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The best gun control this country could ever have is a legal system that in the eye's of the offenders actually punishes in a manner that they find undesirable. Until then we will continue to fund over-crowded overly expensive "correctional" institutions.
Singapore is my personal favorite model. |
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The old sentiment "when guns are outlawed only outlaws will have guns" is really pretty correct. Law abiding citizens would turn in their guns dutifully following the law of the land... Outlaws would probably not, since they don't follow the laws to begin with. Totally human nature IMHO. |
Penn Jillette tells the truth on daytime TV
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Jeff- |
A lot of people - given the circumstances - and sitting with those three -- would have just "padded" their comments and gone along with these three.
I'm listening to the NRA conference speech now... and I'm actually agreeing with him. He's saying "why are these killer games okay"? Why do we have armed guards at banks -- but not at schools. Our money is more important than our schools? I'm not an NRA guy - but the speech is good common sense. |
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In this case I felt their position while aggressive was appropriate and they put their money where the mouth is with a ready to implement plan that calls for immediate action. There is no doubt in my mind that their plan would have positive effects and our schools would become a less desirable target in the shooters planning process. IMO - You will never stop people from committing these atrocities but you can implement measures that will redirect them to other gun free zones or targets of low resistance. One has to wonder - if the media gave next to zero publicity to these shooters - how many would just end their internal battle by shooting themselves in seclusion? |
first off Jerry watches Wendy???? WTF.... LOL
Just one thing....as bad as it maybe 310 million guns in the US, 350 million people, 57% of the homes in the US are armed and only 11 incedents of mass killings in the US since 1965. I'd like to see the total death count. By their logic if gun kill people then we are in trouble. They have some catching up to do. |
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Definately some games are all about gore, death, shooting mindlessly. They actually check IDs to buy these games, but 8-10 year old kids are still playing them because their parents allow it. P-A-R-E-N-T-S. Kids are spending more hours in front of the video babysitter (at home, in front of their parents) than they are in school. It's the game's fault? We need to outlaw the GAME? The school shooter was old enough to purchase whatever video game he wanted and was old enough to decide how much time to spend in front of it. The last time I checked, there are no video games about assaults on schools. There are no FPS (first person shooters) games that I have seen against non-combatants period. In fact, the few that I've played myself would fail, deduct, penalize, whatever if you involved a non-combatant. The shooter targeted innocent children specifically. He wanted the least resistance with the most emotional damage. This was not learned from any game. Lots of blame for inanimate objects. A particular game, a certain gun, not enough rules, laws. This evil was done by a man (a f'ing nutjob), not because he was autistic, not provoked by a video game or made easier by a particular weapon. There is no answer for it, there is no reason for it. Demanding something be done just out of frustration and fear is not the path. Jeff- |
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Craig Pusley stands guard in front of Hughson Elementary School on Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2012. (credit: CBS13) Filed under Breaking News, Local, News, Syndicated Local Related tags Hughson Elementary School, U.S. Marine Corps HUGHSON (CBS13) – The feel-good story of a former U.S. Marine standing guard outside a local elementary school doesn’t feel so good the day after. It turns out Craig Pusley isn’t in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, he didn’t serve overseas as he told CBS13 on Wednesday and he was discharged after less than a year with the second-lowest ranking in the Marines, private first class (E-2). Pusley, who stood guard in uniform but unarmed outside Hughson Elementary School on Wednesday, was stationed at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego from July 2007 until April 2008, according to the Marines’ public affairs office. He was never deployed. “I’m in shock, that’s very bad,” said one mother. “This isn’t something to be playing around with; this is serious and it’s scary.” Pusley said Wednesday he was a sergeant in the Reserve after being on active duty in Afghanistan. He also claimed to be in the service for nearly 10 years, as well as serving two tours in Iraq. Some parents hope school administrators will think twice before letting a man in uniform on campus. “Check, just to make sure they are who they say they are, because anybody can do it, take advantage and something mad could happen,” the mother said. Pusley was back in front of the school on Thursday but in a coat and tie. He said Wednesday he was prompted to take action after the tragic school shooting last week in Newtown, Conn. He left mid-morning, however, as questions surfaced about his past. “I would take a bullet for any one of these kids whether I know them or not,” he told CBS 13 Wednesday. “If a gunman comes into this school, I’m not gonna kill him. I’m gonna drag him out of here. I’m gonna let the law take care of him.” The school’s principal, Laura Fong, wouldn’t comment on Thursday because she said she didn’t know all the facts regarding the controversy. But she said it was a “very heartwarming thing” when the former Marine showed up Wednesday and his presence made her and the staff feel safer. But once administrators learned he was lying about his service record, Pusley was kicked off campus. CBS13 tried reaching out to him, but was unsuccessful. |
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