3/12/2014 1:28:59 PM
3/12/2014 2:01:38 PM
3/12/2014 3:35:15 PM
in that first imgur photo, how to they obtain data for guns in the household? i'm assuming a facebook survey since there wasn't a source.
3/12/2014 3:43:32 PM
This survey: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/health/interactives/guns/ownership.htmlBut if you're thinking there's a positive relationship between firearm ownership and murder rate before controlling for any other variables, you haven't devoted much mental effort to the subject. Because hell-- look at all the murders occurring on Wyoming's streets.
3/12/2014 3:58:33 PM
i was just pointing out why a lmgtfy response when asked for sources for that first imgur link was not sufficient. i'm assuming you were right about the fbi data, although it can only possibly be an assumption, but you never even explained the rest. i can only assume the survey you posted above is the same one. basically, i was pointing out how unsourced graphs are pointless, and presenting one as such is a logical fallacy. as a serious response it wasn't relevant to the concurrent discussion unless you first demonstrated a relationship between gun control laws and percent of homes with gunsI'm assuming that the quoted part of the press release has clarified things for you regarding the study on straw sales?
3/12/2014 4:07:05 PM
3/12/2014 4:15:41 PM
3/12/2014 4:24:51 PM
My last response was snark.My last real response wasn't in reference to the Missouri study, in particular:"In other words, when comparing states, they're only studying whether firearm deaths occur at rates disproportionate to states' overall crime rates. Suddenly Michigan looks ok in comparison to Wyoming because "hey, gun violence.""
3/12/2014 4:33:34 PM
so you can understand the quoted part of that release, and you still can't understand why they controlled for other types of murder? are you just trolling?
3/12/2014 4:38:20 PM
You're using "compare to" and "control for" interchangeably. This study notes that firearm murders rose while non-firearms murders remained steady. That's a comparison, and it's a fair one. If the figures remained at their 2008 levels, it'd certainly be something worth noting. I'm open to the idea that background checks matter, but the notion that one state could repeal a dumb, not-really-a-background-check law and see a profound impact within a year is one I'm not going to take Webster's word on. The fact that the murder rate really did happen to increase (in the time frame chosen by the authors) masks their stupid methodology. Here's a hypothetical scenario: the MO background check law is done away with in 2007 and the overall murder rate goes down by 10%. The firearm rate goes down by only 8%. Well shit, Webster's press release will still read: "Repeal of Missouri's Background Check Law Associated with Increase in State's Murders."[Edited on March 12, 2014 at 6:44 PM. Reason : ]
3/12/2014 6:28:29 PM
that's not the situation, read it again
3/12/2014 7:00:26 PM
That's not a helpful reply.
3/12/2014 7:34:02 PM
I'm still not convinced that you understand that quoted part of the release, because you generally have seemed reasonable enough on this site that I would expect you to understand their methodology based on that quoted part.
3/13/2014 11:31:46 AM
GUNNN CUNTROLL IS USING YER TWWOOO HANDZ. WE DON NEED OBUMMERKER TELLIN US WUT WE CAN AN CAINT DO
3/13/2014 3:10:41 PM
I am shocked this anti gun politician is a hypocrite. California Democrat And Gun Control Advocate Charged With Arms Traffickinghttp://www.mercurynews.com/crime-courts/ci_25428957/state-sen-leland-yee-indicted-arms-trafficking-corruption
3/27/2014 8:14:13 AM
would ya look at that?
3/27/2014 8:38:30 AM
I'm not surprised a closet gun nut could be so corrupt.Also, i'd bet the NSA's wiretapping program was involved in that bust.[Edited on March 27, 2014 at 9:06 PM. Reason : ]
3/27/2014 9:04:13 PM
incoming!
4/2/2014 11:12:11 PM
ban guns in the military!
4/3/2014 11:19:05 AM
Another shooting in a gun free zone where the shooter kills himself after being confronted by someone else with a gun. I am not sure what that guy didn't understand about gun free zone, didn't he know he wasn't allowed to have a firearm there?Oh and let's not also look over the mental illness issue...
4/3/2014 11:39:28 AM
People with mental issues (like this guy supposedly had) shouldn't be able to buy guns so easily (i know, easier said than done)
4/3/2014 12:04:52 PM
Aggrieved army dude shoots up army base. I'm sure the shooting venue had more to do with the location of his perceived tormentors than the presence or lack of a gun free zone.]
4/3/2014 12:59:24 PM
Same bat time. Same bat channel.
4/3/2014 1:05:11 PM
^^^ People with mental issues bad enough to bar them from owning a gun shouldn't be roaming the damned streets in the first place
4/4/2014 11:25:29 PM
4/6/2014 12:00:25 AM
^^ I'd argue most of the populous doesn't have the mental faculties to own a gun. George Zimmerman didn't, that other guy in fl didn't, most police officers in California, that FBI agent interrogating tsarnayevs acquaintance. We are not a country that has the responsibility to own guns, as the statistics demonstrate.
4/6/2014 1:01:43 AM
I mean, without any doubt, a solid majority of the population is way too fucking stupid to be allowed to operate a car, let alone a motorcycle, or probably to be let out into public unsupervised at all. Seriously, I don't know how I don't see a fatal tragedy of some sort every single day, because goddamn, people are dumb....but I really, really hate when my rights as an individual are held back by society's most incompetent common denominators.
4/6/2014 1:11:35 AM
Gun owner here... An ar-15 for full disclosureDuke, your last statement made me think (I don't consider your opinion to be unique, for whatever reason this thought process was triggered after reading your post, though).... Do we consider fire arm ownership to be a right at its most basic sense? An unalienable right? Or do we consider it to be a right strictly because of what some guys decided hundreds of years ago? If the second amendment never was ratified, would people be so adamant about owning guns?I havent ever met anyone who was against the restrictions placed on automatic weapons, so that inherently means people see elasticity in the amendment as written. So why are people so against expansion of restrictions into other weapons classifications?I'm not specifically advocating for anything, just a tangent where I'm curious what other people think about what really drives peoples motives with respect to gun ownership.
4/6/2014 2:06:30 AM
^^ the car thing will be solved In a few years because of self driving cars. We could add tech to guns, but part of the allure of guns is their rote mechanical nature. But I agree, it's a tragedy when we lose things because of the lowest common denominator. I miss real fireworks and cap guns and pseudo ephedrine. This is why the NRA is the worse thing for gun rights. After a tragic school shooting, their big statement is to arm teachers. They don't look at any real solutions. They don't talk about accountability, they don't try to present their constituents as reasonable, they don't admit any flaws or issues at all, and it sets the preps the politics to become galvanized.
4/6/2014 2:26:56 AM
^^It's politics. It's people trying to control the mob by using emotion to create entrenched blocs. The Constitution as written had the president chosen by electoral college, the Vice President was elected and could be of a different ideology, the house was elected, and the senators were chosen by state congress. There was a healthy balance between leaders being chose democratically, and leaders being chosen by "experts". The founding fathers, despite being deeply flawed, did see some merit in "less" democracy. So did Plato. Over the years, this system has degraded to favor mob rule. I think the problem with our politics is too much democracy, too much mob rule and pandering to the masses. I'd be hesitant to have the president chosen today, but I see value in having the senate not directly elected, and having the vp elected separately, more in line with what the Constitution originally stated.
4/6/2014 2:39:14 AM
The problem today is most certainly not a problem of "too much democracy." It's "too little democracy."If we had "too much democracy," then we'd already have stricter gun legislation, because the polls show that a majority of Americans see that as a reasonable course of action. This will never happen, though, because our "democracy" is fully owned by lobbies and corporate interests, and not at all influenced by the dictates of the people.
4/6/2014 12:54:09 PM
I'd say we have partly a problem of too little democracy just as you describe, and above all else, too stupid and ignorant an electorate. That's the root of just about every other problem.Many gun control initiatives enjoy a popular majority because people don't fully understand them. (I mean, the same holds true for all kinds of stuff, but this is the gun control thread, and you brought that specific issue up). There's also the tyranny of the majority issue; just because it's supported by a majority doesn't mean we should do it. That's why we have (a) a representative democracy, and (b) a deliberately cumbersome Constitution, which we largely grossly pervert or flat-out ignore (which is a 3rd huge issue).
4/6/2014 2:41:16 PM
The problem with the mechanisms designed to control the tyranny of the majority, is that those same mechanisms are then controlled and influenced by the wealthy elite to serve their interests.Not to split cunt hairs, but I'd say that blaming the problem solely on stupid people is a little too simple of an explanation. most of those "stupid" people simply just don't have access or time to figure out the details of every issue. And on top of that, it is usually financially beneficial of the ruling establishment to keep those same people in the dark or misinformed on key issues. But I digest....
4/6/2014 10:41:27 PM
4/6/2014 10:54:26 PM
You consider yourself to be educated. I consider myself to be educated.Yet we both have different views on this same issue.
4/7/2014 2:41:21 AM
4/7/2014 9:23:50 AM
Shouldn't we all be? Restricting automatic weapons infringes on our right to bear arms... If you take away automatic weapons, only criminals will have automatic weapons.
4/7/2014 10:19:11 AM
I believe there's a fairly bright line between "arms" and "ordinance." Automatic weapons qualify as the former; WMD, grenades, and SAMs qualify as the latter. But ignoring Constitutional issues, I think that people who crap their pants over automatic weapons have been watching too many action movies.
4/7/2014 12:51:38 PM
There really just isn't much more to say about the issue. You want to reduce gun violence, you limit access to guns. Simple as that. Study after study have shown that among similarly developed nations, gun violence and gun ownership are linearly correlated. It's the basic truth that makes the solution stupidly obvious and impossibly hard all at the same time. It's no different then things like single payer healthcare or progressive taxation. Irrational ideological opposition to common sense.
4/7/2014 1:27:33 PM
nope, youre wrong (again)keep trying
4/7/2014 1:36:07 PM
Actually, I couldn't be more right. The good thing is that the only proof I need is time. Despite all the talk of pervasive gun culture in this country, gun ownership has been dropping precipitously for the last 2 decades, and with it so have violent crimes. The reason opinion polls have shown so much support for gun control is simply due to a dwindling number of gun nuts like yourself and theDuke866. Soon you'll all be localized in handful of states, mostly in the south, just like the rest of the backwards thinking populace in this country.
4/7/2014 1:54:46 PM
not quite, good effort though!needs more anger
4/7/2014 1:56:35 PM
You're the one who's being flippant, little hombre.
4/7/2014 3:11:35 PM
i need to get the flippant out of my system before the government comes for my guns
4/7/2014 3:28:53 PM
4/7/2014 4:42:44 PM
[Edited on April 7, 2014 at 4:52 PM. Reason : :]
4/7/2014 4:51:57 PM
4/7/2014 9:25:39 PM
regardless, there is no option for ridding our society of guns to any effective level, so it's a moot point.as far as gun ownership, percentages of households owning guns has declined somewhat; the number of guns sold in America and in circulation has increased dramatically. Somewhat fewer people, owning ever-increasing shitloads of guns....and every time an influential Democrat opens his/her dipshit mouth about the issue, they sell many thousands of guns, and warehouses full of ammunition. My advice is to shut the fuck up about it and find better stuff to worry about, like privacy issues, or foreign policy issues, or feed the GOP some immigration rope with which to hang itself for decades to come.
4/7/2014 10:57:15 PM
Its not just influential democrats.Dumb shits like Shrike sell plenty of weapons.
4/7/2014 11:40:07 PM