After three years of being the most excellent forum on the internets (in our opinions), FFOF advances. During the past few weeks, the FFOF staff have bought a domain name, a vBulletin license, and a program that transferred posts, threads and users over to the New.
If you can read this message, FFOF as you see it now is closed for posting (except the one section at the top).
FFOF continues however, you can find the New at FFOF.nl. Go there now!
Attention
In most cases, you won't be able to log in directly at the New. This is because we weren't able to transfer your password(s) over to the New. For instructions on how to re-activate your account, please see this thread at FFOF.nl.
Attention:Keep in mind that spamming is strictly prohibited in this section, so do think about your reply before posting.
ANOTHER school shooting, america's love affair with guns.
| Yop |
|

Chatman

Group: Admin
Posts: 23,632
Member No.: 29
Joined: 27-May 04

|
Jack Thompson will soon find a copy of CSS or whatnot with a map of the school at the shooter's house. As for guns and shit, Dutchieland can do without and we don't get (that much) shooting incidents, except for in the criminal circuit (i.e. the mob etc). It's mainly knives and shit over here,  . But yeh. We don't have an Xth amandement giving us the right to own guns, and we don't get near as many shooting incidents around here. In fact, whenever we get one it's big news all over the country. As opposed to the 20 or so murders a day in Detroit, which are hardly given a small paragraph somewhere in the back of a 2 dollar newspaper. Just 'cause they've become so common over there. Now true, if people want guns, whether legal or not, they can usually get them. But legalizing them helps a lot. Sure, you can't legally get a gun as a minor, but it only takes the stealing of a key and opening daddy's gun locker in order to get one most of the time. Or having some connections.
|
|
|
| Neon |
|

The Nazi Admin

Group: Admin
Posts: 9,722
Member No.: 54
Joined: 20-June 04

|
| QUOTE | | yeah, its an amendment to be able to protect your home |
But the problem is that now because it is legal to own a gun you are probably having to defend it from a guy with a gun as well. Instead of just a guy. What purpose do they really serve?
|
|
|
| Cookie Monster |
|

Ich mag Plätzchen

Group: The n00b admin
Posts: 1,291
Member No.: 331
Joined: 2-May 06

|
|
|
|
| Cookie Monster |
|

Ich mag Plätzchen

Group: The n00b admin
Posts: 1,291
Member No.: 331
Joined: 2-May 06

|
I wrote this for LJ:
| QUOTE | The Virginia Tech shooting was a grave tragedy. Any circumstance in which at least thirty-two innocent people die for no valid reason is a terrible waste of human life. Yet such tragedies are commonplace in today's world. Tens of thousands die on a daily basis from malnutrition in the Third World and no one in our mainstream media pays them any attention. The vast and vastly increasing divide of wealth poor is similarly ignored, with the least wealthy half of this country's population controlling only three percent of the wealth and matters even worse in other countries. Our military is in a similar state; our soldiers, as the late Kurt Vonnegut remarked, "are being treated like toys a rich kid got for Christmas." Human life resembles nothing so much as a commodity for CEOs to control as they desire; individual liberty, for those not fortunate enough to be born into the top 40% of the country, increasingly becomes a poignant memory. Emotions, hopes, and dreams are subjugated to the demands of profit; we have become a society that values not work for its own sake, but wealth for its own sake, and we are paying the costs now.
No one really knows why this dude went and shot up a school full of Virginia's brightest students; it's being floated about on the networks that he was going through romantic angst, but billions of us each year go through romantic angst without killing people we don't even know. It comes as no surprise to me that in a society that commoditizes human life as ours does, such events should not only occur but become commonplace. This event should become a matter for severe self-reflection. The shooter very well may have been mentally ill, but he did so in a society that willingly allows people to slip through the cracks. We have become a society in which empathy and compassion are the exception rather than the rule. We are so concerned with ourselves and our insular circles of friends that we disregard the lives of those around us. If we truly wish to avoid seeing a repeat of this event, we will need to change our government and, more importantly, ourselves for the better.
And I'm not talking about vastly increasing our gun control laws and eroding away the Second Amendment, as some on the more authoritarian left have been doing. Switzerland has one of the highest gun ownership rates in the world and one of the lowest murder rates. The problem is societal. Arming students further, as people like Glenn Reynolds have been suggesting, isn't going to help either. Crimes like this are not a symptom of an individual's sickness so much as they are of an entire society's sickness. We need to reflect and ask ourselves how things ever got so bad that such a thing could happen, and if we care at all about the students who died on Monday morning, we need to do as much as we can to ensure that such a thing will never happen again. |
It kind of repeats the piece I linked to in some ways, but I like to think I put my own spin on it as well
|
|
|
| Cookie Monster |
|

Ich mag Plätzchen

Group: The n00b admin
Posts: 1,291
Member No.: 331
Joined: 2-May 06

|
uh no, he had a green card. Very much a legal immigrant. And this could definitely have been prevented; a Virginia court ruled the kid unstable and dangerous but nothing was done about it, really. Of course, one could rightly point out that doing this to everyone declared "unstable and dangerous" would be a stepping stone towards creating a police state, as courts could well hand out decisions like that for political reasons, but saying this couldn't have been predicted or prevented is ridiculous. Plenty of people did predict that he was going to snap. That said, I agree that gun control/extra security/whatnot aren't going to help. It's worth pointing out that Dylan Harris and Eric Kleibold actually tried to use bombs at Columbine first, but failed; however, had guns been banned they'd probably have just kept trying with bombs until they succeeded, and that would've been far deadlier than any gun massacre would've been. If you add security to school campuses, all that'll happen is that nutcases will shoot people at the checkpoints, or use SUVs to run people over, or who knows what. No amount of security short of making America into a police state is actually going to stop events like this, which is why the changes must not be security-related but culture-related. Any society where the individual is so emasculated that he is not even noticed when he displays warning signs as severe as those Cho displayed is simply asking for events like this to occur.
|
|
|
| Cookie Monster |
|

Ich mag Plätzchen

Group: The n00b admin
Posts: 1,291
Member No.: 331
Joined: 2-May 06

|
You're right that the toll wouldn't have been as high if he'd been forced to resort to explosives; it probably would have been much higher. To quote an LJ entry which you should read in full (note the link): | QUOTE | while the Virginia Tech massacre is the worst school shooting in American history, it is only the second worst school massacre. The worst school massacre in American history was in Bath Township, Michigan, and its murderer used no guns at all, but instead a pair of bombs. It was in 1927, before the Depression even really began, when a farmer about to lose his farm because of rising property taxes decided to vent his wrath on the community by destroying the public building they were taking his farm to pay off, the local school. With the students still in it. He then waited at the scene, and made history as the first ever suicide car bomber, blowing up the first wave of would-be rescuers who rushed to the scene.
This is probably also a good time to remind you that it is, perhaps, a good thing that Eric Harris and Dylan Kleibold had guns. They had not planned to shoot up Columbine High School. They had planned to level it, and to that end had planted two ill-designed propane bombs. Their original plan was to use the guns only to pick off any survivors of the blast that escaped the rubble, before killing each other. Had they not had guns, they might have come back another day with better bombs instead of wandering around shooting at random, and the death toll would probably have been substantially higher. I know that Seung Cho didn't do anything at Virginia Tech on Monday that he couldn't have done just as easily and even more effectively with a machete or a good kitchen knife and a couple of ordinary pipe bombs.
England's got pretty strict gun control, you know. During the Troubles, this caused neither the Irish Republican Army nor the Ulster militias any difficulty whatsoever whenever they got the urge to slaughter a large number of people in British-occupied Ireland, either. Oh, once in a rare while they used guns smuggled to them (depending on which side they were on) either from the British army or from sympathizers here in the US. But more often, they used explosives. It's also worth pointing out that, since we destroyed their government, Iraqis have had a Virginia-Tech-sized school massacre at least once a month for the last four years. Even though the Iraqi people are some of the most heavily armed in the world, even more heavily armed than your average American, none of their school massacres have involved guns, either. When al Qaeda wants to slaughter high school or college students, they use suicide bombers, just like at Bath Township, just like the Columbine killers tried to do. For that matter, when Timothy McVeigh decided to slaughter a ton of federal employees in Oklahoma City in revenge for the Waco massacre, he didn't need any guns to do it, either, remember? Just some ammonium nitrate fertilizer, a couple of barrels of diesel fuel, and a few blasting caps.
Throughout history, we've been lucky when the sickos take up guns rather than bombs; the bombers were the ones that produced the truly horrific death tolls. So you should count yourself lucky that Seung Cho had decided to buy two handguns when he was indulging his violent fantasies to himself over the last month or so, one of them a weeny little .22 that he probably didn't manage to kill anybody with, rather than the dynamite or pipe bombs or other improvised explosive devices he might have bought or built if he hadn't had guns. |
|
|
|
| Cookie Monster |
|

Ich mag Plätzchen

Group: The n00b admin
Posts: 1,291
Member No.: 331
Joined: 2-May 06

|
Just saying, banning handguns won't stop massacres as large as this from happening. You'd also have to ban fertilizer, gasoline, and pretty much any other flammable or explosive substance. Let's face it, homemade bombs are ridiculously easy to make, and can kill a lot more people a lot more efficiently than guns can. It's a lot less conscience-draining to kill them all, too, since they all die at once.
I agree completely that the U.S. gun culture is ridiculous and needs to be changed drastically. But it's the U.S.'s attitude towards guns that needs to be changed, not the guns themselves. Banning guns won't eliminate guns; it will just lead to a world in which only criminals have them. (Well, criminals, the military, and cops - and honestly, none of them are particularly trustworthy if you ask me)
|
|
|
| Yop |
|

Chatman

Group: Admin
Posts: 23,632
Member No.: 29
Joined: 27-May 04

|
Word.
But yarly, if you want to kill and shit, bombs are better. In fact, the medium doesn't matter, any pointy or blunt object, or no object at all, is able to kill a person. On larger scales, you're better off with car bombs (you can stash a shitload of those in a van or, even better, a truck), or even nerve gas or something.
I guess the school gun shootings are just more interesting then Iraqi bombings (i.e. one a while back with 130~ ish deaths in one blow) because killing someone is more personal and shiz.
But rly, the bombings with a lot more deaths then this shooting don't get more then half a paragraph in the newspapers anymore, whereas stuff like this is in newspapers for a week, with multiple pages each time. Bah.
|
|
|
| Tabby |
|

The Judge

Group: Super Moderator
Posts: 8,160
Member No.: 268
Joined: 28-November 05

|
| QUOTE (Yop @ Apr 18 2007, 09:06 AM) | | One simply cannot prevent events like this, not when (finally) banning guns, not by having more security at school, not by banning video games. Nutcases will always exist, and so will guns or other weapons like it; video games, movies, etcetera won't influence that. |
Yes it is true, there will always be nutcases in the world who want to go around shooting people like there is no tomorrow. However it would be a lot easier for someone to go about doing this in the states as they would have an easier job of finding a gun. Where as here in the UK not only would you have to find one in the UK (or smuggle one in) but you'd have to conciel it until your moment of bang bang.
On the whole if they wanted to do that much then I'm sure they would find a way of doing it, but if they wanted to do it but couldn't be assed to go into so much hassle to find a gun etc then they might decide to stay home instead and watch some TV.
Thus less shooting
|
|
|
| Tabby |
|

The Judge

Group: Super Moderator
Posts: 8,160
Member No.: 268
Joined: 28-November 05

|
| QUOTE (Belmat @ Apr 22 2007, 08:28 PM) | | Tabs, I think you're being very naive about how easy it is to get a gun in this country. |
It would always be easier to get one in America than it is to get one here.
And if you walked around a street in England with a gun someone is surely to notice something
|
|
|
Track this topic
Receive email notification when a reply has been made to this topic and you are not active on the board.
Subscribe to this forum
Receive email notification when a new topic is posted in this forum and you are not active on the board.
Download / Print this Topic
Download this topic in different formats or view a printer friendly version.
|