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NYPD To Identify 'Deranged' Gunmen Through Internet Chatter

Hugh Pickens writes "Michael Wilson writes in the NY Times that top intelligence officials in the New York Police Department are looking for ways to target 'apolitical or deranged killers before they become active shooters' using techniques similar to those being used to spot terrorists' chatter online. The techniques would include 'cyber-searches of language that mass-casualty shooters have used in e-mails and Internet postings,' says Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly. 'The goal would be to identify the shooter in cyberspace, engage him there and intervene, possibly using an undercover to get close, and take him into custody or otherwise disrupt his plans.' There are also plans to send officers to Newtown and to scenes of other mass shootings to collect information says the department's chief spokesman Paul. J. Browne adding that potential tactics include creating an algorithm that would search online 'for terms used by active shooters in the past that may be an indicator of future intentions.' The NYPD's counter-terrorism division released a report last year, 'Active Shooter (PDF),' after studying 202 mass shooting incidents. 'So, we think this is another logical step,' says Kelly."

197 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. FTW by Baldrson · · Score: 5, Funny
    Obama. Ricin. Krytron. NWO. Red Mercury. Jews. Klystron. ZOG. EMP. Bloomberg. Subway. Federal Reserve. Ultracapacitor. Secession. McVeigh. Illuminati. Nitrate. Constitution.

    Beat that.

    1. Re:FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're nitrate is no good without diesel. Unless your form of terrorism is making me now the lawn 3 times a week.

    2. Re:FTW by Richy_T · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We didn't start the fire...

    3. Re:FTW by nospam007 · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Unless your form of terrorism is making me now the lawn 3 times a week."

      Just write 'asshole' in big letters on your neighbor's lawn at night with the fertilizer, so that he can see it from his bedroom.

    4. Re:FTW by flayzernax · · Score: 1

      President Bush Obama (clinton), healthcare, children, oppression, tyranny, Iran, China, outsource, oil, jobs, rockafeller, media, news, control, mind, aliens, UFOs, nuclear, uranium, corporations, godwin, (a bunch of religious shit which I am not well versed enough in, anyone wanna take up that mantra?)

    5. Re:FTW by rcamans · · Score: 1

      you forgot iraq, syria, lybia, al quaeda, taliban, rocket launchers, saudi arabia, russia, cheechen, north korea, scud

      --
      wake up and hold your nose
    6. Re:FTW by houghi · · Score: 1

      It is dark at night, so he won't see much. Also he will be at sleep. Tss. Some people ... (Huh? What?)

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    7. Re:FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Fertilizer? Fuck that, use salt.

    8. Re:FTW by edibobb · · Score: 1

      That's not true. Ammonium nitrate will blow up just fine without diesel if you do it right (i.e., add enough pressure).

    9. Re:FTW by davester666 · · Score: 1

      But gas is cheap so we spread it everywhere.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    10. Re:FTW by digitig · · Score: 1

      You're nitrate is no good without diesel. Unless your form of terrorism is making me now the lawn 3 times a week.

      Frankly, I'd be more scared of that than the other sort of terrorism. I'm far far more likely to be the victim of being made to mow the lawn 3 times a week than the victim of any terrorist attack.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    11. Re:FTW by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Worked for Carthage.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    12. Re:FTW by slick7 · · Score: 1

      You forgot ebolapox

      You forgot all the crooked cops,politicians, judges, the popularity of organized crime in reality and in the movies/TV.

      --
      The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
    13. Re:FTW by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      You nitrate and diesel are useless since they commercially available fertilizer is now adulterated with sulfur, some sort of polymer and are at a lower nitrogen percentage. Here's how it's being done currently.

      http://advanceindiana.blogspot.com/2012/12/three-criminally-charged-in-indy-home.html

      Evil might actually have a brain or a library card they sure as hell didn't get it from McGuyver.

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    14. Re:FTW by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Trilateral Commission, Council on Foreign Relations, Illuminati, Roswell. Black Panthers, John Birch Society, George Soros, Koch brothers. Grassy Knoll. Janet Reno, Dick Cheney. Jonestown, Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City. Whiskey Rebellion, Shays' Rebellion. TSA, FEMA, IRS. Monsanto, Microsoft. Militia. Heinz Doofenshmirtz. Global Warming. Thrush. Spectre. Dudley Nightshade. Snidely Whiplash. Popism, Caliphate. U-235.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    15. Re:FTW by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      K-Mart used to sell some 35-35-35 pellets that would have worked great for that. I couldn't find them after 1995.

    16. Re:FTW by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Only they'll epicly fail to someone with a unibomber complex and doesnt even use the internet.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
  2. I am a terrorist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I am mad and I have a gun and I will be shooting everyone. I am announcing this beforehand so that the police can stop me. There is no sarcasm in this text whatsoever.

    1. Re:I am a terrorist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's always "too soon" for that sort of humor.

    2. Re:I am a terrorist. by Shivetya · · Score: 1

      posted as an anonymous coward makes it even better.

      --
      * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    3. Re:I am a terrorist. by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Reported. This is clearly a matter of national security. Better safe than sorry!

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    4. Re:I am a terrorist. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, you sound interesting. I will monitor your online game play to see if your style, as in how you play those games matches the typical profile for psychopaths. Play like a dick and don't be surprised if you get a visit ;).

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    5. Re:I am a terrorist. by edibobb · · Score: 2, Funny

      A dead pan? That's just sick.

    6. Re:I am a terrorist. by Skapare · · Score: 1

      Some day they will track him down.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    7. Re:I am a terrorist. by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

      Fuck you! I'm a super psychopath and I love cooperating when playing online, and usually value fun more than winning. It is a relaxing change from hating people and cleaning guns, you insensitive clod.

    8. Re:I am a terrorist. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Don't blame me, Google stole and patented the principle. See all that CIA funding didn't go to waste and neither is that money being wasted on NSA back doors. So the FBI will hook up with the NSA to access Google's patent funded by the CIA. So you really mean "Fuck Them".

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  3. good luck by Hsien-Ko · · Score: 2

    lol i no rite


    Seriously, it's not going to work with the presence of popular internet shorthand.

    1. Re:good luck by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

      lol i no rite
      Seriously, it's not going to work with the presence of popular internet shorthand.

      it'll "work". ... but what they'll actually do is hang around on gun nut boards and try to sell illegal automatics to the people hanging around there. because think crime isn't enough but seemingly creating the actual crime is legit.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:good luck by Grimbleton · · Score: 4, Informative

      Though if they try to sell "illegal automatics" on most gun forums, they'll find themselves banned and reported to the ATF faster than you can empty a magazine.

    3. Re:good luck by pla · · Score: 2

      but what they'll actually do is hang around on gun nut boards and try to sell illegal automatics to the people hanging around there.

      You can legally own a fully automatic ("machine gun") in the US. You need a special permit for it, but it basically takes no more effort than getting a CCW - It just costs more ($200, and you pay that per-gun).


      think crime isn't enough

      Ahahahahaaha... How cute.

    4. Re:good luck by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, they do. We had a summer of fires here. Every few days, someone reported a fire in a pasture, an abandoned building, along the roadside. There are fires every year, of course, but that one year, we had more fires in the previous decade.

      Someone noticed that a particular volunteer fireman was the first to arrive at many of these suspicious fires. He was watched. He was caught setting fires.

      Imagine that. If you want to be a hero badly enough, you can just set up the situation that you believe will enable you to become that hero.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    5. Re:good luck by swillden · · Score: 1

      Though if they try to sell "illegal automatics" on most gun forums, they'll find themselves banned and reported to the ATF faster than you can empty a magazine.

      Damn straight. Gun forums tend to have an extremely low tolerance for any hint of illegal behavior, much less anything as blatant as an attempt to sell NFA-restricted firearms.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:good luck by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      I would be posting anonymously too if I spent my time at university ogling other men's balls.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
  4. man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no thanks by Dan667 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    what they should be doing is improving mental health services. Both the Colorado movie killer and Virginia Tech Killer had been identified with mental illness with red flags. A good system would have gotten them help. And for people that refuse mental health help there are only two options, institutionalization or they do what they want. There should be something like child protective services for people that refuse mental health help with red flags to keep track of them and make sure they get help.

  5. this can only be described as... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Doubleplus ungood.

  6. So, terrorists weren't enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Now we're accepting mass surveillance for the sake of stopping rare crazed killers?

    How about we provide a proper mental health system instead, so that when people go seeking help early in the process, they actually get it? They're willing to spend billions of dollars on a surveillance state, but heaven forbid parents be able to get the help they need at a reasonable price or for free when their kids have problems.

    There's nothing "logical" about the approach they're talking about. It's completely irrational and emotional.

    1. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by Rockoon · · Score: 2

      Now we're accepting mass surveillance for the sake of stopping rare crazed killers?

      You see, you can't take away everyones rights in one big legislation. So instead you take just a small bit of rights away for every million to one shot. There is an endless supply of rare events to rinse and repeat this upon...

      Meanwhile we are using drone strikes on American citizens without even a facade of due process...

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by deimtee · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile we are using drone strikes on American citizens without even a facade of due process...

      You know, this is the attitude that pisses off most of the rest of the world. You don't even consider that using drone strikes against people who are not US citizens might be wrong.
      It's all "Oh no, Obama blew up an American, how terrible". Never mind the Afghan, Iraqi, and Pakistani kids being blown to bits, they're brown and not American so they don't matter.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
    3. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      The entire discussion about crazed killers is irrational and emotional. 55 people/year on average get killed in random mass shootings, and that number hasn't gone up since the 90s despite the impression you might get from the media. More people get killed by lightning each year.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    4. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Now we're accepting mass surveillance for the sake of stopping rare crazed killers?

      How about we provide a proper mental health system instead, so that when people go seeking help early in the process, they actually get it? They're willing to spend billions of dollars on a surveillance state, but heaven forbid parents be able to get the help they need at a reasonable price or for free when their kids have problems.

      There's nothing "logical" about the approach they're talking about. It's completely irrational and emotional.

      Although I agree that access to mental health care in the US is both necessary and extraordinarily lacking in the US, you have to realize that Adam Lanza WAS under such care at the time he launched.

      Don't expect 'mental health care' to be a panacea. It's all about balancing the society's safety and individual rights. It's always going to be much easier in retrospect (like most other difficult problems, imagine that).

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    5. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Funny

      Man is not a rational animal. He is a rationalizing animal.

      Heinlein.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    6. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by davydagger · · Score: 1

      mental health issues will be used as an excuse to round up dissenters.

      it will be used to ruin the reputations, and with drugs, the mental capacity, so they don't get a chance to tell their stories.

    7. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      You don't even consider that using drone strikes against people who are not US citizens might be wrong.
      It's all "Oh no, Obama blew up an American, how terrible".

      Well, we have this whole "due process" thing here. Written into the Constitution, even.

      The Fifth Amendment, for instance, seems to preclude blowing up American citizens with drones, absent the whole Grand Jury, Trial, etc.

      It should also be noted that most of us aren't too thrilled when we blow up innocent bystanders with drones (or any other weapon, really), though the guys shooting at our guys are considered to be pretty much fair game.

      Alas, when the Pres swears his oath, part of it is about upholding the Constitution. And violating someone's Fifth Amendment Rights with a drone seems like a pretty clear violation to many of us.

      Me, I would have made sure of a Grand Jury indictment and trial in absentia (which would be questionable, but probably legal) before I tossed a drone his way....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    8. Re:So, terrorists weren't enough by deimtee · · Score: 1
      The Fifth Amendment:

      No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation

      Note that it says person, not citizen. Your constitution clearly specifies when it applies to citizens only vs when it applies to everyone. If doing it to Americans is wrong, then so is doing it to non-Americans.
      Since there is no declaration of war, the possible exception is the "public danger" clause. If it applies, then it applies to everyone.
      It could easily be argued that blowing up a US citizen terrorist is less a violation of the constitution than blowing up some non-threatening goat herder on the other side of the world.
      If you really want to see disgusting behavior that should get your politicians charged with murder, look up the "double-tap" strategy.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  7. because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We all know how well this worked out in Minority Report?

    1. Re:because... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      We all know how well this worked out in Minority Report?

      But it DID work in Minority Report. They had a crime free society, and only ONE GUY (played by Tom Cruise) was accused unjustly. Our false conviction rate is WAY higher than that today. The problem with the NYPD plan is not that it is a bad idea in principle, but that it will WILL NOT WORK and is a waste of limited resources. There are only a very tiny number of these deranged killers. Over the past two decades only 1 in 1200 gun deaths was from a mass killer. So the false positive rate will be enormous. Maybe the NYPD should be focusing on the other 99.92% of the problem.

      I think this is just grandstanding by politicians that want to be seen "doing something", and will fade away once the media moves on to the next "crisis".

    2. Re:because... by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      The other problem with the idea is that it will probably result in innocent people in jail or at least labeled as terrorists for the rest of their lives because of some silly thing they posted on the internet.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    3. Re:because... by davydagger · · Score: 1

      "But it DID work in Minority Report. They had a crime free society, and only ONE GUY (played by Tom Cruise) was accused unjustly. Our false conviction rate is WAY higher than that today"

      no way to dispute false convictions. Its a closed system

      "I think this is just grandstanding by politicians that want to be seen "doing something", and will fade away once the media moves on to the next "crisis"."
      Its the same fear and hysteria we had after columbine with the same disaster results.

      You will more or less get people so scared of the rare event of school shootings, they will be seeing "mentally ill"/deranged gunmen in everyone. Teenagers will have less rights. Anyone questioning the proccess will be labeled as "deranged/mentally ill", and be scooped up.

    4. Re:because... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      "But it DID work in Minority Report. ...

      no way to dispute false convictions. Its a closed system

      In the movie there was no appeal process, but that is not a fundamental attribute of a "precrime" system. I remember the opening scene, where they stop the guy from murdering his wife when he overheard her having sex with another guy. Then they locked him up for the rest of his life. I thought that was silly. They could have just taken the guy away to cool off for a few days, and lined him up with a divorce lawyer, and then let him get on with his life. It is unlikely he would have posed a danger to society, and even if he did the "precrime" system would just stop him again.

      The justice system in the movie was terrible, but not because of the principle of "precrime". That part actually worked fine. Of course, in real life, precrime doesn't work well at all.

    5. Re:because... by Spamalope · · Score: 1

      The problem with the NYPD plan is not that it is a bad idea in principle, but that it will WILL NOT WORK and is a waste of limited resources.

      The problem is that it will be abused as existing similar plans already are. Criticize someone connected? Shut up or be committed. Complain about the threat? Be committed for Oppositional - Defiant Disorder. Desiring freedom and being left alone is being redefined a mental disorder in the US?

    6. Re:because... by Kjella · · Score: 1

      But it DID work in Minority Report. They had a crime free society, and only ONE GUY (played by Tom Cruise) was accused unjustly.

      I think you should watch the movie again. John Anderton (played by Tom Cruise) was not accused unjustly, he had no minority report. Knowing his future enabled him to change the future, but the way precrime worked he was guilty as without the precogs he'd definitively be a murderer. Meanwhile Lamar Burgess (played by Max von Sydow) did commit murder without being stopped because they thought it was an echo of another murder so it wasn't completely crime free. Finally, all the people who had Minority Reports still had a choice which means there is more than reasonable doubt they'd commit the crime, making them unjustly accused.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  8. People to identify 'Deranged' politicians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    through absurd policies.

    Seems like a better idea, and only the tyrants rights will get trampled on should the system be abused.

    Who gives a shit if we shit on the rights of the tyrants? AMIRIGHT?

  9. It was easy by gmuslera · · Score: 1

    It wasn't so hard to ban free speech. Now even talking about an FPS match will land you in jail.

  10. Apolitical? by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

    So they are going to start arresting people for not having an interest in politics?

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    1. Re:Apolitical? by pla · · Score: 1

      So they are going to start arresting people for not having an interest in politics?

      You joke? Our leaders love people with no interest in politics.

      Just pay your taxes, Citizen, and don't bother looking behind the curtain. It gets so messy back there anyway - You just kick back with your permitted intoxicant of choice, enjoy the Monday Night Gladiatorial games, and let the boys in Washington worry about all that nasty, complicated stuff.

    2. Re:Apolitical? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      No. Being pre-occupied with politics (the way one might be with sports or stocks or soap operas, perhaps) will be classified as a mental illness and it will become a failsafe option to whisk anyone away at any time for any reason. Need to rid yourself of some dissenters? Someone threatening to expose your corporate payola scam or secret affair while in office? Have them diagnosed as mentally unstable, due to pre-occupation with politics. Maybe throw in an accusation that they're paranoid or something -- and bam! -- stuck in a padded room.

    3. Re:Apolitical? by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Also, eat some cake.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    4. Re:Apolitical? by runeghost · · Score: 1

      More likely, they'll start arresting people who don't "understand" that the current one-party-pretending-to-be-two-parties system is the bestest form of government ever.

  11. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by blackest_k · · Score: 2

    In the UK you can be "Sectioned" If you appear to be a danger to yourself or others but these days policy seems to be "Care in the community" or shut as many mental facilities as possible and let fate take care of the problem.

    Trouble is it is cheaper to ignore the problem, than do anything about it.

  12. only problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The Newton shooter had almost no online presence at all. So how would this have prevented it? Just sounds like an excuse to spy on us.

    1. Re:only problem is... by pla · · Score: 2

      The Newton shooter had almost no online presence at all. So how would this have prevented it? Just sounds like an excuse to spy on us.

      He also used guns he couldn't legally own - BUT, the guns themselves came from legal, regulated channels; thus, the fearmongering from the left about more stringent background checks, "waiting periods", or closing the "gun show" loophole wouldn't have changed a single aspect of Newtown.

      He also apparently only stopped when he got bored, not because someone physically prevented him from reloading - Meaning you can't blame Newtown on the boogeyman of high-capacity magazines.

      You want to prevent "gun crime" in the US, deal with the sources of crime in general, not the tools involved. And in the case of mass murderers, that means real (probably chemical) psych intervention for the actual sickos, not some fluffy "but how do you feel" BS counseling sessions for emo kids.

    2. Re:only problem is... by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 3, Funny

      more stringent background checks

      How about "Are there any crazy people living in your house?"

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  13. more freedom out the window by Vince6791 · · Score: 1

    So now we have states doing whatever the fuck they wanna do without regards to the constitution. Talking smack online is a crime now. That's what New Yorkers need, NYPD swat breaking into your home and threatening to blow your head off if you move and scare the living shit out of your family, oh yeah and the shooting of pets. Came from a communist country but it was never so bad(nanny state) like here in the U.S. I think these Oligarchies really need to go, they are just using any excuse to take away more rights. But who cares anyway, a country is just an ideology with virtual borders. Why the fuck should anybody listen to a bunch of guys dressed in clown suits wearing those mentally retarded badges calling themselves law enforcement. I think we need a new form of government because this one is just out of control.

  14. Wait a moment... by maugle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Didn't the latest crazed gunman have almost no Internet presence at all? If this is just an excuse to more closely monitor people online, it's a pretty transparent one.

    1. Re:Wait a moment... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Didn't the latest crazed gunman have almost no Internet presence at all? If this is just an excuse to more closely monitor people online, it's a pretty transparent one.

      What?

      Did you REALLY think this was going to stop with a ban on scary-looking guns (that are otherwise identical to many hunting rifles, other than using weaker cartridges)?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:Wait a moment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Clearly the real solution is to arm all the fourth-graders at every elementary school, then this never would have happened!

    3. Re:Wait a moment... by rcamans · · Score: 1

      They do not need excuses. they already monitor everything. chat, twitter, facebook, emails, shopping, credit card purchases, shipping, everything

      --
      wake up and hold your nose
    4. Re:Wait a moment... by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Which would make them resort to more destructive and yet even easier to obtain methods. Such as nitrogen fertilizer, diesel fuel, ball bearings, and a little rat poison.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    5. Re:Wait a moment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How are any of these easier than just taking your mum's assault rifle and other guns? There must be something about guns that make nutcases prefer using them than these other "easier and more destructive" methods. I'm not saying that nobody should have guns -- frankly, I don't think that is a tenable position with current US culture -- just that the people who have guns, be verified sane, competent to use them, and trustworthy to keep them out of the hands of people who shouldn't have them, And making sure people with mental issues actually get the help they need would also be good.

    6. Re:Wait a moment... by bkmoore · · Score: 3, Funny

      The Batman shooter didn't have any internet presence either. Maybe law enforcement needs to start suspecting people with little or no presence. No FaceBook = potential perp.

    7. Re:Wait a moment... by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Well then it goes back to responsibility of the parents: if you have a mentally unstable son , 1. you should be getting them help and 2. you should keep your firearms locked in a safe or stored at a range (most ranges will store firearms for members). So, why don't we actually make sure people are accountable for their actions and hold them responsible. We are doing the exact opposite in this case by blaming guns, blaming video games, and blaming the system. Neither of these were responsible; it was personal choices and decisions that were responsible.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    8. Re:Wait a moment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Fuck this, I don't have facebook and I'm pretty safe about my internet use, but this smacks of "oh look, an outsider, he's weird, get him!". I don't have a facebook because I don't want a facebook. Not because I'm about to shoot up anything.

  15. How it actually works. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

    do{
    message=getmessage();
    if(message.contains("Mass Effect"))
        email("Alert@fbi.gov", "TERRORIST DETECTED", message);
    while(1);

    1. Re:How it actually works. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      You didn't close your squiggly brackets. So what looks superficially like a Do-while loop is actually a do with no while, and, and the while at the end is a self-contained endless loop.

      Wow. Slashdot even has code syntax checking. Who knew?

      Now, if they could only get Unicode support, we'd be golden. No need for Visual Studio at all!

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:How it actually works. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      I should have picked up on that. I was too busy deciding exactly what language to use before deciding 'screw it, make it anything vaguely like C in syntax and they'll get the joke.'

  16. Re:Sooner Or Later... by SternisheFan · · Score: 1

    It will be impossible to ignore Bloomberg and his fiefdom.

    Doesn't New York have term limits or something?

    Yes, usually it's two terms. Bloomberg had the law amended, and got himself a third term. Next year a new mayor will be voted on for 2014. Politicians in N.Y. are jockeying for that now.

  17. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Trouble is it is cheaper to ignore the problem, than do anything about it.

    No, it's not.

    The problem is that there's no legal mechanism to send the bill to the society.

    To every kid being killed, there're expenses on funeral and emotional support for his/her relatives, but there're also all the practical expenses of the day-to-day life, as medical/dental bills, educational expenses, toys and little amusements, vacations, necessities (clothes, etc) that go to the trash bin.

    To every adult being killed, we have all that expenses since his/her childhood, more the LACK of the future (and present) funds to do the same with his/her kids. With luck, another adult will take for him/herself this expenses - at the cost of the expenses of his/her own kids (present of future).

    So, YES, there're a lot of waste of money on every people being killed by a nutcrack. People are used to avoid talking about this, because we're used to think that a "human life is invaluable and, so, can not be monetized". What I, also, agree - there're no money on the world that can pay my life.

    However, the COST of being alive is measurable. If a life can't be brought back, the costs incurred on being alive can be.

    So, NO. IT'S A HELL OF SHIT EXPENSIVE ignoring the problem. Thing is that the bill does not goes over the shoulder of the bastards that make that decisions.

    --
    Lisias@Earth.SolarSystem.OrionArm.MilkyWay.Local.Virgo.Universe.org
  18. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by sribe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They don't need to be institutionalized, they just need to be stopped from buying guns. Is that really too much to ask?

    Adam Lanza didn't buy any guns...

    Granted, the vast majority of these shooters do buy their own guns through legal channels, so trying to stop the purchase of guns by the deranged is a valid option to explore. But identifying the tiny fraction of strange antisocial people who will commit violent crimes is not as easy as it sounds...

  19. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by nospam007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "They don't need to be institutionalized, they just need to be stopped from buying guns. Is that really too much to ask?"

    How about preventing them from buying fertilizer and Diesel? Or chemicals to make Chlorine gas? Or sprinkling the salad bar with Ricin? ...

  20. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One reason that we can not track mental patients is that most people spend a portion of their lives with some form of mental illness. In essence it is normal to be a bit cracked at times. Secondly the public has refused to fund reasonable mental health care forever. For many individuals treatment is slow, the ability to work is often missing and the cost of effective therapy can be staggering. We also lack a legal system that has any ability to deal with crimes before they happen. In essence we would have to toss the bill of rights down the sewer.
                                    Another really thorny problem is that substance abuse is behind much of the violence that we see. And it is not that the person is high at the moment of the crime. But the use of substances that make people feel good often depletes substances and functions in the brain that lead to radical depression and an inability to handle normal loads of stress. Many people confronted with the on set of depression or mental illness turn to substances to feel better and the issues are inevitably amplified. This is exactly what you see in the crazed teens trying to gun down their classmates. They may not have gotten high in days but the overwhelming depression just sweeps their minds away and rage is released. But if you try and tell people that substance abuse is behind almost all crime they will go into denial so fast that you won't believe it. I met one creep who could not be convinced that he did not drive better while taking LSD. He wiped out seven lives on a Florida highway. In addition to the seven dead, he lost his entire lower jaw, can only stand with two crutches and received a 115 year prison sentence. So he will lay in a prison hospital and be thread liquids through a tube until he leaves the planet. No amount of reasoning could control this guy and I have seen it in other addicts as well. For example a declaration that drugs were the center point of their life and they were dedicating their lives to getting high and they would not change that even if they knew they would accidentally kill a few people with their cars along the way. It really is a deep problem.

  21. Re:Maybe the NYPD can use this tech on their own by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    you're so lucky over there in NYC, at least you get to have the chance for an orgasm from police brutality. over here in Chicago, the cops will just beat the crap out of you for entertainment. Well, unless you're a hooker, in which case they'll rape you then beat the crap out of you

  22. The End of Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    New York City has become a model for the new authoritarian state. They have a police force that selective uses the law to harass "undesirables". They have an intelligence operation that extends across most of the country collecting information on people without warrants or even any real suspicion. The story of 911 has taken the already slightly emotionally unstable self-involved personality of New Yorkers and notched it up several degrees. And their fears and phobias have infected most of the country as these folks spread their distorted interpretations of events to the rest of the country through the media they control. Bin Laden won. Musolini made the trains run on time, and Bloomberg is making New York City safe for investment bankers and their servants. And he isn't going to let the borders of his city prevent him from extending the reach of that effort across the country and world.

    Of course for the typical person, most of us, this won't matter. We never really test the limits of behavior where we would be noticed by their surveillance. Its the "you don't know you are in jail until you want to get out" syndrome. But its apparent that the idea that everyone has civil rights is passe. Instead, those rights are something to be managed by a ruling elite that has the intelligence and wisdom to properly organize society. It may look like they are a bunch of incompetent failures, but that's because the rest of us aren't smart enough to have the understanding of the world they got while networking at Yale and Harvard.

     

    1. Re:The End of Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's the kind of talk that will get you added to the NYPD's list. You are openly expressing your anger, you are a threat and must be prone to violence.

  23. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Both the Colorado movie killer and Virginia Tech Killer had been identified with mental illness with red flags.

    A constant theme around these is that plenty of people noticed "red flags" in the person, and yet none of them did anything about it to get them help. I think this is probably more 20/20 hindsight than useful observation. And then everyone gets the idea that if only the system worked better, they'd have got help.

    How do we improve the system? Who's responsible for getting people help? One person might know someone with social anxiety disorder, while another person might only see a "red flag" in a gun-collecting guy with scruffy hair who never looks anyone in the eye. Is every person who doesn't intimately know you but sees some odd behavior supposed to harass you about getting help?

    I think this is a more complicated thing than many will let on, and it's a slippery slope to TSA levels of worthless profiling.

  24. Well this is helpful by Kindgott · · Score: 2

    They just announced to all potential "deranged gunmen" that they shouldn't use the "active shooter" phrases on the internet, or cover their tracks if they do so. Good job.

    --
    If there's anything more important than my ego around here, I want it caught and shot immediately.
  25. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by shentino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And who the hell do we trust with the power to remove the freedom of others?

    I would insist on a jury of shrinks from no less than four different mental health agencies.

    I think we should treat it the same way we do criminal justice.

  26. NYPD corrupt cops sit around surfing web??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I just want to make sure I understand.

    The corrupt NYPD is a government entity that has a budget and a program to spend it.

    But NOW all of a sudden they're going to NOT do police work and instead patrol the
    Internet (somewhere they have no jurisdiction)???

    AND they are brave enough to put out a press release saying in essence "We won't be
    doing our damn jobs. Instead we'll be surfing the net. We'll find criminals. Even if they
    have nothing to do with New York" and this is GOOD news???

    Fire the corrupt police commissioners. Fire the corrupt officers who came up with this
    "we surf the web instead of patrolling our streets" campaign.

    E

  27. Wearing your Guy Fawkes while you post? by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    Your 4Chan Ion Cannon buddies also thought the Secret Service would NEVER be able to figure out their IP addresses.

    1. Re:Wearing your Guy Fawkes while you post? by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 1

      That's why use someones open wireless or you run it thru a bot on some hapless idiots computer. Then you laugh when the PD/FBI/ATF kicks their door in. Just remember not to leave a trail back to yourself.

    2. Re:Wearing your Guy Fawkes while you post? by citizenr · · Score: 1

      Your 4Chan Ion Cannon buddies also thought the Secret Service would NEVER be able to figure out their IP addresses.

      Only retard would think that, 4Chan servers got hijacked by feds a long time ago.

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
  28. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We have to sacrifice our rights and live in a police state, because that is the "price to protect us from three or four crazy lunatics that we'll never actually be able to protect society from, anyway" because it's going to "save so many innocent people (presumably, children)".

    With this sort of math, we need to be sacrificing a lot more rights and liberties across the board for every other thing which results in more deaths than school shootings (in other words - EVERYTHING INCLUDING JAY WALKING). After all, if every life has a precious cost associated with its lost that is of such intense value to society that all of society must make sacrifices that are most "sacred" to the foundation and existence of our entire society (the Constitution), then why focus on the random unavoidable nutjobs that conduct "mass" shootings? What about seat-belts? What about parents who drink or smoke and put children at risk? What about mothers who bring questionable "step-dads" into the family? What about jay-walking? What about soda? What about sports? What about lighters, pocket knives, stairways, sidewalks, and bicycles?

    If the important thing is the value of a life, then why is the life of someone shot by a nutjob more valuable than that of someone who is killed through any other accident or negligence or criminal act? Especially when those things happen far more frequently?

    The secret key here is that: Yes, bad shit will happen to people and that is the cost of enjoying a free life and society. Bad shit doesn't go away just because government clamps down on society. The only thing lost there is your freedom. You *gain* nothing. And all in the effort to do the impossible -- protect every last human being from unpredictable freak occurrences. Crazy shit that pops out of the brush and happens. And it will always happen. And we will always be shocked (that's the nature of it being a FREAK occurrence).

    I can guarantee you a great deal of safety and security. Just let me lock you in an underground bunker and control everything you consume and everything you do. It won't be enjoyable and it won't be a life worth having lived, but you'll probably live longer than being out in the big scary world with all sorts of awful things that can happen to you, including being t-boned in an intersection by a guy running a red-light or a nutjob in the office that loses his shit when he's fired and brings a firearm to work. :)

  29. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Seumas · · Score: 1

    One reason that we can not track mental patients is that most people spend a portion of their lives with some form of mental illness

    BULLSHIT.

    Most people spend a portion of their lives being diagnosed with some bullshit invented form of "mental illness", because it has been the medical oppression's goal (and that of the government, I suppose) to ensure that the DSM provides at least one diagnoses that could apply to EVERY HUMAN BEING. Are you an underachiever? You have ADD! Are you an over-achiever? You have an overwhelming need to please authority and seek approval, you secretly depressed narcissist!

    Even being critical of your government or questioning authority qualifies for a mental illness diagnosis.

  30. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by clarkkent09 · · Score: 2

    Easier said than done. There are many, many people who match the same symptoms and most of them are not about to start shooting people.

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  31. Re:What? by Seumas · · Score: 1

    You don't think cities pay for everything in their city themselves, right? There are many states (most of them red) that actually get MORE money from the rest of the country (via the federal government) than they pay to the federal government. And if you're looking for funding to violate people's liberties and privacy and further the cause of establishment of an ultimate police state? Fuck yeah, you're going to get funding for that from uncle Sam!

  32. New Cooper Tactic: Google Bad Guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that will zurely work.

  33. Check the anti-social networking sites first by FyberOptic · · Score: 1

    I'm sure this will work great, since all of the people who do these kinds of thing are very social people who love telling others what they're about to do, and in detailed ways that will trigger a detection.

  34. And then...? by tokencode · · Score: 1

    Then what? If they haven't committed a crime, what are you going to do? Just watch them? If I was a NYC resident I would be pissed that resources that could be used to prevent crime occurring IN NYC were being diverted to look for future criminals on the Internet. Is Bloomberg's term up yet? Will that kind of political statement get me placed on a watch list? Considering one of the last psychos that was planning to kill people in NYC was an NYC cop, this doesn't make me feel safe.

  35. Big Brother by __aaqxjh2299 · · Score: 1

    Nice. Let's just call it a 'pre-crime' division. More likely it'll just turn into another expensive entrapment racket. Go Go Police State! By the by, forcing the 'deranged' into prisons has its own repercussions on society, not to mention forcing medications with dubious claims of efficacy upon the unwilling.

  36. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

    Oppositional - Defiant Disorder.

    Yep.

    You fit.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  37. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    this guy went on a rampage because he was going to be involntary comitted

    what stops this sort of crime is when we start treating people better. Mental Health serivces create these sorts of disasters

    but that never seems to be an option.

  38. NYPD is probably the worse & arrogant police d by ancient_kings · · Score: 1

    in the USA. It amazes me that they think they can operate as if they are the CIA/NSA/FBI/DIA/DEA/Marshal all combined into one. Yet, they have not discovered one major terrorist plot...ever... The poor tax payers are getting reamed paying for all this wanna-be Feds who, really, need to be working in a supermarket, bagging groceries. NYPD=losers.

  39. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 1

    for the same reason that most of these "police state" measures only get brought up immediately after a tradgedy when emotions run high. They need to enact legislation before people start bringing in inconvienant facts and statistics.

  40. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 1

    AC makes some sense for once.

    Mental Health industry is one giant fucking scam, to enforce the current social order.

  41. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by russotto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A constant theme around these is that plenty of people noticed "red flags" in the person, and yet none of them did anything about it to get them help.

    Well, apparently two people on the U of Iowa admissions committee saw something wrong with him before the fact -- the program director, Daniel Tranel, said "Do NOT offer admission under any circumstances". I don't think Tranel has ever said what he saw, though.

    But in general, if you want to maintain anything approaching a free society, you can neither lock up everyone you think might be a homicidal nutcase, nor restrict everyone to the level of freedom appropriate to homicidal nutcases.

  42. Yes I'm an idiot. by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    But I'm also not sitting in jail for uselessly firing a cannon at PayPal or Visa.

  43. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by tftp · · Score: 1

    I would insist on a jury of shrinks from no less than four different mental health agencies.

    What makes you think that those four different mental health agencies pursue different goals?

  44. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 1

    they needed to be treated as human beings for being such.

    His mom was fucking a lunatic.

    We need to stop being such a police state, and we'll stop seeing men do desperate things to escape it.

  45. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by edibobb · · Score: 1

    As long as we're going to live in the police state, is there any chance we could stop drunk driving? More people die daily from alcohol related accidents than died in that school shooting. This was not in the news recently. Weird, huh?

  46. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 1

    >Another really thorny problem is that substance abuse is behind much of the violence that we see.

    You may have this backwards. People with 'problems' are the ones more likely to abuse substances in the first place.

  47. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 1

    this, I wish I had mod points. +1

    "Even being critical of your government or questioning authority qualifies for a mental illness diagnosis."

    which is were they are going with this, they want to arrest critics, and even potential critics, by labeling them mentally ill, and vaugely "dangerous".

    Again, lets review,

    Forcible incarceration, no jury, no trial, no lawyer, no appeals, you lack the basic rights even prisoners have, and access to REAL medical care while incarcerated.

  48. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 1

    Red Flags are more paranoid and disinfomration to get you more scared of your peers than authority figures.

    A common theme among these shooters is they have all been systematicly disenfranchised and the solution always seems to be systematicly disenfranchising MORE people, than fixing a broken system which leads to broken people, which leads to a rare handful of shootings.

    How many lives are ruined because people accused of being killers, or murders, with no real evidence are ostracized, arrested, get the typical law enforcement "spy on them, and then use their weaknesses to push them until they fuck up", to run ruin life tactics on otherwise innocent people.

    All what, so some people can have a scapegoat to push off the cliff so they FEEL safer. Guess what, its not making you safer. Its making you less safe. The cameras, the mental health zoos, the laws are not there to protect you, they are there to protect the system, and all of this is disinformation to make you so scared of your neighbors, you run into the arms of the police state.

    By "deranged gunman", they really mean "government, business, and social leader" critics.

  49. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by davydagger · · Score: 2

    I would insist on an jury of PEERS chosen from the population.

    I would choose the burden of proof is "beyond reasonable doubt", there was an intent to harm.

    We need to stand up to this rhetoric, before we further strengthen laws that authorize extra-judicial detention.

    There also needs to be a right to apeal.

  50. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by edibobb · · Score: 1

    You don't have to ignore the problem, but it would be nice if the government and the press did not go into hysterical overreaction. Many conservatives, who traditionally support smaller government, want to hire hundreds of thousands of armed guards to guard every public school in the nation. Many liberals, who traditionally oppose censorship, want to ban this type of violence in all computer games. Instead, maybe we could just enforce the laws we have now and go on with life. 27 people (or so) died in the shooting. 30 people a day die in alcohol-related accidents.

  51. Why Not Identify Them The Most Obvious Way? by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With their badge numbers?

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  52. Another unrelated reason to push draconic laws by Dunge · · Score: 1

    One guy get crazy and do a shooting carnage? Let's spy the whole population!

  53. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes, in a rationally run society, we would provide mental health services as well as other heath services. But, this is the USA where your right to rot in prison, or die due to lack of medical care is enshrined.

    We had state run mental health services in California until Republican Pete Wilson put all the institutionalized folks out on the street. These are the homeless folks you see arguing with pigeons in almost every California city. A minority of these are the same type folks who shoot up an elementary school because they are off their meds, and they, "don't like Mondays."

    As long as the political cast believes it is advantageous to throw money at police, prisons, and the military-- at the expense of everything that makes for a civil society, the US will continue to have this problem.

    So, of course, the US "solution" is to go after thought crimes. It is the only way to address such an issue within the US's framework of prisons, police, and military at the expense of everything else. For the same reason, we imprison drug addicts-- we know that prison doesn't help with addiction, but we have prisons and police-- we don't have drug rehab programs for these non-violent offenders (or at least don't have the political will to treat rather imprison these folks). Hell, we have police tasering, handcuffing, and arresting 5 yr. olds for being disruptive in class!

    The US imprisons more people than any other country on earth-- when all you've got is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. Of course, corruption and racism also play a factor.

    Two judges were _caught_ sentencing hundreds of _children_ to unreasonably long sentences in a private, for profit, prison in exchange for millions of dollars in bribes (e.g., a year for shoplifting a candy bar). These same corrupt folks, operating these private prisons, who make their money stealing lives of others, including children, lobby (aka legal bribe) our corrupt political cast to make ever more draconian laws to keep their prison beds filled.

    There are more black men imprisoned today than there were black men enslaved at the height of legal slavery in the US-- and no, there isn't some crazy crime spree by black men; most are convicted of minor drug offenses which are just as prevalent within the white population, only the enforcement, sentencing severity, and conviction rates differ. Things like New York City's stop and frisk law, where you can be searched solely for the crime of being non-white (there have been 3 times as many stops under this law as black men living in New York, so you will be stopped an frisked, multiple times as a black man; black and brown folks are going to be caught with that blunt in their pocket at a higher rate than whites who are not randomly stopped and searched. Crack cocaine (more prevalent than powder cocaine in black communities) sentencing is much more draconian than powder cocaine that is favored by whites, etc.

  54. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Looks like he should have been involuntarily committed a whole lot sooner. Mental health services do not "create these sorts of disasters" any more than hospitals create serious accidents.

    Don't get me wrong: mental health services can go bad just like surgery after a serious accident can be done incompetently. But for the most part things are better off there than staying at home and trying to deal with it without any professional help.

  55. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Harvey+Manfrenjenson · · Score: 1

    I would insist on a jury of shrinks from no less than four different mental health agencies.

    What makes you think that those four different mental health agencies pursue different goals?

    Exactly. Having multiple shrinks only helps if their judgements can be treated as statistically independent events. Which they can't-- the four shrinks would share common goals and common belief systems, and they would be strongly influenced by what their colleagues say.

    The bottom line is you can't incarcerate someone (except for brief periods) based on the presence of "red flags". Nor should you be able to. Here's what you *might* do, though:

    * If the shrink is evaluating someone and sees a red flag, empower the shrink to communicate with a) the state agency in charge of gun licenses ("Don't give this guy a firearms card") and/or b) the DMV ("You need to suspend this person's license").

    * Require a psychiatric screening for everyone that applies for a gun license.

    There is some precedent for both ideas. Currently, you're allowed to contact the DMV if someone has uncontrolled seizures and should not drive. And I think Great Britain requires a psych eval of new gun owners.

    Hey, not saying this would work 100% of the time (there would be false positives as well as false negatives), but at least it's worth thinking about.

  56. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Oakey · · Score: 1

    But it's okay, cos you still got your 2nd amendment and guns to stop them doing this shit! Oh, wait..

    --
    "Dre don't get as high as me.... I'm Cheech and Chong" - Snoop Dogg
  57. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why was his mom a fucking lunatic? Because she was a shooting enthusiast, had lots of guns, and encouraged her kids to shoot as well? Or was it because she didn't institutionalize her troubled son "just in case"? I genuinely don't know if there is new information that points to her mental state...

    The problem here is in terms of mental health issues, let's say you are institutionalized for being suicidal. Does that mean you can never have a gun, ever? Why? This "reform" of the mental health system people are clamoring for is nothing more than an end-round play to ban guns based on "mental stability." I hate to break it to the /. crowd, but most of us could be considered "unbalanced" if the state, or an overzealous mental health system (or relatives) decided we were. Do we want to go back to the early 20th century where we put everyone who didn't fit a mold (gays, mildly retarded, sexual "deviants") into an institution and shocked, prodded, and medicated them until they really WERE fucked in the head?

    The rational thing to do is to stop inching towards a police state in ALL aspects. That includes these symbolic "bans" on "assault" weapons and other horse shit. Return to a minimal Constitutionally sanctioned federal government...

    --
    It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
  58. Sweet. by poofmeisterp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This has worked so many times in the past; how can it fail?

  59. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    Since all the gun advocates love to bring up Switzerland - why not go all the way and implement their gun laws as well? They don't seem to live in a police state, they're nicely federal... really, what give? Does not being able to own as many semi-automatic rifles with large calibers and long barrels and high muzzle velocity really mean that you live in a police that? Is the next step after that really locking everyone in an underground bunker?

    No. And making these arguments makes you sound like a nut job I need to ignore. Start being rational, acknowledge there are a wide range of options to deal with mass shootings, and stop with the paranoia.

    protect every last human being from unpredictable freak occurrences

    Strawman. No one is arguing that. However, we do argue about the wisdom of having large amounts of deadly weaponry available to anyone who asks.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  60. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by StillAnonymous · · Score: 1

    Google's working on it.

  61. It's more than likely a felony. by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    I can tell you from experience that Federal judges have a very poor sense of humor.

  62. We didn't ... Seriously, that's a good idea by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Billy Joel needs to do a 2013 version of "We Didn't Start the Fire."

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  63. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by mikael · · Score: 1

    Property developers were after the Victorian buildings with high ceilings and bay windows - that architecture had been specifically chosen to provide patients with plenty of sunlight (cure against depression) and fresh air (cure against lung infections).

    MP's spun this as saving costs in maintaining dilapidated buildings (could have been renovated instead) and social integration (allowing the patients to live in the community. They did the same with special-needs schools.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  64. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Everyone dies, so the cost of living isn't more wasted by an unnatural or untimely death. [...]The rest of your reasoning is a series of cognitive illusions.

    Cognitive illusion is to think that every nutcrack in the world has the right to go free killing people.

    Of course every human being has rights. But what you fail to acknowledge is that the killed kids have rights too. As their relatives.

    So, who we prosecute in order to protect the people's right to be alive?

    The fact that everybody will die someday is a pitty of an argument, and makes me think that *YOU* don't make any kind of value (no necessary financial) to human life per se.

    I'm make huge investments on my kid's welfare, even by knowing he will, also, die someday. But I'm making this investments anyway, as I want him to have the best lifespan I can afford to him.

    I pay taxes. As everybody else (including the victims's relatives). Why our right to be alive is less important?

    The quotes were from todaysinnovativewoman.com, an article named The Pitfalls of Investor Psychology (it's the first article I came across).

    Trying to argue in favor of morality on the basis of cost is a huge mistake. I think it's valid to keep convicts alive, and provide mental health care, but it isn't less expensive - it's just better. It's humane.

    You totally loose the point.

    I'm not talking about morality. I'm talking about civil responsibility.

    GP stated that it's cheaper to let these nutcracks loose. I counter-argumented that it's more expensive. It's appear to be cheaper because some people thinks like you, what prevents that the bastards that make decisions about out life can be accountable by their mistakes.

    --
    Lisias@Earth.SolarSystem.OrionArm.MilkyWay.Local.Virgo.Universe.org
  65. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Spamalope · · Score: 2

    It's already happening.
    Brandon Raub anyone? Post lyrics to facebook, get committed.

    https://www.rutherford.org/key_cases/key_cases_brandon_raub/

  66. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 2

    Yeah but if you provide health care to the people then you turn the country into a socialist state and nobody wants that.

  67. Re:What? by mikael · · Score: 1

    In this case, it is the responsibility of the Homeland Security Investigations.

    http://www.ice.gov/about/offices/homeland-security-investigations/

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  68. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 2, Insightful

    By your logic, it's bad to keep drunken drivers from the street. =P

    Look, pal. I'm not a defendant of a police state. But you can bet you damned ass I'm a defendant of the people's life.

    We are not talking about natural disasters, but about predictable and avoidable disasters that happens to be promoted by ourselves! We deliberately give up every single chance to detect and correctly deal with these nutcracks.

    I'm not talking about killing them. I'm not even talking about locking them (but if this is the only choice, better them than us!). I'm talking about to correctly dealing with them.

    This will cost money? OF COURSE IT WILL. As costs money to hunt and prosecute drunken drivers.

    The question is: it will worth it? My answer is YES.

    --
    Lisias@Earth.SolarSystem.OrionArm.MilkyWay.Local.Virgo.Universe.org
  69. "Distraction" by Bruce Sterling by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 1

    In "Distraction" the US government (whats left of it) has software to do this, and it works. But it has been repurposed. Now the idea is to find the borderline crazy guys and spam them with messages saying that is a drug dealing paedophile commie terrorist who needs to be shot. So now has to cope with a steady stream of crazy shooters. Even if survives, they will be too busy dodging the crazies to cause any more trouble.

    --
    You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
  70. Re:Apolitical != Derranged by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

    But that is nowhere near what it takes to go on a shooting spree. I'm one of the most peaceful people you'll meet; I've never fired a gun, and never been in a fight.

    Ah, "It's the quiet ones you have to look out for." So you've never fought or shot a gun, eh? Then you must have a lot of pent up rage just waiting to pour out violently given the right trigger... Conversely, if you take boxing and/or fire weapons at the shooting range then you're practicing for homicide.

    In the future, will I have cops showing up on my door for writing a comment like this?

    You just identified your probable trigger. So instead of the regular Police showing up, we'll just use the Secret ones instead to snatch you while you're sleeping. It's the only way to be sure you don't go on a rampage when they arrive.

    And will they still try to tell us that we have free speech?

    Law abiding citizens will still have free speech, but not some inhuman thing like you...

  71. Bleh by lightknight · · Score: 2

    If the profile was always 'young white male, bit of a loner,' I'd start to wonder, openly, why it is that they ALWAYS fit that mold. Like there is some sort of factory somewhere that just stamps them out for officers to pick up. Does this not bother anyone else?

    Seriously, I'd start to question my reason for existence. I've been created, to catch 'criminals,' which are, like the endings of Scooby-Doo episodes, always the same guy. And I am not, for whatever reason, supposed to think "if they are always the same guy, doesn't that signify that there is something wrong on a higher level?" I mean, these are human beings, they have brains capable of anything -> so why does this one type always choose to be a loaner, be white, be male, and to shoot up a school? It's almost like they're programmed to do it. Why is there never any major changes? The guy visits his mother's grave before he shoots up the school, or he was an outgoing football player, or whatever? Or, given that our population is more than 50% female, one from their gender?

    Does everyone just blindly accept the reasons they're given here? "Oh yeah, he was a white male, a loaner, that happens to them sometimes."

    --
    I am John Hurt.
    1. Re:Bleh by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Like there is some sort of factory somewhere that just stamps them out for officers to pick up. Does this not bother anyone else?

      I regard them as a byproduct of the factory schooling system we have. I'm not sure what the solution is, obviously an illiterate population isn't it. For some people, school is years of unremitting rejection and social isolation. Of those people, a few of them commit mass murder.

    2. Re:Bleh by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      The game was rigged against those white males from the start, like you think, but it's a matter of genetics, not society. Males must take risks in order to have a chance to reproduce, there's evidence that only about 40% of males managed to successfully reproduce in past societies. (this information comes from digging up old bones and tracing lineages)

      "Risk taking" is implemented by genes coding for neural networks that can have a wider variety of behaviors, some good, some bad.

      If my hypothesis is correct, and it is supported by reams of overwhelming evidence, so it most likely is, then this means that at any given time there is a nonzero chance of a young male wanting to do something bad like this. As long as we have a free society where the means to commit mass murder are conveniently accessible, events like this will happen.

      The only way to prevent them is to remove the freedom.

    3. Re:Bleh by swillden · · Score: 1

      The only way to prevent them is to remove the freedom.

      Or the means, or the opportunity. Removing the means for mass murder is impossible, because there are so very many ways to do it, and all of those means have alternative, productive, useful uses to the non-mass-murdering segment of society.

      That leaves removing the opportunity... which also can't be done, not completely, but the window of opportunity can be dramatically reduced if the potential victims have access to the tools and skills they need to fight back.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    4. Re:Bleh by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      In the US, only about 1 in 8 is black. It's likely that if a black shootup did occur, the press would try to bury both the event and the racial identity of the killer.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    5. Re:Bleh by multiplexo · · Score: 1

      Wow, spoken like a true racist dogfucker. Let me guess, you're also one of those fucktards who believes that President Obama is a Kenyan Muslim Socialist.

      --
      cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    6. Re:Bleh by multiplexo · · Score: 1

      Or the means, or the opportunity. Removing the means for mass murder is impossible, because there are so very many ways to do it, and all of those means have alternative, productive, useful uses to the non-mass-murdering segment of society.

      Bullshit. Fully automatic weapons were banned in 1934 and guess what, no one has been going around and shooting up schools with fully automatic weapons because they're not available to the average nutjob. Enforcing a ban on semi-automatic weapons would be difficult but could be done. At the very least the government could just ban their sale to private citizens and ban sales and transfers of existing semi-automatic weapons. If you already have a semi-automatic weapon you get to keep it, but nobody else gets to buy a Bushmaster and you can't sell your Bushmaster to anyone else. And guess what gun nutz, if you read Scalia's opinion in DC versus Heller this would be entirely constitutional.

      Or the government could just ban sales of semi-automatic weapons with detachable magazines. This would be entirely legal and constitutional under Heller. You want a semi-automatic rifle for hunting, hey, you can buy an M1 Garand and have eight shots, which is all you need for hunting. If you need a weapon for defending your house you can buy a revolver, and if you can't resolve a home defense situation with six shots or less then you probably shouldn't have a gun at all.

      You're just blustering and repeating right-wing NRA talking points and blowing smoke up everyone's ass.

      --
      cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    7. Re:Bleh by multiplexo · · Score: 1

      That leaves removing the opportunity... which also can't be done, not completely, but the window of opportunity can be dramatically reduced if the potential victims have access to the tools and skills they need to fight back.

      Oh, so you're a member of the "let's arm the children crowd". Guess what, you're full of shit. Being trained and having guns didn't prevent four Lakewood police officers from being gunned down by Maurice Clemmons. Having a bunch of guys with guns around them didn't prevent Ronald Reagan and James Brady from being shot in 1981. You need to pull your head out of your ass and stop masturbating to Death Wish.

      --
      cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    8. Re:Bleh by swillden · · Score: 1

      If at some point you'd like to have a rational, fact-based discussion on this topic, let me know. For now I'm going to assume you just want to wave your hands and shout obscenities and I'm really not interested in that.

      I do want to thank you for providing evidence to support my contention in another discussion, though. I was pointing out to a colleague that in firearms policy discussion it's always the gun control proponents who get nasty, crude and emotional, not the "uneducated redneck gun-lovers." I was able to point him to your comments here as an example of what I meant.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  72. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 1

    Yep. You are right too.

    We live in a society that fails to prevent the most basic "accidents" (it's God Damned easy to avoid drinking and driving!).

    However, I think the same logic applies. We can't restore a life, but we can issue the people responsable for it a hell of regret for doing that. Not only the perp, but everybody else that enabled him/her.

    --
    Lisias@Earth.SolarSystem.OrionArm.MilkyWay.Local.Virgo.Universe.org
  73. Welcome To The Wonderful World Of Thought Crime. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    Need I say more?

  74. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Of the US did become a police state, so you seriously think even the combined strength of all the gun owners in America would be able to prevent it?

    The 2nd Amendmeny was written when parity or near parity of force could be reached relatively easily because wars were fought with single shot firearms and cannon. But it want even a century after the Bill of Rights were written that the combined strength of the Confederate States was insufficient to defy Federal might for more than a few years.

    Any gun owner who thinks the only thing standing between then and tyranny is their weapons is by definition either an idiot or insane.

    To some extent I can buy the self defense argument, though the first victim of this latest mass shooting was a Prepper. Sadly the NRA is incapable of seeing the irony in that.

    Yes mass shootings happen, even where there is gun control. But the rate of gun deaths in the US is so out of lunch with other Western countries that there has to be some explanation beyond insane people alone. I think no small part of the problem is found in your post; a sort of gun fetishism bordering on worship, to the point of where any gun debate is seen by a sizeable portion of the population as heresy.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  75. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    A constant theme around these is that plenty of people noticed "red flags" in the person, and yet none of them did anything about it to get them help. I think this is probably more 20/20 hindsight than useful observation.

    This whole idea of "red flags" regarding "anti-social" people is what really scares me - and should for a lot of Slashdot. I'm single, fairly quiet, only have a few friends. By most of those definitions I'm likely to be an anti-social nutcase just waiting to go off.

    It almost seems like they're trying to criminalize being a quiet person that keeps to yourself.

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  76. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

    But the rate of gun deaths in the US is so out of lunch with other Western countries that there has to be some explanation beyond insane people alone.

    Economic inequality is a good predictor of violence, and the U.S. has a vast problem with that. The U.S. is also, IIRC, the only industrialized democracy nation without universal health care. And it has a unique situation regarding race; given the mammoth differences in white vs. black murder victims, this cannot be ignored.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  77. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

    this guy went on a rampage because he was going to be involntary comitted

    Has been claimed by one person, with others contradicting it. Other than a vague belief, for reasons currently not clearly known, that the shooter may have thought his mother loved the children he shot more than him, we don't really have anything concrete at the moment. It's certainly not a statement of known fact that he was about to be committed. Even if it was his mother's intention, the "committed" version of the story doesn't suggest he was about to be, rather that his mother was about to start a process that would, in a few months, result in his committal.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  78. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by digitig · · Score: 1

    A constant theme around these is that plenty of people noticed "red flags" in the person, and yet none of them did anything about it to get them help. I think this is probably more 20/20 hindsight than useful observation. And then everyone gets the idea that if only the system worked better, they'd have got help.

    And it's nothing new.

    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  79. Sorry. by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    Guess I've been falling behind on my kiddie-script loser news. I hear they get caught more recently using their Xbox handles over IRC.

  80. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by digitig · · Score: 1

    I would insist on a jury of shrinks from no less than four different mental health agencies.

    A jury of shrinks all working to DSM. If the powers-that-be manage to get "disagreement with government" as a key indicator of a serious disorder in a future edition of the DSM, the job is done.

    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  81. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by tombeard · · Score: 1

    "The state tells its people that the cameras are there for their benefit and to prevent crime, but the crime they are preventing is insurrection."

    --
    The reason we subjugate ourselves to law is to better procure justice. If law does not accomplish this purpose then it m
  82. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by HavenBastion · · Score: 1

    if you understand the difference between the swiss socialist state and the american police state, then you understand why the freedom to own weapons is of primary importance here, and not there.

  83. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by HavenBastion · · Score: 1

    "Any gun owner who thinks the only thing standing between then and tyranny is their weapons is by definition either an idiot or insane." you believe that trying to beat them by their own rules is an option? no, the physical force you can exert IS the only thing standing between you and tyranny, even if it's not enough.

  84. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    We have to sacrifice our rights and live in a police state, because that is the "price to protect us

    I would rather walk free and take the risk that I'll be killed by a nutjob/terrorist, besides that's one of the exciting about living in a true democracy, society was chaotic enough that anything could happen.

    In the meantime everyone just got on with their lives.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  85. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    But it isn't enough by orders of a magnitude. It's rather like saying "the only thing standing between me and lethal staph infection is this wheel of Danish blue cheese."

    If the US government becomes a tyranny you're fucked, and even if you kill off a few cops with your assault rifles, sooner or later they'll just blow you to Kingdom Come. You're so far from parity even from a moderate sized city's police forc that what you wrote is laughably idiotic.

    The Second Amendment was a lovely idea for securing liberty in 18th century, but as I said, by 1864-65, not even the Confederacy with its West Point graduates, seasoned generals from the Mexican-American War, and no lack of men willing to lay down their lives could keep Federal forces from crushing them.

    Just be glad the US isn't actually a tyranny.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  86. Maybe You're In The Minority by cstacy · · Score: 1

    Report, that is.

  87. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    Except that the guy in China who tried to stab children didn't kill very many of them.

  88. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by swillden · · Score: 1

    A constant theme around these is that plenty of people noticed "red flags" in the person, and yet none of them did anything about it to get them help.

    Well, apparently two people on the U of Iowa admissions committee saw something wrong with him before the fact -- the program director, Daniel Tranel, said "Do NOT offer admission under any circumstances". I don't think Tranel has ever said what he saw, though.

    Another important question to ask is how many other applicants he similarly denied. Apparently he had one true-positive, but how many false positives? Tests that try to pick out extremely rare conditions require extraordinary precision, and I really doubt that the Tranel test offers that precision.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  89. City-State by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    It occurs to me that, with the imminent implosion of the Federal Reserve system, it makes sense for New York to expand into new ways of exerting political influence on the rest of the countryside.

    No doubt these "deranged gunmen" will be just happen to be more children of tax-avoiding executives or financial-fraud-tracking scientists.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  90. I do not see the limitation of human rights by miklesz · · Score: 1

    If someone writes nonsense to the public on the Internet and gives others to read, you should take into account the fact that this nonsense will also read and analyze the police.

  91. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by FatLittleMonkey · · Score: 1

    That's what I've been saying since columbine. I could kill more people without a gun than with, and stealthier.

    But you don't.

    The same arguments were made when Australia banned many types of firearms after a mass-shooting in 1996. And while mass shootings virtually stopped, there was no corresponding increase in non-firearm mass killings. No bombings, no mass poisonings.

    --
    Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
  92. Kabuki Theatre by FatLittleMonkey · · Score: 1

    The purpose of the program is to appear to be Doing Something. This doesn't require that the program does something, but it is vital that it appears to do so. Hence the announcement that "We are Doing Something" is the core of the program requirements.

    --
    Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
  93. I am a taxidermist. I live in Mother's basement. by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    I love sewing and stuffing and stuffing and I will be stuffing until the cows come home. And then I will stuff them. I live in a shoe box in the middle of the road.

    Or is a taxidermist one who applies the cool yellow checker design to taxicabs? I'll do that too. Then I'll stuff it. With people. I'll stuff the trunk with their backpacks and signs. And drive them to City Hall. Where we'll set up a protest rally.

    The signs would say,

    "Mayor Bloomberg -- you, like the Giuliani before you -- are 'mission creeps' who somehow believe that human behavior and criminal intent can be algorithmically inferred with less than a 98% error rate. Why does NYPD have a precrime division staffed by folks who believe every CSI Hollywood hacker cliche and statistical cheat?

    But go ahead... staff that giant precrime center with Internet workstations and former Enron scammers. In batches of 100, 2 to surf the web for patterns and 98 to sift out the noise and irrelevant garbage they produce. When you tour the basement facility and hear the reassuring buzz of a hundred power-agents at work you will not realize that they (like they did at Enron) spend most of their time talking to each other not the outside world. And playing networked violent shooter games.

    This precrime center actually sounds like a breeding ground for sociopath terrorists! The problem is that while they are connected to the world they are not part of it and exist solely on the notion that they are arrogantly superior to those they place under surveillance.

    There will be an underground cafeteria and apartments for the Agents too so they never need to emerge into the sunlight. And they will call you 'Mother'. Affectionately at first.

    Meanwhile New York City will be reduced to a single aging beat cop with a rusty flashlight roaming the streets.

    And when the Precrime Project is some day dissolved by citywide bankruptcy the Agents will crawl up the stairs and out the exits and you will see what you have unleashed upon the World."

    They would have to be really big signs, to say all that.

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  94. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by gtall · · Score: 1

    You have no understanding of "the laws". Currently, there are no laws to lock up a crazy nut, they have rights. Ask the ACLU, they'll tell you. My sister, manic depressive at the least, did a runner once from her apartment after moving all her furniture into the street. We searched, we contacts all the police agencies, the hospitals. It was as though she fell off the Earth. After 2 weeks, we happened to call one of the hospitals and a nurse told us that even though she couldn't tell us my sister was there, she was there. Turns out she showed up at a police station and they took her to that hospital. We talked to those cops before we found her, nope, they'd not seen nothing, never, not here.

    After several tumultuous years, Adult Protective Services told Ma that if my sister forced them to come out one more time (she was now living at home with Ma), they would remove Ma from the house. Not my sister, my Ma. Why? Well, mental illness patients have rights, you know.

  95. Still not as awful as "Uptown Girl" though :'-( by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

    Billy Joel needs to do a 2013 version of "We Didn't Start the Fire."

    No, trust me, he really *doesn't*.

    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  96. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

    So you're saying there were mass shootings regularly, and that abruptly stopped when they banned those firearms? Or that there was one, and none since then; which may or may not have anything to do with that ban?

  97. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by dbIII · · Score: 1

    There were several mass shootings but there has not been one since the gun laws were passed. That's the fact. Whether it was due to the gun laws or not is a matter for speculation.
    Here we treat a flag as our flag and we don't pretend our guns are flags or symbols of manhood and courage instead of the tools that the guns actually are. That made passing the gun laws simpler than would be possible in the USA with it's odd gun fetish.

  98. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by FatLittleMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So you're saying there were mass shootings regularly, and that abruptly stopped when they banned those firearms?

    Approximately 1 every 18 months over the two decades before the new restrictions. Reduced to just 1 in the 16 years since the change (using matched criteria for classification. Although it was at the bottom limit of the classification.) A ten-fold reduction in the number of mass shootings so far, and a greater than ten-fold reduction in the number of people killed in mass shootings. Realistically, 16 years isn't long enough to work out the true post-reform rate, it's too low to measure.

    We have the same media, movies, TV, music, video games, as the US. We didn't improve our mental health system, we didn't improve our economy, we didn't change our law enforcement systems. Other crime rates followed their prior trends, some small differences that may be attributable to the change (reduction in murder rate (ditto suicide), increase in some other categories) but they're all around the 10% variation, too small to show causation. None as sharp and dramatic as the immediate near cessation of mass shootings. Hell, even the number of firearms returned to the previous level within a couple of years. So it's not even a matter of weapon numbers.

    We restricted certain weapon types, and magazine capacities, we had a buy-back of newly banned weapons and accessories from law abiding gun owners (at market value + 10%, IIRC)... and the number of mass shootings dropped by an order of magnitude. And there was no increase in other forms of mass killing; bombs and poisonings, mass-knifings, mass cricket-battings, etc.

    The myth that the mass-killers will just find other ways to mass-kill is demonstrably false. They don't. Regular criminals, yes, nutters, no. There's something about certain types of firearms that is deeply empowering to paranoid delusional freaks.

    And I don't know why.

    Seriously, I didn't see it working. Although I'm okay with reasonable gun control, I could not see the new laws having any impact on mass killings. I remember saying as much online at the time. Outliers are notoriously immune to systematic changes, and this change just screamed "knee-jerk politics" (just like this NYPD story)...

    And yet... the numbers are there.

    --
    Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
  99. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

    Thanks a lot for elaborating, that helped a big deal. Though of course I can't explain it to you either... but it just occured to me that there used to be a huge "problem" with getting soldiers to shoot at enemy soldiers. I guess that "problem" got solved too well, now we even have civilians getting a kick out of it.

    Personally, I learned to glorify (movie) violence long before I learned it sucks, which is pretty much western standard. Strikes me as a doublethink problem, we clearly want people to be sociopath slaves, but then when they are shooting random people and the world drowns in its own feces and lack of imagination, we kinda don't want that bit of it. Thing is, it's all in one piece.

  100. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    Can you please tell me, what happened throughtout history, when populations, on-mass, had denounced their 'efficient weaponry' of the time? (I'll give you a hint, they are not around to tell their stories).

  101. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    Humans are crafty and stupid at the same time. The 2nd amendment is perfectly suited for the moden age. Since the government is composed of people, it's possible to exploit the stupid if you exploit your own craftiness. Lather rince repeat. No govermnet is infalliable, and their mistake is to delude themselves into that position.

  102. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    That's about all they got, actually.

  103. Free Market Solution? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    A decade ago some very wealthy types created a Free Market solution to Mental Health Care. These materialistics have now decided that Mental Health Care requires a War Lord at every elementry school. Do these "all for one, and the rest for me" types feel any responsibilty for their actions? Is their concept of voting using your wallet working for you?

    By the way, when FBI puts that psyco's computer back together again, it's going to be very interesting what see what mom was using the computer for. I would be very surprized if her searches were on how best to arm a socialpath.

  104. Re:Sooner Or Later... by SternisheFan · · Score: 1

    Expect him to try running for president, would not surprise me. What else is left for him to run for?

  105. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    That doesn't even make sense. What is it you're trying to say?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  106. War On Christmas by srobert · · Score: 1

    Be on the lookout for those who think the "War on Christmas" is literally a "War".

  107. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    Against second graders, maybe. Against an unarmed adult, not so much.

  108. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
    Wow, call out the correlation is not causality police.
    And if you're going to cite "white vs. black murder victims", you should point out "white vs. black murderers" or be immediately identified as attempting to mislead.
    So-called universal health care is theft on a grand scale and economic illiteracy at its wildest.

    Economic inequality is a good predictor of violence

    Seen a lot of millionaires shooting up 7-11's and rioting? Jealousy is a mental state, a symptom of a poisoned mind. Honorable poor people, working and holding their own, do not engage in systematic violence. Dishonorable poor people, looking for a handout and thinking the world owes them a living, do. This is a moral problem, not a wealth disparity problem.

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    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  109. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    We can show that when communities arm themselves the crime rate almost disappears. That didn't happen in Australia. Other crimes went up. If they instead adopted common sense laws like more guns - conceal carry and such, it would have been far better than lying about it and saying it was somehow an epidemic. A disease to be fixed. Maybe you forgot about that part? Get the book - "More Guns, Less Crime" and learn a lot. It's all in there, with real numbers.

  110. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    A single person against a city police force loses. But if the government is recognized by even a third of an armed populace as a lethal tyranny, an enforcer will have a poor life expectancy.

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  111. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Trying to argue in favor of morality on the basis of cost is a huge mistake.

    "Cost" can be measured in terms of the lives of those who have to pay it. It should always be considered.

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  112. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Why was his mom a fucking lunatic?

    The news I've heard indicated she was expecting a collapse of civilization. Although that alone does not qualify her as loony, it's not a good indication.

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  113. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    And more: quiet people aren't newscasters. Blabbermouths and nosy-parkers often think everyone should be like them, and those who aren't are hiding evil secrets. People who "shape public opinion" are often loudmouths, afraid of and willing to denounce people who spend a lot of time thinking.

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  114. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 1

    Yes mass shootings happen,

    No. Mass shootings does not simply "happens". They are done. By someone.

    Other than this, I agree with you.

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  115. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 1

    If my poor grammar if the worst thing you can pinpoint in my post, then thank you for implying I'm right. :-)

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  116. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by Lisias · · Score: 1

    It sounds to me like we just need to steer these shootings to the schools where the Free Shit Army send their children. In some places in the US, wiping out a classroom of kids would save society and the government tens of millions of dollars in hand outs, prison expenses, addiction recovery services and damage inflicted on the rest of society.

    Also, by your logic, it's better to kill them while they are young as the sunk cost is less.

    Strawman. I didn't imply anything of this.

    What I said is that is a lot of cheaper to correctly deal with the problem (and I don't even touch on the definition about what would be the correct thing to do) than to let it goes as it is now.

    You are the one stating that killing people is a acceptable way of doing things. Not me.

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  117. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

    I think he is about to have a bath.

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  118. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

    It's a gun debate so critical thinking is not required

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    The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
  119. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by multiplexo · · Score: 1

    What utter bullshit. If all of the Jews in Germany had been armed and had decided in 1934 to resist Hitler they still would have been killed, armed Jewish resistance wouldn't have made the Nazis back down, it would have given them the excuse they needed to start the Holocaust a few years earlier. Or let's take the example of the Japanese American internment. What do you think would have happened if Japanese Americans had decided to arm themselves and resist deportation to camps such as Manzanar? Would the government have backed down on deporting the Japanese Americans if a couple of prominent advocates of internment, say Earl Warren, the AG of California at the time, and FDR, had been assassinated by Japanese Americans? No, given the racist tenor of the times the Japanese Americans would have been slaughtered.

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  120. 15 minutes of fame by CHIT2ME · · Score: 1

    I think one of the first things we need to do to reduce the number of nutcases from commiting these mass murders is to deny them their 15 minutes of fame. A simple law preventing news outlets from releasing the names of these nutjobs would be a good first step. Back that up with stiff fines for anyone, tabloid newspapers etc. from releasing their names to the public. Take away their 15 minutes of fame and, I believe, it would cut down this type of activity greatly.

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  121. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    It's a gun debate so critical thinking is not required

    Problem is, they don't use critical, sound nor even half way informed thinking. Usually won' t listen either. Though I'd like to think I've changed some minds out there. I have changed some minds of parents of some Boy Scouts. They went from thinking it was only ever used to kill to owning a guns. They love shooting now. Used to be many schools had a range in the basement or outside. Even in Washington DC. One of the most rabid anti gun places out there now. The old ranges are usually used for storage.

    The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.

    Indeed.

  122. Re: Uptown girl by davidwr · · Score: 1

    If songs could be rated -1....

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  123. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    I mean that the government is not infalliable. It's right in my post, actually. I explain why, and that is because it's made out of people, and I suggest, very generally, how... use your brain against their brain. Any other questions?

  124. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    Hahahahahahahaha, oh you're so funny that I just shat myself.

  125. Re:man, that is stupid. cyber think crime, no than by hazah · · Score: 1

    You are comparing apples to oranges. The Jewish population is hoplessly outnumbered while at the same time integrated into the population. Same problem with the japanese. So I congradulate you on picking the few situations that are completely impossible. Now lets get back to my actual question... where are the *civilizations* or *nations* or what have you that did not use the most advanced weapons of their time? This time, stop being pandantic over what's irrelevant to the question.