACHINE GUNS FOR RENT HERE”. We laughed out loud. But in retrospect maybe that IS an answer. I know it used to be that if you have leave in the Navy and wanted to go target practicing there was a dispensary where you could check out a weapon.

    A compromise? Sure. But I doubt seriously that you will ever do much better when it comes to gun control -at least until the 2d amendment is re-written.

    BTW: did anyone watch Jimmy Kimmel’s moving address to this issue?

    #75517
    wv
    Participant

    BTW: did anyone watch Jimmy Kimmel’s moving address to this issue?

    =============

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    w
    v

    #75518
    wv
    Participant

    A rightwing response to Kimmel:

    #75523
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Waterfield,

    Interesting idea. I was listening to NPR this evening, on my way toward some communing with Nature and reading — we have a pretty cool new arboretum nearby — and I heard some interviews of gun-rights folks in the Vegas area. Most of what they said made me want to punch a hole through the roof of my car, but in retrospect, one of the more “moderate” interviewees had an interesting comment along the lines you raise.

    He talked about the rush people get by firing those automatic weapons, and he basically, kinda sorta, suggested the reporter should do so. Again, I’m thinking about punching a hole through my car roof as he’s saying this. I’m saying to myself, your blankety blank pleasure in firing those guns isn’t worth one single life, and that IS the trade off in existence. No one’s “freedom” to blow up shit is worth a single life. Not one. Not even one single injury. It’s the height of extremism and selfishness to put your pleasure above other lives.

    But . . . hmmm. Not that they would agree to this, cuz the vast majority of gun-rights folks are absolutists and won’t budge an inch. But if they’d trade their guns for the ability to rent ’em and use ’em in one spot, in a shooting range, etc. etc. . . . I could go with that. Make them illegal to own, to have in one’s possession, except in designated, licensed places ONLY, and maybe there’s some room for compromise.

    But if they say no, then I think the only answer is to match their absolutism with our own. Ban all bullets.

    That, as mentioned, goes beyond the issue of militias. Even if you remove that clause, there is still no “right” to a loaded weapon, or bullets, or firing of those weapons. All it says, with or without the militia clause, is “keep and bear arms.”

    Not a word there about ammo or actually using the weapons. Not even implied.

    Hope all is well, W.

    #75524
    Billy_T
    Participant

    BTW: did anyone watch Jimmy Kimmel’s moving address to this issue?

    =============

    ====
    w
    v

    I watched it, WV. Kimmel has been really good, in relative terms, on social issues lately. He’s showing a lot of guts. Anyone who talks about gun control in public is doing that, because they likely will receive death threats.

    IMO, people who publicly advocate for strict gun control are heroes, at least when it comes to that issue. Not only is it the sane, rational and logical thing to do, they may be risking life and limb by doing it.

    #75525
    Billy_T
    Participant

    A rightwing response to Kimmel:

    WV,

    I didn’t hear a single truth escape from Shapiro’s mouth. Not one. Not one of his criticisms of Kimmel was true. And I always find it utterly laughable when right-wingers claim “the left” is attacking the right solely on issues of “intent” or “motives.” Anyone who has spent any time online, arguing against folks on the right, knows at best, on their best day, the right does that at least as much. My own experience is that they do it far more, are more hysterical about it, and more vicious. On balance, “the left” is far more measured and more likely to discuss the issues, instead of the person.

    But the most important lie he delivers is to say no regulation could have prevented this. I list several above that would have saved most, if not all of the people who died, and most, if not all the gun shot injuries. And none of that would run afoul of an actual objective reading of the 2nd Amendment, which people like Shapiro can’t do. They can only do the usual right-wing revisionist reading. A great example of this is their bizarre insistence that the founders wanted everyone to have “military grade weaponry” and that this somehow is future-proofed to include all new technological improvements.

    First of all, there is NOTHING in the amendment that remotely points to that fantasy, and second, the difference between “civilian” and “military grade” in the 1780s was non-existent. It was all single-shot, load powder and ball one at a time. Maybe, if you were super fast, you could get off two or three shots a minute, and it made no difference if you were a hunter or a soldier. Same weaponry.

    In short, he’s full of shit.

    #75561
    wv
    Participant

    Well BT, the ‘right’ fears the US Government much more than they fear
    crazy-people-with-automatic-weapons.

    I think thats the bottom line with themz on the Right.

    w
    v

    #75563
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Well BT, the ‘right’ fears the US Government much more than they fear
    crazy-people-with-automatic-weapons.

    I think thats the bottom line with themz on the Right.

    w
    v

    Agreed. I think that’s the heart of the issue.

    They fear certain parts of the government. Not all of it, of course. Just the parts they see as threatening their own “freedoms.” They’ve always been fine with Big Gubmint stomping all over people of color, doing mass incarceration, shutting down antiwar voices, Occupy, unions, leftists in general. They actually root hard for that. They also root for Big Gubmint when it comes to immigrants, borders, wars, empire and capitalism. And as I’ve mentioned — probably too often — the real irony in their love of capitalism is that their system of choice requires massive government, or the system dies.

    Anyway . . . yeah, that’s their fear. But I don’t think it’s unreasonable to say that governments can’t make public policy just to assuage the fears of fringe movements, especially when they radically increase death and destruction in the process. They have to make public policy that improves and protects the lives of all citizens.

    The lack of sensible gun control endangers all of us. It’s literally killing us with its irrational permissiveness.

    #75564
    wv
    Participant

    Yeah, lots of fear. The Right is not really monolithic though is it. They have a diverse collection of factions it looks like:

    1 Rich country-club crowd. Pro-Corporate culture. Folks that dont fall asleep during discussions about Taxes and the stock market.

    2 The Eee-Vangelical Christians. Abortion, abortion, abortion. Abortion. They dont seem to know or care about much else.

    3 The Pat Buchannon conservatives. Throwbacks.

    4 The racist-collective. Nazis, Neo-Confederates, etc.

    5 Working-class folks who fear Immigrants will take their jobs.

    6 Military families. Lots of folks connected with the military just seem to be Reps.

    7 And then there’s people that just cant stand the lying, cheating, weasely Democrats.

    Fear of government, fear of immigrants, fear of blacks, fear of terrorists, fear of secular folks, fear of Muslims, fear of gays and cultural disintegration….

    Ah well.

    w
    v

    #75573
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    When I started living alone again, I briefly considered buying a hand gun. Briefly as in about 30 seconds. I’ve fired weapons from time to time and it really is a lot of fun. However, I’d rather be gunned down by an armed intruder than have one of my grandchildren hurt by a weapon I may own. That’s good enough for me.

    So I know many gun owners and I can see why many of them do. They may live out in the sticks, or they hunt. Or they may be collectors. But with some, I find it disturbing when they react with almost religious fervor at the mere hint of ownership restrictions. It boils down to this…incrementalism. They fear a little gun control here and there will lead to the confiscation of their weapons.

    Well, I’m tired of waking up, turning on the TV and muttering, “Fuck. Again? Tired of it. I so feel for those lost and those left behind to deal with this madness. And I know grief up close and personal.

    It time to ban military style weapons. No civilian should own one. And maybe handguns, too.

    #75581
    wv
    Participant

    When I started living alone again, I briefly considered buying a hand gun. Briefly as in about 30 seconds. I’ve fired weapons from time to time and it really is a lot of fun. However, I’d rather be gunned down by an armed intruder than have one of my grandchildren hurt by a weapon I may own. That’s good enough for me.

    So I know many gun owners and I can see why many of them do. They may live out in the sticks, or they hunt. Or they may be collectors. But with some, I find it disturbing when they react with almost religious fervor at the mere hint of ownership restrictions. It boils down to this…incrementalism. They fear a little gun control here and there will lead to the confiscation of their weapons.

    Well, I’m tired of waking up, turning on the TV and muttering, “Fuck. Again? Tired of it. I so feel for those lost and those left behind to deal with this madness. And I know grief up close and personal.

    It time to ban military style weapons. No civilian should own one. And maybe handguns, too.

    =============

    Well like most WVirginians, I own a gun. (handgun)
    I like having it in the house for protection against intruders. Just gives me some peace of mind.

    But yeah, i agree with ya. I’m fine with banning military style weapons.

    Aint gonna happen though. Like i said, a ton of people on the right, fear the government more than they fear the individual-nutcases.

    Often, the NRA-types talk about the solution being ‘mental health’ policies. But i never hear them get specific about what policies they are talking about.
    In WV we are WOEFULLY lacking in mental-health facilities for poor people. Its essentially every-crazy-person-for-him/herself
    in this State. There aint no real help available from the government.

    w
    v

    #75604
    Zooey
    Participant

    However, I’d rather be gunned down by an armed intruder than have one of my grandchildren hurt by a weapon I may own

    That’s me.

    And statistically, a grandchild is more likely to be hurt or killed with your gun than an intruder is.

    I dunno. I used to be FOR getting rid of guns. Now…I dunno. I get where some people are coming from.

    But I do NOT understand the resistance to gun training, licensing, and screening. And these automatic weapons…I mean…stop it. I don’t know how they are even debatable.

    You want protection? Get a handgun, and pass safety training and a marksmanship test. Wanna hunt? Same thing.

    Protect yourself from the government? There’s no such thing, and you aren’t using that as an excuse to buy battlefield weaponry. Get rid of internet sales, gun shows, and so on.

    You can have a gun – I guess – but it’s going to be within reason, and you are going to demonstrate competency.

    But I give up. That’s not happening.

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