Domo
Wotcha
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2012
- Messages
- 5,668
Maybe instead of "how do we stop the shootings" the question should be "how do we stop the killings" and figure out what is happening to make too many too willing to kill.
Very well put

Maybe instead of "how do we stop the shootings" the question should be "how do we stop the killings" and figure out what is happening to make too many too willing to kill.
I guess when I see only, I read it differently.. KWIM?
Maybe she wouldn't have passed the background check, maybe she wouldn't have had a good enough reason to own the guns she wanted, maybe she wouldn't have allowed him the access he had if she new she could lose those guns for being irresponsible.
I don't know what makes these shooter's or any shooter act. I don't think the problem is people don't want to talk because it doesn't follow "get rid of guns" I really don't. I think the problem is the loudest voices on both sides are extremists and they drown out any productive talk.
And maybe it would have happened exactly the same way it did with all those regulations in place. That's my point. It happened because her son had a slip in reality or had a breakdown or lost his mind or whatever happened to him. Now surely in all of Finland, there are people with mental health issues--what stops them from killing? (with anything, not just guns)
Maybe she wouldn't have passed the background check, maybe she wouldn't have had a good enough reason to own the guns she wanted, maybe she wouldn't have allowed him the access he had if she new she could lose those guns for being irresponsible.
I don't know what makes these shooter's or any shooter act. I don't think the problem is people don't want to talk because it doesn't follow "get rid of guns" I really don't. I think the problem is the loudest voices on both sides are extremists and they drown out any productive talk.
, maybe she wouldn't have allowed him the access he had if she new she could lose those guns for being irresponsible.
Maybe it would have but really we don't know. It can't be used to say those restrictions don't make a difference (which Gumbo had said) when we don't know.
Honestly I don't care about Finland. I just find it hilarious that someone who had stated previously he is a bit of an extremists when it comes to his beliefs of gun ownership in America, uses a country that had more restrictive gun laws to prove a point and then outright dismisses those restrictions as not making any difference.
Well, he will have to answer for himself but I would assume that his meaning was that that the gun ownership is in place in Finland. I don't think he was using Finland as an example of laws to obtain a gun; they already own the guns; but as a comparison of equal numbers of gun ownership but unequal numbers in violent crimes using those guns.
I don't think I should have to justify why I need/want a gun before being allowed to purchase one. If a person isn't fit to own a firearm I question whether their fit to be allowed to wander around freely.
I have to believe she never thought he would kill her and all those people and children and just ignored it, like you suggest here.
So anyone who isn't institutionalized should just be allowed to own a gun?
I'm not suggesting she ignored the fact that he would kill people. I think too often families are too close to understand what someone is really capable of until it's too late. I'm saying that if gun owners are held to a certain standard of responsible behavior perhaps they would think twice before others have such access.
But you can't dismiss the restrictions on how those people obtain and keep their licensed guns. When I look at something like that, I see the regulations as allowing more responsible people to own guns and maybe that's the difference. Maybe their regulations create a different mentality towards gun ownership.
On the other hand maybe it doesn't. I just don't see why that should be dismissed outright.
So anyone who isn't institutionalized should just be allowed to own a gun?
I'm not suggesting she ignored the fact that he would kill people. I think too often families are too close to understand what someone is really capable of until it's too late. I'm saying that if gun owners are held to a certain standard of responsible behavior perhaps they would think twice before others have such access.
What I am saying (again, can't answer for Gumbo) is that the gun ownership is in place. Guns can be stolen even from a safe, they aren't foolproof. Family members likely do have access to those guns. The ability for someone to get their hands on a gun if they want to is probably still there.
While I think that the regulations in place do have some effect on the low numbers of violent crimes, I don't think that its the only thing. What else does? What else is different?
No you can't dismiss their regulations but otoh, you can't dismiss the fact that even when some of those things (guns being locked up) are in place a mass shooting STILL happens. So that particular regulation, in that case, would not have mattered.
From what I've been able to ascertain active weaponry is primarily employed for protection in the USA; hunting and target shooting can both be accomplished with the aid of an air rifle or air pistol (I own a match air rifle which is stored in a lock down at the range). I guess you could use an air weapon to stop an intruder but there are some people who are out to kill in order to neutralise the enemy. Is this an accurate assumption?
Sometimes killing an intruder is the only way to defend one's children, for example, but by removing certain firearms from the market we can make the threat significantly less immense... you can only do so much damage with an air weapon or knife, but give an offender a semi or fully automatic weapon such as a Five-seveN or Kar-99 and suddenly these nutters have the scope to do a great deal of damage before anyone can stop them. Therefore, my stance is fully against needlessly powerful weaponry.
ETA: Being in a state with heavy restrictions on weapons, we have a homicide rate one fifth that of the USA and a gun crime rate of about 0.25 versus 10.3 in the USA. Statistically, clamping down on weapons lowers homicides.
I don't know where you live but it's been discussed immensely that gun control and violence are not necessarily tied together. Their are a lot of other factors that also play a part.
Just call me Mr. Statistics![]()
Statistics are like polls, they can be manipulated/made to show whatever you want them to.