RiverDog wrote:Just a few observations: We could repeal the 2nd Amendment tomorrow and it would have little effect on mass shootings like these for years, if not decades. Since Lee Harvey Oswald killed JFK with a $12 mail order rifle, we've been passing laws aimed at preventing gun violence but it still continues. As was the case with prohibition, banning guns would simply create and enhance organized crime. There's just too many guns already in circulation for any legislation to have a meaningful effect on these types of incidents. As cold hearted as it sounds, there are many, many more times the number of people killed by cars than by guns. It is not an epidemic.
Totally Agree with this. Not to mention those of us who know how to make our own guns from scratch.
[/quote]The shooter in Dayton, OH supposedly bought his weapon legally and there was noting in his background that would have prohibited him from purchasing such a weapon. It's also been reported that there were some that knew the shooter and reported to local police a number of odd things in his background that in retrospect might raise a red flag but
apparently no action was taken.
[/quote]
This is the scary part. How many of the laws we already have are being ignored or not followed that allow for these types of incidents? What good would passing a new law that isn't going to be followed do?
In Dayton, the shooter had less than 30 seconds before he was shot and killed by police. In that amount of time, he killed 9 people, or an average of about one every 3 seconds. So much for tight security and superior LE presence being a deterrent.
This I don't agree with in that, how many would have died or been shot if LE didn't respond in 30 seconds? That kid had 100 round magazine drums for his AR. "IF" LE didn't prevent him from going inside that night club where he could barricade himself in and just plink away like ducks on a pond, this could have been much worse.
That being said, I'm at a real weird crossroad on this topic in that I wonder how many (especially in the Ohio case) is copycat because of the notoriety of the shooter on TV news reports. The only thing on the news all weekend was these shootings. They are terrible but giving them wall to wall coverage begs kids who "want to be heard" a reason to copycat the incident. I'd much rather the news be unencumbered but c'mon, 48 hours of non stop shooting coverage as if nothing else is happening in the world is a bit much. They should regulate themselves. Then I get to thinking maybe the progressive news media knows that this will create more copycats and increase the pressure on the legislature to pass gun control. That is a weird reverse psychology place to be on this subject but there has to be a reason the news is doing this.
The incident in El Paso is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism. Apparently the suspect made a number of white supremist statements indicating his anger at immigrants and was supposedly targeting Hispanics. Early interviews of the subject indicate that he developed this resentment well before DJT took office.
I've tuned out the news on this already but it wouldn't surprise me if he has been grieved in some way by a hispanic to give him is stance. This is the problem with the younger generation where they can't verbalize their issues but instead revert to violence. Either way, we can't blame anyone but the perpetrator for the acts they commit. We didn't blame Bernie for the shooter at the Republican softball practice and we can't link these acts to Trump. (I know you didn't link them River I'm just making an observation.
Bottom line is that there's not a whole lot in terms of measures to prevent both of these incidents from happening unless we want to become a police state like China or Russia, something I have no desire to live in. I look at those people that died this weekend as hero's that sacrificed their lives so that the rest of us could enjoy our freedoms, including much more than the freedom to keep and bear arms.
I don't view them as heroes that made a choice unless you are talk about the cops that ran toward the gun fire. I do view them as victims in the wrong place at the wrong time.
I'm starting to wonder how much these kids would want to copycat the crime if they showed the dead bloody body of the shooters on T.V. or showed the execution of them to the public (the El Paso shooter). We used to do this in the old west days and back in the 30s when they would do public hangings and viewings of Electric Chair executions. I know it sounds barbaric but as it stands now, the only thing the public sees is a shooter getting the notoriety for committing the crime on T.V. without any consequence other than a courtroom in shackles.