^
1/31/2013 11:10:24 AM
You are contributing a lot to the debate, it's your second post in the thread without the word troll in it.
1/31/2013 11:13:00 AM
so stop trolling.dumb objections to the gun control issue are why we can't get anywhere. your objection is dumb and you know it. you are trolling. you are a troll. troll
1/31/2013 11:22:59 AM
I'm not deaf and I haven't always used hearing protection, even at a range.Sure, permanent damage can be done. It can also be done at clubs, concerts, in your car, in your home, from your iPod, etc. Have you sued everyone around you that has caused a noise loud enough to possibly damage your hearing?[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 11:26 AM. Reason : /]
1/31/2013 11:26:36 AM
1/31/2013 12:53:20 PM
Your kids will hate you for not taking them to concerts
1/31/2013 1:01:49 PM
Concerts are known for causing hearing damage, restuarants are not.
1/31/2013 1:32:50 PM
so as long as you know your kids will have a very high chance of sustaining hearing damage, it's ok. But if you don't know about the ever so slight chance, then it's not ok.
1/31/2013 1:51:54 PM
It's about whether I make that choice or some guy who decides to bring a gun into a restuarant makes it.Are you seriously arguing that it's ok to cause hearing damage to children whenever you want because their hearing could be damaged elsewhere? That's like hitting a kid with a car and saying "well they could have fallen off a cliff on their own". It's one of the silliest arguments I've heard in a while.If you cause damage to someone else, you are responsible. It's not like we're arguing over Israel/Palestine.[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 2:02 PM. Reason : ]
1/31/2013 2:00:22 PM
So a criminal can bring a gun and possibly cause hearing damage, but you'll be damned if a law abiding citizen can do the same do defend themself?The point was, was that you said you disagreed with restaurant carry because a child's hearing might be damaged. Might. Very small chance of a such a situation occurring. Yet, you have no problem when the choice is made to damage a person's hearing (concerts, loud radio, etc.), situations which occur much more often than a self defense shooting in a restaurant. So as long as YOU make the choice to damage your child's hearing, it's ok?[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 2:16 PM. Reason : .]
1/31/2013 2:13:43 PM
If either causes hearing damage, they can be held financially responsible for damages in civil court.
1/31/2013 2:16:47 PM
1/31/2013 3:29:05 PM
"Bill would allow for arming school volunteers"http://www.wral.com/bill-would-allow-for-arming-school-volunteers-/12048058/
1/31/2013 5:48:24 PM
OMG GUNS IN SCHOOLS! [forgets that many schools already have armed guards, police, or sheriff deputies]
1/31/2013 6:02:24 PM
We had an armed resource officer in my high school. It was an officer though, FWIW.He was the archetypical fat, donut eating, sit in the office all day, type of cop. Pretty nice though.
1/31/2013 6:09:54 PM
We had a security person in my high school too, but she wasn't an unpaid gun-wielding volunteer. I always thought her name, Officer Raleigh, was cool with it sounding so official, and with Raleigh being the big city where I wanted to go to college and all back when I lived in Mayberry.
1/31/2013 6:15:18 PM
^^ same here... Jernigan.Supposedly one day he had to chase someone down and was pretty quick (but had no endurance).^^^ so what youre saying is that the NRA's recent call for armed guards at schools was redundant, reactionary, and idiotic?[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 6:49 PM. Reason : ]
1/31/2013 6:48:23 PM
1/31/2013 7:17:25 PM
I think the argument is that, yes, someone would be responsible, but you don't eliminate this possibility by banning the guns.I think the no-guns-in-bars thing (which is an old tradition), is geared more towards the late night drunk asshole crowd (either using a gun whilst drunk, or shooting a drunk asshole, who may not necessarily deserve to die). The "buttt... poor lunch goers!" thing is really just an inconsequential side effect, that most normal societies deem an acceptable loss to prevent the aforementioned drunk-assholes-in-bars.
1/31/2013 7:23:35 PM
if you're worried about hearing damage due to the lawful use of a firearm in a restaurant, go to a restaurant with a gun free sticker on the doorLOL[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 7:32 PM. Reason : adf]
1/31/2013 7:31:53 PM
1/31/2013 8:12:33 PM
Cigarettes in restaurants = unsafeGuns in restaurants = a-ok
1/31/2013 9:36:53 PM
^ both should be determined by the property owner.
1/31/2013 9:38:55 PM
^^ A cigarette creates a cloud of poison that damages you and those around you. A gun is a heavy chunk of metal and plastic that sits on the belt of my pants and affects no one unless they're an imminent threat to someone's life.
1/31/2013 9:47:18 PM
^ or unless you miss and stray bullets start flying, which I also hear is bad for your health
1/31/2013 10:04:03 PM
Damn those evil smokers with their clouds of death, so much more deadly than a gun.
1/31/2013 10:14:08 PM
^^ One pf the primary rules of gun safety is identifying your target and what's beyond it. For a recent example, see the mall shooting in Oregon. That shooter was confronted by a man who drew his concealed weapon. The man with the concealed weapon didn't fire because there were people behind the shooter that he might hit should he miss or the bullet pass through the shooter. However, according to witnesses, the shooter, confronted with armed resistance, fled and soon after shot himself. In that case, the concealed weapon bearer didn't exactly what they were supposed to and what any person should do if they remember the most basic rules of weapon handling.Just like there aren't shoot outs in the other kinds of stores thanks to people carrying concealed weapons, there won't be shoot outs in restaurants is this bill passes.
1/31/2013 10:22:36 PM
Are there shootouts in restaurants now?And wasn't it never confirmed if the shooter even saw the guy Oregon? Seems like that's a i vaguely recall that being the narrative the NRA was pushing, not the official account.
1/31/2013 10:25:03 PM
^I just remember reading a news article that quoted that guy in question. I'm fairly sure it was from a mainstream news site. I just turned up this article from a Portland TV station with a google search. Take it for what it's worth.http://www.kgw.com/news/Clackamas-man-armed-confronts-mall-shooter-183593571.html
1/31/2013 10:40:03 PM
2/1/2013 12:10:38 AM
^^That's just an interview with the guy saying he thinks his magical rock gun helped save him because he hid behind a column holding it.
2/1/2013 12:14:19 AM
Man if that girl wasn't nearby I would have been all PEW PEW PEW bitch PEW PEW PEW got him
2/1/2013 1:09:10 AM
H.B. 49 would make it unlawful for employers to tell employees they can't keep firearms locked and out of sight in their personal vehicles.http://www.ncleg.net/Sessions/2013/Bills/House/PDF/H49v0.pdfi work for a company that is ok with long guns locked in your personal vehicle and out of sight, but they have a policy against handguns. they effectively disarm me anywhere i may stop on my way to or from work. it's none of their business what i keep locked in my personal vehicle.
2/2/2013 5:36:06 PM
Would this apply to state employees?
2/2/2013 5:56:27 PM
depends on if it's illegal to possess a firearm on that propertyfor example, NCSU employees still couldn't have a firearm in their personal vehicle if it's parked on campus.[Edited on February 2, 2013 at 6:10 PM. Reason : adsf]i think that's still illegal. lemme do some more research. didn't keep up with it after college.[Edited on February 2, 2013 at 6:16 PM. Reason : fad]
2/2/2013 6:09:38 PM
i did some more reading and i'm pretty certain this wouldn't change anything about being allowed to bring a firearm campus, no matter if it's locked up or you're an employee or whatever.
2/2/2013 8:41:27 PM
from page 1 (ironically relevant now):It's not smart to force people to leave firearms in cars in parking lots. Too many smash and grabs. Some of you lefties complain about ill-secured firearms being stolen and adding to crime; then you should be against a law that forces people to leave guns in cars. It's a bad idea all around. -wdprice3
2/3/2013 12:58:14 PM
if the employer doesn't want guns unattended in locked personal vehicles, they should let us carry at work
2/3/2013 1:04:11 PM
Or have a guard/surveillance in or around the parking lot.
2/3/2013 3:30:16 PM
2/3/2013 7:10:17 PM
2/3/2013 7:33:40 PM
2/3/2013 9:38:38 PM
^ I agree with this.
2/3/2013 10:13:41 PM
2/3/2013 11:02:41 PM
i definitely see your point.what about in an apartment? should the owner of the complex be able to tell a resident that guns aren't allowed in the apartment?
2/3/2013 11:16:29 PM
Well the contradicting part is the Castle Doctrine allows one to defend themselves in their vehicle... No it does not mention that you can carry in your vehicle, but rather you may use deadly force if someone is forcibly trying to enter your vehicle.So how would that unfold in the courts as it stands now? Guilty on the charge of prohibited possession but not guilty on the use for self defense?
2/4/2013 2:35:18 AM
2/4/2013 6:43:03 AM
2/4/2013 8:16:56 AM
http://www.wral.com/hundreds-rally-for-gun-rights/12067909/
2/5/2013 2:54:26 PM
meanwhile, the president releases info claiming the power to execute American citizens with no due process, and retards like the guy quoted in ^ grip on to their guns like a child holding on to their magic security blanket, keeping all the monsters out from underneath their beds.
2/5/2013 4:40:21 PM