more sandy hook questions.
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A day after Public Policy Polling (PPP) released a poll that showed where Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee stood among potential opponents in the 2014 governor’s race, the organization has released another survey that touches on a hot-button issue in the Ocean State.
http://www.therepublic.com/view/stor...n-Control-Poll
Lakeville Latest Headlines: ICE Worker Charged In Bloomington Underage Prostitution Sting; Will MN Have A White Christmas? Here’s What The Old Farmer’s Almanac Predicts; Spend Where It Matters: Your Personalized Guide To Local Shopping
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/0...aws-86262.html
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Of course, that assumes that the status quo is a good thing.
The NRA has removed itself from the mainstream. After lobbying for legislators to essentially make it impossible for existing gun laws to be enforced, it then decries attempts at more effective laws claiming there are plenty of gun laws already on the books, so more are not necessary. It is making ludicrous claims out of desperation. Their new bleat, which is "more guns = more safety" is such a logical fallacy as to be laughable. Just as we have seen with the cases of Keith Ratliff and Chris Kyle, being surrounded by guns, and being proficient in their use is no guarantee of safety. In fact, ownership of guns is correlated with a greater, not lesser likelihood of being injured or killed by gunfire. The actual data suggests that a gun kept in the home is 43 times more likely to be involved in the death of a family member than to be used against an intruder.
The NRA successfully lobbied to prevent law enforcement from tracking gun serial numbers, from requiring gun dealers to keep an accurate inventory of their stock, and influenced legislators to reduce the crime of falsifying gun records by dealers from a felony to a misdemeanor.
Hilariously, Todd Tiahrt, the very man whose efforts in 2003 rendered the ability of the BATF to enforce existing laws impotent, recently called for the more aggressive enforcement of existing gun laws, further stating that state and local authorities should not be involved. Who does he suggest? Why the BATF, of course.....the very agency he helped to neuter.
If this is the status quo, I, and apparently lots of other Americans, want no part of it.Last edited by mar1t1me; 02-03-2013, 10:58 AM.Comment
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wrong again.
you can't even correctly describe your conspiracy theory as a "false flag" operation, which is what you mean, rather than "hoax".
maybe if you give your ideas a little more bake time, they'll be worth addressing, but right now, they aren't well-formed enough to address; so that leaves us with only your shortcomings as a person to discuss. dumbfuck.past:
1989 325is (learner shitbox)
1986 325e (turbo dorito)
1991 318ic (5-lug ITB)
1985 323i baur
current:
1995 M3 (suspension, 17x9/255-40, borla)Comment
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I like reading your posts because you always present a well thought out and research position, but when it comes to gun control I have to disagree.Of course, that assumes that the status quo is a good thing.
The NRA has removed itself from the mainstream. After lobbying for legislators to essentially make it impossible for existing gun laws to be enforced, it then decries attempts at more effective laws claiming there are plenty of gun laws already on the books, so more are not necessary. It is making ludicrous claims out of desperation. Their new bleat, which is "more guns = more safety" is such a logical fallacy as to be laughable. Just as we have seen with the cases of Keith Ratliff and Chris Kyle, being surrounded by guns, and being proficient in their use is no guarantee of safety. In fact, ownership of guns is correlated with a greater, not lesser likelihood of being injured or killed by gunfire. The actual data suggests that a gun kept in the home is 43 times more likely to be involved in the death of a family member than to be used against an intruder.
The NRA successfully lobbied to prevent law enforcement from tracking gun serial numbers, from requiring gun dealers to keep an accurate inventory of their stock, and influenced legislators to reduce the crime of falsifying gun records by dealers from a felony to a misdemeanor.
Hilariously, Todd Tiahrt, the very man whose efforts in 2003 rendered the ability of the BATF to enforce existing laws impotent, recently called for the more aggressive enforcement of existing gun laws, further stating that state and local authorities should not be involved. Who does he suggest? Why the BATF, of course.....the very agency he helped to neuter.
If this is the status quo, I, and apparently lots of other Americans, want no part of it.
That 43x likely number, does that break down suicide vs domestic violence? Many quoted John Stewarts 30k+ gun violence death numbers recently, but when you do the research, you find that 75% of those were suicides..........twisting the numbers to fit an agenda, wouldn't you say?
And from the other thread that all the gun control opponents keep ignoring.
Have any statistics to back up your assumption that harsher penalties reduce crimes?
How has the 3 strike rule worked out in California?
How does any of the proposed legislation keep guns out of the hands of criminals vs law-abiding citizens? Pull up gun crime statistics in Chicago, D.C. and England after the ban of hand guns?
The "need" argument is bullshit as well. I don't need a 420hp 160mph muscle car to drive to work every day either, so find a fact-based argument instead of tired anecdotes and personal feelings.Need parts now? Need them cheap? steve@blunttech.com
Chief Sales Officer, Midwest Division—Blunt Tech Industries
www.gutenparts.com
One stop shopping for NEW, USED and EURO PARTS!
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Thank you. That's a high compliment, indeed.
According to revised research, it's true, that after adjusting for other factors (such as a police-report history of violence in the home, a convicted felon in the home, drug or alcohol abuse in the home, race, etc.) that the 43x number is high. However, there remained an independent 2.7 times increase in risk of homicide, specifically associated with a firearm in the home; this risk was not attributable to any particular "high risk" subgroup(s) identifiable by the above factors but was evident to some degree in all subgroups. Further, this risk was essentially entirely attributable to being shot by a family member or intimate acquaintance with a handgun which was kept loaded and unlocked in the house.That 43x likely number, does that break down suicide vs domestic violence? Many quoted John Stewarts 30k+ gun violence death numbers recently, but when you do the research, you find that 75% of those were suicides..........twisting the numbers to fit an agenda, wouldn't you say?
All that to say that you or your family are more likely to die from the very firearms that were ostensibly purchased with protection in mind. To me, it's rather like a healthy person taking a drug everyday to try and protect from cancer that is 3 times more likely to result in their death than the cancer they are trying to prevent. We'd call such a person illogical....
...and if the gun is locked safely away, then it won't be much good as protection in the much ballyhooed "home invasion" type of event.Comment
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The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money. -Alexis de TocquevilleOriginally posted by FusionIf a car is the epitome of freedom, than an electric car is house arrest with your wife titty fucking your next door neighbor.
The Desire to Save Humanity is Always a False Front for the Urge to Rule it- H. L. Mencken
Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants.
William Pitt-Comment
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Another good post, but again, address my own post I quoted.Thank you. That's a high compliment, indeed.
According to revised research, it's true, that after adjusting for other factors (such as a police-report history of violence in the home, a convicted felon in the home, drug or alcohol abuse in the home, race, etc.) that the 43x number is high. However, there remained an independent 2.7 times increase in risk of homicide, specifically associated with a firearm in the home; this risk was not attributable to any particular "high risk" subgroup(s) identifiable by the above factors but was evident to some degree in all subgroups. Further, this risk was essentially entirely attributable to being shot by a family member or intimate acquaintance with a handgun which was kept loaded and unlocked in the house.
All that to say that you or your family are more likely to die from the very firearms that were ostensibly purchased with protection in mind. To me, it's rather like a healthy person taking a drug everyday to try and protect from cancer that is 3 times more likely to result in their death than the cancer they are trying to prevent. We'd call such a person illogical....
...and if the gun is locked safely away, then it won't be much good as protection in the much ballyhooed "home invasion" type of event.Need parts now? Need them cheap? steve@blunttech.com
Chief Sales Officer, Midwest Division—Blunt Tech Industries
www.gutenparts.com
One stop shopping for NEW, USED and EURO PARTS!
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I cant believe their alien overlords allowed them to do so!
If you move some letters around in Sandy Hook you get Andy Shook...
Hands on IT leader with 25 years + in the field that performs very well at the… · Experience: BeyondTrust · Education: Winthrop University · Location: Rock Hill · 500+ connections on LinkedIn. View Andy Shook, CISSP’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members.
Coincidence? I THINK NOT!!!!
Signs are everywhere people. WAKE UP!!Comment



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