1/10/2011 8:48:35 PM
^What you are missing is that there were two interventions in that scenario, so the causal model framework is still consistent.
1/10/2011 10:17:43 PM
No one here has made this argument, thankfully, but the dumb one I have heard on one of the news stations is "No one in that crowd was carrying a firearm, had they been, this might have been avoided". I find this argument comical in that the entire incident happened within 30 seconds, not even james bond could have assessed the situation, made it through the crowd, gotten a clear and safe aim at the guy, and hit him within that 30 seconds.
1/10/2011 10:48:36 PM
Shit just got real real on The Daily Show, btw.OMG LIEBERAL MEDIA!!!
1/10/2011 11:13:24 PM
do you watch the daily show live or something?
1/10/2011 11:25:03 PM
Did they do the thing where they edit together clips of different reporters saying the same 3 words and then make fun of them for being wrong?
1/10/2011 11:37:22 PM
I missed the first five minutes, but it was more of the "heartfelt reach out for reason" a-la 9/11. Steve did the other bit.
1/11/2011 12:20:16 AM
http://tv.gawker.com/5730178/watch-jon-stewarts-poignant-speech-on-the-arizona-shooting
1/11/2011 12:25:12 AM
I think the fact that people are throwing themselves into a debate over this in terms of referencing the incendiary rhetoric, the hate-mongering, and the war-like imagery present in the media/politics today says volumes about where we stand as a nation. To me, it doesn't matter whether or not Jared was batshit crazy or his attack was politically motivated. At times, it is funny to me to see the places where big stories like this end up. It is I really wish that as a country, we could just quell our pride long enough, use our collective reasoning long enough, and pull our heads out of our asses long enough to just realize that there are bigger fucking fish to fry than some of the goddamn things people get so heated about in this country. Everybody likes to talk about how the left is so bad because of x y and z, and how the right is so bad because of x y and z. You're no fucking better off than the other side is whenever you have that attitude, to whatever dipshit it may concern, and you're just another cog in the machine.
1/11/2011 12:49:41 AM
the Right hates our freedom, therefore we're better
1/11/2011 1:01:54 AM
1/11/2011 1:20:47 AM
1/11/2011 10:08:19 AM
Reuters had something about it. Link in death penalty thread.
1/11/2011 10:44:33 AM
1/11/2011 11:02:37 AM
1/11/2011 11:28:21 AM
Seeing as how the Tea Party and the right in general have shifted the national dialogue to the point that it's commonplace and even banal to claim that Obama is a cryptoislamofascist Marxists bent on destroying the United States so he and the Fed and the global bankers can establish a global socialist Caliphate...yeah it's really not hard for me to believe that those messages might resonate with paranoid schizophrenics and possibly fuel their (nuts like loughner) delusions and fantasies.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 12:01 PM. Reason : by the end i wasnt sure if i was talking about loughner or the tea party itself]
1/11/2011 12:00:11 PM
Ah yes, when you can't attack a real opponent or message, make one up and attack that one. Works every time.
1/11/2011 12:13:10 PM
i see you haven't addressed my assraping of your "definition" of cause.
1/11/2011 12:37:05 PM
yep perfectly sane, coherent, rational dialogue herehe's just an entertainer though, its not like anybody takes him seriously or anyt-[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 12:52 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2011 12:51:57 PM
haha, burn
1/11/2011 12:56:21 PM
http://img.waffleimages.com/502d2e675508e5173ed3791d274e517445133885/021009church-manifesto-1.pnghttp://img.waffleimages.com/f939a47deea944e42244d891a21e312673eb6413/021009church-manifesto-2.pnghttp://img.waffleimages.com/db24213d93404da2ffeee8a3c30b07786754d787/021009church-manifesto-3.pnghttp://img.waffleimages.com/d115bb5a1e67206e167d79f23ffd3f8a2fee1122/021009church-manifesto-4.jpg[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 1:09 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2011 12:56:54 PM
1/11/2011 1:57:05 PM
tldr
1/11/2011 2:06:29 PM
Since the "tea party caused this" narrative fell through, it's back to gun control. That's an excellent idea - let's make it illegal for anyone to own a gun, except the government. There's no way that could backfire.A lot of the incendiary rhetoric is being labeled "anti-government," as if that's somehow a bad thing, or unjustified. The reality is that the the government, specifically the United States government, is responsible for more atrocities in the 21st century than any other single government or group. How many people have been sacrificed at the altar of "U.S. interests" in the past decade? 100,000? 200,000? How much wealth has been stolen from developing nations so that bankers here could make another billion?Anti-government rhetoric isn't the problem, it's the solution. Killing politicians is not, and never has been, a good way of scaling back government, though. The Tea Party knows this. The vast majority of anarchists know this. Articulating this point is beyond useless, though. The organized left has been painting the entire Tea Party as frenzied, violent revolutionaries since the media started reporting on it, waiting for some event like this that they could pin on their political opposition, no matter how unrelated the shooter's motives actually were.
1/11/2011 3:37:37 PM
well when you decide to go on your shooting rampage just stay away from me, k? I'll probably be armed anyways.also, :rbrthwrd has just turned himself into fiction so you can't hit me anyways because i am now no longer fact. if you try i will verbify you. [Edited on January 11, 2011 at 4:42 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2011 4:27:49 PM
http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/01/11/5814091-ny-republican-wants-to-outlaw-guns-near-officials-judgesOut of all the things that are wrong with this the one I like to reflect on the most is the implication that judges and officials are just more important than the dirty common folk.
1/11/2011 4:37:47 PM
i think its stupid, but to be fair it could also simply that they are more likely targets and i think thats probably true. still ridiculous though, doesn't matter because it will never fly
1/11/2011 4:40:23 PM
They may be more likely to be a target, but passing a stupid law like this would only serve one purpose, to have one more thing to charge people that kill judges or officials.Note that the law isn't helping toward preventing an actual assassination, it's just... tacking on a few more years to a prison sentence or adding some fee to charge someone after they got caught trying to (or succeeding in) killing a judge/official.I really couldn't see this as being enforceable until after some greater crime had been committed. With that in mind, why bother? Just raise the minimum punishments for the other crimes.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 4:49 PM. Reason : -]
1/11/2011 4:47:03 PM
That's going to suck when I'm legally carrying and get in a fender bender with a federal judge.]
1/11/2011 4:53:43 PM
1/11/2011 4:53:50 PM
^^Or when they revisit the handgun all guns ban in D.C.
1/11/2011 4:55:39 PM
1/11/2011 4:59:28 PM
someone murdered a senator? whoa.
1/11/2011 5:06:54 PM
1/11/2011 5:15:36 PM
If a judge or lawmaker is killed by a lover because they had an affair (or some other personal matter), there is nothing special about the murder.Almost every time such an official is murdered, it is a political murder. If political aims are being achieved through violence, then the nation itself is threatened. And we know how a nation behaves when it feels threatened.
1/11/2011 5:42:34 PM
most of the laws includes language relating to the victim performing their official duties.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 5:50 PM. Reason : ]
1/11/2011 5:49:33 PM
1/11/2011 5:52:04 PM
1/11/2011 6:10:32 PM
You do exactly what you would have done if a regular group of citizens was shot up for no good reason. The idea that a politician's or judge's life is more valuable than anyone else is highly offensive. No one that walks into a building and starts shooting people is expecting to make it out alive or return to normal life. They've made their decision. They should be charged to the fullest extent of the law.The thing that makes this such a big news is the public nature of the target. The punishment should fit the crime, though, and if you firmly reject the concept of nobility, as I do, you should agree. I apply the same reasoning to terrorism, hate crimes, or any other violent crime. Charge the person with the crime they committed - no need to tack on some ambiguous "social harm" charge.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 6:28 PM. Reason : ]
1/11/2011 6:28:15 PM
nobility? are you purposely being a sensationalist drama queen, or do you not really undertand the nature of representative democracy?its not the office holder. it's the office. i don't know how much more plainly to put it than that.people in the public spotlight are far more likely to be targeted. if you're a celebrity, thats your own buisiness. but if you're doing *the work of the people*, then you need to have some amount of security in place to PERMIT you to do the work that your elected or appointed office DEMANDS.increase punishment for offenders .... assign professional security detail .... something. but limiting constitutional rights is generally not the answer to anything, IMO.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ]
1/11/2011 6:32:36 PM
I don't care. I don't know how to put that any plainer. Charging a person with murder and either locking them up permanently, executing them, or putting them in the loony bin is going to be as much of a deterrent as you could hope for. No one is sitting home right now saying, "Damn, this guy is going to get off as mentally ill or sit in jail for the rest of his life? What am I waiting on, time to kill my local representative!" Don't be ridiculous. No laws like you're talking about are needed, and elevating a public official like you suggest is the very opposite of what a representative democracy aims to achieve.
1/11/2011 6:38:59 PM
gun control is eerily similar to the war on drugs.stupid and ineffective.
1/11/2011 8:01:24 PM
________ is eerily similar to the war on drugs.stupid and ineffective.
1/11/2011 9:50:28 PM
Looks like it is going to be the "dream defense"basically, some people know they are dreaming and they make things happen as they wish....supposedly he is one of those.....so, he thought he was dreaming....since apparently he slept most of the time so he could be off in fantasy land controling the plots of his dreams.[Edited on January 11, 2011 at 10:39 PM. Reason : he thought he was dreamining when he wrote those words they found.....]
1/11/2011 10:39:15 PM
One time I dreamed I was watching the movie "Inception"
1/11/2011 11:03:39 PM
christopher nolan is to blame, clearly
1/11/2011 11:03:54 PM
^^Sounds more like a nightmare
1/11/2011 11:48:23 PM
that might work better than the Chewbacca defense
1/11/2011 11:48:29 PM
Hey, Chewbacca is a wookie.
1/11/2011 11:49:19 PM
1/12/2011 3:02:12 AM