Maps • Google • GeoGuessr
- ScottFromWyoming - Jun 19, 2013 - 4:06am
Counting with Pictures
- Proclivities - Jun 19, 2013 - 3:30am
Chat on the RPorch
- samiyam - Jun 19, 2013 - 3:22am
Today, I learned...
- samiyam - Jun 19, 2013 - 3:19am
How's the weather?
- BlueHeronDruid - Jun 18, 2013 - 11:52pm
What Makes You Laugh?
- Alexandra - Jun 18, 2013 - 9:05pm
Cloud Gazing (Photos You've Taken)
- Alexandra - Jun 18, 2013 - 8:59pm
Annoying stuff. not things that piss you off, just annoyi...
- MsJudi - Jun 18, 2013 - 8:59pm
how do you feel right now?
- MsJudi - Jun 18, 2013 - 8:58pm
Things You Thought Today
- lily34 - Jun 18, 2013 - 7:48pm
Regarding cats
- mutepoint - Jun 18, 2013 - 5:59pm
Bear!
- winter - Jun 18, 2013 - 5:27pm
Movie rental suggestions & reviews - Netflix or Blockbuster
- Isabeau - Jun 18, 2013 - 4:45pm
Radio Paradise Comments
- Isabeau - Jun 18, 2013 - 4:41pm
Looking for a song...
- listenerSeattle - Jun 18, 2013 - 4:39pm
Who Is Your Favorite Dick?
- mutepoint - Jun 18, 2013 - 4:33pm
All Dogs Go To Heaven - Dog Pix
- arighter2 - Jun 18, 2013 - 4:30pm
Positive Thoughts and Prayer Requests
- Antigone - Jun 18, 2013 - 3:15pm
The Dragons' Roost
- triskele - Jun 18, 2013 - 3:02pm
Make kysmet laugh
- lily34 - Jun 18, 2013 - 1:43pm
What Did You Do Today?
- RASPUTIN - Jun 18, 2013 - 1:24pm
city kitties/cat doctor... rescues
- K_Love - Jun 18, 2013 - 12:54pm
• • • BACON • • •
- 2cats - Jun 18, 2013 - 12:31pm
Cryptic Posts - Leave Them Guessing
- Sean-E-Sean - Jun 18, 2013 - 12:29pm
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •
- oldviolin - Jun 18, 2013 - 11:22am
Perfunctory Definitional Diddy-Wah-Doo. Hicky.
- oldviolin - Jun 18, 2013 - 11:15am
260,000 Posts in one thread?
- winter - Jun 18, 2013 - 10:39am
Listener Review Channel (LRC) Song Comments!
- Lazy8 - Jun 18, 2013 - 10:16am
YouTube: Music-Videos
- ScottFromWyoming - Jun 18, 2013 - 9:32am
Those lovable NSA/GCHQ/CSEC guys
- cc_rider - Jun 18, 2013 - 9:26am
Make Lily34 Laugh
- cc_rider - Jun 18, 2013 - 9:02am
What are you reading now?
- ZM_Herb - Jun 18, 2013 - 9:02am
Things I Saw Today...
- 2cats - Jun 18, 2013 - 8:09am
If not RP, what are you listening to right now?
- ptooey - Jun 18, 2013 - 7:57am
OUR CATS!!
- 2cats - Jun 18, 2013 - 7:41am
What makes you smile?
- lily34 - Jun 18, 2013 - 7:27am
The Voice
- swell_sailor - Jun 18, 2013 - 6:40am
Medieval Tech Support
- Isabeau - Jun 18, 2013 - 6:35am
Jrzy Updates
- Isabeau - Jun 18, 2013 - 6:31am
Birthday wishes
- Isabeau - Jun 18, 2013 - 6:23am
Celebrity Face Recognition
- Proclivities - Jun 18, 2013 - 5:25am
Guns
- sirdroseph - Jun 18, 2013 - 2:22am
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos; Please Limit to 510 ...
- Alchemist - Jun 18, 2013 - 12:11am
Free Mp3s
- RichardPrins - Jun 18, 2013 - 12:06am
WOOT!
- Manbird - Jun 17, 2013 - 10:58pm
Sunrise, Sunset
- Alexandra - Jun 17, 2013 - 9:20pm
• • • What's For Dinner ? • • •
- Manbird - Jun 17, 2013 - 7:30pm
Local Scandals, politics and news
- MsJudi - Jun 17, 2013 - 7:12pm
Tech & Science
- DaveInVA - Jun 17, 2013 - 7:03pm
Help!!!!!!!!
- katzendogs - Jun 17, 2013 - 5:36pm
Show us your NEW _______________!!!!
- GeneP59 - Jun 17, 2013 - 5:32pm
You really put butter on the hot dog?
- Red_Dragon - Jun 17, 2013 - 5:01pm
Baseball, anyone?
- bokey - Jun 17, 2013 - 4:46pm
~*Funny Cats*~
- 2cats - Jun 17, 2013 - 2:10pm
Mixtape Culture Club
- sirdroseph - Jun 17, 2013 - 1:58pm
Poetry Forum
- samiyam - Jun 17, 2013 - 1:07pm
PhotoShop Phun
- ScottFromWyoming - Jun 17, 2013 - 12:58pm
RPeep News You Should Know
- lily34 - Jun 17, 2013 - 12:57pm
Gardeners Corner
- Isabeau - Jun 17, 2013 - 12:44pm
RPeeps I miss.
- RASPUTIN - Jun 17, 2013 - 12:40pm
That's good advice
- sirdroseph - Jun 17, 2013 - 11:44am
What Did You See Today?
- 2cats - Jun 17, 2013 - 11:31am
If you're in a weird mood and looking for something to pl...
- Puma1234 - Jun 17, 2013 - 10:56am
What Are You Going To Do Today?
- Puma1234 - Jun 17, 2013 - 10:08am
Best Song Comments.
- lily34 - Jun 17, 2013 - 8:50am
The House I Want (Today)
- MsJudi - Jun 17, 2013 - 8:36am
Food Pics
- Isabeau - Jun 17, 2013 - 7:58am
Things that piss me off
- MsJudi - Jun 17, 2013 - 6:40am
Sailing By
- hobiejoe - Jun 17, 2013 - 6:24am
Happy Father's Day
- Antigone - Jun 17, 2013 - 5:08am
• • • Clownstock • • •
- Manbird - Jun 16, 2013 - 7:43pm
::TCM:: Turner Classic Movies
- Manbird - Jun 16, 2013 - 5:43pm
Things that make you go Hmmmm.....
- bokey - Jun 16, 2013 - 5:15pm
Gotta Get Your Drink On
- bokey - Jun 16, 2013 - 4:16pm
What Makes You Sad?
- kurtster - Jun 16, 2013 - 9:36am
(a public service of RP)
|
|
Index »
Regional/Local »
USA/Canada »
Guns
|
Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 364, 365, 366 Next |
sirdroseph
Endeavor to Perservere

Location: Yes Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 18, 2013 - 2:22am |
|
Nice Fathers Day pic of our President being a good father like so many of us:
It was recently announced that a school in California would be doing a toy gun buyback where students could trade in their toy guns for a chance to win a new bicycle. “Playing with toys guns, saying ‘I’m going to shoot you,’ desensitizes them, so as they get older, it’s easier for them to use a real gun,” Chris Hill, the principal who organized the buyback, said said in a statement to Mercury News. At least two students have been harshly punished for bringing toy guns to schools in recent weeks, one in Maryland and one in Massachusetts. Multiple students were suspended in Washington for bringing toy Nerf guns to school (they did not resemble real guns and were brightly colored) for a project that was previously OK’d by their teacher. Anti gun mayor Michael Bloomberg’s New York City government recently fined a small shop owner $60,000 for selling miniature gun shaped lighters since selling toy guns that aren’t brightly colored with non typical gun colors is highly illegal in New York City. |
|
gypsyman
Master of the Local Campground

Location: just passing through.... Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 17, 2013 - 1:11pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:
The answer to your question is a google away, my stubborn friend.
Coming in late to this discussion - and not wanting to backscroll forever - some people grew up around guns, understand their purpose and usefulness, not only as a means of putting food on the table, but as a method of self-defense (provided for in the constitution). Others, as I suspect of my homeboy (for real) aflanigan, was not a product of that upbringing, and therefore cannot be faulted for what they don't know. This does not mean that they are un-teachable wretches. Remember, inside every gook is an American trying to get out!
|
|
Lazy8
human

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 16, 2013 - 7:40pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:The answer to your question is a google away, my stubborn friend. It's your insinuation, you prove it.
You're proposing yet another mechanism for the state to send people to prison. And not just anyone, either—mostly grieving parents who've just lost a child. You seem to think doing that will make other parents more responsible, that piling punishment on top of tragedy will motivate people to avoid the tragedy.
The burden of proof is on you. And not just to back up your insinuation (you haven't actually come out and said this would do that) but to demonstrate that the harm (people going to prison) is outweighed by the good.
|
|
Red_Dragon
y ddraig goch ddyry gychwyn

Location: Redneck Nation 
|
|
Posted:
Jun 16, 2013 - 4:11pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:
The answer to your question is a google away, my stubborn friend.
I think his point is that there is no way to enforce responsibility short of a total police state.
|
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 16, 2013 - 4:05pm |
|
Lazy8 wrote:Adding yet another law may make you feel better, but does it have any effect on the problem?
The answer to your question is a google away, my stubborn friend. |
|
Lazy8
human

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 15, 2013 - 2:01pm |
|
aflanigan wrote: Here, let me repeat:
I'd like you to think it thru though. You can propose yet another law (and I know you will) but will that actually have any effect on the problem? How do you ensure that someone irresponsible enough to leave a loaded gun lying around for a kid to find will actually comply with the law? Inspect every home that reports having a gun? How do you craft a law with penalties so severe that it's more effective than the threat of the death of a child? Adding yet another law may make you feel better, but does it have any effect on the problem? You can tell yourself you did something and feel all self-righteous, but have you actually prevented any deaths? Did the effort (and the potential incarcerations) accomplish anything besides that warm fuzzy? |
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 15, 2013 - 10:41am |
|
Lazy8 wrote:I looked below but didn't see a proposal to reduce this.
Here, let me google Child Access Prevention Laws for you.
|
|
Lazy8
human

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 2:53pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:See below. CAP laws (many states already have them, so no new law is really necessary, we just need uniform adoption of an effective existing state statute) are supposedly effective.
Minimize the problem all you want by comparing it to deaths due to other causes, but in most or all of your other examples, we have taken steps to reduce these fatalities, to good effect. Automobile fatalities continue to fall with the adoption of various comprehensive strategies including legislation, education, etc.
Suffocation figures I suspect include crib death (SIDS). Surely you don't equate a truly accidental death like that with death caused by negligence?
Drownings are another situation where education, supervision, and (rather minimal) legislation (PFD usage for children) have likely contributed to a reduction in fatalities. At the boy scout camp where my son has worked, they have strict rules regarding scouts not swimming unattended, and not being allowed to swim in water over their head until they are qualified swimmers. They have never had an accidental drowning of an attended scout. I looked below but didn't see a proposal to reduce this. You proposed (surprise!) a law, but I didn't see any mechanism to ensure it was followed.
I don't distinguish between accidental deaths of any type because the victim is just as dead. If you're worried about kids dying from preventable causes then negligence is just another cause. I bring up the stats to put the problem in perspective. We could enact yet another expensive, intrusive program/legal structure to try and reduce what is already a tiny problem or we could put less effort into bigger problems and save more lives. If the priority is saving lives the choice is clear. If this is just another emotional attack on gun ownership then be honest about that.
Simple measures can indeed be effective, and in organized settings (like boy scout camps or, say, organized shooting events) accidental deaths are extremely rare. Further emphasis on safety in those settings would see diminishing (or even negative) returns. Do you have a proposal that might actually help? If so let's see it.
|
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 12:43pm |
|
Lazy8 wrote:aflanigan wrote:Unfortunately, unlike the guy who shoots his nuts off with his own gun, the victims who suffer the ultimate loss are not the stupid ones in many of these shootings. I understand the reluctance by libertarian types to want to interfere with people's stupid behavior when it harms no one but themselves, but this goes beyond victimless crime, I think. So what's your answer? Assuming you don't get the one you really want (criminal penalties for private possession of firearms) what would you do about this? I'd like you to think it thru though. You can propose yet another law (and I know you will) but will that actually have any effect on the problem? How do you ensure that someone irresponsible enough to leave a loaded gun lying around for a kid to find will actually comply with the law? Inspect every home that reports having a gun? How do you craft a law with penalties so severe that it's more effective than the threat of the death of a child? You've raised the alarm over the sixth-largest cause of accidental death among children (age 0-19). If you reduced that count to zero, in 2007 that would have saved 138 lives. Children are 4 times more likely to burn to death, 7 times more likely to succumb to accidental poisoning, 7.7 times more likely to drown, 9 times more likely to suffocate, and 48 times more likely to die in automobile accidents. If the tragic accidental deaths of children is what's motivating you why aren't you beating the drum to reduce these other causes, where many more lives are at stake?
See below. CAP laws (many states already have them, so no new law is really necessary, we just need uniform adoption of an effective existing state statute) are supposedly effective.
Minimize the problem all you want by comparing it to deaths due to other causes, but in most or all of your other examples, we have taken steps to reduce these fatalities, to good effect. Automobile fatalities continue to fall with the adoption of various comprehensive strategies including legislation, education, etc.
Suffocation figures I suspect include crib death (SIDS). Surely you don't equate a truly accidental death like that with death caused by negligence?
Drownings are another situation where education, supervision, and (rather minimal) legislation (PFD usage for children) have likely contributed to a reduction in fatalities. At the boy scout camp where my son has worked, they have strict rules regarding scouts not swimming unattended, and not being allowed to swim in water over their head until they are qualified swimmers. They have never had an accidental drowning of an attended scout. |
|
Lazy8
human

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 12:00pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:Unfortunately, unlike the guy who shoots his nuts off with his own gun, the victims who suffer the ultimate loss are not the stupid ones in many of these shootings. I understand the reluctance by libertarian types to want to interfere with people's stupid behavior when it harms no one but themselves, but this goes beyond victimless crime, I think. So what's your answer? Assuming you don't get the one you really want (criminal penalties for private possession of firearms) what would you do about this?
I'd like you to think it thru though. You can propose yet another law (and I know you will) but will that actually have any effect on the problem? How do you ensure that someone irresponsible enough to leave a loaded gun lying around for a kid to find will actually comply with the law? Inspect every home that reports having a gun? How do you craft a law with penalties so severe that it's more effective than the threat of the death of a child?
You've raised the alarm over the sixth-largest cause of accidental death among children (age 0-19). If you reduced that count to zero, in 2007 that would have saved 138 lives. Children are 4 times more likely to burn to death, 7 times more likely to succumb to accidental poisoning, 7.7 times more likely to drown, 9 times more likely to suffocate, and 48 times more likely to die in automobile accidents. If the tragic accidental deaths of children is what's motivating you why aren't you beating the drum to reduce these other causes, where many more lives are at stake? |
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 11:21am |
|
Red_Dragon wrote: another irresponsible human being...
Unfortunately, unlike the guy who shoots his nuts off with his own gun, the victims who suffer the ultimate loss are not the stupid ones in many of these shootings. I understand the reluctance by libertarian types to want to interfere with people's stupid behavior when it harms no one but themselves, but this goes beyond victimless crime, I think.
|
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 11:19am |
|
sirdroseph wrote:See now this is a responsible and logical article that addresses gun safety instead of railing against the existence of guns which is not only counter productive, but absolutely useless rhetoric in actually helping reduce these senseless deaths. I agree with every point of this article. If you own a gun, it is your responsibility to insure that it is safely secured at all times. You can be for gun safety without frothing at the mouth and calling for confiscation or making all firearms illegal.  So the thing I wonder is, why isn't the NRA and the members of Congress who tend to vote with the NRA promoting widespread adoption of Child Access Prevention Laws (or a national law to that effect)?
|
|
Red_Dragon
y ddraig goch ddyry gychwyn

Location: Redneck Nation 
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 10:17am |
|
aflanigan wrote: another irresponsible human being... |
|
sirdroseph
Endeavor to Perservere

Location: Yes Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 14, 2013 - 10:01am |
|
aflanigan wrote:
See now this is a responsible and logical article that addresses gun safety instead of railing against the existence of guns which is not only counter productive, but absolutely useless rhetoric in actually helping reduce these senseless deaths. I agree with every point of this article. If you own a gun, it is your responsibility to insure that it is safely secured at all times. You can be for gun safety without frothing at the mouth and calling for confiscation or making all firearms illegal. |
|
aflanigan

Location: Downstairs at Downton Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Coaxial
SHINE ON

Location: 543 miles west of Paradis,1491 miles east of Paradise Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 6, 2013 - 6:59am |
|
miamizsun wrote:"Brace yourselves, because this is the dumbest thing you'll hear all day."
The Grand Island (Neb.) school district is forcing a 3-year-old deaf boy to change the way he signs his name, because they say his gestures violate their weapons policy. Preschooler Hunter Spanjer's personalized name sign is a registered sign with Signing Exact English — a modified form of American Sign Language — and involves extended index fingers that the district says resembles a gun. It's for the boy's own good, come on. |
|
sirdroseph
Endeavor to Perservere

Location: Yes Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 6, 2013 - 6:04am |
|
Chock one up for us tin foil hatters!
|
|
Red_Dragon
y ddraig goch ddyry gychwyn

Location: Redneck Nation 
|
|
Posted:
Jun 4, 2013 - 6:19am |
|
miamizsun wrote:"Brace yourselves, because this is the dumbest thing you'll hear all day."
The Grand Island (Neb.) school district is forcing a 3-year-old deaf boy to change the way he signs his name, because they say his gestures violate their weapons policy. Preschooler Hunter Spanjer's personalized name sign is a registered sign with Signing Exact English — a modified form of American Sign Language — and involves extended index fingers that the district says resembles a gun. blithering idiots. |
|
kurtster
paw paw power

Location: Back in Ohiya, for now ... Gender:  Zodiac:  Chinese Yr:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 4, 2013 - 6:03am |
|
miamizsun wrote:"Brace yourselves, because this is the dumbest thing you'll hear all day."
The Grand Island (Neb.) school district is forcing a 3-year-old deaf boy to change the way he signs his name, because they say his gestures violate their weapons policy. Preschooler Hunter Spanjer's personalized name sign is a registered sign with Signing Exact English — a modified form of American Sign Language — and involves extended index fingers that the district says resembles a gun.
Another fine example of the Zero Tolerance society that Political Correctness has foisted upon us.
All of us ... |
|
miamizsun

Location: (3261.3 Miles SE of RP) Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Jun 4, 2013 - 5:49am |
|
gypsyman wrote: Here we go.
i know, wtf?
dang, you're up with the chickens 
|
|
|