Slashdot Mirror


Ask Slashdot: Can Technology Prevent Shootings?

An anonymous reader wonders if there's a technological response to mass shootings like this Sunday's attack in Orlando, Florida: We're in for a sadly obvious debate now with all of the usual scapegoats, but instead of focusing on who's to blame, it'd be better to identify some specific actions that could actually generate real increases in public safety going forward...

If we're looking for radical changes in the way we live, does technology have a role? Is the answer smart gun technology? Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? Better data analysis algorithms for the federal government? Bulletproof fabrics?

Share your best ideas in the comments. Could there be a technological solution to the problem of mass shootings?

1,144 comments

  1. An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why don't you try education and common sense?

    1. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      If everyone was always armed, the bad guys would be outnumbered, and any shootings would end quickly. Sure, there would be an initial spike of deaths, but in the long run bad guys will stop using guns to try to kill lots of people.

    2. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      If everyone was always armed people would kill each others instead of only shouting and calling bad names.

    3. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How naive. Shots would be heard and the first "good guys" would draw their guns. The second good guys would think the first good guys were the original shooters and would therefore shoot *them*. Death by friendly fire is what would occur -- a lot.

    4. Re:An easier sollution by Oligonicella · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not at all what happens in states with right to carry. Gun violence is *down* from other states. But, spout some more prop.

    5. Re:An easier sollution by lgw · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In the context of "nightclubs", not so much. There's good reason most states ban carrying where alcohol is served, and all if you're drinking. The recent shooting was yet another in a gun-free zone.

      Technological fix? No. Smart guns? It's the terrorist's gun. Metal detectors? Terrorist. Outlaw guns? Terrorist (much like shootings in nightclubs in other countries).

      Outlawing religion seems a better bet, except historically religion has thrived on that.

      No easy answers to evil men.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:An easier sollution by Mike+Frett · · Score: 2

      There were Armed Guards at the door of the nightclub...

    7. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What TV shows are you watching? There are no simple good or bad guys. In reality everybody is a mix of good and bad, and thus your naive solution doesn't work.

    8. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes. Please show that you're intelligent enough to distinguish between different religious beliefs.

      The morals of humanism aren't that different from those of many religions. Hell, I've heard humanism advertised as "all of the morals, none of the gods." Religion doesn't inherently mean having bad morals and doing evil.

      Likewise, therapists sometimes advise their patients to find faith. It's also a central element of AA, which has done a lot of good for many alcoholics. Sometimes faith helps someone find the strength to overcome personal issues they otherwise wouldn't be able to do so. Even if you consider it irrational, there are certainly benefits that are generally accepted as real.

      Neither religious morality nor faith in a supreme being is inherently bad. Not at all.

      However, not all religions are equal. Not even close. FLDS is an extremely creepy cult. Scientology is a scam. The Westboro Baptist Church is a branch of Christianity built on hate, evil, and a perversion of the Gospel. ISIL's brand of Islam is pretty damn close to pure evil.

      Religion isn't inherently good or bad. Some forms of religion do a lot of good, even if you think they're based on irrational and unprovable beliefs. Others are objectively evil.

      In the Old Testament, God promised Jeremiah that, "I will plant my law in their hearts." This means that everyone has an implicit understanding of right and wrong. Pope John Paul II, now a Saint, famously said about evolution and science, "truth cannot contradict truth." This quote is a fundamental fact going well beyond its context. We should all implicitly understand that it's wrong to harm innocent people and that defenseless attacks are particularly cowardly. This is undeniably true. If your religion says otherwise, your religion is wrong.

      Banning religion isn't the answer. We need to be intelligent enough to distinguish between good religion and bad religion.

    9. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I prefer a tech industry enabled mass surveillance dystopia thank you very much.

    10. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outlawing religion

      Yeah, that's been tried too with great effect during the anti-religious campaigns in the Soviet union. You'll find reddit thataway -->

    11. Re:An easier sollution by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >> There were Armed Guards at the door of the nightclub.

      And it took the cops three hours to storm the building while people were dying inside because they thought there was a bomb and hostages, the former due to some bad camera angles. So...for better technology in this incident, I'd go with automatic emergency lighting and web- or phone-quality cameras that could be accessed from outside the building.

      >> "Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said that officers initially mistakenly thought the gunman had strapped explosives to some of his victims after a bomb robot sent back images of a battery part next to a body. That held paramedics up from entering the club until it was determined the part had fallen out of an exit sign or smoke detector, the mayor said." https://www.yahoo.com/news/another-night-drinking-dancing-until-shots-began-011941419.html

    12. Re:An easier sollution by ArylAkamov · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you point to a single incident where that has happened?

    13. Re:An easier sollution by tlambert · · Score: 1

      If everyone was always armed people would kill each others instead of only shouting and calling bad names.

      Only if you were Russian, and the other guy was a Manchester United supporter.

    14. Re: An easier sollution by tlambert · · Score: 0

      It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes. Please show that you're intelligent enough to distinguish between different religious beliefs.

      Isn't that rather the problem? People distinguishing between religious beliefs, and then becoming violent over it?

      Or have you never heard "Imagine" by John Lennon?

    15. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Does it matter? It is all just theory-crafting anyway.

      It's not like there aren't countries that have less shootings. It is simple enough to look at what they do and do the same.
      There will be plenty of theoretical scenarios that aren't prevented but those are only relevant if you don't actually want less shootings and are looking for arguments to not do anything about it.

    16. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone isn't imposing their religion on you, why should you care if they hold irrational beliefs? What gives you the right to impose your beliefs (or lack thereof) on them?

    17. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religion is a mental sickness, a toxic meme. If a member of your family gets sick, do you just ignore them?

    18. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allow everyone to carry firearms. Simple, easy, effective... Some nut case yells "Mohammed was a child pedofile" we're good, they yell something else while brandishing a gun, they are shot 6 ways to Sunday. Simple, and effective - unlike all of the liberal solutions you'll hear that have been tried and failed repeatedly.

    19. Re:An easier sollution by solidraven · · Score: 1

      An idiot seeking cruise missile would also work, but we'd need to build a hell of a lot of those things :)

    20. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Almost never happens.

      40,000 Americans are killed or wounded by gun violence each year.

      On average, approximately zero are saved by good guys who aren't cops.

      The good guy vigilante is a myth, even in states with open carry or liberal concealed carry .

      The level of training required to effectively deal with an active shooter with a compact long gun is far too high for most civilians to devote the time to, so they end up being ineffective or escalate the situation.

      If Chis Kyle can get whacked by a nutjob, Joe Average civilian had no chance.

    21. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      7.2b?

    22. Re: An easier sollution by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On average, approximately zero are saved by good guys who aren't cops.

      Well, yeah, that's because of a number of factors:
      1. Most gun deaths involve people who know each other, with drug and domestic violence being the top two.
      2. The most visible case where a CCW would be handy is a spree killing, yet spree killings are actually really rare. Seriously, you're more likely to be punched or kicked to death than killed in a spree killing.
      3. Something around 80-90% of spree killings(depending on your definition) happen in 'gun free' zones where you can't legally CCW anyways.

      So, get rid of or at least seriously reform the war on drugs and get rid of gun free zones and you might see shooters stopping more spree killings. That being said, spree killings stopped by a civilian or police shooter early don't make the news anywhere near as hard.

      You hear about the Uber driver who went on a spree killing rampage. You don't hear about the one who stopped one(and ended up fired).

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    23. Re:An easier sollution by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why don't you try education and common sense?

      Too simplistic. Besides the progressives would rather bury their head up their ass and pretend nothing is wrong. Remember when all those progressives and the media said that after Dylann Roof murdered 9 people there needed to be a national dialog on the confederate flag? A guy just killed 50 people was a muslim, I'm sure they're going to be lining up to suggest a national dialog on Islam.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    24. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try selling ISIS flags, see how that works out for you.

    25. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technological fix? Armed guards, especially in drinking places where the guests can't bring their own guns. But armed guards cost money - not gonna happen.

    26. Re:An easier sollution by geekmux · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can you point to a single incident where that has happened?

      Are you serious? The term "friendly fire" wasn't invented in this thread today, so let's not be ignorant that it could exist on or off a battlefield. Just because civilians are not exposed to warfare on the same level as a soldier doesn't mean it couldn't happen, as we have literally dozens of unfortunate events in our history that prove that it HAS happened during conflicts.

      I have considerably more experience with firearms than the average civilian, and it has crossed my mind several times as to how a situation might play out that would involve multiple people shooting, and how I would or could defend myself and others during a situation where it might be VERY hard to tell the difference between a bad guy and an undercover police officer.

      With the laws today, it's bad enough for a civilian legally defending a lethal action of self defense, even when the threat and target is crystal clear. Our legal system does not always see eye to eye with Common F. Sense as. You should know this by now.

    27. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Does it matter? It is all just theory-crafting anyway.

      Not at all. There are hard statistics available on the crime trends since we've gone from a nation with zero concealed carry states to now 50 concealed carry states. What you "theorize" didn't happen. On the contrary, crime (including violent and gun crime) has continued to decrease and there are virtually no cases of crimes being committed by permitted concealed carry holders. There are however, myriad documented cases of crimes being interrupted and prevented by armed noble citizens. Too many to count! But there are blogs dedicated to publicizing them since the mainstream media doesn't. Not a conspiracy, perhaps; just that non-news doesn't make headlines: "Man not killed because attack didn't happen because of an armed bystander."

      NOTE: Guys carrying long rifles and using them in mass shootings is an entirely different legal topic than concealed carry to reduce them. Remember that before responding.

      Also, I can't not highlight your naive comment suggesting that somehow we could just copy what other nations did and have the same results. That ignores the reality of the unique history of the United States in relation to guns and the immutable fact that they *already* exist here in large numbers and aren't going away, regardless of what laws you craft.

    28. Re:An easier sollution by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      what education? that killing is bad? which common sense solution do you ascribe to?

      --
      If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    29. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      And you have to ask how he got into the nightclub with all that weaponry

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    30. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything that gives hope to people helps. Fighting poverty and social injustice, more education, better employment.

      It is a great thing to be wealthy. Even if it means other have to suffer. Just when those others are in your own country, they start being a problem.

      Vajk

    31. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      he seemed more homophobic than radicalised

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    32. Re: An easier sollution by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      If someone isn't imposing their religion on you, why should you care if they hold irrational beliefs?

      s /on you/on you yet/.

      Answers itself, doesn't it?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    33. Re: An easier sollution by GLMDesigns · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Belief in the almighty power of the state is also a toxic meme. So how does one cure progressives? Or do you leave them to rot in their misery?



      The solution is

      freedom of speech - no exceptions - that also means don't go out of your way to shout down your political oponents,
      freedom of thought (otherwise known as a religion)

      one can disagree with others but one cannot use violence.

      And yes that means that once in a while a crazy person will do some crazy sh!t.

      --
      If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    34. Re: An easier sollution by reboot246 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So, am I to believe that no atheist has ever committed a crime of any kind? Nonsense.

      Jesus said that we will know them by their fruits. Don't listen to what a man says; watch what he actually does. That's the only way to judge what is in a man's heart. Islam has some pretty rotten fruits. Wake up and look around.

    35. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he seemed more homophobic than radicalised

      Why are you trying to separate those two traits? With Islam, they go hand-in-hand.

      How about this Orlando imam caught on video saying "Gays must die"?

      And yeah, it's ISLAM that's the problem. Not religion. No one was murdered over Piss Christ.

    36. Re:An easier sollution by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      And you have to ask how he got into the nightclub with all that weaponry

      The first people he shot were the guards...

    37. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/md-killed-friendly-fire-deliberately-shot-article-1.2567054

    38. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...the [xxx] would rather ...
      words that often indicate a simplistic strawman argument is about to follow.

      (reads post) Yep!

      What's more annoying is that this bit of mediocre group-blaming got modded up. There are a bunch of mods that look more for posts that they agree with rather than posts that add to the discussion, and their numbers seem to be growing.

    39. Re:An easier sollution by manu144x · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Because education and common sense are completely relative terms.

      Education in Islam = Knowing the quran by heart.
      Common sense in Islam = Killing anybody who is not muslim, who is not straight, and in the end who does not agree with Islam.
      There is no such thing as common sense/education, it's not measurable and certainly not enforceable.

    40. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's actually about 30,000 (inflating by 33% is quite the exaggeration), and about 22,000 of those are suicides. And there isn't so much as a correlation, much less a causation link to legality of guns and suicide rates since I know that's where you want to go with (most of the highest suicide rate countries on earth have complete bans on firearms). And the reason you think the good guy vigilante is a myth is because it never makes the news. Do some google searches and you'll find out how frequent it actually is.

    41. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he seemed more homophobic than radicalised

      If that's what a nonradical homophobe is like, I'd sure hate to meet a radicalised one.

    42. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were your first two sentences supposed to be linked in some way? The second is a complete non-sequiteur. Do you actually believe that all "progressives" believe in "the almighty power of the state"? I mean, there's a "toxic meme" right there. Ironic, no? This kind of abject idiocy which attempts to paint anyone who disagrees with you as some kind of irrational extremist is the most toxic meme of all. So stop pretending you believe in free speech. You clearly believe in closing people down if they disagree with you, to the extent you actually talk about "curing" them of their misguided opinions. I mean here you're shouting down your political opponents before the conversation has even begun. As for "freedom of thought", the Judao-Christian religions are specifically opposed to that. "Freedom of thought" in those cases means freedom from, not of religion.

    43. Re: An easier sollution by mpercy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes."

      Just as valid: It's woefully ignorant to blame all gun-owners for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes.

    44. Re:An easier sollution by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

      he seemed more homophobic than radicalised

      Most people who think homosexuality is something horrible think so because Abrahamic religions in general and Islam in particular have been saying that for 2000 years. But it might have been more "the enemy (IS) of my enemy (gays) is my friend" than any deep religious commitment. Doesn't matter, I doubt all the people who fought for the Nazis were die-hard ideologists either.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    45. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the truth:

      >40,000 Americans are killed or wounded by gun violence each year.
      of the 33K so called "gun violence" deaths 2/3 of it is from suicides. Majority of the "gun violence" that is not suicides are from cities and states with extreme gun control laws that doesn't decrease "gun violence" or the overall violence.

      >On average, approximately zero are saved by good guys who aren't cops.
      Where is the stats for this lie? No agency tracks how many crimes where stopped because someone was carrying a gun since none of those were ever reported to the police. Plenty of stories in the non-liberal media about people who stopped home invasions and robberies who are not cops so your lie is debunked with just one valid story.

      >The good guy vigilante is a myth, even in states with open carry or liberal concealed carry .
      See above

      >The level of training required to effectively deal with an active shooter with a compact long gun is far too high for most civilians to devote the time to, so they end >up being ineffective or escalate the situation.
      False. Plenty of stories in the non-liberal media about guys who help cops in a shooting situation. Plus you have the false narrative that police are trained well in shooting situations. You seem to equate police as some super human when they are not. Police academy training for shooting is minimal. NYPD academy training for shooting is only 24 hours. CA POST training is about the same.

      >If Chis Kyle can get whacked by a nutjob, Joe Average civilian had no chance.
      Situational awareness. Kyle was not expecting the guy he was helping to turn the gun on him. No one can avoid that, your point is just moronic.

    46. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't educate someone who doesn't want to be educated. You also can't de-program people who grow up in communities of hate.

      The best technology solutions are the ones people balk at right now:
      1) Register all gun owners
      2) Register all guns
      3) Register all gun and ammo sales
      4) Use smartphone location information to find out where gun owners are immediately after they purchase guns and ammo.

      Use technology to map who are buying guns for hunting, shooting ranges and such and put those on the "safe recreational use" side of the spectrum, while people who seem to be stockpiling ammo, or buying substantial amounts without going to a recreational location get flagged. Nobody needs 4 cartridges of semi/fully-automatic ammo unless they are going to a gun range to blow stuff up. Regular pistol ammo (eg the kind that law enforcement would have) would only flag individuals who buy the ammo and do not have a job where such weapons are issued.

      If someone is regularly in communication with jijadi's then they should be red flagged and the second they purchase guns or ammo, they need to be watched where they take those weapons.

    47. Re:An easier sollution by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Can you point to a single incident where that has happened?

      If it happens to trained police officers, do you really believe it doesn't happen with ordinary gun "enthusiasts" who are trying to be heroes?

      http://www.policemag.com/list/...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    48. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. He was more of a orthodox muslim that follow to the letter Muhammad's (PBUH) teaching of violence and haltered, than a radical peaceful muslim that stay away from of obscenity of the quran.

    49. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you couldn't even read the entire sentence you replied to. That's lazy even by /. standards.

    50. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Bogus number. Go and get the real ones. Maybe look at just the homicides. How about dropping the suicides out of that number thats close to 20k a year.

    51. Re:An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why don't you try education and common sense?

      The federal government has been waging war on education and common sense since the fifties. They are horribly inconvenient in a populace you would like to control.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    52. Re:An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 0

      during a situation where it might be VERY hard to tell the difference between a bad guy and an undercover police officer.

      That's every day. Hell, it's VERY hard to tell the difference between a bad guy and a uniformed police officer. The difference, I suppose, is that the uniformed police officer gets away with his crimes even when caught.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    53. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, pledging allegiance to IS doesn't mean you have been radicalised?

    54. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shooters don't happen to carry a gun, then randomly think... I'm going to start shooting people now. Nearly any security measure at the entrance can by bypassed if you start shooting people... Which I should point out is already illegal. Will it make things more safe if shooting people at entrances becomes illegal? .... In this sort of thing the shooter dies like 90% of the time... making more parts of this illegal isn't going to stop them.

    55. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freedom of thought is NOT "otherwise known as a religion."
      Perhaps you mean that in allowing freedom of thought, we must also accept that some thoughts will be religious.
      Unfortunately, religions aren't known for giving freedom of thought to their adherents.

    56. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Chis Kyle can get whacked by a nutjob, Joe Average civilian had no chance.

      Standard progressive defeatist drivel.

    57. Re:An easier sollution by SirSlud · · Score: 0

      That ignores the reality of the unique history of the United States

      The US is a special snowflake.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    58. Re:An easier sollution by laurencetux · · Score: 1

      and i would add in this context the STAFF enjoying the tech of John Moses Browning combined with some creative loads.

    59. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're just trying to keep on par with US educational, religious and diplomatic norms. Thanks for leading the way once more.

    60. Re: An easier sollution by dywolf · · Score: 5, Informative

      That is woefully ignorant thing to say.
      Ignorance is what is toxic.
      Liberals and progressives don't believe in the power of the state.

      The power of the state can originate in many places.
      In western liberal political theory that place is the people, ie, the consent of the governed.
      That is then represented though democracy, either direct or representative.

      the power of the state can also originate in a belief in divine right of a special family. we call those monarchies.
      some places believe in the power of god (or other religion) empowers some religious leader. those are theocracies.
      or in the power of the military. we call those military dictatorships.

      Liberals and progressives believe that all political power and authority, ie "the state", originates in the people, the governed, not the state itself, nor do we worship it.

      Question is: where do you believe it originates?
      Since you seem to have a problem with a basic tenet of western liberalism.

      Are you one of those conservatives who is tired of the military being limited by civilian oversight?
      Maybe a military junta is more to your liking then.

      Or perhaps you think the people have limited religion too much, and a theocracy would be more to your liking?

      Or there's always merry old England, if a King/Queen is more your thing.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    61. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's woefully ignorant to blame all gun-owners for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes.

      Aren't those terms synonymous?

    62. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if by, approximately zero, you mean tens, to hundreds of thousands depending on your exact definition, then i agree with you 100%!

      Allow me to direct you to https://www.reddit.com/r/dgu

      or perhaps http://www.nap.edu/read/18319/chapter/1

    63. Re: An easier sollution by alvinrod · · Score: 1

      That being said, spree killings stopped by a civilian or police shooter early don't make the news anywhere near as hard.

      To some degree this is also because once you stop a spree killing or something that could have been a spree killing, you have no way to determine how much harm was prevented. Was the person killed going to go on a murderous rampage that would have claimed dozens of other lives or were they about to commit suicide after just killing a single person?

      Sometimes we can learn enough about the killer after the fact to make an educated guess, but we never really know.

    64. Re: An easier sollution by tburkhol · · Score: 3

      one can disagree with others but one cannot use violence.

      That's the rule. Not everyone follows the rule.

      Humans get passionate about their beliefs. They raise their voices. Some of them get carried away. It hardly even matters what they get passionate about - football or faith: both result dead people.

      The best you can do is try to arrange so that when people let their passions carry them away, the scale of violence is limited. This is why football riots usually injure rather than kill. Don't take your gun to the bar, don't take it to the KKK rally, don't take it to the Occupy protest.

    65. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All religion would gladly kick out those few nutjobs and murderous assholes ... while NRA-class gun-owners will welcome them into their club.

      Either you:
      - educate and keep everyone mentally healthy,
      - accept nutjobs killings,
      - limit weapon access.

      You don't need technology, just willingness to go the distance.

    66. Re:An easier sollution by dywolf · · Score: 5, Informative

      the downward trend in crime is very long-term and consistent and shows zero correlation to the increase in CCW permits.

      what we have instead in this country, on both state-by-state basis, as well as a metro-area basis, is very clear correlations between gun prevalence and gun deaths. and it's summed up thus: more guns = more deaths.

      this trend also is clearly shown at the national levels as well, as of all western nations the US has by far the most gun deaths of any nation not currently engaged in an active conflict.

      as for permit carriers actually stopping crimes, for every gun used in self defense, 34 people die.
      and yes, the FBI and CDC has statistics.

      In 2012, there were 8,855 criminal gun homicides in the FBI's homicide database, but only 258 gun killings by private citizens that were deemed justifiable, which the FBI defines as "the killing of a felon, during the commission of a felony, by a private citizen."

      That works out to one justifiable gun death for every 34 unjustifiable gun deaths.

      Or, look at it this way. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows that in 2012 there were 20,666 suicides by gun. That works out to one self-defense killing for every 78 gun suicides. CDC data show that there were more than twice as many accidental gun fatalities as as justifiable killings.

      There are, of course, plenty of solid arguments for robust 2nd Amendment protections. Millions of people use guns for sport and recreation every day. The vast majority of gun owners are responsible citizens, not criminals.

      But, though some people certainly use guns for self-defense, the data suggest that overall, guns are used far more often for killing than self-defense. As a result, it may be worth thinking twice about arguments for more guns in schools, churches and other public places.

      Don't like those statistics?
      Then lobby Congress to remove the ban on funding for actual dedicated research of gun violence.

      After all, what have you got to lose?
      If you're right and the current statistics are completely wrong, then actual dedicated statistics research and collection should prove that.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    67. Re:An easier sollution by dywolf · · Score: 1
      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    68. Re: An easier sollution by dywolf · · Score: 2

      most (2/3) gun deaths are suicides.
      most sprees aren't in fact in gun free zones.
      nor are gun free zones chosen for that reason; targets are nearly always chosen because of a specific target or connection at that location. place of employment, significant other, etc.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    69. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If homophobic was a "real" thing. I have never seen a person "afraid" of a homosexual. I have seen people afraid of spiders (freaking out and screaming and running) and ladders, and closed in spaces and heights.

      But never afraid of a person that is gay.

      So, it's extremely unlikely he went into a building full of something he was actually afraid of. It seems there is actually no scientific proof that there are any homophobic people in existence. (willing to see proof, just submit a link)

    70. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you try education and common sense?

      Better solution. Check IDs before letting anybody in the US. If the name says Mohammed, Omar, Achmed, or anything like that, deny entry. And give the one's already here the old heave ho. Most of the mass shootings will go with them.

    71. Re: An easier sollution by ninthbit · · Score: 1

      It happens all the time. The problem is though, is that it's not a MASS shooting if the wacko is taken out quickly. If no one, or just a few people get hurt, the news hardly reports it. As for the level or training... about 7% of the US population are military veterans. So if you have a group of even 15 people, then on average, one is trained Vet. Not to mention off duty law enforcement and other trained civilians. As mentioned, most active shooting happen in gun free areas. If Chris Mintz had a gun, he probably would have been able to stop the Oregon community college shooter and also not been shot himself 7 times for trying without one. http://www.usatoday.com/story/... We don't need gun control, we need crazy people control.

    72. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War on education, anyway.

      Conservatives have long denigrated the educated with the phrase, "Wall, I ain't one of them pointy-headed elite Liberal Intellectuals, but anybody with a lick o' Common Sense can plainly see..."

      Common Sense == Agrees with my prejudices.

      In any case, neither education nor common sense will help. Many terrorists well-educated. What's really needed are to teach people compassion and respect for others. If they lack that, then all the knowledge in the world won't help, and certainly fear of punishment won't.

    73. Re:An easier sollution by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Most people who think homosexuality is something horrible think so because Abrahamic religions in general and Islam in particular have been saying that for 2000 years.

      Sunni Islam is the oldest at only 1300 years. Christianity, from what history states, didn't really form as anything more than essentially a Jim Jones or David Koresh cult for about 300 years, so really only Judaism is 2000+ years old.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    74. Re: An easier sollution by jsrjsr · · Score: 0

      The typical gun owner knows more about guns and can shoot them more accurately that the typical police officer. Even criminals may be better at shooting than police officers.

      Police training is woefully inadequate in this area. Professional trainers know this and have discussed it openly.

    75. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You cannot legislate around constitutional rights. You don't like it, repeal it.

    76. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The US has far and away the most gun violence in the developed world. It also has more guns per capita than any country in the world. If guns are the solution why aren't we the safest from gun violence? And why does Texas have basically the same gun homicide rate as CA? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    77. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The greatest number of people killed in the 20th century were killed by atheists in China and the old Soviet Union.

    78. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good points. Of note is #3, which may be applicable here due to the presence of a licensed alcohol retailer (the dance club) and the typical ban of firearms near places that sell alcohol under many state's law(s).

    79. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Except that is not true. Liberals say the believe the power of the state originates in the people, but they really mean that it originates in the right kind of people lead by right thinking elites who use the power of the state to suppress anyone who doesn't agree with them.

    80. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://www.usatoday.com/story/... And that was a trained policeman who shot one of his own by mistaking him for the assailant. Or the admission of someone at the Gabby Giffords shooting who said he came very close to shooting someone who had wrestled the gun away from the attacker. http://www.slate.com/articles/... You really need to stop believing movies are reality. If you don't have situational awareness you hurt more than help. And if your in the thick of an attack you don't have it.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    81. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Friendly fire" does NOT sum up the hypothetical situation being talked about here.

    82. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1-You can try having weapon scanners everywhere, but that just means the crazies will do something else. 2-teach people to take down the "guy with a gun". 500 unarmed people have no trouble beating 1 crazy. And even if you get shot it's an unaimed shot so probably just a bad wound not death. 3-Teach people to understand that a few deaths by terrorism isn't a serious threat like 50,000 car accident deaths a year.

    83. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there a difference?

    84. Re:An easier sollution by kenwd0elq · · Score: 1

      "It's not like there aren't countries that have less shootings. It is simple enough to look at what they do and do the same."

      Mono-cultural societies often have lower levels of violence; Japan might be the classic example.Japan has no cultural minorities, and has a low level of violence. Multi-culti societies have more. At an extreme, think of Iraq with Sunni, Shia and Kurdish minorities. There's a lot of violence in the transition; for example, England and France are experiencing a lot of violence in importing a Muslim underclass that refuses to assimilate.

    85. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the downward trend in crime is very long-term and consistent and shows zero correlation to the increase in CCW permits.

      That sounds like a correlation....

    86. Re:An easier sollution by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Rule 0; If everyone at the poker table has a gun, someone is going to get shot.

      Rule 1; If everyone at the poker table checks their gun at the door, you only need a gun outside the door.

      I'm not ready to carry my handgun yet - I haven't yet completed training in how to carry safely and use properly (including learning how to evaluate situations and use force appropriately), but if/when I do, I will probably not carry it to a poker game. But I might to a public event. And where I live, I can carry unconcealed, legally, and indeed you often can find someone carrying an AR-15 style rifle, openly, both to exercise their rights and to give full warning to the criminals, that they will be opposed.

      And, frankly, if everyone were armed all the time, pretty soon we would stop shooting each other and probably stop shouting and calling each other bad names. After the initial and saddening culling. But that happens in slow-motion now. I cite Chicago. Give everyone in public housing training, range time, and a functional handgun with ammo, and watch the gang shootings go elsewhere. In time, those public housing residents would pay little attention to where their issued handgun was. It would not be needed.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    87. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Except ... when a good guy kills that bad guy who has just started shooting up a night club, the shooting stops. That's the whole point. Police don't appear magically, instantly out of thin air. If they could, they would have shot this guy while he stood casually reloading over and over again. If any one of the 300 people in that club had landed one good shot on that guy, it would have ended things. More people showing up on the scene wouldn't have confusion over who to shoot, because there wouldn't be any more shooting going on. You get that part, right?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    88. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there a difference?

      Sure there is.

      By dismissing the radical Islamic aspect, GP poster can leave his head up his ass.

    89. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally, a voice of reason. I have to agree with you.

      Is there are technological solution to "evil". . .?

      We could ban inanimate objects.

      ban guns,

      ban cars,

      ban airplanes,

      ban fertilizer,

      ban ball/cricket bats,

      ban water balloons,

      ban an upraised middle finger . . .

      None of these things has the capacity or the ability to exercise free will. We already banned bombs and wmds. Didn't slow down evil.

    90. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      This. Did you hear about the mass killing by 2 muslim extremists at an art exhibit in TX, with hundreds dead, and more wounded? No, because they were shot dead at the door.

      Like you said though, it doesn't make headlines unless it has a good body count...

    91. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with guns is that is a game where the equilibrium lies where everyone has a gun. If there might be a gunman, I'm better off with a gun.
      That equilibrium is terrible for the risk of one individual losing it.
      We have two choices: accept that we are very likely to die from gun violence in a crowd, or add rules to break this equilibrium.

      As a Canadian living in a society that accept a few rules to increase my survival probability, I'm tired of having the US weapon industry supply our criminals. Can Trump hurry up and build the wall with Canada to keep your weapons where they belong?

    92. Re: An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      1) Being vague on purpose. Despite "almost never" being factually incorrect, would you like to be one of the people who was NOT saved when self defense works? Why?

      2) Citing stats that include suicide. More than half, in fact, of your (inflated) number are suicides. Suicides have been greatly on the increase, though most of those have involved methods other than firearm use.

      3) "On average, approximately zero" - please, really? There are long lists, for your perusal, of detailed news and police accounts of personal use of firearms preventing and stopping violent crimes. This happens (conservatively) tens of thousands of times a year. Most of the time, the gun isn't even fired - because brandishing it is enough to end the violent encounter or prevent one. Your obsession with death is strange, though.

      4) The level of effort ... blah blah blah. Right. Most people engaged in self defense are using a handgun or a shotgun.

      5) Chris Kyle was whacked by someone delusional, under very specific circumstances. I personally know more than one Joe Average who has successfully relied on a firearm to defend themselves from a violent person. No fancy training, just range time and good familiarity/comfort with the tool in hand. I have personally used one in those (quite scary at the time) circumstances. Your need to wish all of that away is really odd.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    93. Re: An easier sollution by mandark1967 · · Score: 1

      Because for every million or so religious people who don't force their beliefs on you there are probably 10 people who are "extremists". If you count up the number of followers of "big three religions" prone to violence, you're looking at probably 40,000-45,000 people actively planning to kill you over the words "god" used when he said "Love your neighbor as yourself"...well, he said that if you're of the "christian" persuasion. Don't kill me, bro!

      --
      Sig Follows: "Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself." -- Mark Twain
    94. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are going to make a point with stats, please post your source. People with a gun-control agenda seem to love throwing around misinformation to convince people guns are evil. I suspect you are one of those people.

      You claim 40,000 per year are killed or wounded by gun violence. The most recent FBI stats I could find showed homicides by firearm to be at 8454 for 2013 (source). The most recent stats I could find from the Justice Department for non-fatal firearm violence shows 46,000 total for 2007 though 2011 which comes out to approximately 9200 per year (source pg 10). That comes to approximately 17,600 which is less than 45% of the number you provided. That also assumes stats dating back to 2007 despite the fact that gun violence has decreased since then (you can check out the same sources above to see that trend).

      As for the "approximately zero saved by good guys" - that is also 100% incorrect. While the mainstream media do not report it, there are tons of these incidents. Lucky for us, I have a source for this data as well. While those 600+ pages of articles is compiled by the "evil" NRA, they all have independent source articles linked.

    95. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going by online shooting game experience (so a big fat YMMV applies), most friendly fire happens for one of the following reasons:
      1) Jackass troll (IRL, "traitor"), who promptly gets shot by the rest of the team
      2) Pincer attack closes too far, and teammates shoot each other from opposite sides of the enemy
      3) Dumbass teammate runs in front of your line of fire

      It literally never happens because of mistaken identity. Maybe that's because games give you good IFF that doesn't exist IRL, maybe it's because you're not shooting in response to other shots fired. It's possible that the environment skews the results that much. But "never" and "it could happen" are so far apart that it requires a decent amount of study to find out whether that possibility exists.

    96. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How naive. Shots would be heard and the first "good guys" would draw their guns. The second good guys would think the first good guys were the original shooters and would therefore shoot *them*. Death by friendly fire is what would occur -- a lot.

      Who said the second good guy must immediately shoot? If the second good guy thinks the first good guy were the original shooter, then a simple "FREEZE" with a gun pointed at the first would cause the first to stop. Us that have concealed weapon permits are NOT trained to fire first then ask questions.

    97. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The NRA, when it boils down, is essentially a mutual insurance company; no insurance companies want people who are extreme liabilities in their fold.

      The Demoncratic party on the other hand welcomes all comers. With the exception of the nutters who shoot up abortion clinics, the rest of these shooters seem to be overwhelmingly registered Dems.

    98. Re: An easier sollution by srw · · Score: 1

      Or have you never heard "Imagine" by John Lennon?

      Exactly! I mean, have you ever heard of an atheist murdering people?

      Imagine a country where religion was banned... must have been nice until it failed.

    99. Re:An easier sollution by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Try selling ISIS flags, see how that works out for you.

      No problem.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    100. Re: An easier sollution by Hasaf · · Score: 1

      I have been through police firearms training and I disagree. I think you are confusing gun owners with gun enthusiasts. I have a friend whose hobby is shooting, collecting, and modifying, guns. He is a very good shooter. At the same time My mother owns a gun and I know she has not fired it in nearly a decade. In a pinch I am not so sure she could find it.

      Contrary to the media portrayal, the typical gun owner is not obsessed with guns. Like my father, there are a few left over from his target shooting hobby days. Others have a gun, or more, that only come out when it is time to go hunting.

      As for myself, I no longer shoot on a regular basis. I am just not in a place where it is convenient. I do practice with an airsoft trainer, that is configured the exact same as my "real" gun (the one on my permit) on a regular basis. However, at this point practice consists of knocking cans around in my garage (and shooting when visiting my, above mentioned, gun enthusiast, friend).

    101. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A) LOL at 'radicalised' (What does that actually mean? Oh, you mean "following the teachings of the mass murdering, paedophile, mass rapist 'prophet' of Islam"?
      B) You can't BE more 'homophobic' than a muslim.

    102. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes."

      Just as valid: It's woefully ignorant to blame all gun-owners for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes.

      Not really. Both the Koran and the Bible have specific scripture that mandates the killing of infidels. A good christian or muslim, if they followed their holy book, would be murderers. Fortunately MOST people are smart enough to simply ignore the bad parts of those books and concentrate on the good parts.

    103. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When someone commits suicide, the published stories avoid the suicide so that the deceased doesn't get fifteen minutes of fame and inspire others to copy them. How about a little common sense from the media selling audiences to advertisers trumping up these scary stories of terrorism and violence. Report the facts, focus on the tragedy, and avoid the fear factor that empowers those who would commit such acts in the first place!

    104. Re:An easier sollution by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      as for permit carriers actually stopping crimes, for every gun used in self defense, 34 people die.
      and yes, the FBI and CDC has statistics.

      Just to be clear, your statistics don't justify your previous claim. (And I say this as someone who is in favor of greater gun regulation. I just don't think it's a good idea to use misleading statistics to support an argument.)

      That works out to one justifiable gun death for every 34 unjustifiable gun deaths. [snip] That works out to one self-defense killing for every 78 gun suicides. CDC data show that there were more than twice as many accidental gun fatalities as as justifiable killings.

      What you've shown is the ratio of justifiable killings to (unjustified) murders... or suicides or whatever.

      That has little basis for a comparison of "every gun used in self-defense," which is where you started your argument. One would hope (and there are definitely statistics showing) that the vast majority of guns used in self-defense did NOT result in death -- either because simply brandishing the weapon deterred the assailant, or because the victim simply wounded the assailant.

      And, in fact, if you want to find statistics supporting the "other side," you can easily do so. There are well-known FBI statistics out there from various reports suggesting that there are millions of uses of guns in self-defense every year, though the vast majority of them never result in a shot fired.

      I don't buy those statistics, either -- and there are various ways that critics have picked them apart. On the basis of "studies" and "data," we can only definitively say that the number of "defensive gun uses" in the U.S. per year is somewhere between 50,000 and 5,000,000. That's a big range. (But, I'd note that even the lowest estimate from a reputable study is well over 100 times what your argument implies.)

      Basically, when it comes to gun politics in the U.S., I've come to believe that anyone who is a strong advocate on either side will cherry-pick statistics that really don't answer the questions we need to consider. Your post is no exception.

      And while I agree with you that better studies and funding for them is a good idea, I also recognize that the vast majority of gun studies out there seem to be run with a strong agenda in mind for one side or the other. Thus, you'll still just end up with a battle of conflicting statistics, even with more data.

      The only way to really resolve such an argument is to have a strong education in statistics, an understanding of how they can be manipulated, and the kinds of flaws inherent in various population studies. Most people arguing for one side or the other in this debate aren't interested in such nuance. But when you look at it that way, the reality is probably somewhere in the middle: guns ARE used a lot in self defense (a lot more than your statistics suggest), but they also are responsible for a lot of possibly preventable deaths (particularly suicides and accidental shootings).

    105. Re: An easier sollution by jasper160 · · Score: 1

      Very true indeed.

      --
      No good deed goes unpunished.
    106. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what we have instead in this country, on both state-by-state basis, as well as a metro-area basis, is very clear correlations between gun prevalence and gun deaths. and it's summed up thus: more guns = more deaths.

      Citation needed.

      Florida has very loose gun laws. Quite a bit of gun crime.
      Vermont has very loose gun laws. Very little gun crime.
      New Hampshire has very loose gun laws. Very little gun crime.
      Chicago has some of the strictest gun laws in the country. Enormous amounts of gun crime.
      Washington DC has very strict gun laws. Very high gun crime.
      A few miles away in Virginia (with much looser gun laws), quite a bit of gun crime, but less than DC.

      Whatever the effect of gun laws on gun crime, there are many other factors that seem to have a much larger effect.

    107. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You're correct, the word 'religion' isn't inherently 'good' or 'bad' any more than the word 'devil' is 'inherently good or bad', but the fundamental precepts of the Abrahamic religions tend to breed not just 'nut jobs' but a whole sects and even 'major leadership groups' whose actions ARE 'bad' (for the record I was brought up Catholic & am now atheist). When a religion simulates cannibalism as a central tenant of the faith I don't think its a stretch to suggest that religion needs to be closely watched (Catholicism). When a religion professes that dying in the service of that religion will lead you to 75 virgin wives (or whatever the exact number is) & that is promoted widely then you might start questioning the mental health of the people in that religion.

      BTW, you might want to search for 'AA success rates', you'll likely be very surprised (hint, if I had a choice & needed a 'cure', AA would NOT be my 1st or even 10th choice).

      Push comes to shove the ONLY inherent benefit in any religion is the 'sense of community' that most religions provide (shared interests, getting out & meeting people) but that same 'sense of community' is ALSO once of religions most diabolical failings in so much is it tends to promote 'group think', usually quickly followed by 'bad group think' (those dirty homo's, blacks, jews...pick an 'other' that is not wanted in the community).

      So, while inherently I wouldn't promote 'banning religion' as anyone is 'free to think' what they want (e.g. 'freedom of thought' trumps a whole lot of other freedoms), I also wouldn't give it any 'protected status' (e.g. tax breaks etc.) or place religions in a group suggesting they have some 'inherent wisdom' and I certainly would identify anyone who believes in a 'sky fairy' as someone who needs psychological help no more or less than someone who thinks they are Napoleon (note that in either case the belief itself isn't inherently bad in that it doesn't automatically mean they'll be a harm to themselves or others but it's a 'symptom' of an illness & such people should seek treatment). Again, having been brought up Catholic I have brothers who are still Catholic (at least in name), if pressed on the issue I know they don't REALLY believe in the 'sky fairy', so I don't bother, it is the 'sense of community' (especially in times of hardship) that they rely on & use the support of the 'church' for...to that extent there's little harm BUT there has to be a 'better way'...and if religions simply acknowledged that their 'rules' aren't 'from the hand of God' or other nonsense, or just promoted themselves as 'groups of people supporting each other' than maybe they wouldn't be so bad. Unfortunately all the Abrahamic religions are steeped in 'rules' that there is simply no way to remove that even read allegorically are 'fundamentally evil' & as a whole they need to be 'banned' (the rules not the religions...but than for these religions unfortunately that is 'one & the same' but that's THEIR problem).

    108. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Education is what lead to this shooting. He was educated to hate people.

    109. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In 2012, there were 8,855 criminal gun homicides in the FBI's homicide database, but only 258 gun killings by private citizens that were deemed justifiable, which the FBI defines as "the killing of a felon, during the commission of a felony, by a private citizen."

      That works out to one justifiable gun death for every 34 unjustifiable gun deaths.

      This would matter if defensive uses of firearms required killing the perpetrator to be successful. These stats could hide 10, 100, or 1,000 perpetrators breaking off an attack when they realize that the intended victim is armed.

    110. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RIGHT...the history of Christianity is littered with the blood of innocents...under your premise 'Christianity has some pretty rotten fruit'

      Atheists do commit crimes (they/we are human), but in general you don't see Atheists running amok 'for the sake of their religion'.

      Jesus was purported to have 'said' a lot of things...not all of them something that you'd really want to promote...o and you may want to read up on the difference between what the Catholic church wants you to believe he said & what writings actually exist purporting a different fundamental philosophy (they are NOT the same by a long shot).

    111. Re:An easier sollution by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Police don't appear magically, instantly out of thin air.

      Didn't have to in this case; there was an armed off-duty cop in the club when it started. I don't know what happened - only that he engaged the shooter in a "gun battle" - or whether the cop made it out alive. Hopefully whatever action he took saved lives.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    112. Re:An easier sollution by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 2

      "what we have instead in this country, on both state-by-state basis, as well as a metro-area basis, is very clear correlations between gun prevalence and gun deaths. and it's summed up thus: more guns = more deaths."

      So when did Chicago suddenly start allowing its people to have guns?

    113. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you point to a single incident where that has happened?

      Are you serious? The term "friendly fire" [blah blah blah ...]

      So, no.

      Thanks.

    114. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also most of these mass shooting have no "good guy with a gun" because they are usually at some "Gun Free Zone" where people are not allowed to be armed, only the criminals. :Gun free Zones" just make a place for killers to go and kill a lot of people and makes sure that the killers will not be shot at until the cops show up minutes later after people are dead already. Police are reactionary forces not proactive forces. Reactionary forces can only reduce the amount of damage but with longer arrival time, the damage is more. A conceal carry at the location would mean a reactionary force is already there and can reduce the damage. If you want a proactive force, you will need to submit an authoritarian government that monitors you 24/7 and you have no civil rights. If you want that go to Europe or Asia.

    115. Re: An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 2

      Isn't that rather the problem? People distinguishing between religious beliefs, and then becoming violent over it?

      Problem is, today it seems to be overwhelmingly a singular religion that lashes out with extreme violence over such comparisons. Perhaps the problem isn't religion on a whole, but just the one that demands everybody convert or be considered fair game for murder.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    116. Re:An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 2

      what we have instead in this country, on both state-by-state basis, as well as a metro-area basis, is very clear correlations between gun prevalence and gun deaths. and it's summed up thus: more guns = more deaths.

      The facts show otherwise.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    117. Re: An easier sollution by deck · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately you are wrong concerning Christian scripture. It is divided into two sections, that before The Christ, The Old Testament, and that written of and after The Christ, The New Testament.

      The Old Testament centers around the history of the Jews with some history (in a more allegorical sense) before them. While the Jews were commanded to do warfare against their enemies up to and including wiping them out (not unusual 3000 years ago) to preserve themselves and their way, they were also commanded not to commit murder as the Hebraic word used in the Ten Commandments refers to murder and not killing. Properly rendered in modern English it might read "You shall not murder".

      The New Testament never condones murder. The most emphatic statement is when The Christ states to turn ones cheek even "seventy times seven" (an Aramaic hyperbole to express a great many and not really a specific number) to ones enemy. Christians were commanded to submit to the authorities as long as it did not impinge on their beliefs. The closest to any violence is when The Christ tells his disciples to obtain a sword for self protection in the very violent world of the times 2000 years ago.

      The Qu'ran is replete with commands to kill all unbelievers and even those who don't hold the same view of the Islamic religion. If you can find any factual basis in which Jews or Christians are commanded to kill unbelievers on that basis only, present it. Otherwise quite making baseless statements!!

    118. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Won't work, Americans love to shoot each other. It's their god-given right! This is just a larger-scale shooting. The NRA is a terrorist organization enabling mass shootings for years. Answer as always is, "We need more guns!" Move along, nothing to see here.

    119. Re: An easier sollution by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      The good guy vigilante is a myth, even in states with open carry or liberal concealed carry .

      There was an armed, uniformed police officer at the Orlando club at the time of the shooting. It didn't help. There's not much even a highly trained "good guy with a gun" can do do against a bad guy with an assault rifle.

    120. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guy suggests:

      > Why don't you try education and common sense?

      You say:

      > Too simplistic. ... and get 4, Insightful. It doesn't follows, but I can't help but wonder if people think "Can Technology Prevent Shootings?", as the question says.

      What next? Knifes with embedded chips?

      > A guy just killed 50 people was a muslim, I'm sure they're going to be lining up to suggest a national dialog on Islam.

      The alternative being?

      Just for the record, the Iraq war is what created ISIS -- war isn't always the best response.

      Actually, war is for losers who must rule by force, because they can't do it by wisdom.

    121. Re: An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Or maybe we can see assault weapons be taken off the streets. Had the ban enacted in the 1990s been active today, this massacre would not have happened. Simple as that. Support HR 4269, and get this thing to the president's desk so she can sign it. The carnage will end then.

      Please explain the functional difference betwen an "assault weapon" and the Kel Tec SU-16ca. Note the SU-16ca is NOT an assault weapon by any definition. Yet it still uses the same magazines, the same ammunition, has the same ballistics as the "assault weapon" used in Orlando. But it does look "innocent" compared to the scary Evil Black Rifle so it's OK - and its identical cousin, the AR-15, is dressed up all different and would be banned.

      Banning a weapon because it "looks mean" is what I'd expect from a 5 year old...

      You know, we banned killing people, and we banned carrying firearms into that club. Ban didn't work, did it? And of course, you (obviously a Clinton supporter) expect the President to sign legislation to ban these weapons when the current President - and your hopeful President - actively allowed these weapons to be illegally purchased and provided to criminals.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    122. Re:An easier sollution by Deep+Esophagus · · Score: 1

      Why don't you try education and common sense?

      Yes, that should do the trick.

      Enraged Killer: I was going to go into that club and kill everyone whose behavior I find distasteful, but thanks be to my teachers who made me realize that violence is the wrong way to solve my problems!

      My friends on the left say that the only solution is to ban all guns. My friends on the right say the only solution is to ban all immigrants. They're all looking for a one-size-fits-all easy answer to a complex problem. The thing is, society is messy. Another reply in this thread said that there aren't just good guys and bad guys; people are good sometimes and bad sometimes. That's exactly it. Banning guns won't work because (a) that genie has left the bottle and (2) criminals can always get guns, especially now that they can print them; banning immigrants won't work because (a) doing so would punish the innocent as well as the guilty, thus taking away the freedom that makes this country what it is and (2) criminals can always sneak in no matter how high we build the wall; education and common sense won't work because rage and fanaticism are toxic to common sense (see above hypothetical situation); more guns won't work because then you have a crowd of frightened, angry vigilantes firing into a random mix of killers and innocent bystanders. One of my friends mentioned a statistic today that for every attack thwarted by armed self-defense, 34 additional deaths occur because of armed self-defense.

      You can't stop or even measurably reduce terrible things happening, because human beings are chaotic and irrational. The best we can do is find a balance of laws that prevent honest people from doing terrible things while they're thinking rationally, without stifling freedom so much that we are a police state. Too much regulation and even honest people will rebel against authoritarianism; too little regulation and criminals can get away with murder. The hard part is finding that balance between the two extremes.

    123. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dude called the police in the middle of murdering Americans to pledge allegiance to ISIS. You have a strange definition of "radicalized."

    124. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine no hippies...

    125. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Not all of them believe in the 'the almighty power of the state'. Those that don't are too stupid to see the consequences of their beliefs.

      With progressives the options are 'almighty power of the state' or 'too dumb to see unintended consequences'.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    126. Re:An easier sollution by mukinrestak · · Score: 1

      You've clearly missed the point. The root cause of all evil is having beings that can commit it. Ban life.

    127. Re: An easier sollution by I75BJC · · Score: 1

      Even the Great John Lennon told a friend that his song, "Imagine", was just a song – or in crude-speak, "BullShit". Don't forget that GJL also sang that "Happiness is a warm Gun; Bang, Bang, Shot, Shot". So you have FJL contradicting himself (a life long passion and practice of his, btw).

    128. Re:An easier sollution by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Remember when all those progressives and the media said that after Dylann Roof murdered 9 people there needed to be a national dialog on the confederate flag? A guy just killed 50 people was a muslim, I'm sure they're going to be lining up to suggest a national dialog on Islam.

      Your right to be a Muslim - or, for that matter, an Atheist, a Christian, Jew, Hindu, Buddhist or whatever - is protected by the First Amendment. On the other hand, no amendment protects your right to be or swear allegiance to a traitor.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    129. Re:An easier sollution by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      It is simple enough to look at what they do and do the same

      Basic education and consideration of others isn't "simple" to copy. You need to start young and wait for at least a couple of older generations to die off.

      --
      No sig today...
    130. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Far more than 10 in 1,000,000 progressives are dangerous for the exact same reasons.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    131. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      For the really dangerous leftists, atheism was only one aspect of their toxic religion. They were the number 1 killers of the 20th century.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    132. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus also said love thy neighbor and turn your cheek.

      He didn't say only love thy christian neighbor, and only turn your cheek when you're looking to have the moral high ground.

    133. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being violently homophobic *is* radical.

    134. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      No, it didn't help. Because the bad guy went into a closed space full of soft, unarmed targets, and then got to casually kill people and repeatedly reload his gun in order to do more of it, and hang out unmolested for three hours until the SWAT guys stormed the place. The armed guard wasn't fortunate enough to have the opportunity (as someone inside the club would have had) to get a shot at the guy while he was standing around reloading.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    135. Re:An easier sollution by Phusion · · Score: 1

      I'm all for education and common sense, but how would that have prevented the attack on the night club? I'm pretty sure he was motivated by hate. Educated or not, he'd still want to go kill those people.

      --
      640k ought to be enough for anyone.
    136. Re:An easier sollution by Udom · · Score: 1

      "Outlawing religion seems a better bet"... No religion necessary for Sandy Hook, Columbine, Washington Navy Yard, Virginia Tech, Aurora Colorado. etc, etc. The common element is guns, although guns aren't the cause of the behaviour. Mass shootings trigger a huge emotional convulsion in society and I think that's what the killers really want to trigger... the Oprah effect.

    137. Re:An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      The first two are already law in most of the States topping the list of murders per capita. California is working on number 3 (ammo sales), but it's not going to do anything in terms of reducing gun violence...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    138. Re:An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      None of the cops were injured in the initial firefight. He walked in because it was closing time and the security at the entrance had switched into 'clear them out' mode.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    139. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The statistics cited may or may not be completely wrong or right, but as presented they are total non sequiturs.

      So there's "one justifiable per 34 unjustifiable": how does that argue for or against private legitimate carry? Perhaps it's due to not having nearly enough private carriers, such that we need a national campaign to increase their numbers. Perhaps private carry prevents a lot of unjustifiable deaths without killing anyone, but that is not addressed by this statistic. And what does the gun suicide rate have to do with anything?

      If you wish to look at relevant statistics published in peer-reviewed journals, check out the work of Gary Kleck. This Wikipedia link will get you started:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Kleck
      Spoiler alert: he finds guns are used millions of times a year in self defense, which pretty strongly implies that the presence of a gun in a self-defense situation very seldom results in the death of anyone.

    140. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      As a kid, I used to use the same range as the local PD.

      I would take the far end spot. I didn't trust them not to shoot 90 degrees off. 90% of cops only shoot when they have to requalify. The requalifying standards are laughable.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    141. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      The Kel Tec will jam at least once per clip.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    142. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The number of guns does not correlate to gun violence. Switzerland has per capita gun homicide rate (0.15) comparable that of the UK (0.23) while gun ownership is 7 times higher (45.7 and 6.6 respectively).

      For reference in the US ownership is 112.6 and homicide is 3.43.

    143. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "as for permit carriers actually stopping crimes, for every gun used in self defense, 34 people die.
      and yes, the FBI and CDC has statistics."

      False. The FBI and CDC only keeps numbers on how many were *killed* in defensive gun uses. However, the majority of defensive gun uses do not require the discharge or the firearm.

      Research on the topic has suggested that defensive gun use occurs AT LEAST as frequently as criminal use, if not MORE frequently...

      Take a look at pages 15 & 16: http://www.ncdsv.org/images/IOM-NRC_Priorities-for-Research-to-reduce-the-threat-of-firearm-related-violence_2013.pdf

    144. Re: An easier sollution by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Banning religion isn't the answer. We need to be intelligent enough to distinguish between good religion and bad religion.

      And which ones are good? Most of them seem to claim that homosexuality is "evil", so which ones wouldn't support what this guy did? At least Christianity generally (these days) advocates working politically against homosexuality rather than going on a murder spree, unlike Islam. But it wasn't always that way: centuries ago, Christianity advocated burning people at the stake for things like that, or for having the "wrong" Christian beliefs. Jewish people are violent like this too: they throw rocks at women who are "immodest" in Israel, and probably wouldn't treat homosexuals any better.

      Whenever you see some religious person trying to pass off religion as a great thing and casting the nasty bits of it as "extremism" or "fundamentalism", it necessarily comes along with them ignoring or dismissing certain non-progressive parts of their own religion somehow: "oh, we don't believe that stuff any more", or "modern interpretations now hold the following view...".

      We should all implicitly understand that it's wrong to harm innocent people

      Religious people have been doing this for millennia. Crusades, burning people at the stake, etc. The thing is, they don't think of the people they harm as "innocent", because they're "sinners". That's the whole problem with religion: it's easy to find people guilty of some kind of "sin" (which Christians even say that everyone is guilty of to some extent), and then use that as justification to do harm to them.

      This is undeniably true. If your religion says otherwise, your religion is wrong.

      Then it seems that they're all wrong.

    145. Re: An easier sollution by MurryVonSok · · Score: 2

      Atheists act like they didn't support a radical group of people that dropped a nuke on Hiroshima. They act like Stalin did nothing wrong (Oh, communism will work this time, if it didn't work, it wasn't real communism). Atheists proudly wave the banner of those who committed genocide at wounded knee, and blame religion when they put their hands over their hearts, and make promises to a piece of damn cloth.

    146. Re:An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Technological fix? No.

      Obligatory mental heath checkup for purchase of guns and ammo would sure reduce the sales of murder toys to people with mental issues WHILE detecting untreated cases of mental illness.
      Like... you know... people who go out and buy an AR-15 days before they go on a murder spree.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    147. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the longest way to say "no" I've ever read.

    148. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      What sort of education would you like? Who would we be educating, and what would we be teaching them?

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    149. Re:An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      That statistic is a big fat lie.

      Unless you fire the gun, they don't count it as armed self defense. Never trust that source for anything again.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    150. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that crime has dropped 50% in the USA the last 30-40 years has nothing to do with guns. Crime has dropped by half in many other countries. Like in Germany which bans having guns in public unless you're policemen or have an actual use like a body guard. You can't simply be paranoid. England has pretty much no guns. Japan has no guns.

    151. Re:An easier sollution by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Why don't you try education and common sense?

      Because religious extremists aren't interested in 'education', they're only interested in enforcing, with murder if necessary, what some jackass(es) wrote in some old book thousands of years ago, that allegedly is the 'word' of some unseen, unknowable, unprovable, allegedly omnipotent and omniscent 'being' that they call a 'god'. Logic and reason have no place in their world, therefore 'education' is anathema to them, and in fact they'll go out of their way to destroy education, educators, and students whenever and wherever possible, unless of course it's 'educating' them in their ancient, irrelevant, and highly questionable book that they supposedly live by -- but that they feel free to 'interpret', and even cherry-pick parts of, to suit their agenda.

      Note that I am not specifically naming Islamic religions here; I am calling out ALL RELIGION as illogical, irrational, corrupt to it's core, anti-life, and otherwise completely and totally WHACK.

      You want a 'techonological' solution to prevent these sorts of mass shootings? Find a way to fix the fundamental flaw in the human brain that causes religion in the first place. The sooner that we, as in the entire human race, can get over this irrational 'religion' nonsense, take responsibility 100% for ourselves, our actions, how we treat each other, and our planet in general, the better off the human race will be. It's all holding back our evolution and it needs to STOP.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    152. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to point out the obvious here ... but ... there is a 100% correlation between gun violence and gun deaths ... You can't have gun deaths from rocking chairs, jars of Skippy, or Lego blocks ... otherwise it would be called something else.

      Since "the vast majority of gun owners are citizens, not criminals" why it is that WE gun owners are all labeled as "gun nuts" or "militants" or "domestic terrorists" because of the actions of a fraction of a percent of the gun owner population ... and we get chastised for treating Muslims the same way we are treated? I know that not all Muslims are terrorists. I also know that now all gun owners are right-wing religious zealot homophobes who want to shoot up the local abortion clinic.

      Coordinating NICS with mental health and Homeland Security etc. would be a good start.

    153. Re:An easier sollution by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And, frankly, if everyone were armed all the time, pretty soon we would stop shooting each other and probably stop shouting and calling each other bad names. After the initial and saddening culling. But that happens in slow-motion now. I cite Chicago. Give everyone in public housing training, range time, and a functional handgun with ammo, and watch the gang shootings go elsewhere. In time, those public housing residents would pay little attention to where their issued handgun was. It would not be needed.

      Honestly, this would be a very interesting (though ethically questionably) sociological experiment. Find two public housing projects that are fairly similar, with similar crime rates (perhaps in the same city but not too close to each other), and in one, do what you suggest here, and in the other, don't do anything different from current policy, and see what happens. It'd be nice to get a real data point since, frankly, the arguments on both sides are really just a bunch of hand-waving with no real evidence, and any comparisons are usually not very valid because the things they're comparing are far too different.

    154. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      He was arguably both. The FBI had investigated him twice before because he'd made some comments to coworkers that made him seem pretty radicalized, but the FBI couldn't find enough to justify keeping the investigation open. It's not like the two are mutually exclusive; ISIS and some very fundamentalist governments do execute gays, after all.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    155. Re: An easier sollution by MurryVonSok · · Score: 1

      Your US Constitution has specific scripture that mandates the kidnapping, or murder of infidels that don't agree with it. It even says that those who believe in it, shall never perish and have everlasting liberty. It also, in Article 1 Section 8 says that stealing is NOT forbidden if it is done by it's holy-magic leaders. If any of these things is done by its magic leaders, then any immoral act, automatically, and magically becomes moral. The best example of this is it's own history, Wounded Knee, Hiroshima, Kent state... the list goes on.

    156. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he seemed more homophobic than radicalised

      And you are wrong

      Orlando gunman tied to radical imam released from prison last year, say law enforcement sources

      The gunman who murdered at least 50 people in a Florida nightclub early Sunday morning was a follower of a controversial gang leader-turned-bank robber who was released from prison last year despite warnings from prosecutors that he would recruit people to carry out violent acts...

    157. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for pointing out his strawman argument so I didn't have to. :)

      1) Proposal was that concealed carry could reduce crimes.
      2) Response was that all guns together cause more deaths than preventions by concealed carry holders.
      3) Non sequitir: therefore, concealed carry is bad.

    158. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the downward trend in crime is very long-term and consistent and shows zero correlation to the increase in CCW permits.

      That sounds like a correlation....

      Yep. It's certainly not an inverse corellation as the OP seems to think.

      In conclusion, as I said before: crime (including violent and gun crime) has continued to decrease as CCW has been implemented nationwide. CCW's show no sign of having had an adverse effect.

    159. Re:An easier sollution by MurryVonSok · · Score: 1

      I'm interested in the statistics of how many people were killed in mass shootings by one or two people, vs how many were killed in the names of your politicians, and military? Wounded Knee, Hiroshima, Kent state, Iraq? But only those people you like should have guns right?

    160. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      The error in your argument is that you only look at justifiable killings, not use of a gun in self defense - using it as a threat or just injuring the assailant wouldn't show up. This CDC study showed that "defensive gun uses by victims are at least as common as offensive uses by criminals".

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    161. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That ignores the reality of the unique history of the United States

      The US is a special snowflake.

      As the anti-gun side likes to quote, the US has more guns per capita than any other developed nation. Isn't that unique enough?

    162. Re:An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Common Sense == Agrees with my prejudices.

      Common sense == critical thinking. Agreeing with prejudices is just religion, or some other form of poisonous education.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    163. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      "It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes."

      Just as valid: It's woefully ignorant to blame all gun-owners for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes

      Not quite.

      Mostly on account that a religious moderate can't kill you two blocks away by accidentally dropping his magic book on the floor - while a gun owner can.
      Similarly, no special precaution should be taken if religious person's home catches on fire. Them religious books sure ain't gonna start exploding and whizzing around the neighborhood.
      Nor will a kid shoot another kid with dad's book he found hidden in the closet.

      Even most religious nutcases will just stand on the corner, waiving their little black books in the air, yelling about the impeding end of the world, or they will go door to door trying to convert people.
      A gun-nut waiving his or her little black thing in the air is a run for cover kind of situation. And if you see one coming to your door with it - call the cops immediately.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    164. Re: An easier sollution by Jack9 · · Score: 1

      China has done pretty well relegating religion to it's proper place as a non-issue.

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    165. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Or there's always merry old England, if a King/Queen is more your thing.

      They have no meaningful political power in England...

    166. Re: An easier sollution by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Because for every million or so religious people who don't force their beliefs on you there are probably 10 people who are "extremists".

      This is provably wrong. Religious people push for laws based on their religion, which equates to "forcing their beliefs on you". Try polling Christians in America about whether they support legalizing gay marriage or not. It's a lot more than 1/100,000 who would want to ban it.

    167. Re:An easier sollution by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      Better idea: cower in the corner and wait for someone to come and help you. Hope you get lucky and they respond quickly. I'd rather take the chance of friendly fire than wait to be saved or killed.

      Now on the point of the original poster, not everyone should carry guns, just those that are trained and want to. A person unwilling to use their firearm on an assailant is in far more danger by carrying a gun.

      Lastly, a well trained and concerned population is way better than relinquishing everyone's safety to a few authority figures. Look at any point in history for reference.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    168. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BS. Cherry picking the definition of the use of a gun for self defense to mean only killing an assailant is a way to use stats to lie. The vast majority of defensive gun uses never lead to death of the assailant.

    169. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > commanded not to commit murder as the Hebraic word used in the Ten Commandments refers to murder and not killing.

      Murder is a matter of moral perspective, so that's not too useful here. The morals of a religion have no bearing on the will of a people who are socialized under democratic ideals.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    170. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outlawing religion would do absolutely nothing, as that is not the problem. Typical /. anti-religious bias; if you'd said "Outlaw guns" you'd have gotten modded down into the double digits.

    171. Re:An easier sollution by gsslay · · Score: 1

      when a good guy kills that bad guy who has just started shooting up a night club, the shooting stops.

      No it doesn't. These situations are chaos. Most people do not know what's going on, just that there are people with guns running about and people are dying.

      So.. Good Guy shoots Bad Guy. Hurrah. But Good Guy #2 arrives at this point and has absolutely no idea who is the Good Guy, and who is the Bad Guy. Oh no! They have forgotten to wear a hat of the appropriate color! He just sees one guy shoot another guy. But Good Guy #1's appearance is enough to trigger Good Guy #2's personal prejudices about how a bad guy might look, and so he takes a shot at him. Good Guy #1 thinks "Shit, it's Bad Guy #2!" and shoots back.

      Meanwhile Good Guy #3 has arrived, having heard gun fire, to see two guys shooting it out. Unsure who is the Bad Guy he hesitates. Good Guy #2 sees him, decides he's a Good Guy too, and shouts at him to take cover. Good Guy #1 hears that and decides that Good Guy #3 is Bad Guy #3, and so shoots at him too. Good Guy #3 concludes that Good Guy #1 is Bad Guy, and that the body of Bad Guy is Good Guy #1. He opens fire, but is a poor shot and takes out Innocent #1 instead.

      Good Guy #4 arrives. He's a personal friend of Good Guy #1 and knows he's a Good Guy. He also has a bigger gun. He stafs Good Guys #2 and #3, making the safe conclusion that anyone firing at his friend and Innocent #1 must be the Bad Guys. Good Guy #2 fires back, taking out Good Guy #1. Good Guy #4 is upset about this and goes on the rampage .

      The shooting continues. Everyone dies.

    172. Re: An easier sollution by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Most spree killings are in gun free zones. Most gun killings/murders aren't. Like I said before, it depends on your definition of a spree killer. By some definitions, a dude going in to kill his boss and as many co-workers(possibly ex as he just got fired) as possible isn't actually a spree killer because his killings are actually targeted - if numerous.

      Is the man who kills his wife and a half a dozen of his wife's family at the family business actually a spree killer? He's got the numbers, but the motivation is different.

      As such, spree killers have shown a marked preference for gun free zones.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    173. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [citation needed]

    174. Re: An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Not from my experience. It's been rock-solid in operation. I've had one for 6 years now with thousands of rounds through it without a problem. It loads fine from the stock magazines supplied to using PMAGs to US issued metal magazines. Feeds reliably every time.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    175. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Did you hear about the mass killing by 2 muslim extremists at an art exhibit in TX, with hundreds dead, and more wounded

      Did you hear about those 2 mass shootings on the same military base in Texas, that never happened on account of the base being literally full of highly trained people with guns?
      No - because they DID happen.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      One of them wasn't even a mentally disturbed Muslim. Just a mentally disturbed trained killer.
      The one who was Muslim was even a base psychiatrist.
      One would think that when a shrink goes nuts and shoots up a place, killing 13 and injuring 30 - that mental health issues would be taken more seriously at such an establishment.
      Nope. Second guy's psych just prescribed him pills for his sleeping issues.

      Second guy even bought his murder toy in the same shop as the first guy.
      Maybe they have a special discount for disgruntled military personnel with mental issues.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    176. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not really. It wouldn't happen, as there is no evidence of this thus far. this has not happened yet with civilian shooters. Blue on Blue killings have happened, but every time a civilian CCW carrier has intervened, it has resulted in the crazed assassins taking their own life, or engaging the civilian and not having time to engage the unarmed bystanders. ALL lawful US citizens need to become CCW holders, and practice, practice, and carry all the time! (and I need to figure out how to get an account so I'm not posting as "anonymous coward" LOL.

    177. Re: An easier sollution by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Humans get passionate about their beliefs. They raise their voices. Some of them get carried away. It hardly even matters what they get passionate about - football or faith: both result dead people.

      People get passionate about their beliefs, and sometimes even carried away. That doesn't result in dead people, it results in people painting flags in their faces and throwing wicked celebrations should their team win. What does result in dead people is people having faith in violence itself.

      As Tsingis Khan put it: "âoeA man's greatest joy is crushing his enemies.â No, it isn't, unless your life really sucks, but that doesn't stop people from thinking that this time they're surely get the hate-gasm, and if they don't have enemies, they'll just treat anyone who happens to be near that way. Of course, not being part of the steppe hordes they need to frame their behaviour in a way that makes it seem rational or at least understandable to themselves. For a football fan it's the rather twisted idea the rival team is "enemy", for the politically inclined politics provides the perfect excuse. But that's all they are: excuses.

      As our technology keeps advancing our faith in violence has transformed from merely making life short and miserable to seriously threatening the existence of our entire species. We need to stop excusing that shit. No, people getting passionate doesn't result in dead people; people choosing to engage in violence does. And they do so not because they're passionate, but because they're murderers. And they choose to be murderers because somewhere in their hearts there's a certainty - a religious conviction - that killing their enemies will make them heroes.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    178. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are guzzling the kool-aid.

      In a liberal democracy, the "will of the people" takes the place of "the god(s)", and the "intellectuals" take the place of "the priesthood". Only the priests can rightly divine the will of the god. Under this system, the people are to believe that everybody else has consented, and that it is thoroughly rational to do so themselves. Both systems are based on the will of an imaginary entity. They are very similar systems.

      The only difference is, we could in theory measure something like "the will of the people" by defining it as the result of voting, but, we can also measure how much the state acts in accordance with this information.

      At least with monarchies and military governments, they are more or less up front about who is in charge and why, but even they aren't immune to appealing to imaginary entities with self justifying wills of their own - the mandate of heaven, manifest destiny, the common good, etc..

    179. Re: An easier sollution by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      Yet many of the TEA Party protests had many armed individuals and there was no loss of life. The people behind the mass killings are not NRA members. You take away the right to carry, you take away people's right to defend themselves. Gun free zones are shooting galleries for those that don't care much about the law. Schools, movie theaters, clubs.. gun free zones.

    180. Re: An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the problem isn't religion on a whole, but just the one that demands everybody convert or be considered fair game for murder.

      Remember, Christianity has been there before, and more than once. It was reined in, but if it proliferated again, it would probably just get back up to its old tricks. The problem is religion as a whole.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    181. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Its also woefully ignorant for people to blame all gun owners for the acts of a few nutjobs. But people keep doing it.

    182. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      No. The common element is nutjobs that slipped through the cracks.

    183. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you point to a single incident where that has happened?

      Are you serious? The term "friendly fire" wasn't invented in this thread today, so let's not be ignorant that it could exist on or off a battlefield. Just because civilians are not exposed to warfare on the same level as a soldier doesn't mean it couldn't happen, as we have literally dozens of unfortunate events in our history that prove that it HAS happened during conflicts.

      I have considerably more experience with firearms than the average civilian, and it has crossed my mind several times as to how a situation might play out that would involve multiple people shooting, and how I would or could defend myself and others during a situation where it might be VERY hard to tell the difference between a bad guy and an undercover police officer.

      With the laws today, it's bad enough for a civilian legally defending a lethal action of self defense, even when the threat and target is crystal clear. Our legal system does not always see eye to eye with Common F. Sense as. You should know this by now.

      One important question.

      In your response:
      - 4 derogatory attacks on the questioner
      - 1 hyperbolic claim that the question is easily answered
      - 1 unsubstantiated claim of personal authority
      - 2 paragraphs of peripherally related dialogue
      - 0 REAL EXAMPLES

      Maybe you're too caught up in the argument to put together careful response, but attempting to bludgeon your opponent is the surest way to get them to retrench their position and draw yourself as a jerk to us onlookers. Too bad, because I think the root of your statements have merit, but I'm too busy thinking about how rude you are for it to matter.

    184. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      And for the 32,000 deaths a year caused by drivers ?

      Only 12,000 deaths a year by firearms (im not counting suicides as it has been shown that taking a tool away does not change the over all suicide rate)

    185. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      Foot Hood is actually a pretty bad example to support the gun control argument. Fort Hood was and is essentially a gun-free zone.

      All those "highly trained people"? They weren't allowed to carry firearms on base.

    186. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      If everyone was always armed, maybe; there are plenty of people with poor impulse control out there. But there's also some truth to the saying that an armed society is a polite society.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    187. Re: An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      All religion would gladly kick out those few nutjobs and murderous assholes

      Let's see them do it, then. Why aren't the holy wars between the sects? They're between one or two of the sects, and everyone else. Why? Because they're not kicking out the nutjobs and murderous assholes. On the contrary, they tend to wind up running countries because their religion says that it's supposed to be running their governments.

      The most murderous Christians were purged from both within and without. Let's see the Islamics do some purging.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    188. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      More armed guards/bouncers, perhaps. Otherwise yeah, there doesn't seem to be a whole lot we can do; banning the guns didn't help in Belgium or France.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    189. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      From the linked wikipdia article on the 2009 shooting:

      According to testimony from witnesses, Hasan passed up several opportunities to shoot civilians, and instead targeted soldiers in uniform,[30] who - in accordance with military policy - were not carrying personal firearms.

    190. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't load stripper clips directly. Use them to populate the mag before inserting it.

    191. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      True, but they were doing it to strengthen communism, rather than for atheism. They didn't want any institutions in their country that people might look up to more than the State.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    192. Re:An easier sollution by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Yes. There are several training courses offered by police departments where open and concealed carry is common. The whole "good guy with a gun" thing only works if that good guy is trained and everybody knows he's the good guy. There are videos of and interviews with people who have taken the courses. The vast majority of them failed in their first simulated aggressor situation. Either they failed to identify the right shooter, got shot, or mistook someone fleeing with hands up for a "bad guy with a gun."

      I don't know of any cases where this has happened in real life, but if it happens to people who get trained in this sort of thing, imagine how much more often it would happen to the unwashed masses. Just think of how often friendly fire accidents happen in a war zone. These are people who have trained for months or even years on exactly what to do, and they still make mistakes.

      I would like to point out that a "good guy with a gun" can't stop a shooting from happening. Hell, it's not even a deterrent. Especially if it's a crazy who is planning on getting killed in the process anyway.

    193. Re: An easier sollution by srw · · Score: 1

      I know it's not "murder" when a government does it, but: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    194. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      It is likely pretty easy to spot the good guy with the gun. He/she is the one holding the gun NOT shooting the other people.

    195. Re:An easier sollution by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      You're right. It is a correlation. Just like the inverse correlation between pirates and global temperatures. Ramen.

    196. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      Do you trust the US Government to assess your mental health in an unbiased way? More to the point, what things specifically would disqualify someone from buying guns or ammo? Should bipolar people not have the right to self defense? Depressed people? Where do you draw the line?

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    197. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      Most of those Americans who are killed by guns are suicides. Long-term suicide rates are unaffected by gun ownership. Moreover, This CDC study says you're entirely wrong about people using guns defensively. Most mass shootings happen in zones where people aren't legally allowed to have guns, so naturally responsible gun owners wouldn't be able to stop them there.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    198. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't. These situations are chaos. Most people do not know what's going on, just that there are people with guns running about and people are dying.

      Except that's not at all what happened here. There was ONE guy, standing stationary in one place, calmly shooting people, stopping, reloading, and shooting some more. Nobody was (or could) rush out, nobody was rushing at him, he was just standing there. If he'd been shot by someone in the club, he'd be down. The cops were still HOURS from coming inside because they were worried about explosives. If the bad guy goes down, do you really think that the person who shot him is then going to start running around like an idiot waving their gun around? Do you even listen to yourself?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    199. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A uniformed Orlando Police officer working at the club off-duty had heard gunshots himself and spotted Omar Mateen outside the club. He fired his gun at the 29-year-old security guard from Fort Pierce, Florida, and two other officers quickly joined in. Mateen was not armed lightly: Police said he had an AR-15 assault-type rifle, a handgun and an explosive device." (retrieved - https://www.yahoo.com/news/another-night-drinking-dancing-until-shots-began-011941419.html ).

      there were uniformed officers; armed with their service weapons; they immediately fired upon this "security guard" who was armed with a military grade AR-15 assault rifle, the same type as used in the newtown shootings ( - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandy_Hook_Elementary_School_shooting ) " of the newtown shooting, (you know, of kindergartners) using his mother's Bushmaster XM15-E2S rifle" (- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushmaster_M4-type_Carbine ).

      So... if there were civilians who were armed with "concealed carry firearms" how would they have responded, being untrained in these matters, better than police officers who were on site from the very beginning? Why are these military grade AR-15 carbine assault rifles even legal for sale?

      According to Wikipedia:

      "The Federal Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) — officially, the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act — is a subsection of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, a United States federal law that included a prohibition on the manufacture for civilian use of certain semi-automatic firearms it defined as assault weapons, as well as certain ammunition magazines it defined as "large capacity."

      The ten-year ban was passed by the U.S. Congress on September 13, 1994, and signed into law by President Bill Clinton the same day. The ban only applied to weapons manufactured after the date of the ban's enactment, and it expired on September 13, 2004, in accordance with its sunset provision.

      Several constitutional challenges were filed against provisions of the ban, but all were rejected by reviewing courts. There were multiple attempts to renew the ban, but none succeeded." ( - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Assault_Weapons_Ban).

      Reinstate the Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) and institute a mandatory buyback of these rifles, institute universal background checks, eliminate online purchases of firearms, eliminate private sale of firearms through unauthorized brokers, and yes, install metal detectors, which might be more of a "security theater" measure these days.

    200. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      Fun fact: on most military bases, you aren't allowed to carry guns around unless you're an MP or on gate duty. No concealed carry, no open carry, nothing. In order to get the guns on the base, you have to go to the armory, show that you're supposed to have them, check them out, check out ammo, etc. So no, Fort Hood was not literally full of highly trained people with guns.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    201. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this scenario where there are three hundred people in a nightclub and one person starts shooting them indiscriminately (likely in a darkened room in which people have been drinking or doing some form of drugs...) what is is the more likely scenario if one or more person starts shooting back:

      The "good guy" is 1. Completely sober and able to use a fire arm. 2. Able to clearly see the "bad guy" and has no obstruction in trying fire back 3. In attempting to get a clear shot at said bad guy kills that person quickly enough (I.E. with a single shot) that the "bad guy" cannot continue to do harm.

      OR

      The "good guy" has 1. Been having a good time and is not sober. 2. Cannot easily determine who the "bad guy" is 3. Is trying to force his way through a panicked with a drawn, loaded gun 4. Fires at what he hopes is the "bad guy" but either misses because he was wrong, gets pushed and loses his aim or simply because he isn't that good a shot 5. Has now drawn the attention if this "bad guy" so is more likely to get both himself and anyone near him shot 6. Is now dead and has created even more confusion

      More guns is a horrible argument for stopping gun violence. I am Canadian and I will just point out that, per capita, we have more guns in this country then the US does. We have much less gun violence. The reason is relatively simple: the types of guns and barriers to getting them are vastly different.

      If you want to have guns, that's fine. But don't say they are the solution to the same problem they create...

    202. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If religious fundamentalists, moslems and christians, would stop acting like dirty dogs, get their noses out of their neighbor's crotches, and pay more attention to their own mental hygiene we would all be better off. Sadly, all too many people are unable to be educated and there is exactly zero hope of them educating themselves.

    203. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      go and do your school home work, your mum is getting your dinner ready

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    204. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      some people just hate

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    205. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      As a canadian that looks at canadian murder stats, guns are currently 3rd on the list. Knives are #1.

    206. Re: An easier sollution by mandark1967 · · Score: 1

      I purposely avoided naming any "one" religion, and also purposely underestimated the number of extremists. Everyone knows there are way more than 40-45k people out there actively planning your (and my) death over "words in a book". The point is, (besides being above your head), that even when using an absurdly, laughably low number, it still equates to over 40,000 people who truly, firmly believe that it's okay to "kill for god"...

      Don't get your panties in a bunch.

      --
      Sig Follows: "Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself." -- Mark Twain
    207. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      And how many liberals that spew "Anyone who wants a gun should be killed !"

    208. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      They weren't allowed to carry firearms on base.

      Nope.

      Soldiers on all military installations, including Fort Hood, are not armed while on post, nor are they permitted to carry any privately owned firearms.
      Only law enforcement and security personnel are allowed to have weapons on post.

      Any soldier on a check point or on guard duty is a part of said security personnel.
      And that's disregarding the fact that commanders can issue out guns in case of an attack such as that.

      Military bases are full of trained armed men. And guns. And trained, armed men with guns.
      They even have their own police force. With guns.
      Think about that for a while. It'll come to you eventually.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    209. Re:An easier sollution by lgw · · Score: 1

      Many states already have this. Doesn't stop a terrorist from obtaining a weapon illegally, as with the Belgium and France nightclub shootings, and a couple of the recent US shootings by crazy people (I remember at least one was a "straw purchase" - getting a friend to buy the gun for you - which is very illegal).

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    210. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      " I doubt all the people who fought for the Nazis were die-hard ideologists either."

      i think you can take that as true, when you are drafted into the army in those days, you do as you are told. But as most of the nazi echelon were catholics and catholics blamed the jews for killing jesus, you could say religion had a part to play.....

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    211. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Did they kill in the name of atheism or in the name of thier political leanings ?

    212. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Do you know how many would have died in japan had they NOT dropped the bombs ?

      Go do some research on what the US was planning to do.

    213. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, from your stats, Texas has far more guns than CA, but pretty much the same murder rate /100k. So more guns do NOT equal more murders. And having been shot on two different occasions (police never caught the person in both cases), I know first hand I'd rather be armed than unarmed.

    214. Re: An easier sollution by pr0nbot · · Score: 1

      I've often (genuinely) wondered where gun advocates draw the line. Fully automatic? Grenades? RPGs? SAMs?

      Presumably the basis for any line-drawing is destructive capability? Or perhaps more accurately, first-strike destructive capability, on the assumption that in a world where everyone is similarly armed, anyone who is undeterred will only get off one shot?

    215. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is that every legal gun owner should be treated as a murderer because he has the tool ? Get real.

    216. Re: An easier sollution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Atheism was an important aspect of their political leanings. So both.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    217. Re: An easier sollution by Vicious+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Ignorance is what is toxic.
      Liberals and progressives don't believe in the power of the state.

      The power of the state can originate in many places.
      In western liberal political theory that place is the people, ie, the consent of the governed.

      I certainly do not know if you consider yourself a Liberal (left of center in America) or Progressive, but what you are saying is quite misleading. While you are correct that L/P may not worship the state de jure, they certainly do de facto. Just listen to the policy proposals of anyone who espouses those views. They are always centered around a government program.

      The consent of the governed is certainly the wellspring for power in the "western liberal political theory." But here, the term "liberal" is used in the classical sense of individual liberty and economic freedom. This is the foundation of the libertarian/Conservative (right of center in America) views on limits to the scope and size of government. To the Liberal/Progressive, benefits to the people in aggregate outweigh any such concerns over individuals, therefore they typically see no limit to the scope and size of government.

      To use the word "liberal" as if these ideas were the same is terribly misleading.

    218. Re:An easier sollution by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      One of my friends mentioned a statistic today that for every attack thwarted by armed self-defense, 34 additional deaths occur [washingtonpost.com] because of armed self-defense.

      TFA that you refer to does not support this assertion. What it says is that for every criminal killed in self defense, 34 homicides occur. Not 34 EXTRA homicides, just 34 homicides.

      Basically, TFA says that armed self defense accounts for 3% of gun deaths. And possibly stops 3% of murders, of course.

      And as they guy who responded first says, it doesn't include the crimes that are stopped by someone showing a criminal a gun. If someone broke into your home, and you pointed a gun at him and told him to lie down while you called the police, that would qualify as "armed self-defense", even though not a shot was fired and noone was killed....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    219. Re: An easier sollution by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Banning religion isn't the answer. We need to be intelligent enough to distinguish between good religion and bad religion.

      And which ones are good?

      Quite obviously, his is good; all others are bad. That's how religion works.

    220. Re:An easier sollution by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Outlawing religion seems a better bet, except historically religion has thrived on that.

      Execute the religious? After testing their children for religious belief and executing them as necessary.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    221. Re: An easier sollution by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Imagine is imaginary for a reason. Might as well go with the obvious fix- no drinking away from home, virtual cyberspace night clubs with no physical presence,.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    222. Re:An easier sollution by ronruble5 · · Score: 1

      In addition to the other replies, the FBI has stated that the statistics on justifiable homicides may have issues, as the data for the Uniform Crime Reporting Program is self reported by state and local police departments, which have differing standards for reporting. Some do not require reporting of justifiable homicides. http://blogs.wsj.com/numbers/w... From the WSJ article: "...it isn’t required that agencies submit justifiable homicide data—submitted as the Supplementary Homicide Report—to participate in the program. This makes the largest database of justifiable homicides in the U.S. very incomplete. Among the missing states is New York, which had 684 killings in 2012. The third-most populated state, which likely had a number of justifiable homicides, doesn’t report justifiable homicide data, according to the FBI. Data from other highly populous states are missing or compromised as well. Agencies from Florida don’t follow Uniform Crime Reporting guidelines when submitting justifiable homicide data and Illinois only submits limited data. Various other agencies at multiple levels don’t submit justifiable homicide data for other reasons, resulting in fewer than half of the 18,000 agencies contributing this information."

    223. Re: An easier sollution by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      They're doing better than many places, but they too have significant problems with Uighir Islamist terrorists.

      Think of that next time you use something built with Chinese rare-earth element concentrates - most of heir production and processing is in areas suffering from Uighir problems.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    224. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go and do your school home work, your mum is getting your dinner ready

      Kinda hurts when the facts that keep coming out totally bitch-slap your head-up-your-ass "he wasn't a radical Islamic" claims, doesn't it?

      FBI 'highly confident' Orlando killer was radicalized

      FBI Director Comey: "highly confident" Orlando shooter radicalized through internet

      Orlando shooting: attacker appeared to be self-radicalized, says Obama – live

      You can either pull your head out of your ass and realize this loon was an ISLAMIC homophobic loon, or you can keep living on a planet that doesn't have a blue sky.

      Because right now reality is laughing at you.

      You can either grow up and start living in the real world or you can remain deliberately blind.

    225. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Except guns in the hands of non-criminals STOP VIOLENCE ALL THE TIME. I've done it myself. And why are you assuming that the staff of the club would all be drunk and in drug-induced haze?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    226. Re: An easier sollution by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      And rocks at #2 (combining availability and effectiveness)? Or are cars at #2?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    227. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 2

      When a significant number of those deaths starts happening due to mental issues... sure.

      Until then just suspend and take away driving permissions of people for willfully lowering their own driving abilities through drug use.
      Repeated and willful offenders should be jailed.
      Hey! Whaddayakno! That's exactly what's being done! And deaths have been going down since the 1940s!
      From ~25 per 100k in 1940 - to ~10.25 per 100k in 2014.

      But boy did those numbers start falling down as seat belt legislation started coming in.
      It's almost as if education, fines and penalties CAN reduce fatalities.
      And yes, it IS fatalities - including drivers and passengers, not just people being run over that you are quoting.

      Now just imagine the same for guns!
      Legislation that would prevent, fine and penalize people using guns irresponsibly. Like, while they are mentally ill.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    228. Re: An easier sollution by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Do you know how many people were killed by the Inquisition in Spain in 800 years? Now compare that to the number of human beings exterminated by Planned Parenthood in the United States in one week, for exactly the same crime: being inconvenient.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    229. Re: An easier sollution by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Jewish people are violent like this too: they throw rocks at women who are "immodest" in Israel, and probably wouldn't treat homosexuals any better.

      To be fair it is only some Jewish people, and it isn't just women who are dressed immodest that get rocks thrown at them. The thing is that most of the Israelis I have met can't stand those Jew as they just piss everyone else off in general. One of the guys I know really well over there has this to say about how religious he is:

      I could eat a whole fucking pig covered in cheese.

      One weekend he took me and one of my coworkers out fishing with one of his friends who has a boat out on the sea of Galilee because what the hell else were we going to do on a Saturday in Israel.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    230. Re: An easier sollution by misanthropic.mofo · · Score: 1

      So, am I to believe that no atheist has ever committed a crime of any kind?

      No, of course not. However, you don't hear about atheists going and committing atrocities like this, because someone doesn't agree with a peer reviewed paper from my favorite journal.

      --
      --There are two kinds of people in this world. I don't like either of them.
    231. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gun violence is up in states with CCW. This was recently published, and from a much larger and better study than the previous claims to the contrary.

    232. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just because you take away people's guns doesn't mean you're blaming them. It's just saying that their entertainment is not worth more than other people's lives.

    233. Re:An easier sollution by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Getting rid of religion does not stand up to scrutiny.

      Atheist governments are far far more dangerous, especially in the modern age of mechanical killing.

      Lenin/Stalin era USSR and China being the two biggest examples. They dwarf anything that religious organizations have done by an order of magnitude.

      If anything, religion curbs the human animal's natural tendency to kill other humans.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    234. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      You are envisaging a situation where a single good guy pulls out a gun and accurately shoots and kills the single bad guy, and that's it.

      This is, to put it mildly, optimistic: more than one good guy will pull out a gun, they won't all be accurate, and the bad guy being killed would not guarantee the shooting stops, because -- and here's the crucial bit -- the good guys won't be wearing special good guy uniforms. So each good guy could make an unintended error and shoot another good guy, because there's no easy way to tell good from bad.

    235. Re:An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      More to the point, what things specifically would disqualify someone from buying guns or ammo? Should bipolar people not have the right to self defense? Depressed people? Where do you draw the line?

      Why don't you go and ask a mental health professional?
      But for starters...
      If you're in therapy for anything that would include keeping you away from sharp objects - you shouldn't be allowed to purchase guns or ammo.
      If you're taking prescription medication for mental issues - you shouldn't be allowed to purchase guns or ammo.
      If you're a person with a history of suicide attempts - you shouldn't be allowed to purchase guns or ammo.
      If you're a person who suffers from paranoia - you most certainly shouldn't be allowed to purchase guns or ammo.
      Feel free to buy a large dog, a tazer, several cans of mace, a large stick and a katana - or a reinforced door.
      But not something that you could accidentally, or in the fit of delusion, fire through your window (or wall) at other people.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    236. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      More accurately, some facts support one argument, and other facts support the countervailing position.

      There is a clear correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths when you look by geography (between US states, and between countries).
      There is a clear inverse correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths when you look over time within the US.

    237. Re:An easier sollution by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      As someone who does have a carry permit you seem to be on the right track with your thinking. While I do have a permit to carry in my state I rarely carry one and the only place that I do is when I am up at my property in the north woods of Minnesota. One can't be out walking down roads with a loaded firearm legally unless they have a carry permit so to stay legal I got the permit. I got the handgun as I have had a few too many close encounters with large predators up there, like bear, wolves, cougar (not cute), lynx (cute as hell) then add in the stupid coyotes that are getting out of control and it is just reasonable to carry a sidearm. My handgun also isn't one that would be a good conceal weapon as I chose it for it being effective against some like a bear, not something I could easily hide in a coat pocket or shoulder holster.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    238. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignorance is a problem, and so is failure for two sides to talk about the same issue.

      All of the examples you cite are examples of who controls the state. None of them address the question of how much of a role the state should play. When someone claims you worship the power of the state, they are not referring to democracy. They're saying that you endorse the use of state programs and laws to address too many things. They're saying human lives are unique, and the heavy hand of the state is as likely to muck them up as to make them better when over-applied.

      Democracy needs to remember that the singular of 'the people' is still 'person'. When 'the people' start thinking that their one way should be legislated for all 'persons', you get a tyranny just as bad as the other forms of government you reference.

    239. Re: An easier sollution by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      The second is a complete non-sequiteur.

      Il ne sequite pas? Bordel!

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    240. Re: An easier sollution by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Texas has far more guns than CA, but pretty much the same murder rate /100k. So more guns do NOT equal more murders.

      Seems they don't equal fewer either.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    241. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      What a pile of bollocks in relation to the UK. You could not possibly provide credible back up to that claim of a link between Muslim immigration levels and violence in the UK. Not least because violence in the UK has been *declining* for two decades. You could literally count every gun massacre in the UK in the past several decades on one hand: there was the Dunblane shooting in 1996 (18 deaths), the Cumbria shooting in 2010 (12 deaths) and the Hungerford shooting of 1987 (16 deaths). Gun attacks and gun deaths are not part of the lived experience of the overwhelming majority of British people. Would that the same could be said of US citizens.

    242. Re:An easier sollution by edittard · · Score: 1

      And, frankly, if everyone were armed all the time, pretty soon we would stop shooting each other and probably stop shouting and calling each other bad names.

      So if anyone says something you don't like, you should just execute them?

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    243. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      They do have their own police force. And, just as in other gun-free zones, only that police force may have weapons on the base (as you quoted). And in this case, as in the recent shooting, there weren't any police present when the shooting initially occurred.

      So, when you said the base was "literally full of highly trained people with guns", that was wrong. Only a small percentage did. Maybe you don't realize how big a military base is, but there are some 45,000 soldiers and 9,000 civilians on the base. How many of those do you think were LEOs, MPs or on guard duty?

    244. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why so crazy? We already live in a world where we are told we need to teach our boys not to rape... all because they have the tool to do so, and apparently are never told growing up that hurting other people is wrong.

    245. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      Exactly! Perhaps they're not actually causally related and we can start chasing the real causes instead of getting caught on this subject every single time.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    246. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why then does Plano, TX have such a insignificant homicide rate compared to... Detroit?

    247. Re:An easier sollution by Matheus · · Score: 1

      The sky must be gorgeous in your universe...

      Dark nightclub with presumably loud music going on. Vast majority of the patrons imbibing whatever they so choose to be imbibing. First burst of gunfire rings out and your supposed hero immediately jumps to action with his hip piece and shoots down the guy with the AR. Great. Now patron B coming out of the bathroom doesn't see guy with the AR who's now on the ground BUT he does see random, non-uniformed, gentlemen with a gun drawn and similarly steps to save the day by shooting this clearly dangerous person. This chain reaction can easily involve way more people and way more guns than that simple scenario not to mention the probability that any one or many of these shots aren't fatal in which case you have injured people on both sides of the action trying to make their last stand to the best of their ability. Everyone is well-intentioned I'm sure but the friendly fire takes its toll. That story doesn't even need the alcohol (or whatever else has been consumed that night) to be present. That could happen with "clear" heads.

      Note: I'm am not anti-guns in the slightest. Guns may make it easier for such an asshat to take out as many people as he did but at this point in our history, in this country alone, there are enough firearms out there that if he wanted one there'd be someone willing to sell it to him. My problem is people like you that seriously think a shootout by numerous armed unknown shooters in a dark and drunken environment could ever end as cleanly as what you describe above. I think gun reform (or not) could be a way more sensible discussion if people would stop making such ludicrous claims.

    248. Re:An easier sollution by drpimp · · Score: 1

      Then they will just resort to bombs and other mechanisms. Taking away guns or arming everyone is the same solution that won't work and are assinine solutions.

      --
      -- Brought to you by Carl's JR
    249. Re:An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Interesting

      more than one good guy will pull out a gun, they won't all be accurate, and the bad guy being killed would not guarantee the shooting stops, because -- and here's the crucial bit -- the good guys won't be wearing special good guy uniforms. So each good guy could make an unintended error and shoot another good guy, because there's no easy way to tell good from bad.

      I really am quite sick of this strawman. Look, I own firearms, but I am not a member of the black helicopter crowd. I have a concealed carry license but I rarely (count on one hand, 2016 year to date) use it, because I do not feel the need to be armed everywhere I go. I do not own what is commonly but inaccurately referred to as an assault rifle. I do not feel that "MORE GUNS EVERYWHERE" is the best solution to the problem of mentally deranged spree killers. Even if you increased the number of individuals who regularly carry by a factor of ten they're still going to be squarely in the minority. In short, the "good guys" will not and can not be everywhere.

      All that said, your argument is stupid. It's the stuff of people who do not like firearms and grasp to any argument -- no matter how tenuous -- that can be made to discredit their use. You want to know how you tell the good guys from the bad in the midst of such chaos? The good guys are not fucking walking around shooting masses of unarmed people who are begging for their lives!!!!

      I also find the "do nothing, wait for the professionals" argument offensive. If someone is walking around killing innocent people you do whatever you fucking can to stop him. You do not cower and beg for your life; you fight back with any and all means at your disposal. This is the same "you've already lost" victim mentality that advises women to tell a would-be rapist she's menstruating. Fight or flight is an instinct that's billions of years old; it needs to be embraced, not discouraged. The most important part of self-defense isn't your weaponry, or your training, it's your mindset.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    250. Re: An easier sollution by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      Or have you never heard "Imagine" by John Lennon?

      Yeah. Heard it. A hymn to Marxism, as defined by Marxism's press releases. Somehow, this bears little resemblance to the megadeathtoll that Marxism has produced in the real world.

    251. Re: An easier sollution by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      And they are still, 70 years later, handing out Purple Heart medals manufactured in WWII in anticipation the expected U.S. casualties in taking Japan.

    252. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Even funnier fact - on ALL military bases, security personnel are armed. AND that means both MPs AND guards.
      Plus, the commander of the base or the officer on duty can issue guns and ammo in the case of an attack.

      Oh... wait... I'm repeating what you just said.

      It's just that you don't realize that that means that a military base is full of people GUARDING it. With guns.
      As in all around the perimeter, at all gates, at various secure points... Plus they have their own police force, doing regular police things. While carrying guns.
      You know that thing about never a cop there when you need one? Imagine working at a place with its own police.

      I know! It's almost as if military bases are full of people with guns! Right?!
      Plus, they have plans and scenarios and protocols for just such an event. It's almost as if they are trained to respond to attacks.
      Unlike some Travis Bickle wannabe skulking around, waiting for "his moment".

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    253. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      I mean, have you ever heard of an atheist murdering people?

      Pretty sure you're being rhetorical, but can't resist the obvious reply. :D

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    254. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know you really need to get rid of those Christians.

      westboro baptist church

    255. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is that every legal gun owner should be treated as a murderer because he has the tool ? Get real.

      Nope. That's you putting words in my mouth, playing "Let's make a strawman".

      Get literate. Also, factual.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    256. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recall that Uber driver who was stopped among cars while pedestrians were crossing the street and a crowd was nearby. He was in Chicago. A man begins shooting at the crowd and the pedestrians. Uber driver gets out, aims between all the cars and over the heads of pedestrians, and kills the shooter. Nobody dies.

      Stop hyperbolizing and take your narrative-manipulation elsewhere you paid swine.

    257. Re:An easier sollution by GodelEscherBlecch · · Score: 2

      If you're going to be a semantics pedant, at least get it right. The root word 'phobia' means aversion, not fear.

    258. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Progressives" definitionally believe in the power of State: that is the historical name for an ideology which prescribes it. That's all I'll say since you're that ignorant.

    259. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Islam has some good fruits (preservation of Greek and Roman knowledge), and Christianity has historically had some pretty bad ones (think of the Inquisition, or even the Crusades). Even today, Islam as a whole constitutes a general Good.

    260. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever been to a nightclub? The whole scene is set up to be disorienting from the light shows to the music to the alcohol. If someone is shooting up the crowd, and someone else takes out a gun to shoot the original shooter, to yet another party, that new shooter looks like just another shooter! What if he had an accomplice? That would distort the situation even further... There's nothing crystal clear about defensive shooting in especially this Orlando situation.

    261. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      How many of those do you think were LEOs, MPs or on guard duty?

      Well... considering 89th Military Police Brigade is garrisoned there... at least about a battalion of MPs.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    262. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      True enough.

      Of course I meant to say 'On Duty' MPs... As you quoted above, if they weren't on duty, they couldn't carry.

    263. Re: An easier sollution by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      Truthfully, I'm glad your interested enough in this topic to look into it further.

      I suggest you don't take my word on any of this, and actually read some of the first hand accounts of what happened at Fort Hood in 2009.

    264. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      All that said, your argument is stupid. It's the stuff of people who do not like firearms and grasp to any argument -- no matter how tenuous -- that can be made to discredit their use. You want to know how you tell the good guys from the bad in the midst of such chaos? The good guys are not fucking walking around shooting masses of unarmed people who are begging for their lives!!!!

      You are absolutely deluding yourself about your ability to distinguish between good guys and bad guys -- just like everyone is convinced they're a better than average driver. There is a reason why the military train regularly and hard on situational awareness -- the ability to make muscle memory and rational thinking count for more than fight/flight/freeze instincts in a surprise high-stress situation is a very perishable skill. Many people struggle even to draw a weapon from a holster in an unexpected gunfight, all the more so if concealed. The assertion that it takes extensive initial training and high levels of maintenance training to be able to respond effectively in a firefight is hardly my conceit, it's widely accepted and forms the basis of much training for the police and the armed forces in countries around the world -- and firearms training courses aimed at civilians too. For example: http://www.homedefensegun.net/...

      The fact that you think this is some kind of contentious straw man, and that by implication, you think it would be straightforward to reliably identify and accurately shoot a bad guy, is a clear example of false confidence.

    265. Re: An easier sollution by DMJC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually most of the killings were because of idiot economic policies run by morons. Mao's great leap backwards and Soviet Famines were mostly caused by bad economic planning, not to mention all the political killings which were large, but by no means greater than other killings caused by other groups seeking money/resources. Stop trying to reduce complex events to simple single sentence answers, there are many things that influence political movements and power struggles. It's never about Atheism/Religion. Most of the terrorist attacks right now are being cause by US intervention in the Middle East, and that's mostly being driven by economics. Crony capitalists trying to take what's not rightfully theirs have caused more wars than any other group.

    266. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I am glad that shootings are rare enough to justify as news. It says wondrous things about a society that can stop and declaim about violence instead of it being back page news on 'XYZ people blown up today.' Helping correct the few who think real death and turmoil can keep them even rarer, more so than limits on guns or privacy or speech.

      Don't like those statistics? Then lobby Congress to remove the ban on funding for actual dedicated research of gun violence.

      After all, what have you got to lose? If you're right and the current statistics are completely wrong, then actual dedicated statistics research and collection should prove that.

      The US government, motivated by the gun lobbyists, do not want real research on gun violence because they already know the result is ugly. They did the preliminary studies already.

      Most gun violence in the US is suicide. It is the white elephant of gun ownership. Estimates put suicide as far more the likely use of a firearm over other uses.

      Even the man in the recent gay bar shooting killed himself at the end.

      No, regardless of what firearm salesmen or government thugs want to believe, there is no a quiet militia of people polishing their firearms waiting to murder you and your children.

      There are a few hurting people - fellow blood and flesh humans - who cannot get the help they need.

      But Western society stigmatizes illnesses of the mind worse then skill color, gender, race or creed. The names themselves are derogatory. People aren't ill they are 'Sick in the Head.' Nutters. Crazies. Sickos. Wackjobs. People who work on mental health issues aren't doctors, they're shrinks. You don't have anxiety problems you're just a "head case."

      And this hurts us directly elsewhere besides the gun ownership debate. The lack of recognition makes these sufferers distance themselves from general society. The delusions make the mentally unstable easy candidates for recruitment by fanatical organizations with fantastical promises. It is rarely the Supreme Leaders of the terrorists that are blowing themselves up. Their foolish footsolders with the illusions of rewards that do not exist are strapping themselves into the suicide vests.

      No, we don't need a 'technical solution' to prevent shootings. We need to fix society.

      That means changing the ideas in people's heads about what's in their heads.

      Could there be a technological solution to the problem of mass shootings?

      There will never be a machine that fixes the shooter problem or the gun violence problem. Both of these are people problems and fixes need to start and end with people.

      Western Society needs to realize that broken minds are broken legs. You don't ask someone with a broken leg to run a marathon, you call an ambulance. You don't tell someone with depression to stay away you're a downer, you offer to listen. Otherwise these sufferers will turn on their own to what help they can. That help may be a pill or a rope or a gun.

      Or it could be someone who says 'pray to my God who says kill the infidels and all your problems will be solved.'

      And they will believe them. Because there's nobody to tell them otherwise. (That would be bad for sales.)

    267. Re:An easier sollution by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Police don't appear magically, instantly out of thin air.

      There's our technology solution: We need teleporters.

    268. Re:An easier sollution by ewibble · · Score: 1

      Ok lets see, some guy walks into a crowed bar, caring an assault rife, all good since everybody does that. Lets say he kills 3 people before anybody has time to react. 100 drunk people panicked pull out there guns, most of them didn't see who shot they just heard the shot. How do they tell who did or do they just start shooting people pointing guns? Which is everyone. You could probably kill just as many buy shooting up in the air and letting everyone kill each other.

      Yeah no problems there. That doesn't include the increased number of accidental deaths caused by everyone having a deadly weapon handy all the time.

      Armies wear uniforms for a reason, and it isn't so the enemy can recognize them.

    269. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another poster has already pointed out the inconsistency of the political term "liberal" in historical and modern contexts, but that's only one deficiency in your post.

      Liberals and progressives don't believe in the power of the state.

      The power of the state can originate in many places.
      In western liberal political theory that place is the people, ie, the consent of the governed.
      That is then represented though democracy, either direct or representative.

      In theory, sure. In practice, at least in the context of the US (your country may vary), liberals/progressives tend to exhibit two severe problems. First, they overwhelmingly lean very statist. I have yet to see any significant US liberal/progressive who shows any evidence of looking for solutions rooted in reduction of regulation, government oversight, or government power. For them, government is treated like duct tape: if it isn't working, you're not applying enough of it.

      Second, US progressives/liberals commonly fall into the "we know what's good for you" camp. For example, when Melissa Harris-Perry stated[1] that "sometimes it's the government's job to protect you from yourself". For another example, Debbie Wasserman-Schultz stating that "I'm driven by the idea that safety is really a core function of government...I don't think we should just let things happen to people and let them be stupid and the victims of the consequences of their actions. I think we can put enough obstacles in the path of poor decision-making." I elided only the intervening question from the interviewer, which readers can verify at the link - NY Times, so disabling JS might be necessary to view the entire interview. Maybe they do know what's good for the masses, maybe not. Regardless, their approach is to force what they think is good for us down our throats, instead of (OK, sometimes on top of) other options, e.g. public education campaigns.

      So, Yogi Berra's folksy wisdom rings true here: "In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is."

      To be fair, US conservatives tend to have analogous defects, though rooted in different, mostly Christian, ideals. Both groups, left unchecked, would have us living under a statist fascist dystopia in no time, not by sliding down a slippery slope, but by traveling a road paved with good intentions.

      I don't know if you live in the US. If you do, then please take off the progressive-colored glasses. If you don't, then chalk it up to us Americans doing yet another thing the wrong way - labor unions probably work well in your country, too, unlike here, where that is the exception.

      The last few lines of your post, military juntas and so forth, are just sniping at strawmen, and do not merit a reasoned response.

      - T

      [1] On or about 15 Jan 2015 - sorry, couldn't find a link. Maybe a link wasn't easy to find due to how many even more batshit insane things she has actually said which got more coverage, such as her Darth Vader comments and her comments on the term "hard working". She was doing a quick review of laws taking effect at the beginning of the year, as journalists & pundits often do. IIRC the law in question was passed in New York to make it illegal to take selfies with zoo tigers, apparently to curtail maulings. I had seen other pundits mention the law prior to MHP, as these sorts of quick commentaries usually start in December, but no others had mentioned the motivations for the law. I assumed it was to protect the tigers. Sure, their digestive systems can presumably handle herbivore bone fragments, but perhaps they are less resilient when subjected to iPhone screen shards. Perhaps a rolex could lodge in their digestive tract, necessitating avoidable surgery. Also, there might be public outcry against the animal, potentially leading to an a

    270. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but most of the security personnel are at the gates, and depending on how large the base is, may have a not insignificant response time, especially if alarms aren't sounded quickly. There also aren't actually that many cops around on most bases; bases with secret or dangerous stuff have plenty, but around office buildings and residential areas there aren't many. I worked on an AFB for several years; I know what those kind of bases look like.

      Yes, the commander can issue guns and ammo in case of an attack - but that takes time to do, and if you'll notice, both of the events you cited only lasted ten minutes or less. You couldn't have raised the alarm, told the commander, got people to the armory, gotten guns and ammo, and then gotten to the shooter in that amount of time if you wanted to respond with normal troops. I do work at a place with its own police, and - surprise - they still have to know something is happening in order to respond. It's kind of hard to do that in less than ten minutes when it's an office building and people are more concerned with getting away than calling the cops.

      No, they aren't full of people with guns. There are guys with guns around the perimeter, and some cops around, but not all that many, especially inside buildings. They're mostly trained to respond to attacks from outside the base, not from a shooter inside a building. Once you're inside the base, you're often surrounded by people who aren't armed at all.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    271. Re:An easier sollution by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      Because some nerds mistakenly think technology is the end all be all answer to everything.
      I recall a documentary about Star Trek TNG, where they said the writers had the same kind of mindset during the first seasons, but after a time started to realize how unrealistic that was. They also saw a dark side, tech can bring with it unbridled power too, and so they conceived the Borg to represent a society where technology is valued over individualism, art, and social interaction (as opposed to "hive" interaction). The Borg are introduced just about when the Federation is feeling pretty invulnerable.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    272. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Texas does NOT have far more guns. They are actually about equal given the population differences. So more guns per person in TX doesn't equate to being safer

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    273. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Indeed, perhaps it's not the number of guns per person but that having ready access to guns by the general population is just a bad idea. I'd love Europe levels but to compromise on allowing rifles and shotguns which are a small fraction of the problem. What's your solution?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    274. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What nonsense. What happens an armed good guy accidentally kills another armed or unarmed good guy? What happens if 10% of the hundreds of people in a crowded night club are armed and start shooting? For that matter, I wonder how many of the people killed in the club in Orlando were killed by friendly fire? I have no idea, but adding more guns to the mix sounds like the kind of theoretical pendantic nonsense that my anti-government and libertarian friends are always spouting.

    275. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is plenty. Shove you in front of the bad guy, while he's focused on shooting you, a good guy with a gun can shoot the bad guy with a "semi-auto rifle."

    276. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      Sure, most of the people who died in the USSR and China were because of bad economic systems, but there were also plenty of religious groups that were heavily suppressed and some of their members killed too. Religion often plays a role; it's by no means the only motivator, but it is important. Maajid Nawaz has written a few very good books on the subject; it's not just econ or foreign policy, although those are certainly part of it.

      It's also pretty funny that immediately after you say "Stop trying to reduce complex events to simple single sentence answers" you blame it all just on crony capitalism. Incidentally, while crony capitalism has certainly started some wars, religion, mercantilism, and plain old racism have caused more wars by far, historically speaking. Don't forget that we're in one of the periods of history with the smallest percentage of people dying due to conflicts.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    277. Re:An easier sollution by tombeard · · Score: 1

      On Ren & Stimpy. Also, biggest gun wins.

      --
      The reason we subjugate ourselves to law is to better procure justice. If law does not accomplish this purpose then it m
    278. Re:An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Congratulations on reading my post without actually reading my post.

      I would not have had a firearm in that situation. I stated -- quite clearly -- that I do not feel the need to be armed everywhere I go. There is no "false confidence" here; my ability to identify friend from foe is quite irrelevant if I am unarmed, as I almost certainly would be in a night club setting. As an aside, I've availed myself of enough training to take this matter quite seriously. I've known people who have taken human life, have seen what it does to their souls and mental well-being, even though they had no choice in the matter, and I have no desire to join that "club." My first inclination would be to run away; deadly force of any kind is an absolute last resort in my eyes, when one's back is against the proverbial wall, and it's truly kill or be killed.

      I simply dispute the oft-repeated notion that the "good guys" will automatically start shooting each other in such a situation. It's a frequently repeated argument of the gun control crowd, meant to condemn those who wish to carry as "gun nuts" or whatever other disparaging terminology you wish to use. It speaks to the mindset of that crowd that they do not approve of the use of firearms for self-defense, no matter what the circumstance, and they feel the need to belittle those that do.

      I'm sick of the extreme idiots on both sides of this argument. The "MORE GUNS EVERYWHERE" crowd and the "NO GUNS ANYWHERE" crowd are equally obtuse, in my not so humble opinion. There's no room for rational discussion on this issue, because of people like you, who rush to repeat themselves over and over again without even bothering to read what they're replying to.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    279. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chris Kyle was "whacked" while trying to help a friend, he wasn't in a combat or active shooter situation. Even if it was, the friend who did it was practically joe average citizen compared to Chris's training...

      It's almost as if no amount of training can save you from a bullet and bad luck...

      .

    280. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Similarly, no special precaution should be taken if religious person's home catches on fire. Them religious books sure ain't gonna start exploding and whizzing around the neighborhood.

      Ammunition does not work that way. It relies on the structure of the firearm (specifically the chamber and barrel) to contain the expanding gases from burning powder and utilize them in a useful way. Without such containment the gases dissipate before imparting a meaningful amount of energy on the projectile. Ignite the powder in a non-chambered round and the cartridge will simply blow apart, with the projectile flying one way and the cartridge another. Either can inflict minor injuries (burns and/or bruises) but they can not kill or seriously injure. The lion's share of the potential energy is lost, since there's nothing to contain the expanding gases.

      Ammunition left chambered within a firearm is potentially dangerous in a house fire. Mythbusters tested this is an episode, igniting ammunition both in and outside of a firearm. The ammunition ignited inside a firearm (a revolver left inside a common kitchen oven) had a significant amount of force behind the projectile, though less than it would have if properly discharged. Ammunition ignited outside of a firearm simply blew itself apart.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    281. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Please explain the functional difference betwen an "assault weapon" and the Kel Tec SU-16ca.

      The assault weapon has a shoulder thing that goes up. I thought everybody knew that?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    282. Re: An easier sollution by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      Whatever society you live in, that biases your view of religion. You view the dominant religion as harmless, and people who believe in it as normal people. You view other religions as suspicious and people who believe in them as abnormal. In a Christian majority country, people see Christianity as normal and Islam as a threat. In a Muslim majority country, people see Islam as normal and Christianity as a threat.

      Example: if a billion believers tell you, "This is a religion of peace and we reject violence," but you find a passage in their holy book endorsing violence, what do you conclude? Is it a religion of peace or of violence? Also assume their fellow believers have fought countless wars over the years, but most members of the religion just want to live their lives in peace.

      In this case, most people apply completely different standards depending on the religion. In a Christian majority country, people will tend to say that Christianity is a religion of peace. They justify it by talking about all the great things Christians done, and how most of them are peaceful people, and quoting Bible passages that endorse peace. But they say Islam is a religion of violence, citing terrible crimes committed by Muslims and quoting passages from the Koran that endorse violence.

      But you can just as easily reverse those. Countless terrible acts of violence have been committed by Christians. The Bible has lots of passages endorsing violence. Most Muslims are peaceful people, and describe their religion as one of peace. And in Muslim majority countries, people see the two religions in the exactly reversed roles, based on exactly the same evidence, justifying their conclusions with exactly the same logic.

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    283. Re: An easier sollution by avgjoe62 · · Score: 1
      --

      How come Slashdot never gets Slashdotted?

    284. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      There's not much even a highly trained "good guy with a gun" can do do against a bad guy with an assault rifle.

      Bullshit.

      I don't want to take on an AK-47 with my .45, but I'd rather face one with my .45 than my cell phone.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    285. Re: An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Not according to the original "assault weapons" ban nor the State of California! Having a pistol grip and a threaded barrel is enough to get you an "assault weapons" marking. Or an accessory rail and forward hand grip... Don't need a folding stock (which really isn't used by the US military anyway) - just got to look evil and black!

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    286. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what we have instead in this country, on both state-by-state basis, as well as a metro-area basis, is very clear correlations between gun prevalence and gun deaths. and it's summed up thus: more guns = more deaths.

      This is (deliberately?) misleading. Gun deaths are, of course, correlated with gun ownership: you can't have gun deaths if there aren't any guns. Homicides in general, however, show no correlation with gun ownership (see plot). This rather supports the pro-gun side's argument that "guns don't kill people; people kill people" - that is, that people decide to commit murder, then do so with whatever means are at hand, whether guns or something else.

    287. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      I read your post quite carefully. While you said you do not feel the need to carry a firearm in all situations, you also described at some length your views on the likelihood or otherwise of a blue-on-blue incident occurring "in the midst of chaos", as you put it. You made it quite clear that you thought it would be easy to distinguish the good from the bad. So complaining that my assumption that you would make such a judgement based on your own lived experience, rather than simply hand-waving about a theoretical good guy, seems a bit overdone, to be honest. If you didn't make such a judgement based on your own experience, what on earth *is* the basis for your confident assertions that it's easy to tell the good guys from the bad in a shooting situation? Why would you downplay the long experience of war, policing and trainers, all of which points to blue-on-blue as being a significant issue? I mean, I linked to a home-defence organisation's training site -- it's not exactly a site that's a mecca for gun control, is it?

      Furthermore, it's a bit rich of you to complain about my not reading your posts carefully. My OP says: "So each good guy *could* make an unintended error and shoot another good guy, because there's no easy way to tell good from bad. Yet you characterised this as: "the oft-repeated notion that the "good guys" will *automatically* start shooting each other". From my "could" to your "automatically": you assign to me an extremeness of rhetoric that is not present in my actual statement, and then use it to berate me. That, my friend, is the quintessence of strawman argumentation.

    288. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was an off-duty police officer at the club, who shot at the bad guy as he was entering the club, but then failed to stop him. Two more police showed up, and also exchanged fire with the bad guy. They, too, failed to stop him.

      If three officers with guns couldn't stop him, why do you think less-trained private individuals with guns would have?

    289. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Dude, I was being very very very factious. I figured that quote would get a laugh out of you, not an explanation. :D

      Personally, I don't understand the fascination with so-called assault weapons on either side of the issue. I feel no need to own one; they're excessive for my self-defense needs and they cost too much. I can defend my person quite effectively with my 1911, thank you very much. I also don't see why they need to be legislated against. The fact of the matter is that handguns are the most popular weapons used to commit crime, for obvious reasons (easy to conceal), and that rifles of any sort are rarely used for nefarious purposes.

      Sometimes I think the gun-control crowd borrows tactics from the pro-life crowd. They support any legislation aimed at guns, no matter how little sense it makes, or even if it's effective. The point is to slowly steer the ship of state towards their desired outcome. I'll never forget my United States Senator, Gillibrand, voting against allowing firearms in checked baggage on Amtrak; that vote had nothing whatsoever to do with gun violence and everything to do with proving her bonafides to the gun control crowd.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    290. Re:An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      "Some length?" It was one short paragraph out of three. I'll concede that I should have said, "this argument is stupid," rather than "your argument is stupid." For that I apologize.

      I really do find this particular argument tiresome when it is used to condemn concealed carry. It's a theoretical, something that to my knowledge has never actually happened in the real world. Is there a single case of civilian blue-on-blue during or immediately after a spree killing? For that matter, law enforcement blue-on-blue during or immediately after a spree killing? The odds of there being a single armed "blue" on-site as a spree killing begins is remote, the odds of multiple blues even more so.

      It's much like the oft-repeated claim that a gun in the home is more likely to kill a family member than a home invader, or the oft-quoted statistic that the United States has more gun violence than other Western counties. Even when these claims are true (the latter certainly is; the former is more questionable) they rather miss the point. In the United States you don't get make another person's self-defense choices for them. For better or worse we have the right to keep and bear arms in this country.

      Incidentally, what's the point of even quoting the statistic about gun violence vis-à-vis other western countries? Of course the US has a higher rate of gun violence than countries where guns are hard to come by. Duh! I'm willing to wager that Saudi Arabia has a nearly zero DWI rate but I don't see MADD quoting that statistic and/or suggesting that prohibition is the answer for our very real DWI problem. Even those zealots accept the reality that recreational alcohol is here to stay. Why can't the gun-control crowd accept the fact that the United States is never going to be the United Kingdom or even Finland; the strictest American jurisdiction is more liberal than the most liberal of European countries when it comes to firearms regulation and licensing.

      Honestly, I'm sick of both sides of the gun debate. "MORE GUNS" is hardly the answer, because the likelihood of an armed "blue" being nearby will always remain remote. It's also fucking tone deaf to go on national television after these tragedies (I'm looking at you Wayne LaPierre, post Newton) and claim that more guns is the answer, even if you earnestly believe that claim. The only thing dumber than the arguments made by these people are the arguments of those on the other side.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    291. Re: An easier sollution by denzacar · · Score: 1

      In both cases shooters were stopped or shot (second one committed suicide after being stopped) within minutes - by police officers.
      In both cases, response time was under the national average.

      In neither case civilians (as in not security officers) didn't stop it.
      Nor did non-security military personnel stop it, though some were killed while trying to do that while unarmed.
      Nor did the security of the location, which is NOT a gun-free zone, as gun-free zones don't come with armed guards around them and at various locations across the "zone" - deter either of the shooters.

      As for the 89th and 720th - that is their job there. When they are not deployed, they are the base security.
      I.e. They carry guns.

      The point is - neither do civilians with guns stop mass shooters, nor does increased security deter them.
      These are insane people we're talking about.

      In fact, there are more cases of unarmed civilians (21, out of 160 incidents, 2000-2013) stopping mass shooters, than there are cases of armed civilians doing that (5 - one of them a security guard at that church).
      https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/o...

      Sorry. Neither facts nor logic support "Yosemite Sam" approach to citizen security.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    292. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Most general gun users cant kill someone 2 blocks away. Most can barely hit a pie plate at 100 yards.

      Dont presume just anyone can hit a human sized target from 2 blocks away.

    293. Re: An easier sollution by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I have no problems with any of those options. Just amend the constitution to grant the government the constitutional authority to take action.

    294. Re: An easier sollution by Izuzan · · Score: 1

      Knives, blunt objects, guns. If they counted cars as a weapon it would by far be #1

    295. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hitler and Mussolini were both athiests.

    296. Re: An easier sollution by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Actually, No.

      The bible is a set of covenants with God. Not everything in it is supposed to be literal in every covenant. The latest is the New Testament which sets new rules. We don't stone adulterers because Jesus said so not because we want to ignore Leviticus.

      The old testament is more or less a historical representation of the path that made Jesus legitimate and the new covenant.

        The bible is not like a programming manual. It is more like a collection of them designed to illustrate how we got to the newest fad language by showing the progression through the old ones. The jews understand it this way to, they just don't accept Jesus or the new testament.

      But what is missing here is the fact that there are multiple denominations within religions. Sometimes they disagree on interpretation of parts of the bible and sometimes it is the organizational structure of the church.

    297. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are American, they dont do common sense. When you have 20 toddlers killed and do nothing, you have lost all ability for critical thinking.
      FFS.

    298. Re: An easier sollution by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Ahh, my bad. Sorry about that! Just so many here are on the "guns are evil!" kick without understanding it's the person using them that is evil. The FBI just recently released statistics from the last 4 years, and you are more likely to be beaten or kicked to death than killed with a rifle. But evil black rifles are the focus because "gun".

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    299. Re: An easier sollution by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      How, do you think, would a police officer outside the building gain entry to it when there are people stampeding out of every conceivable exit? If he did gain access, how, do you think, would a uniformed police officer look as a target in a building full of smartly dressed party people?

      Now, consider armed bartenders, servers, managers, and other staff stationed inside the building. They know each other, they know the building, and they are already inside when the shooting starts. This event would have been over in only a few brief moments instead of hours, the death toll vastly lower.

      I think your preconceived notions are coloring your viewpoint. I don't think those notions can be trusted to stay within the lines. They obviously need more supervision.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    300. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that progressives arent actually liberal right? They just hijacked the word.

    301. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      So let's see. You're characterizing my thoughts as: "Everyone blaze away in the dark no matter what you can or can't see!"

      Could you point out where I said that, or anything like that?

      Of course, witnesses say that once people understood he was shooting, everyone hit the floor, and those in line of site could very clearly see the killer standing in a door frame calmly taking shots, reloading, talking on his phone, with nobody else up and around, at all. Someone with a clear shot could have taken one during any of several interludes when he was reloading. I know you'd like to imagine that everyone with a gun would start spraying lead, but that's not how things go. The person painting a ludicrous, fantasy scenario here is you.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    302. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Really, that's what you see happening? A completely fictional scenario where a hundred drunk people are all blazing away? I'll bet you don't even know a single person with a carry permit.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    303. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People like the GP poster are (by design) completely ignorant of how firearms work and know nothing about people who own them. They've been programmed by government and leftists to be in complete and utter terror of anything even resembling a gun. They cannot hold a mature discussion about the issue, as they cannot contain their emotional response long enough to use the logical hemisphere of their brain.

      The vast majority of these people are simply lost causes. Victims of propaganda that will attempt to spread their disinformation. The best you can do is teach your children to understand a weapon's function and power. With understanding comes knowledge and respect instead of ignorance and fear. Teach them to stand up and fight for what they believe in and to not knuckle under to pressure and disinformation campaigns designed to retard their free will.

    304. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In both cases shooters were stopped or shot (second one committed suicide after being stopped) within minutes - by police officers.
      In both cases, response time was under the national average.

      So, you're confirming that even with a higher density police (in the form of MPs et.al.) presence than most civilian localities, two intentional mass shootings still occurred. So, 13 dead in 2009, and 3 dead in 2014, even though you described the base as "literally full of highly trained people with guns" in your prior post. Good, at least we can agree on that. I'd phrase it more succinctly as "When seconds count, the MPs are still only minutes away - just like the civilian cops."

      In neither case civilians (as in not security officers) didn't stop it.

      As has been pointed out to you multiple times, base policy did not allow civilians to be armed, so this does not support your contention. You keep using this fact as though it represented civilians who chose not to return fire, or failed to stop an attacker with return fire, even though you already know those civilians were not allowed to carry firearms on base. You are being intellectually dishonest, which is the kindest way I can phrase it.

      Nor did non-security military personnel stop it, though some were killed while trying to do that while unarmed.

      As has been pointed out to you multiple times, base policy did not allow non-security military personnel to be armed, so this does not support your contention. This time you explicitly admit that they were unarmed, yet still use this point to support your misguided views. Somehow in your twisted view, if these non-security military personnel had been allowed to carry on-base, they could/would not have stopped either mass shooter, even though, by your own words, they attempted to do so even while unarmed. That's some world-class reasoning there - you ought to go into politics.

      Nor did the security of the location, which is NOT a gun-free zone, as gun-free zones don't come with armed guards around them and at various locations across the "zone" - deter either of the shooters.

      First, the concept of a gun-free zone typically doesn't restrict the police et. al. from being armed - it's still a gun free zone even when armed police are present. Or do you think that cops leave their guns in the patrol car when making a courtesy stop in Colorado theaters? Was Columbine not a gun free zone, just because it had a full-time armed police officer assigned to it? You're being brashly disingenuous here. While there is no official/standard definition of what constitutes a gun free zone, the Gun Free School Zones Act is about as close to authoritative as we have in the US, and it defines a gun free zone as one which prohibits unauthorized individuals from being armed on premises, which does not include police. Fort Hood fits the generally accepted definition of a gun free zone, wherein the police/security (MPs et. al.) are authorized to be armed, but nobody else is.

      Second, both shooters were insiders who knew where the density of armed security would be lowest. Furthermore, stating that the existence of police/security forces did not deter them is an attempt at deflection. Your contention was that armed civilians don't thwart mass shooters - deterrence is an orthogonal matter. And even if we were to add the discussion of deterrence, I'd respond that armed civilians (and non-security personnel in the specific instances of Fort Hood) can still be an effective defense against insane/terrorist mass shooter, even if not a deterrent - but we'll never know if they're never allowed to be armed in the first place.

      As for the 89th and 720th - that is their job there. When they are not deployed, they are the base security.
      I.e. They carr

    305. Re: An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      I agree with you; they're hoplophobes, to borrow a term from Jeff Cooper. :)

      That said, it's only fair to point out the stupidity on "our side," like the tone deafness of Wayne LaPierre, who goes on national television a few days after Newton and proclaims that more guns are the answer. Even if you agree with his sentiments that was mind-numbingly stupid, poorly timed, and extremely insensitive. Or the idiots that have ruined open carry, by carrying AR-15s into establishments like Starbucks or Applebee's. Seriously, WTF is the point of that, other than to tweak people? Is Red Dawn going to happen during Happy Hour?

      My sister now boycotts Panera and Target, because they asked that people not carry firearms into their establishments. They did not actually post their establishments, even in States where such postingshave force of law; they simply released open letters asking people not to carry firearms. I figured that was a reaction to the aforementioned excesses of the open carry crowd and I have continued to conceal carry at Target and Panera. Out of sight, out of mind.

      I think it comes down to the old adage: Just because you CAN do something it does not mean that you SHOULD.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    306. Re: An easier sollution by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Oh please.

      As an American, I have lots of complaints about Christians, but to equate the two religions is pure lunacy. Christians haven't committed largescale acts of religious violence for a very long time. The Crusades were a millenia ago. People haven't been burned at the stake by Christians for centuries. The Salem Witch trials were in the late 1600s. By contrast, Islamic nations are horribly violent places right now. If you don't believe me, take a plane to Turkey, cross over into Syria, and go spend some time in Al-Raqqah. ISIL controls a huge amount of territory, has tens of thousands of fighters and probably millions of citizens, and executes people brutally on a daily basis. And that's just the worst of the lot. Saudi Arabia, our wonderful ally, has all kinds of misogynistic laws and executes people in medieval fashion too. Qatar, another strong US ally, just released a Dutch woman from jail where she was held for 3 months because she was raped, and was pushed to marry her rapist so they could both leave jail early (!). UAE does that kind of stuff all the time. The Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan had popular support (and still does in places) and they also commit countless acts of brutality. Islamic countries have been full of violence for ages, especially for anyone who left the religion or violated some other backwards religious law.

      Christians have their issues still (like the WBC), but this is a serious case of false equivalence here.

      You don't have to look at any holy book passages to see how totally different Islamic and Western nations are.

    307. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a lot of violence in the transition; for example, England and France are experiencing a lot of violence in importing a Muslim underclass that refuses to assimilate.

      While I agree wholeheartedly with your larger point, I have to point out a huge flaw in this part... After living in several countries in Europe as an American, I can tell you that even the concept of "multiculturalism" as a goal doesn't exist in France. (Can't speak to the UK from firsthand experience.) If you aren't white and French by blood you will never be French. They hate Muslims, Jews, Chinese (that means all Asians to them), and anyone else dark skinned or who speaks with an accent. Their politics and society are hugely racist in a way that would shock the sensibilities of an uninitiated American. That Muslims can't *integrate* has more to do with the fact that they are relegated to living in ghettos on the fringes of society and are denied educational opportunities and decent treatment. Wearing Muslim or Jewish or other religious clothing to a public school is illegal. Not sure if you meant it or not, but *assimilation* as the goal is exactly the problem... be just like us or get out. That's a very different thing than multiculturalism and integration of different cultures and values into a single society. Say what you will about the failing of American multiculturalism, at least its the normative ideal. It's vastly superior to assimilation.

    308. Re: An easier sollution by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Hardly. We should respect each other, without the threat of force.

      But already we've lost civility in so many areas of American society that indeed, you can be beaten for attending a political rally, and the state will watch, if they don't much like the headliner.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    309. Re:An easier sollution by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Actually, no, that chart doesn't prove otherwise. It shows that the gun death rate is dropping while the number of guns is increasing, but it does not prove that increasing the number of guns resulted in the decrease in gun deaths as you imply. It could just as easily be true that the increased number of guns resulted in more deaths than would otherwise have occurred, but that this was overshadowed by the sharp decline in gun deaths caused by a general reduction in crazy people, a general increase in incarceration of dangerous felons, or even the reduction of lead in gasoline.

      For this reason, if you wanted to prove your theory correct, you would need more than just a vague inverse correlation in a single graph. You'd have to start by comparing the rate of gun ownership increases in various areas and the rate of decrease, to determine whether those two numbers are correlated in some way, and if so, in which direction.

      Unfortunately, even that won't really prove your point one way or another, because there's every possibility that the increase in gun ownership could be caused by the increasing violence in an area. So a proper study would have to factor in the timing of changes in the slope of those lines over a long period of time at a fine-grained level.

      Fortunately, a team of Stanford law professors have done that study. Unfortunately for you, they found precisely what the GP said—that every action that made it easier for people to own guns resulted in a statistically significant increase in the amount of gun violence without increasing the probability of bystanders preventing crimes.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    310. Re:An easier sollution by Gussington · · Score: 1

      The federal government has been waging war on education and common sense since the fifties.

      You're implying that education and common sense peaked in the 50's? When people with vaginas or higher melanin levels were routinely discriminated against or persecuted?
      Nostalgia goggles have amazing power...

    311. Re:An easier sollution by Gussington · · Score: 1

      Except ... when a good guy kills that bad guy who has just started shooting up a night club, the shooting stops. That's the whole point.

      That's why wars always cease as soon as the other side gets their guns out.
      Awesome logic...

    312. Re: An easier sollution by Gussington · · Score: 1

      "It's woefully ignorant to blame all religion for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes."

      Just as valid: It's woefully ignorant to blame all gun-owners for a few nutjobs and murderous assholes.

      Or all drivers for a few nutjobs who crash into others. But we do anyway, because sometimes that is the best way to achieve some sort of order.

    313. Re:An easier sollution by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      And it took the cops three hours to storm the building while people were dying inside because they thought there was a bomb and hostages, the former due to some bad camera angles. So...for better technology in this incident, I'd go with automatic emergency lighting and web- or phone-quality cameras that could be accessed from outside the building.

      That's a good start. I would say:

      • Fire alarms should trigger full indoor lighting until deactivated.
      • People should be trained to pull the fire alarm in the event of a gun attack.
      • Kill-bots would clearly prevent shootings if broadly deployed. :-)
      • Tear gas grenades could also be highly effective, particularly if you can trigger them remotely.

      Above all else, though, the best thing we can do is train people how to handle these situations. Remember the three Ds: Distract, Disrupt, and Disarm.

      • Distract the attacker by pulling a fire alarm, suddenly changing the lighting, shouting at the attacker from an unexpected direction, throwing something at the attacker (keys, cell phones, beer bottles, purses, bricks), etc.
      • Disrupt the attacker by using a chair to knock the gun from his/her hands while his/her back is turned in response to the distraction.
      • Disarm the attacker by beating the ever-living s**t out of him/her until he/she can no longer reach for another weapon.

      Remember those rules, and whenever you enter any room or building where your opportunities for escape are limited, pay attention to defensible positions, and be prepared to quickly move to one of those positions and invoke the three Ds if necessary. A few moments of preparation can make all the difference.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    314. Re:An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      The shooter had an associate degree in criminal justice and years of law enforcement training. What more did he need?

    315. Re:An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      The establishment had one armed guard and I assume several bouncers and it was not enough.

      The idea though to have armed guards at every establishment reminds me of one of the early WW1 or WW2 plans where someone wanted to distribute the army along the border for defense. A superior asked if the plan was to prevent smuggling.

    316. Re:An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Where this situation has arisen, that has not generally been the result. It is much more common for responding law enforcement officers however to shoot bystanders and there is a reason for this; someone who is on the scene in the time before the incident can have a much better situational awareness than a responding officer.

    317. Re:An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      And there are practical examples where a civilian stopped a criminal in the act which do not support the theories that everything will descend into a free-for-all fire fight resulting in worse results than had the criminal had remained unopposed.

    318. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 2

      Personally, I'd put an end to the War on Drugs, which is just as violent and destabilizing as alcohol prohibition was. Between that, and working to end the cycle of poverty and poor education, the murder rates in the US would easily drop to European levels. Basically, we can start chasing the real causes instead of getting caught on this subject (guns) every single time.

      If that's all too hard or something, we could just do nothing at all. The violent crime rates for most Americans (not involved in gangs or illegal drug trade) is very low. The gang-bangers will continue to kill each other and make up the largest chunk of the murders, interspersed with the occasional nutjob or jealous lover.

      Attempting a gun confiscation program in the US would probably not be peaceful, would certainly be unconstitutional, and would likely be accompanied by enabling laws that would make the US a less fun place to live. The price is too too high, especially when the problem is not about guns but culture.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    319. Re:An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      I agree about the legal risk. Citizens do not enjoy even qualified immunity when they do things exactly right while law enforcement does. In general law enforcement and the legal system take a dim view of civilians defending themselves and others.

      The risk of friendly fire however is greater with responding law enforcement officers who lack situational awareness of the events they are responding to; the number of bystanders they manage to shoot bears this out.

    320. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a look at North Dakota. 50% gun ownership there, and drastically lower homicide rates.

      And then at DC: only 3.6% gun ownership rate, but a whopping 16.5/100k gun deaths.

      It's almost as if... wait for it... The problem is SOMETHING ELSE other than the guns!!

    321. Re: An easier sollution by Agripa · · Score: 1

      On average, approximately zero are saved by good guys who aren't cops.

      The good guy vigilante is a myth, even in states with open carry or liberal concealed carry .

      There are compiled lists where a civilian with a firearm stopped a violent crime and it is regular occurrence but not very news worthy. Further there is a built in bias because what if a civilian with a firearm succeeds and nobody else is killed? Well, then he did not save anybody because the criminal was stopped.

      If a civilian stopped a mass shooting then there was no mass shooting to stop. If the mass shooting occurred, then the civilian failed. Heads you win, tails I lose.

    322. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      White American gun owners mowing down a brown skinned mideast looking fucknut... are NOT going to be shot at by other White American gun owners.
      Sorry folks, but white dudes at least have each other's back in that regard before pulling the trigger.
      Don't carry if you're not prepared and practiced in identifying friend or foe.

    323. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU'RE AN IDIOT!

      You just talk a lot of gun deaths.
      What you NEED to check is the total number of shootings CLAIMED to be in SELF DEFENSE,
      versus the number OF THOSE that were later adjudicated to instead be some unlawful form of killing.
      LAWFUL versus UNLAWFUL self defense.

      Or GTFO with your gun grabbing self.

    324. Re: An easier sollution by Hyvtti · · Score: 1

      Difference between police officers and members of the public in shooting situations is that officers are required to take action and actively seek solution to the threat to other people. Non officers only have to consider protecting themselves, and they must not actively go after bad guys. It is far easier, as it is easy to identify if someone is trying to shoot you, even with zero training.

      This is why we have never seen friendly fire from CCW carriers.

    325. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't like the US Constitution that the country was built on, go somewhere else where they already have your gun-free paradise.

    326. Re:An easier sollution by StillAnonymous · · Score: 2

      If you want to have guns, that's fine. But don't say they are the solution to the same problem they create...

      Maybe you should tell the police that when they next respond to a situation where the perp is armed.

    327. Re:An easier sollution by StillAnonymous · · Score: 1

      You might want to rethink civilians ability with firearms with respect to police.

      "In fact, gun owners mistakenly kill about 30 innocent persons a year, one-eleventh of the number killed by police"

      There also have been numerous cases where officers have had their weapon taken from them and sometimes killed with it. Yet I don't see the usual screaming from the anti-gun crowd that cops should be subject to the same restrictions they demand upon the public, despite making the same blunders that the anti-gun crowd vilifies the gun owners for.

    328. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to point out that a "good guy with a gun" can't stop a shooting from happening. Hell, it's not even a deterrent.

      Once again, the gun-o-phobes prove themselves to be idiots or liars. Which one is it, then?

    329. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      So it's 'their' problem? And we should just let them kill each other? You're a sick person.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    330. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the 2nd link where a ccw says he almost killed an innocent person? Perhaps take the lady in Michigan. Who decides to shoot at fleeing 'criminal' because she thought she would help? You're not fucking Rambo and this isn't a god damned movie

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    331. Re: An easier sollution by EzInKy · · Score: 1

      Oh, communism will work this time, if it didn't work, it wasn't real communism.

      Surely there must exist a system somewhere the will provide for the general welfare of all people while still feeding the needs of those few who have a need to control everything?

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    332. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many civilians were on the military base in the first place, and how many of them were allowed to carry a weapon while there? The answer to the second part of the question is 0. So law-abiding civilians could not have stopped this with a weapon, by definition, and would have been very unlikely to stop it without one.

      Again, non-MPs would be unarmed when this occurred. Not a lot of chance for them to stop this. How do you think this would've gone down if all of the military personnel were armed at the time?

      Statistically speaking, since most of these mass shootings happen in gun-free zones, where law-abiding civilians are stripped of their 2nd amendment rights, there is a very low chance that they will have the ability to stop the gunman with their own firearm, since, being law-abiding, they didn't bring it. An unarmed attempt is your only other option, but I bet if you asked those people if they'd have preferred to have a weapon at the time instead, they'd say yes.

      You very effectively confirmed everything the_saint1138 had to say. Way to go!

    333. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fix education, use solar power to end desperation

    334. Re:An easier sollution by davester666 · · Score: 1

      That is totally a SMRT idea.

      In a small, crowded, dimly lit room, filled with people in varying stages of being impaired, with plenty of testosterone and/or estrogen flowing competing for dates, we need more guns. Because NOTHING can go wrong in that situation.

      It has ALREADY been shown that popular clubs that had a problem with gun and knife violence, after introducing a no-weapons policy with metal detects, they stopped having gun and knife violence. People stopped dying and/or having critical injuries [both "victims" and bystanders]. Yes, there were still fights, but the next day, the people involved went on living.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    335. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      For someone who doesn't like the extremes of argument, you do spend an awful lot of time putting forward very absolutist statements. Like this one: "In the United States you don't get make another person's self-defense choices for them. For better or worse we have the right to keep and bear arms in this country."

      The situation is not nearly so black-and-white as this. The right to bear arms is not a right to bear *any type* of arms. So, yes, in the United States, the government (not individuals, except insofar as the government reflects their views and votes) does "get to make another person's self-defence choices for them". In particular, the government gets to say: there are some types of arms which you may not bear in self-defence. These include: nuclear bombs, conventional bombs, RPGs, tanks, Apaches, etc. The government also used to include assault rifles on that list. One day, it may do so again. Even if that does disgruntle people who think it's very unfair. We can but hope.

    336. Re:An easier sollution by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      whats the difference between "highly confident" and "guarantee"?

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    337. Re:An easier sollution by geekmux · · Score: 1

      Except ... when a good guy kills that bad guy who has just started shooting up a night club, the shooting stops. That's the whole point. Police don't appear magically, instantly out of thin air. If they could, they would have shot this guy while he stood casually reloading over and over again. If any one of the 300 people in that club had landed one good shot on that guy, it would have ended things. More people showing up on the scene wouldn't have confusion over who to shoot, because there wouldn't be any more shooting going on. You get that part, right?

      Someone trained well enough to handle an AR is likely trained well enough to reload fairly quickly (it can take less than 3 seconds to drop a 30-round magazine and put in a fresh one), so let's just dispel with the delusions that even an armed citizen would have had time while merely trying to survive, or that the assailant sat down to have a cup of tea while packing his single-shot musket rifle full of gunpowder. The off-duty police officer engaged the shooter and failed to stop the threat due to the inherent danger, and that is someone who was armed and well-trained to neutralize threats like this, along with being armed with legal protections to do so. The situation was made worse when it was suspected that the attacker was also armed with explosives, which played a considerable part in the delayed response to neutralize the threat as precautions and protocol were stepped through.

      As far as someone being able to take him down, yes I agree. That said, ever seen how well the average civilian shoots with a handgun when they do it once a year? Now imagine the confusion and crossfire that could have happened with only 10% of the people involved here being armed and willing to engage. A full nightclub with poor lighting isn't exactly a safe zone to engage in a firefight for any human within bullet range as armed citizens look to target anyone holding a gun in their hands. Yes, the end result would have likely been less lives lost, but again I challenge anyone to look at our history of civilians legally defending a lethal response with a firearm. Your overall stance here appears to support the notion that an armed society is a society that can defend themselves. Sadly it is the courtroom you also must defend yourself against. "I'd rather be judged by 12 than carried by 6" is an often cited term here. Financial ruin and damage to reputation due to legal defense and civil charges can still destroy lives.

    338. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      You were just looking for a reason to say that, weren't you? It's hard to see how fighting poverty and ending drug-trade fueled violence makes me a sick person. Your all too common attitude of needing to divide everybody into opposing ideological teams and vilify the "other team" is what is keeping us all in this sorry state of affairs.

      Grow up.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    339. Re:An easier sollution by shilly · · Score: 1

      I'm from the UK. In my country, the police *are* routinely unarmed.

      It's fabulous. It's why, last year, there were 3 gun deaths at the hands of police for the whole of the UK. (That's all gun deaths, not just innocent victims). In the 26 years since 1990, there've been 60 gun deaths at the hands of police.

      In 2011, there were 44 gun murders in the whole of the UK. 44! Just to remind you, in the same year, the US had 11,101. That's 250 times as many for a population that was five times the size, a fifty-fold difference in the rate. If you could get your gun murder rate down to ours, you'd have about 200 murders a year. Conversely, if our rate increased to the same as yours, we'd have more than 2,000.

    340. Re:An easier sollution by Shakrai · · Score: 2

      The government also used to include assault rifles on that list. One day, it may do so again. Even if that does disgruntle people who think it's very unfair. We can but hope.

      Thank you, for proving my point, about the commonalities between you and the pro-life crowd. "Assault weapon" is an invented term, like "partial birth abortion," something that sounds really scary but when you actually examine the issue you quickly learn that it doesn't mean a damn thing.

      The difference between an "assault rifle" and a regular rifle is cosmetic. Mini-14 with OEM stock? Legal in all 50 States. Mini-14 with aftermarket stock? Assault rifle. Banned in NY, CA, CT, IL, and a few others, whilst uninformed people seek to ban it on the Federal level. The two firearms have the exact same capabilities. Putting a spoiler on a Honda Civic does not turn it into a Formula One race car.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    341. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      You're the one who said it was mostly gangbangers killing each other, implying that wasn't that bad. Yes that's sick. If that's not what you meant, them perhaps acknowledge the wording was not the best? Guns are the problem. Specifically military assault weapons in civilian hands. Theres no sane reason. For that.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    342. Re:An easier sollution by zentigger · · Score: 1

      All that said, it doesn't change the fact that if buying a gun wasn't as simple as buying a pack of cigarettes, the deranged idiots wouldn't have guns.

      period.

      I can point to several billion good examples (being pretty much the global population OUTSIDE the USA.)

      So go build your own strawman somewhere else.

      --

      the above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head

    343. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't have situational awareness you hurt more than help. And if your in the thick of an attack you don't have it.

      Clearly you have never been in a fire fight. I have many times. You are right on one point. If you don't have situational awareness it is true you will hurt more than help. HAVING situational awareness is what will SAVE YOUR LIFE and get you through a fire fight alive. Being aware of what is going on around you and being prepared and trained to act is what keeps you alive Situational awareness is what keeps you shooting the right bad guy and not the wrong good guy.

      I know "situational awareness" is a buzz phrase maybe you should study what the phrase actually means and how to use situational awareness in your daily life. There's a lot more to it than just dodging bullets. Its actually about being aware enough to where you don't have to dodge the bullets.

      This was not just a shooting this was a fire fight. Yes sometimes the wrong person gets wounded in a fire fight but isn't it better that one person is shot by friendly fire than 50 being shot by unfriendly fire and not dare taking a stand? There is only one way to stop a killer with a gun and that is by better use of a gun from a good guy.

      All it takes for ternary to exist is for good men to do nothing.
      Thomas Jefferson

      Don't know maybe you rather die lying on the floor crying please don't shoot. Personally I rather die trying to defend myself and others.

      Yes you can take my life but I WILL fight you for my life and it won't be easy. You better make your first shot count. I will not give you a chance for the second.

      I spent 2 years in Vietnam "situational awareness" and the motivation to remain alive is what got me through it alive.

    344. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it happens to trained police officers, do you really believe it doesn't happen with ordinary gun "enthusiasts" who are trying to be heroes?

      Yes, because making that sort of claim requires evidence that you don't have. Asshole.

    345. Re:An easier sollution by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Yes, because making that sort of claim requires evidence that you don't have. Asshole.

      Man, you are going to feel so stupid.

      http://www.rawstory.com/2015/0...

      http://www.chicagotribune.com/...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    346. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ðY"

    347. Re:An easier sollution by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      The argument for not doing anything to change it is that it is a right guaranteed by the constitution and it would be wrong to take it away. This was as important to the founders of our country as the right to speak freely and the rights of the press. You can whine and cry all you like about how other countries do things, and I can just point to other countries like North Korea, Cuba, Iran, or the old Soviet Union where guns were/are also banned. Anyways, good luck removing the guns from the population, in the US the guns outnumber the people by 120%.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    348. Re:An easier sollution by hucker75 · · Score: 1

      If nobody was armed, the bad guys couldn't buy a gun so easily.

    349. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      And you think the average gun owner has your wealth of experience? Any experienced law enforcement officer does NOT want vigilantes 'helping'. The hubris you espouse is precisely the problem. You aren't fucking Rambo and youll as likely shoot an innocent bystander.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    350. Re:An easier sollution by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I don't know how legit this is, but here ya go... From Orlando, two months earlier:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    351. Re:An easier sollution by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You're implying that education and common sense peaked in the 50's? When people with vaginas or higher melanin levels were routinely discriminated against or persecuted?

      Discrimination is evil, but it's not insensible. But the 50s were probably when the quality of public education peaked in terms of it actually being useful and teaching you things. Obviously, indoctrination has always been there, mostly in civics and history. The difference is that you also used to get at least part of a classical education, which is important if you want to make sense of the world.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    352. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Coren22 backup your alleged self-proclaimed professional status in security + programming. Your evasions are good for laughs https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=9229319&cid=52314773 @ your expense, hahahaha!

    353. Re:An easier sollution by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      How naive. Shots would be heard and the first "good guys" would draw their guns. The second good guys would think the first good guys were the original shooters and would therefore shoot *them*. Death by friendly fire is what would occur -- a lot.

      Actually, it does not happen that way. Most people educate themselves in safe gun handling and there are courses available all over.

      But perhaps it's best if ID10t city people are not given such things... ;-)

    354. Re:An easier sollution by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      ... If it happens to trained police officers, do you really believe it doesn't happen with ordinary gun "enthusiasts" who are trying to be heroes? ...

      Civilian gun people actually tend to be better trained in the safe handling and accurate use, than police or soldiers. Most police only use guns very occaisionally, it is not the main part of their job. Few ever take it up as a hobby. That is one reason that lots of shots get fired and few hit anything, in police shootouts.

      Besides, even the worst of what you are describing would be better than having a terrorist shoot the whole crowd, with no one stopping them.

    355. Re:An easier sollution by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      Then lobby Congress to remove the ban on funding for actual dedicated research of gun violence.

      After all, what have you got to lose?
      If you're right and the current statistics are completely wrong, then actual dedicated statistics research and collection should prove that.

      The ban on government-financed research was done because the researchers were caught faking the results ... again!

      Gun-ban activists have been caught doing fake statistics again and again over the years. Partly because they think the "end justifies the means" and partly out of pure ignorance of firearms. If you are against guns then you should check your data -very- carefully.

    356. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      It is mostly gangbangers, but nothing about my wording implied that it wasn't that bad. My point in the second paragraph was that you can be cozy in your armchair railing against "military assault weapons in civilian hands" instead of advocating for actual policy that will reduce the violence and you'll still be safe from it.

      Disarmament in the US is not going to be a pretty sight, either, and your interest in seeing that disaster play out shows your personal depravity. And after that, I assume you believe that the drug-trade, experts in procurement and smuggling that they are, won't have access to guns to continue murdering each other?

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    357. Re:An easier sollution by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Civilian gun people actually tend to be better trained in the safe handling and accurate use, than police or soldiers.

      http://madogre.com/wp-content/...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    358. Re:An easier sollution by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Civilian gun people actually tend to be better trained in the safe handling and accurate use, than police or soldiers.

      Please join me on a virtual tour of poor trigger discipline. And these are all "gun enthusiasts" and "Second Amendment activists".

      http://all-len-all.com/wp-cont...

      http://i51.tinypic.com/derc7a....

      http://www.armoryblog.com/wp-c...

      https://41.media.tumblr.com/tu...

      https://gunmart.files.wordpres...

      Let's review:

      Civilian gun people actually tend to be better trained in the safe handling and accurate use, than police or soldiers.

      "Hobbyists tend to be better trained than professionals".

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    359. Re: An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please.

      As an American, I have lots of complaints about Christians, but to equate the two religions is pure lunacy. Christians haven't committed largescale acts of religious violence for a very long time. The Crusades were a millenia ago. People haven't been burned at the stake by Christians for centuries. The Salem Witch trials were in the late 1600s. By contrast, Islamic nations are horribly violent places right now

      Both World Wars were highly involved with Christians. So were dozens of other wars. Or the numerous waves of colonization.

      That isn't even counting less systematic abuses like Lynchings or other forms of violence.

      Westerners are not so far as you might like from being horribly brutal and violent. Instead of going to Turkey, try going to Columbia, or El Salvador. There's lots of brutality out there.

      Saudi Arabia, our wonderful ally, has all kinds of misogynistic laws and executes people in medieval fashion too.

      America has indeed propped up this group of dictators for its own gain.

      Qatar, another strong US ally, just released a Dutch woman from jail where she was held for 3 months because she was raped, and was pushed to marry her rapist so they could both leave jail early (!).

      Yeah, lots of people think crazy things about rape. Just ask around at a woman's shelter in the US for some horror stories.

      Christians have their issues still (like the WBC), but this is a serious case of false equivalence here.

      You don't have to look at any holy book passages to see how totally different Islamic and Western nations are.

      You can, however, look at some headlines and see how similar they are. Heck, just check for a riot after losing a sports game.

      No, don't lie to yourself, the brutality is not so far away, it's a shallow veneer at best.

    360. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they also are responsible for a lot of possibly preventable deaths (particularly suicides and accidental shootings).

      A lot? Depends on your definition of "a lot".

      However, if you go to www.suicide.org, you'll see that many countries -- including France,Switzerland,Austria,Czech Republic,Luxembourg,Denmark,Sweden,Germany,New Zealand,Canada,and Norway -- have higher suicide rates (per 100,000 population/per year) than the USA.

      Further, the statistics for the Catholic countries are a bit suspect, which means some of those with lower rates than the USA might also be actually higher.

      If all these countries with really great social programs, many of which have highly restrictive gun control, end up with HIGHER suicide rates than the USA, that suggests that no gun control policy the USA adopts is going to have a significant effect on suicide. The relationship between gun availability and suicide simply isn't that strong: suicides are clearly determined by factors other than availability of guns.

    361. Re:An easier sollution by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      If you are talking about Ronny Raygun the crazed greed obsessed actor who slithered into politics and with his buddies gutted mental health services, than you are 100% correct. This event, like so many others shows the exact same pattern. Crazed individual discovered to be violently nuts, with a pattern of violent behaviour and due to lack of mental health services, gets not treatment and works themselves into a killing rage over any cause what so ever.

      Nothing to do with any causes, whether Islam or Christianity, or which direction bananas bend, whether to the right or to the left (they are threatening a global war over that one). This is about one thing and one thing only. Mental health services cost to much and who gives a fuck, were talking poor crazies and they only kill other poor people, so who gives a shit. Yep, nothing to do with terrorism, this is all down to the rich not giving a fuck about poor people and leaving mentally disturbed individuals out on the streets to kill other people, oh and of course to be used a target practice by law enforcers.

      Ronny Raygun kills again.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    362. Re: An easier sollution by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Uh, the FBI release is a regular thing, they're just generally a year or so behind on the data because it takes so long to collect, verify, collate, and summarize.

      And yes, you're more likely to be beaten to death than to be killed in a spree killing OR with a rifle.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    363. Re: An easier sollution by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      In both cases shooters were stopped or shot (second one committed suicide after being stopped) within minutes - by police officers.

      As the saying goes - when seconds count, the police are only minutes away.

      Nor did the security of the location, which is NOT a gun-free zone, as gun-free zones don't come with armed guards around them and at various locations across the "zone" - deter either of the shooters.

      Common parlance for 'gun-free' zones are that civilians aren't allowed to carry there, but police are. For example, the zone past the security checkpoints in airports are enforced gun free zones, but there's still plenty of armed police officers patrolling there.

      Given that you're not allowed to carry on the fort unless you're assigned to a security detail and are actually on duty, it's a gun free zone.

      I've worked on a number of USAF bases with multiple security squadrons. Roughly 9 units. There were still lots of places where it'd take a while for them to get to, though if the incident was serious enough the eventual response would be 'overwhelming' to say the least.

      The point is - neither do civilians with guns stop mass shooters, nor does increased security deter them.

      The problem is that even on a military base, armed security isn't 'everywhere', and lacking metal detectors and such, getting a gun onto base is easy - if a felony. After all, they're intent on committing murder, insane, and thus not worried about felony concealed carry and the 0.01% chance of getting caught doing it once.

      In fact, there are more cases of unarmed civilians (21, out of 160 incidents, 2000-2013) stopping mass shooters, than there are cases of armed civilians doing that (5 - one of them a security guard at that church).

      You say it doesn't happen, then post numbers where it does. Which is it? The reason most are stopped by unarmed people is that most don't actually carry, and like I said way back - a large proportion of spree killers target 'gun free zones' where those that do carry aren't.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    364. Re:An easier sollution by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      I'm not anti-gun -- I don't own any, I don't especially feel comfortable around them, but I don't let my feelings get in the way of my intellectual commitment to a broadly liberal/libertarian stance -- but I find the argument you're attempting to rebut compelling and don't see anything in your rebuttal that actually assuages the concerns it raises.

      I imagine myself, if I were the type to carry a gun, being in that club and hearing a shot, scanning the room looking for its source, finding a person with a gun drawn and pointing across the room, and across the room somewhere in that general direction is a dying person on the floor. And I ask myself now, before I draw my gun, is this person with their gun drawn the one who just shot that person on the floor over there, or are they another good guy who's already spotted the actual shooter? Should I draw my gun on them? They look like they're about to shoot; does that make them the bad guy, or does that make them about to shoot the bad guy? Should I draw and fire? Seconds are passing, someone is probably about to die, if I don't act right now it might be the wrong person, but if I do act then that might make it the wrong person who dies and then it's my fault, what do I do?

      Note that I'm assuming here, contrary to the first impression of the original version of this argument, that the good guys with guns are sensible enough not to immediately draw and start waving their guns around when they hear a "bang", but to first wait, like I am in this scenario, to identify a target they're about to draw on. I'm not drawing my gun yet specifically because I'm aware that it might make me a target to the next-slowest armed good guy to react. But I've still got the quandary before me of whether the target I've identified who appears to be about to shoot someone is a bad guy, or just someone like me about to shoot the bad guy, and I don't know what to do in this situation to neither escalate the very problem vexing me by drawing my own weapon, and possibly kill an innocent myself, or to instead let a possible innocent get shot in fear of that.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    365. Re: An easier sollution by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      There's no such thing as "good religion", there's just mostly-harmless religion and worse religion. The defining characteristic of religion is faith, which is tantamount to appeal to authority -- if nothing else (perhaps sometimes at worst), one's own authority -- and appeal to authority is always wrong, because it shuts down reasonable discussion and so inhibits the finding of real solutions to problems.

      Now, there's are a lot of religious people and religious groups who do a lot of good things and have a lot of good qualities, sure. But those things are not dependent on their religiosity, and if you removed the religion from those people and groups and left the good parts, they would be even better.

      Still no excuse to ban religion though. That would itself be authoritarian and so just as bad as -- quite worse than, in many cases -- religion itself.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    366. Re: An easier sollution by Hyvtti · · Score: 1

      "almost"

      So someone carrying a gun has helped in countless instances saving countless lives. But on the other hand, one almost killed someone.

    367. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Countless because there aren't any examples? I'm sure there are examples....of people risking others lives without permission. There's a reason it's illegal in many places.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    368. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      I'm all about drug legalization AND gun control. Say you agree with removing AR-15s from civilian ownership...cmon it's easy

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    369. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Crazed individual discovered to be violently nuts, with a pattern of violent behaviour and due to lack of mental health services, gets not treatment and works themselves into a killing rage over any cause what so ever.

      No, he wasn't "discovered to be violently nuts" - he was understood to be obsessed with jihad, because that provided a framework for him to act out against a world he disliked, because his family culture taught him to dislike it. The problem wasn't the lack of help, it was the paralyzing political correctness that prevented friends, family, and multiple FBI investigators from calling it like they saw it. If you think his problem was mental illness, then you are - on which we agree - identifying most vocally religious people as mentally ill, and certainly the millions who make up groups like AQ and ISIS, finance, and support them ... they are definitely ill. When people with some typical angsty personal axe to grind happen to also be passionately enthusiastic about militant jihad as a sport, then they follow that recipe. Because millions of people are telling them that's a grand thing to do.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    370. Re: An easier sollution by agm · · Score: 1

      Unless you're female. Or homosexual. Or atheist.

    371. Re:An easier sollution by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      The difference between an "assault rifle" and a regular rifle is cosmetic

      No, the difference is that with an assault rifle like the AR-15, the shooter can kill a hundred people in 5 minutes, while someone with a regular rifle could only kill a dozen.

      That would give police a much better chance at minimizing the carnage.

    372. Re:An easier sollution by Gussington · · Score: 1

      But the 50s were probably when the quality of public education peaked in terms of it actually being useful and teaching you things.

      Such as? I'd really love to know why you think this.

      Obviously, indoctrination has always been there, mostly in civics and history. The difference is that you also used to get at least part of a classical education, which is important if you want to make sense of the world.

      This is nostalgia goggles.
      What the hell does "make sense of the world even mean"? How do you measure such a thing?
      By any real metric, the education system is better and more accessible now than it ever was.

    373. Re:An easier sollution by gsslay · · Score: 1

      Please refer to the discussion at hand. We're not talking about what happened, we're talking about what would happen if everyone was armed. Some believe the solution to incidents like this is ensure everyone has a gun. Because life is like the movies; the bad guys wear black t-shirts with skulls on them, and the good guys are easily identified because they're the handsome ones with the nice teeth.

    374. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      we're talking about what would happen if everyone was armed

      Who is? Very few people actually make that choice, even in places where there aren't obstacles preventing it. A club like Pulse could still have a "no customers with guns" rule, but allow staff to carry if they meet the management's standards for training and the right mindset. The notion that there are two choices: only criminals having weapons, or "everyone" is carrying - absurd, and you know it.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    375. Re:An easier sollution by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      To quote a very old phrase:
      "Friendly fire ... isn't."

    376. Re:An easier sollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he wasn't "discovered to be violently nuts" - he was understood to be obsessed with jihad, because that provided a framework for him to act out against a world he disliked, because his family culture taught him to dislike it. The problem wasn't the lack of help, it was the paralyzing political correctness that prevented friends, family, and multiple FBI investigators from calling it like they saw it.

      Nope, it was the concept of individual liberty. You know, FREEDOM!, that kept them from doing anything. That, or simply agreeing with a lot of the notions and concepts, while not having the sense to see a problem.

      If you think his problem was mental illness, then you are - on which we agree - identifying most vocally religious people as mentally ill, and certainly the millions who make up groups like AQ and ISIS, finance, and support them ... they are definitely ill. When people with some typical angsty personal axe to grind happen to also be passionately enthusiastic about militant jihad as a sport, then they follow that recipe. Because millions of people are telling them that's a grand thing to do.

      Yes, that recipe is easy to find across the world, whether it be racially motivated, sexually, or religious. You can get people willing to slaughter albinos, tigers, or supporters of the opposing team, and it doesn't take that much trouble. Doesn't take millions either, just a few can give you bad ideas.

      Thus the only solution? BAN ALL HUMAN CONTACT!

    377. Re:An easier sollution by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      ... Let's review:

      Civilian gun people actually tend to be better trained in the safe handling and accurate use, than police or soldiers.

      "Hobbyists tend to be better trained than professionals".

      Yes, actually. Hobbyists enjoy the subject enough to study it without being paid. Professionals often only train on what they are paid to do every day.

      The police do a job that does not often involve firearms. It is not their fault, their job is usually about psychology and negotiation, and remembering a long list of (random) laws. Many only fire their guns once a year at the qualification. And their experience is about 6 years, on average.

      A civilian might have less training, but they might also be a participent in competitions and a veteran of the wars over a span of 20 years or so.

      Keep in mind, just because you don't know something, does not mean that no one else knows. 8-)

    378. Re: An easier sollution by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      I've discovered that whenever someone starts a comment with, "Oh please," it means they're about to say something totally unrelated to the facts, that does nothing but exhibit their biases.

      Please peruse https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..., then tell me whether you still think "Christians haven't committed largescale acts of religious violence for a very long time."

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    379. Re:An easier sollution by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      The difference is that militant Islam is backed up by hundreds of millions of enthusiastic supporters who either actively back the actions of groups like ISIS, or - in keeping with their culture - look away when they commit atrocities, lest them come across as rude towards their brothers and sisters. That's the difference between them and, say, fans of a local soccer team. Do you have any sense of scale?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    380. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      As I've stated repeatedly, the good to be gained by doing that is minimal and the downsides are tremendous. So no, I don't agree.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    381. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Preventing the killing of 20+ children or 49 innocent people is a 'minimal' gain? just wow.

      None of these crimes were committed by drug gangs so your proposals would do nothing to prevent these mass shootings.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    382. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      Preventing the killing of 20+ children or 49 innocent people is a 'minimal' gain? just wow.

      Compared to the population of the country and even the combined homicide rates of the US, yes, it is minimal. More children, by at least an order of magnitude each, died from poisoning, drowning, traffic accidents, etc. Death by AR-15 is such a small contribution to mortality that basing policy on it is foolish. How many children do you think would die during the unrest that gun confiscation would cause in the US? Do their deaths matter less because they died to advance your noble cause? Just wow. (See how silly and juvenile "just wow" attempted shaming looks?)

      None of these crimes were committed by drug gangs so your proposals would do nothing to prevent these mass shootings.

      There are several times more gang-related shootings every year than the entire count of mass-shooting homicides in US history. I'm sure that not being instantly swayed by emotional arguments and "think of the children" rhetoric makes me a monster in your eyes, but being so thoroughly controlled by your emotions makes you one hell of a scary creature in mine. You sound like the fools who are willing to throw away everything out of the sheer terror of statistically unlikely terrorist attacks. Get a hold of yourself, man.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    383. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Now you're going with "Well bad stuff happens everywhere all the time, so lets not stop this one thing because it only kills a few people".

      Fucking sick bastard.

      Again, you apparently would prefer that AR-15s are readily available to kill entire kindergarten classes. How about banning this ONE FUCKING GUN to stop this issue, which has happened multiple times in 5 years?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    384. Re: An easier sollution by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There's no "largescale acts" in there anywhere, just a few nutjobs here and there killing a small number of people. There's absolutely nothing there that compares with ISIS or anything else going on in the middle east.

    385. Re: An easier sollution by chihowa · · Score: 1

      LOL. So much emotion and so little reason.

      I'd love to continue this discussion if you'd actually debate what I'm saying instead of just calling me names; you'll find I'm actually pretty reasonable and presented a decent argument. I'm not going to bother checking your reply, because it's invariably going to be more strawman-bashing and name calling, but you'll find future debates are much more productive if you:

      1) calm down
      2) read the opposing argument (for comprehension -- not just to pick up on key words and make assumptions about what is being stated)
      3) refute that argument in a well-reasoned manner (If your biggest point centers on hysterical overreaction, name-calling, or attempts at shaming, then try harder. You'll never bring someone over to your way of thinking by repeatedly calling them a sick bastard. Seriously, has that ever worked for you??)

      We could have good discussions on this site, and in this country in general, and it'd greatly benefit everybody.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    386. Re: An easier sollution by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      linky. Says everything just fine.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    387. Re: An easier sollution by stinkydog · · Score: 1

      From a Vern diagram standpoint we need to eliminate the overlap between gun owners and murderous assholes. I am open to any and all proposals to do just that.

      SD

      --
      âoeWho knew something as harmless as willful ignorance could end up having real consequences?â
    388. Re: An easier sollution by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

      Less well-known is a short story in one of Harlan Ellison's "Dangerous Visions" anthologies. After an initial period of unfortunate casualties (ahem) things got considerably better.

      Perhaps it was tongue-in-cheek. Perhaps not.

      --
      There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
    389. Re:An easier sollution by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      The plural of anecdote is not data. In the case of Sandy Hook or Pulse, these were unstable people for whom a "good guy with a gun" would have just been yet another target. Not a deterrent in the least. And for the record I am very pro second amendment, and think that people should be allowed to own and carry weapons. I also believe that they should be properly trained before trying to be a hero. Either way, if you're getting drunk at a night club, leave your fucking gun at home. Everybody knows that. All of my gun-nut buddies are *very* strict about the no booze and bullets rule.

  2. No by spudnic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No

    --
    load "linux",8,1
    1. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, remove local control of the body from the user!

    2. Re:No by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Because there's always a work around.

    3. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. A thousand times this. That's all I came here to say.

    4. Re:No by 2ms · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What are you talking about? All of these mass murders in the last 6 months have been by Islamists and half of them were outside of the US. France has some of the strictest gun laws in the world. People were mowed down with AK-47s anyway. Belgium they got the same effect with bombs.

      You people talking as if this is a U.S. problem with guns are going to cost more people's lives.

      Everyone needs to wake up. People are dying left and right. It isn't going to stop until someone confronts and does something about Islamic Terrorism.

    5. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's called "Nuke the entire planet from orbit".
      No more humans, no more shootings.
      It seemed like the obvious answer to me, but maybe I'm a little sick.

    6. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Everyone needs to wake up. People are dying left and right. It isn't going to stop until someone confronts and does something about Islamic Terrorism.

      No they are not dying left and right. A couple of hundred people over the course of a year killed in USA/Europe is a drop in the ocean compared to the number of people who die from other causes.

      Of course it is tragic and horrific that 50 people were shot to death in a nightclub under the supposed name of "Islamic Terrorism" (or was it under the name of "Mental Illness"? Such questions will need to be answered) But this should not be a trigger to go do something stupid that would cost the world another $100 billion dollar, 10 year war.

    7. Re:No by hackertourist · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. Mass shootings are not more common in the US than in Europe. Living in Europe, my perception is different. The difference would have to lie in the media coverage I see.

      You are also incorrect, by the way. Of the 10 deadliest mass shootings in the US, only 2 were by Islamists. I maintain that 'going berserk' is a more common cause of mass shootings than terrorism.

    8. Re:No by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      https://www.gunowners.org/sk08...

      It might blow your mind as well to know that guns save FAR more lives than they take, only the media doesn't cover it, but the info is there, if you want to learn it...

    9. Re:No by Kjella · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? All of these mass murders in the last 6 months have been by Islamists and half of them were outside of the US. France has some of the strictest gun laws in the world. People were mowed down with AK-47s anyway. Belgium they got the same effect with bombs. You people talking as if this is a U.S. problem with guns are going to cost more people's lives.

      I think the US has a gun problem, but not particularly related to terrorism or heavy organized crime, not even premediated murder. If you really want to commit mass murder or pull off an armed heist, it's possible to get guns in Europe too. And if you just want to kill your ex, there's other weapons that'll work in close proximity but not start a killing spree. It's the more everyday crime like burglary, mugging and robbery or conflicts at home or at work that didn't have to escalate into anyone getting shot and killed which make up the bulk of the difference. And I don't think more guns stop the big killing sprees because they'll hit soft spots and there'll always be soft spots, you can't protect everyone like you do the President. So in sum I think it's a net loss, for every time you stopped a shooter there were three "shooters" stopped by not having a gun.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    10. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? All of these mass murders in the last 6 months have been by Islamists and half of them were outside of the US.

      And still there are more deaths in the US because of public shootings.
      Terrorist makes a significant dent in the statistics, but the baseline is still way off.

    11. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it might blow your mind, but you can't trust the numbers on there.

      one.

      two

      three

      Tell you what, you write your Congressman, and you tell him you want a real comprehensive study, then you'll have some credibility to your intent to get real numbers on the subject.

      No wait, you'll just keep posting those baseless numbers because they make you feel good. They give you the emotional feeling of satisfaction, so you embrace them because they say what you want to hear.

    12. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EditorDavid: please delete your account.

    13. Re:No by Falos · · Score: 1

      Not if we magically uninvent weapons down to sharpened sticks.

      Since we can't: Weapons exist. They can't be uninvented. Determined actors will find something. A "workaround", if you like. Humans congregate often, daily, and like every second of their life they Will. Be. Vulnerable.

      There's only two realities up there that aren't hard, irreversible, immutable fact, two theoretically possible sliders: (1) The amount of human congregation (not gonna change); and (2) the emergence rate of determined actors. That's also unlikely to change, but we arguably can control it. A lot of the arguing is about how. Education, cultural paradigm, mental healthcare, the like.

      It might seem like an indirect and not terribly potent change vector, but it's the only one that isn't WHAT IS THE [city/country/police/president] DOING ABOUT IT theater for infants in need of pacifiers.

      I will go out of my way to point out that I'm addressing mass killings specifically and set aside discussion of things like unintentional killing or crime rates, which may or may not mean options for trying to alleviate things umbrella style.

    14. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You people talking as if this is a U.S. problem with guns are going to cost more people's lives.

      It is, which would be obvious to you if you would care to take a look at the actual numbers.

  3. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    And before peope start. Not all mass shootings, but most. It would stop 9 /10 of them and that is a huge step forward.

  4. You want us to shill for more surveillance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you nuts?

  5. Apples and pears by Aethedor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, don't use technology to try to solve a problem that's not a techical one. This problem, the reason why some people start shootings, is a social one. Use social means to solve it.

    --
    It doesn't have to be like this. All we need to do is make sure we keep talking.
    1. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason *why* cannot be solved perfectly. Therefore, the *means available* must be addressed as well. It's called gun control.

    2. Re:Apples and pears by Lennie · · Score: 2

      Actually, I think a lot of these social problems come from people with hate and without hope.

      When do for example nazis get more power ? When there is more uncertainty. Where do people recruit terrorists, etc. ? Districts where people feel disassociated from the rest of society. These areas still exist today: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... It's been more than 10 years now, things have hardly improved.

      So part of the reason is a money problem.

      I'm for something like UBI or at least really good social security (safety net) and improving the pay of people with medium income:

      https://fabiusmaximus.files.wo...
      https://fabiusmaximus.com/2015...

      It will boost the economy, because the people with medium income are the biggest spenders. Do you think a millionaire needs 10 000 jeans ? Or jeans 10 000 as expensive ? Nope, they are the biggest group. They are the consumers.

      Ohh, improve education. That would also be on my list too. Why is education getting more and more expensive in western countries ? Are they really doing something completely different that we need to cut spending on that ?

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    3. Re:Apples and pears by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      It's called gun control.

      There is no amount of gun control short of a complete outright ban that would have prevented this.

      He was a security guard and had a licence to carry a gun.

    4. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason *why* cannot be solved perfectly. Therefore, the *means available* must be addressed as well. It's called gun control.

      There is no consensus on "why," let alone any real conclusion.

      Orlando cops and politicians let that imam get up there and blame homosexuals and white people and non-muslems for that shit. One of the first things they did, was capitulate to the people that caused it.

      Until the actual reasons are discussed, and specifically, I mean the religion, political system, and death-cult known as "islam", nothing will change and these types of attacks will continue. Galviston. San Bernadino. Orlando. These are just the start.

    5. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Robot that shoots people who shoot people would be a technical solution to this problem. Then we either fix the problem, or create a technical problem.

    6. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no amount of gun control short of a complete outright ban that would have prevented this.

      Not even an outright ban. Dedicated terrorists have guns even in countries where only the army is allowed weapons.

      Gun laws prevent the easy-access shootings, when someone just snaps. Take school shootings. With no access to guns other than a rather expensive black market - it won't happen much. Someone may still go crazy - but when he snaps, he stabs the school bully or hit a teacher with a bat, and then the cops get him. Or perhaps someone knocks him out with a chair. Or even talks him into giving up. Similar for the guy that snaps after getting fired & divorced on the same day.

      Some people will always go mad; Without easy access to guns the damage is limited. In a gun-free community, I might get angry and knock someone's teeth in. In a gun society I would have to shoot him; a punch won't do because then he'll shoot back.

      Gun laws won't stop terrorists or bank robbers from getting guns, but gun crimes will require some planning and budgets.

    7. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, now you're getting to an answer!

    8. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and he was investigated two times by the FBI. Gun control would work fine if you didn't give gun licenses to people that at the same time you investigate for possible radicalization. In case of doubt, don't allow people to carry a gun. This very simple rule works very well in other countries.

    9. Re:Apples and pears by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      The "gun potential difference" at the gates of the club was enormous - not manageable by a few guards. But a multi-layer security formation to protect clubs would be highly effective.

      The gun potential in Florida is high, and of course it is very low in clubs where a lot of alcohol is served - leading to high potential difference, requiring high protection. Gun potential in streets of Toronto is low - and maybe slightly lower in drinking clubs in Toronto. Potential difference at the gates of clubs in Toronto is not high - so unarmed or lightly armed security guards are good value for the security money in Toronto.

      Take a typical small coffee shop in Florida - there is not much gun potential difference at its gates. People drinking coffee there are likely to be armed, so its attraction for a potential mass-shooter philosophically opposed to coffee wouldn't be much.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    10. Re:Apples and pears by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      Precisely, and even with a total ban, the guy would have found a way to either get his hands on an illegal gun, or he'd have done something else to murder all those, or perhaps even MORE people.

      I mean we could try a complete ban on RELIGION, which I think would be of greater benefit to mankind, but that would be as unlikely to be obeyed.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    11. Re:Apples and pears by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      Use social means to solve it.

      Evil and conflict has been around for just as long as people have been. There is no solution, just unsolvable equations.

    12. Re:Apples and pears by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      UBI isn't technology, currency is technology. UBI is tactics, part of an overall strategy of taking care of the populace.

      It's not clear that there's anything that the government can do to increase gay acceptance, though it's clear that it can do a lot more to protect homosexuals. For one thing, we could have federal protection of sexual orientation, like we have for race or religion. We don't even have that. Some states have got it. It wouldn't help here, but it would send a strong signal that a change in attitude is impending.

      Next time the democraps control the senate, let's see them do at least that if they want us to believe that they give a shit about us.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have to hurt someones feelings.

      Can't have that...

    14. Re:Apples and pears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're just dating mining and trolling. The technocrats and their politiques want a way to conveniently direct, control, or precrime everyone because those morons think tech will solve problems that are societal and arise from moral dissolution/anarchy and general lawlessness in the hearts of the populations they want to milk. :(

    15. Re:Apples and pears by airdweller · · Score: 1

      "Precisely, and even with a total ban, the guy would have found a way to either get his hands on an illegal gun, or he'd have done something else to murder all those, or perhaps even MORE people."

      I'm confused. Is that sarcasm? This is so ridiculous, you may as well be serious.

    16. Re:Apples and pears by DaHat · · Score: 1

      So you support denying people civil rights without due process?

      Shame you opted not to add your name to the post.

    17. Re:Apples and pears by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      This wasn't about gays. This guy didn't have something against homosexuals because of homosexuals themselves. He had something against a group of people because of his chosen religious beliefs and his choice of religious leaders to listen to. The target could have been any number of groups that his religion states are valid targets of murder. It just happened to be homosexuals.

      Therefore, this is not a homosexual acceptance issue. This is a religious issue.

      The problem is that while we operate under a tenant of religious freedom, to date we have not held any religions accountable for their texts that incite violence, hate, and murder contrary to other tenants of our legal structure. I find it interesting that people are talking about banning guns, like they are the cause and solution to the problem, while an ideology that suborns murder is counted off limits for criticism and accountability.

      Maybe we should license believers in certain religions, as long as those religions call for the murder of innocent people.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    18. Re:Apples and pears by hucker75 · · Score: 1

      Or stop trying to solve everything. What is this modern idea that we can fix everything? Everything has to be 100% safe. Not achievable, not worth trying.

  6. Re: Technology can't stop these by Dog-Cow · · Score: 0

    That is an assertion which is impossible to prove. Do we know that 9 other attacks were planned in Paris, but were thwarted due to the unavailability of firearms? How about Brussels?

  7. How would metal detectors help here? by Mal-2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Metal detectors might keep people from bringing in a concealed weapon, saving the occasional life when a fight escalates. They would do nothing in a situation like Pulse, as the shooter wouldn't try to pass through undetected. He'd just storm the place, shooting the guards at the entrance if need be.

    --
    How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
    1. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      Metal detectors might keep people from bringing in a concealed weapon, saving the occasional life when a fight escalates. They would do nothing in a situation like Pulse, as the shooter wouldn't try to pass through undetected. He'd just storm the place, shooting the guards at the entrance if need be.

      Quoted for truth...

      My local school has tried to reassure parents by pointing to the double locked doors, the front desk staff, the required sign-ins, etc...

      I pointed out to the Principle one day that the two main front doors are made of full size sheet glass... the locks are for appearance, a gunman could simply shoot the glass.

      She looked at me with a blank expression like that thought had never occurred to her.

      ---

      Side note, at the front desk, the two ladies who sit there and sign people in, they have a buzzer behind the desk to unlock the second set of doors and let people in. What stops someone from shooting them and pressing it themselves?

      Sadly, security is a joke, but one one really seems to care.

    2. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Guns are such efficient tools that the only way to prevent mass murders is to stop people getting hold of them. The only way technology can help is if someone invents a mind reader to check the sanity, stability and responsibility of the purchaser.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As 3D printing improves over the next year, preventing acquisition seems likely to become impossible. We're going to need to focus on detecting that someone is carrying, I think.

    4. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by John.Banister · · Score: 1

      If you want people to prove they're hardware free in order to get in, a valuable tool is to change the architecture of the building. At the entrance, have little rooms like airlocks with a hardware detection apparatus in the middle. A person enters the first half of the room from the unregulated zone. One proves oneself hardware free to get to the second half of the room in an authorized manner. Then, the door unlocks allowing passage from the second half of the room into the secure area. If the person attempts to get to the second half of the room in an unauthorized manner, the interior door stays locked, and the exterior door locks also. Of course, one needs to make the walls and doors out of strong, bullet resistant material. It would work, but if entering the venue was that much hassle, would people attend your events? Also, it wouldn't necessarily stop the person who has some Hantavirus infected tissue in a sealed bag up their ass.

    5. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As if guns are the only way to mass do mass murders. I don't want to give any ideas, but there are easier ways.

    6. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 2, Informative

      My local school has tried to reassure parents by pointing to the double locked doors, the front desk staff, the required sign-ins, etc...

      That "school" sounds more like a prison to me.

      It's really sad to see that things have come this far.

      But maybe we're on to something here . . . maybe we can consolidate schools and prisons . . . ?

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    7. Re: How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about if you had this kind of airlock-to-enter setup whereby you have to prove you're gun free, except that it was a walled off part of the city - say one or two square miles square for the entertainment district wherebyou have to go through airlocks to get in . you could have multiple access point airlocks to maximise flow through but once inside you have access to multiple clubs/entertainment sites. If this was more-or-less the onlyvplace where large crowds gathered it might limit the number of *mass* shootings.

    8. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not need the 3D printer.
      You need only some machine tools like lathe, milling machine and some files ...

    9. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bombs are far more efficient. Bath School, Oklahoma City etc. Far higher kill counts with a properly placed and timed bomb.

    10. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not how you use metal detectors. You build two metal doors. Before the first one is the doorman who checks the people. If he's shot, he won't open the first door (obviously). Then comes the metal detector. Open the second door only after the okay has come from the guy operating the metal detector.

      But this would too much of a hassle for a disco or club, and a mass shooter would just choose another target instead, like killing all children in a kindergarten.

      If you want to reduce mass killings, don't hand out guns to every fucking moron in the country. It's really that easy.

    11. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The key is that if you are going to prevent someone from being able to protect themselves, then you must provide adequate security.

    12. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by cdrudge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Side note, at the front desk, the two ladies who sit there and sign people in, they have a buzzer behind the desk to unlock the second set of doors and let people in. What stops someone from shooting them and pressing it themselves?

      Sadly, security is a joke, but one one really seems to care.

      A school isn't a prison, All of my kids schools have access control on all the doors. To enter the building during the day, you have to be buzzed in. It's about knowing who is entering the building, controlling the flow of people.

      If a shooter is going to storm the building, there is little that could be done economically for any building and still have it resemble a school.

      It's not about preventing a shooter from gaining access

    13. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus ...

      Rhode Island night club fire would look like a picnic.

    14. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      School felt like prison to me, at least for the first 14 years of it. And we didn't even have guards anyplace.

    15. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by JD-1027 · · Score: 1

      We drove by a large high school this weekend.

      My 7 year old son asked me if that was a prison.

      I've thought the same thing for years about newer schools going up (but never mentioned it to my son).

    16. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      But maybe we're on to something here . . . maybe we can consolidate schools and prisons . . . ?

      Isn't that detention?

    17. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But maybe we're on to something here . . . maybe we can consolidate schools and prisons . . . ?

      It that does happen, remember The Simpsons predicted it http://simpsons.wikia.com/wiki/Springfield_Elementary_School_and_Prison

    18. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      maybe we can consolidate schools and prisons . . . ?

      Simpsons did it!

    19. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by jecblackpepper · · Score: 1

      But require significantly more planning and skill to do, which is why the number of bombs used for mass killings in the US is vastly out numbered by the number of mass killings using guns.

    20. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guns are such efficient tools that the only way to prevent mass murders is to stop people getting hold of them.

      That's one of the dumbest things I've ever seen you post, and you post a lot of really stupid shit.

    21. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except there are plenty of methods for mass murder that are just as efficient. They aren't often used because firearms are safer during the preparation stage and less time consuming. And, it isn't like if conservatives let liberals have their guns and mass murders still happen, the liberals are going to say sorry we were wrong here have your fundamental rights back.

    22. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      But require significantly more planning and skill to do, which is why the number of bombs used for mass killings in the US is vastly out numbered by the number of mass killings using guns.

      Ban guns and you'll see more fires. You might actually see less mass killings, but what else will you see?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    23. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The high school I went to was designed by a prison architect and actually had a moat.

    24. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

      When Chuck Norris throws an exception, it is always fatal. Exceptions thrown by Chuck Norris kills the process. Exceptions thrown by Rajnikant kills the process, kills the OS, kills the computer, kills all the computer on the LAN, and the CEO of the company that created the OS.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    25. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by spazzmo · · Score: 1

      The stainless steel rat sent his sons to a Military Academy and Penitentiary. The students were chained to the desk until they passed the exam.

      --
      The cheese stands alone...
    26. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by slew · · Score: 1

      My local school has tried to reassure parents by pointing to the double locked doors, the front desk staff, the required sign-ins, etc...

      That "school" sounds more like a prison to me.

      It's really sad to see that things have come this far.

      But maybe we're on to something here . . . maybe we can consolidate schools and prisons . . . ?

      The point of school security to keep the students inside so the school officials don't get blamed if they lose a student to non-custodial parents/relatives, or 22yo internet boyfriends... If someone comes in guns ablazing, that is not part of the threat they are guarding against.

    27. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      I pointed out to the Principle one day that the two main front doors are made of full size sheet glass... the locks are for appearance, a gunman could simply shoot the glass.

      She looked at me with a blank expression like that thought had never occurred to her.

      Maybe she used to be your English/spelling teacher and that's what the blank expression was about? :D

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    28. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      If a shooter is going to storm the building, there is little that could be done economically for any building and still have it resemble a school.

      Not having full size plate glass doors would be a good start...

      It's not about preventing a shooter from gaining access

      It sure was pitched that way when the new "upgrades" were rolled out.

    29. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Gussington · · Score: 1

      A school isn't a prison, All of my kids schools have access control on all the doors. To enter the building during the day, you have to be buzzed in.

      That sounds like a prison to me.
      In my country, anyone can walk into any school at anytime, you know, exactly unlike a prison. No-one has shot any kids ever, why do you think that is?

    30. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      That "school" sounds more like a prison to me.

      I got to watch the transformation of schools into their present prison like form growing up in southern California between the 80s and 90s and it was *not* to prevent outsiders from shooting up the school although it would prevent an emergency exodus.

    31. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

      We don't "hand them out", people have to buy them. However, short of being convicted of a felony, the right to do so is exactly that -- a right, not to be taken without due process. No-fly lists are wrong enough because they lack accountability and transparency and have already been proven to be used against people who haven't earned it. It is estimated that 1/3 of the people on the list don't belong there, and there are many more cases where someone is mistaken for being on the list and has to jump through hoops to prove that they are not that person. Alas, freedom to travel is not a specifically enumerated right. The right to keep and bear arms is, so such a list would be unconstitutional.

      The shooter in this case was investigated twice by the FBI, and there was nothing substantial found. If that was enough to put him on a list, then someone filing false reports about you and causing the FBI to investigate you (and then drop the investigation) would also put you on the list. Unfortunately, the world is full of trolls and people who will abuse the process, so it is a good thing that it is necessary to have a high standard for denying someone's rights. It would require a constitutional amendment to change this, and there are still plenty of state governments sufficiently distrustful of the Federal government to make sure that doesn't happen. The only amendment I'd like to see is to make freedom of travel an enumerated right that cannot be removed without due process. Right now the no-fly list is merely wrong and abusive. I'd like to see it be unconstitutional.

      If you want to get rid of all the guns in the country, go back in time almost 240 years and convince the founders not to protect the right to keep and bear arms. Short of that, the genie has long since left the bottle and there's no putting him back in. Since that's not going to happen, all that can be done is to disarm the law-abiding, a situation that will delight those who choose not to hand in their weapons.

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
    32. Re:How would metal detectors help here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pointed out to the Principle one day that the two main front doors are made of full size sheet glass... the locks are for appearance, a gunman could simply shoot the glass.

      She looked at me with a blank expression like that thought had never occurred to her.

      Early in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook (Newtown) shooting, either Anderson Cooper or Don Lemon (can't recall, but I think it was Cooper) were on-site interviewing some school official, an older woman whose title I cannot recall. At first, she was answering reasonably, and was clearly level-headed (this was very soon after; lots of people were still quite emotional) and well-informed. Very near the end of the interview, after some discussion of the recent security improvements recommended by some security consultant, she stated that nobody had considered the possibility of breaking through the glass - almost exactly what you noticed (at Newtown it was a large glass panel next to the doors). I shouted at the TV in incredulous anger, in great part because that statement was in such sharp contrast to her prior responses. Nobody?! WTF! Who wouldn't envision such a possibility, especially when aided by the advice of some so-called security consultant, who would presumably enjoy padding his wallet with the installation of beefed-up security glass, or decorative (yet secure) metal "bars" behind it? It was probably a good thing for the TV that I didn't have anything heavy in my hand...

      - T

  8. When there is a will then there is a way. by TechnoCore · · Score: 1

    Since your country seems adamant to continue provide ease of access to all sorts of guns and assault rifles, see only one solution: Lets ramp up production of Ed-209!

    1. Re:When there is a will then there is a way. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No. ED-209 was too big; I'm not even sure how that thing fit through regular doorways. It could have a hard time getting into a club.

      Robocop is a much better solution, since it's human-sized.

    2. Re:When there is a will then there is a way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even the ed-209 would be defeated by lawyers and lawsuits. The power of the attorney is relentless and never ending. When the battle is over all that will remain will be a 3ft robot covered in warning stickers and nerf foam. It's only weapon a polite British accent requesting that you stop hitting it with your tire iron while it tries to give you a ticket for loitering.

      And then you'd be able to sue the robot manufacturer and the police department because the robot was a tripping hazard...

  9. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, you mean like in Norway?

  10. Gun control by Pascal+Sartoretti · · Score: 1

    Maybe not the hi-tech response you expected ...

    1. Re:Gun control by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Like they have in France, Belgium, Norway, Denmark and Scotland?

    2. Re:Gun control by Pascal+Sartoretti · · Score: 1

      Like they have in France, Belgium, Norway, Denmark and Scotland?

      Yes. And most (if not all) other European countries. It is not 100% perfect, but it makes these countries safer than the US for these kind of shootings.

    3. Re:Gun control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. and even counting all the recent terrorists acts in Europe, The European number of death by gun violence is way lower than yours without terrorist acts guys.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_firearm-related_death_rate

      And none of European's school blows up on regularly due to a kids that took daddy's gun.

    4. Re:Gun control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like they have in France, Belgium, Norway, Denmark and Scotland?

      Scotland - are you referring to Dunblane in 1996? If so, are you aware that in the UK, permission to own automatic and semi-automatic weapons was banned *after* the Hungerford mass shooting in the 1980s, and that permission to own handguns outside of gun clubs was banned *after* the Dunblane mass shooting of 1996?

      You may call this closing the stable door after the horse has bolted, but we've largely prevented recurrences of these horrors - for some unclear reason the USA has no wish to protect its citizens in the same way.

    5. Re:Gun control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it does not. You look at a single country and compare to a continent. Compare all of Europe to the USA, not just a single counrty. (thats like comparing a state to the whole of the USA.)

    6. Re:Gun Control by ledow · · Score: 1

      Guns do not stop crimes.

      What they do is upgrade every crime to something worse. A burglary becomes murder, a robbery becomes armed robbery, an assault becomes assault with a deadly weapon.

      The irony is, they upgrade the crime NO MATTER which side has the guns, or whether both sides have them.

      Petty crime in the UK is no worse than any other nation. It's really not, check the stats. Daily Mail stories about immigrants breaking open lorries really are fiction or exaggeration.

      But our gun crime is SIGNIFICANTLY lower than the US. By orders of magnitude. Because we had a school shooting 20 years ago (with a man with pistols against 5-year-olds) and we said enough was enough and banned even those weapons outside of regulated activities. As a result, though not "zero", the number of weapons available is significantly reduced and the number of weapon crimes even more so.

      Literally there were 370 "mass shootings" (i.e. more than 4 people killed) last year in the US. We've had about 4 in the last few DECADES.

      But Americans don't want to hear that. They want their guns "to prevent" crimes like mass shootings. How many people shot back and how many died as a result? One. Fifty.

      Guns just amplify the crime, not prevent it. What in the UK would be a simple mugging, you'd go home with a black-eye and no wallet (your "petty" crime), would turn into a murder or manslaughter case if a gun was involved. You would EXPECT the number of petty crimes to rise not because more petty crimes are carried out, but because none of them amplify to lethal violence with firearms because some kid was trying to steal your purse.

    7. Re:Gun Control by Nonesuch · · Score: 1

      Literally there were 370 "mass shootings" (i.e. more than 4 people killed) last year in the US.

      Sorry, but that is a falsehood -- there were not 370 incidents where more than 4 people were killed in the United States in 2015. It's widely agreed that this claim is nothing more than political propaganda.

    8. Re:Gun control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure if the built-in process for amending the constitution counts as "technology".

      Oh wait, let me guess, you're one of those people who would happily circumvent the constitution for an amendment you hate, with no care to how it can and will impact an amendment you like.

      And no, before you say anything, I am not a 2nd amendment nutter. I hate guns, and would love to see them abolished. But I also realize that unless we do it correctly (read: amend the constitution), it will bite us in the ass.

    9. Re:Gun control by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      "Firearm death rate" is a shitty way to compare, since about 2/3 of gun deaths in the US are suicides. Obviously, in countries without regular access to guns, people aren't killing themselves that way.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    10. Re:Gun control by spazzmo · · Score: 1

      Twit. The numbers are adjusted per capita.

      --
      The cheese stands alone...
    11. Re:Gun Control by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      This CDC study says that the use of guns for defensive purposes is actually quite common, and is an effective crime deterrent.

      Yep, your gun crime is way lower than the US, but your murder rate kept following the same trend before and after the gun restrictions took hold. If banning guns drops the gun crime rate but not the murder rate, does that really matter?

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    12. Re:Gun control by airdweller · · Score: 1

      I bet Oligonicella was rather proud of that "killer" argument.
      It's always funny when people "shoot from the hip" without realizing that they're actually proving their opponents' point.

    13. Re:Gun control by slew · · Score: 1

      Yes. and even counting all the recent terrorists acts in Europe, The European number of death by gun violence is way lower than yours without terrorist acts guys.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_firearm-related_death_rate

      And none of European's school blows up on regularly due to a kids that took daddy's gun.

      In the USA, although they make most of the news, terrorist acts make up a minuscule amount of the gun death totals (~2%). US gun deaths are dominated by 2 categories: Suicides (60%), and gang activity (33%). Also despite the notoriety of automatic weapons incidents, about 75% of all firearm homicides and nearly all firearms suicides in the US are committed by standard handguns or rifles/shotguns (because suicides, gangbangers and criminals often use handguns, not automatic assault rifles).

      Unfortunately the bulk of these gun deaths are not "newsworthy" as many times the victims are gang members or the victims are members of minority communities (hispanic and black youths are disproportionally impacted by gun violence) so the perception is quite warped. If the goal is to make a real dent in these statistics, it would be better to ban handguns instead of automatic weapons.

      If we simply look at mass killings with automatic weapons per capita, surprisingly the US isn't even #1 on that statistic either. Norway, Finland, Slovakia, Israel, and Switzerland rank higher, and the US is on par with countries like Belgium, Netherlands, and Germany.

      If we take a "think-of-the-children" approach, only about 0.5% of accidental gun deaths were among 15 years old or younger (another 0.5% older than 15 years). On the other hand, about 1/2 of suicides are handgun related, so maybe banning handguns would help there. But these have nearly zero to do with automatic weapons used in terrorist incidents.

      So what's the problem in the US? It certainly isn't because of automatic weapons. For some hard to fathom reason, the handgun violence rate is significantly higher in the US than in other countries (even compared to countries that have high rates of gun ownership rates like Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, and France). Maybe it's some cultural thing, but it isn't something that has a simple fix like banning assault weapons (even if you think that is a good idea in principle, the statistics don't bear out the idea that this would somehow move the needle that much).

      But of course we must do something, but we should be thoughtful, not reactionary...

  11. Re: Technology can't stop these by Oligonicella · · Score: 0

    You state your presumption as if it were fact.

  12. Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Create a superior AI. This will kill all the humans - problem solved.

    1. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely. The real question here shouldn't be when I will lose my right to carry an assault rifle. The real question should be when I will get my inalienable right to carry tactical nuclear weapons. Because until that happens, you're just trampling on my freedom.

    2. Re:YES by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "...he could have been flagged as a person that should not be able legally to purchase weapons or ammo."

      On what basis? Your list contains nothing but vague suspicion and hearsay. He'd never been convicted of a crime, never been adjudicated mentally defective and was not subject to a restraining order. How would you propose to restrict his access to firearms if not through a court decision? Do you think government employees should be able to arbitrarily add names to a list of people who can't own guns?

      "We have a national registry for firearms we just don't use it correctly"

      Not sure what you mean by that? The government does not (so they claim) have a registry of firearms or owners. They do have a registry of "prohibited persons" which is queried when a firearms dealer sells a weapon. They can't just add people to that list on a whim however. Most of the things that will get you on the list require a formal legal proceeding.

    3. Re:Yes by airdweller · · Score: 1

      Nice start. Idiotic ending. I hope it was just your bean-rich diet that caused that temporary brain fart.

    4. Re:Yes by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      So tell me is the culture in your average shitystan or North Africa friendly and gentle towards young children? If you like the start, it implies the second. Not all cultures are equal, and migrants tend to take their culture with them, and the more disparate the cultures the longer the integration period.

  13. You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No. America isn't an especially violent country. Setting aside gun crime, it's a bit more violent than England and a bit less violent than Scotland. However, America has repeatedly decided that it wants lots and lots of guns, and now with around one gun per person on average there's no way to drain that swamp. Americans will just have to live with it. Or, obviously, die with it.

    1. Re:You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the smug self-righteousness from non-Americans that I dread the most...

    2. Re:You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, those uppity non-Americans are dreadful! Get out your gun!

    3. Re:You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Setting aside gun crime..." - there's your first, and unforgivable, mistake. Stop reading right there.

    4. Re: You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't discount gun crime and then compare statistics between the US and gun control countries. A lot of US violent incidents end with a gun involved, that escalation ends in blades or blunt weapons here so would be included in the stats you're trying to compare.

      I wouldn't carry a gun even if it were legal. I'd rather face down a knife weilding thug than a gun toting one.

    5. Re:You can't drain that swamp by mrbester · · Score: 1

      I consider 174 mass shootings *this year* more than "a bit" more violent then the UK which hasn't had any. But maybe that's just me.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    6. Re:You can't drain that swamp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The vast majority of those mass shootings occured during the Obama administration, Obama being a Democrat, Omar Mateen is a registered Democrat, it would make as much sense to outlaw the Democratic Party. Obama has set a divisive tone of retribution and class warfare and the statistics show the results.

  14. Re:Technology can't stop these by Aethedor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gun control is no longer an option in the US. You can impose gun control rules on citizens, but not on criminals. I often hear the excuse for not having gun control: in area's where there are more strict rules for owning a gun, there's more gun violence. That might be true, but it also proofs my point.

    --
    It doesn't have to be like this. All we need to do is make sure we keep talking.
  15. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Australia.

  16. No it cannot by prefec2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What would help us a less violent surrounding, i.e. less guns. In case of Orlando , the guy was mentally I'll and violent. He should have been in treatment, but in the US you do not send the mentally ill to proper institutions (at least not right away). The thing that would help is a social security system and protection of the poor. You may supplement it by gun laws which forbid selling guns to people who are violent and crazy. In short Bernie could but it looks like you get Trump a fascitoid angry white guy who does not care about the poor or Clinton a Wall Street representative. At lest she will not scrap medicare.

    1. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In case of Orlando , the guy was mentally I'll and violent.

      "Mentally I'll"? Clearly the Grammar Police's armory is in sore need of stocking up.

    2. Re:No it cannot by Solandri · · Score: 1

      What would help us a less violent surrounding, i.e. less guns.

      You mean like France?

      It's important to understand that both this incident and the France terrorist attacks were outliers. The availability of guns (or lack of) doesn't make a difference when you have a determined assailant(s). They will figure out some way to do what they want to do, whether it be by smuggling in guns or building alternate weapons (bombs).

    3. Re:No it cannot by tlambert · · Score: 2

      What would help us a less violent surrounding, i.e. less guns. In case of Orlando , the guy was mentally I'll and violent. He should have been in treatment, but in the US you do not send the mentally ill to proper institutions (at least not right away).

      (1) The guy travelled to Orlando to perform the shooting

      (2) The guy's family had left him because he was a wife beater, prone to violence

      (3) He then got a job that required him to be armed (security guard), and gave him lots of time to brood

      (4) The guy was questioned about other terrorist incidents by the FBI; so there was already a connection there

      (5) The guy called in a 911 call dedicating himself to an ISIS leader after it was too late to stop the shooting happening

      (6) We have several supreme court decisions that allow mentally ill people to refuse treatment, and, without an imminent threat, they have to be cut loose in 72 hours in order to protect their right to be mentally ill and unmedicated

      The guy was a powder keg with a lit fuse; something set him off; while the most recent two guns he bought were legally obtained (waiting list and all), a bell should have rung at the FBI when the background check happened; probably on the first gun, or at least on the second.

      It's pretty clear they have no cumulative scoring system in place, which would have flagged him for a visit.

    4. Re: No it cannot by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, he was a violent person who attacked his wife. He should have been hospitalized then. Furthermore, a person with a violent past and no mental health check should not be allowed to work as security guard.

    5. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, a couple of things. 1? Yes. 2? No. He was getting "wives" from overseas to get them into the country. The "beating" was all staged, the new citizens (probably radicals themselves) and their families said all the right shit to get fast divorces. He did this TWICE. Probably as payment for something going on in Afghanistan. The wives were a financial transaction not a psychological failure. Remember, it is not a sin for a muslem to lie to you to further the goals of the muslem or islam. The marriages, and all the bullshit the families said before and after the attack are lies.

      3? Time to think isn't a problem. Time to think about how to be a good muslem is the problem. Also, why the hell were his parents let in the US? (Look up who they were, those fuckers are terrifying themselves.

      4. The guy shot his mouth off. The FBI can't arrest and neutralize everybody that does that. Not if you want freedom of speech and/or freedom of religion.

      5. Yes. Proof he listened to ISIS (they specifically said to do that before attacks), and chances are, it was a genuine self-radicalish motivation. (Ish, because he didn't have to go far. This wasn't some white farmer's kid discovering islam.)

      6 is also a huge constitutional problem. It used to be, crazies got quietly disposed of. Now that society has changed, that doesn't happen anymore. There is no easy solution to this. It's either accept the blood the crazies spill, or spill the blood of the crazies before they start.

    6. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not this shit again about Birdie kinda Jesus, Dalai Lama and Gandhi hybrid, savior of everything.

    7. Re: No it cannot by mysidia · · Score: 1

      a person with a violent past and no mental health check should not be allowed to work as security guard.

      How is the employer supposed to find out about the violent past part, when there's no criminal charge associated with said violent past?

      Even if he had seen a mental health professional, there would be no information about a disorder available to the government or to the firm that hired him, because of privacy laws and professional ethics that mental health professionals adhere to.

    8. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly like France,
      Although both incidents might be labeled as outliers, the frequency is dependent on the availability as well. So while both the US and France have seen mass shootings, they happen FAR less frequent in France then in the US, mostly because of availability of guns, and also because of more poverization/radicalization prevention provided by the community.

    9. Re: No it cannot by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      First, you have to provide an detailed police report which may include minor stuff including FBI info on IS contacts.
      Second, he has to attend a psychic evaluation. He never would have past that .
      Third, you could interview character witnesses.

    10. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was liberal policies that made it impossible to commit anyone until they are a threat to society. Just look at the ACLU lawsuits on deinstiutionalization from the 1950s on. It's near impossible these days to commit someone against their will until they are a threat to society. Usually when they are considered a threat to society is when they have attacked someone. It's why the jails are full of mentally ill people. The liberals now bitch about how the mentally ill are in jail, well your stupid policy of deinstiutionalization put them in the streets and when they attack someone, they end up in jail. They should be in mental hospitals but since your liberal policy against forced treatments kept them out. Stop trying to blame the right when the left caused this issue of the mentally ill not getting treatment.

    11. Re: No it cannot by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Second, he has to attend a psychic evaluation.

      He could sue them under ADA if they act on any medical information other than a fitness-for-duty test.

      In other words, the only psych test information they can use is ability to perform the job.

      Who knows what the result would be, but he would probably have been cleared.

    12. Re:No it cannot by guruevi · · Score: 2

      Although I agree that being religious is similar to being mentally ill, this person was brainwashed by a US Imam, whether or not he had mental problems is besides the point. There are many religions that do the same thing, even Christian ones, it only takes one to trigger an event like this. As the governor of Texas has indicated, Christians by and large agree with this shooting.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    13. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guy was also a federal contractor and undoubtedly had gone through and passed several background checks which would have made getting a gun easy for him regardless of any additional restrictions people want to pile onto legal gun ownership.

    14. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more like Australia

    15. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You may supplement it by gun laws which forbid selling guns to people who are violent and crazy." Already the law.

    16. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For him, seeking professional help also meant that he would not be allowed to carry and would lose his job.

      As for a technical solution, use the one landlords seem fascinated in, require all gun owners to give up their facebook and linked in passwords as part of the 'background check'.

    17. Re: No it cannot by HornWumpus · · Score: 0

      If the ex-wife had filed a restraining order because of the domestic violence he would have been prohibited from owning a gun.

      Her family didn't do that. Likely because they thought that their private sharia law justice/divorce was better. Take care of the real issues privately and just record an uncontested divorce.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    18. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't try to blame this on liberals.

      The reason you cant lock up crazy people in mental institutions is NOT because of some liberal policy, it has to do with Cons decimating the mental health budget of this country. Go look it up if you don't believe me, a very very many institutions were closed in the 70s and 80s and it is directly related to excessive fiscal conservatism.

      Also note, I am not a liberal, but that does not mean you get to make shit up in your head and spew it out of your mouth without someone challenging you.

      In fact it is still going on. http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/05/12/disappearing-hospital-beds/9003677/

      Or look at this study here: In fact just look at the graph. In 1960 there were 400 psych beds in the US per 100k pop. Right now there are 25.
      https://u.osu.edu/zagorsky.1/2014/04/07/why-are-so-many-mentally-ill-people-in-prison/
      Between 66 to 70 we went from 350 to 250
      From 70 to 80 we went from 250 to 100
      And it has only gotten worse. And it is all about money, yearly cost for a psych ward 200k, for a prison its 35k. But people don't realize that once you let them out of jail, THEY ARE STILL SICK AND WILL END UP BACK IN JAIL.

      Long term it is MUCH better and cheaper to just flipping heal the person. In a proper psych bed, in a proper psych hospital, treated by actual psych nurses and doctors. Jailing them just makes it worse.

    19. Re:No it cannot by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      they have to be cut loose in 72 hours in order to protect their right to be mentally ill and unmedicated

      In fairness to the court, doctors were unable to demonstrate that they can distinguish between mentally well and mentally ill people. See for example

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    20. Re:No it cannot by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      In fairness to the court, doctors were unable to demonstrate that they can distinguish between mentally well and mentally ill people. See for example [wikipedia.org]

      My thanks for the link. I'd never heard of this before.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    21. Re:No it cannot by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's kind of eye-opening, I agree.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    22. Re: No it cannot by mysidia · · Score: 1

      If the ex-wife had filed a restraining order because of the domestic violence he would have been prohibited from owning a gun.

      Only if there was enough evidence to convict. Unless he were convicted of a crime, he could continue to own a gun; temporary orders do not last very long, and you need to be found guilty on a felony count to permanently lose constitutional rights. It is only an option for a judge to temporarily block his right to a firearm while the proceeding is scheduled or in progress.

      Certainly by now an issue more than 6 years old would have been addressed.

      Also, he could possibly have just disobeyed the order even if it were current. If he had already purchased guns, the guns do not disappear, just because a new order pops up.

    23. Re:No it cannot by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      They were closed because they were already empty. The direct result of an ACLU lawsuit.

      There is no point in paying for empty loony bins.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    24. Re:No it cannot by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      Citation needed.

    25. Re: No it cannot by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      It's a terrible law, but if you have a restraining order on you as a result of domestic violence allegations, you cannot own or buy a gun.

      Permanent restraining orders are relatively easy to get.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    26. Re:No it cannot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because some arrogant prick in Texas is totally the voice of Christians world wide....

      Seriously, **** those people. No truly good human being would "agree" with mass slaughter and harm of this nature.

    27. Re: No it cannot by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      He could sue them under ADA if they act on any medical information other than a fitness-for-duty test.

      You can sue for anything, but a security guard suing over a failed psych eval would have been laughed out of court. If someone is subjected to a psych evaluation by his/her employer and shows signs of being psychologically unhinged, that absolutely disqualifies that person from being fit for duty in a job that regularly involves rationally evaluating when to use a dangerous weapon. In fact, mandatory psychological screenings are common when applying for security guard positions in the U.S. for precisely that reason.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    28. Re:No it cannot by Agripa · · Score: 1

      "Sir, you have increased the budget for the security forces tenfold but cut social services to nothing."

      "Yes, and when the revolution comes, I will be ready."

  17. Sure... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    go back to muzzle-loading muskets.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He'd still have gun powder - he could just as easily have walked in with a bag full of pipe bombs.

    2. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or only the printing press for the exchange of ideas. Just because technology changes does mean our rights change. Firearms have been available for years in the US, but only recently have we had such mass killings. We like to blame the tool but not the tool user.

  18. Re: Technology can't stop these by Oligonicella · · Score: 2

    Denmark, Scotland, Norway, France and Belgium.

  19. Re: Technology can't stop these by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1

    Keep letting them in and you'll see that change.

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
  20. Virginia Tech by Thor+Ablestar · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You all remember the Virginia Tech where one of teachers was an Israeli who had a specific training and could kill the criminal but had no gun.

    But I heard that is Virginia there was a mass shooting some years before. But it was NOT the arms free zone. So the students went to the parking, took their gins from their cars and shot the criminal. It's a hint.

    The only method that could save you Americans from mass shooting is the perspective for the shooter to be immediately shot. So your Second Amendment is precious.

    1. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear that every single time when someone mentions 'gun control'. In what percentage of cases has this line of thought actually ever worked?

    2. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when the police get there, how do they identify the shooter?

    3. Re: Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy, the "good guys" will stop shooting the moment the police tell them to...

    4. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah. It would be such a good idea to have a club filled with drunk armed people. This never leads to bad consquences.

      The problem is that this sort of automatic/semi-automatic weapons are LEGAL. Even if someone had a gun on them, don't you think that a shooter with an automatic weapon could take out 10-20 people before some do-gooder would be able to stop him? Espcially in the circumstances of a dimly lit, noisy club. There is absolutely NO preventing this sort of thing as long as people have ready access to such powerful weapons. Easy access to guns comes with the problem of having to deal with more nuts with guns. Your point of view may be that this is an acceptable tradeoff. I don't think so.

    5. Re:Virginia Tech by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 1

      >> In what percentage of cases has this line of thought actually ever worked?

      When's the last time a disgruntled asshole killed dozens of people at a county fair, an auto show or a police convention (where someone will probably be packing)? No, those cowards tend to head for classrooms, theaters, churches, nightclubs and military bases (?!) where they expect a large number of unarmed people.

      (That's how our line of thought works: if a couple of people in "gun free zones" were armed and trained to shoot back - kind of like the way we rethought our passive reaction to airline hijacking - maybe mass shooters would stop targeting as many groups of completely vulnerable people.)

    6. Re:Virginia Tech by VanGarrett · · Score: 1

      When the state of Florida introduced requirements for registered gun ownership, they started a program to keep track of gun-related crimes involving registered gun owners. They discontinued the program after several years because there just weren't enough incidents to justify spending money on tracking them. A fair number of the incidents they did document involved a registered gun owner using his gun to save the life of a police officer.

      The incident I think GP is talking about was one of the copycats following Columbine, and it was, in fact, a teacher who went out to his car, and obtained his gun, then proceeded to end the situation.

      Wide-spread legal gun ownership really does make people generally safer.

    7. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, it works sometimes. That's not even wrong. The problem is that easy gun access is what made the shooter able to get a weapon and carry it into a crowded area in the first place. That it will also thwart him in 1 out of 20 cases is correct but not exactly a justification for him having it.

      I mean, take a look at Australia/New Zealand: the answer to rats were weasels, cats, then dogs. Every time you think that you can control mammals by bringing in larger mammals, you lose.

      It's the same with guns. "If we only have enough good-purpose lethal weapons, bad-purpose lethal weapons will cease being a problem." And then you see a weasel taking on a rat, or a good guy shooting a mass shooter, and think you'll get everything under control with more weasels and more guns. Because look: it works. It actually solves a minuscule fraction of the problem caused by it in the first place.

      Hooray.

    8. Re:Virginia Tech by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that this sort of automatic/semi-automatic weapons are LEGAL.

      I suspect you don't actually know what those two terms mean, what type of weapon was used, or what difference it would have made had there been limits on the type of weapon.

      But that's ok, lots of people who know nothing about guns just sure love to talk about them.

    9. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the state of Florida introduced requirements for registered gun ownership, they started a program to keep track of gun-related crimes involving registered gun owners. They discontinued the program after several years because there just weren't enough incidents to justify spending money on tracking them. A fair number of the incidents they did document involved a registered gun owner using his gun to save the life of a police officer.

      The incident I think GP is talking about was one of the copycats following Columbine, and it was, in fact, a teacher who went out to his car, and obtained his gun, then proceeded to end the situation.

      Wide-spread legal gun ownership really does make people generally safer.

      No, "Wide-spread legal gun ownership really does make people generally safer" is not true.

      The gun deaths per capita in countries with strict gun laws are lower than in the US.

      The only statement that may be true is that "in the event of a mass shooting, countries with high gun ownership have a higher probability of somebody using their own gun to stop the shooting." But that ignores the fact that countries with lax gun laws have more mass shootings to begin with.

    10. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wide-spread legal gun ownership really does make people generally safer.

      It that was true then the united states would be the safest of these countries.

    11. Re:Virginia Tech by jafiwam · · Score: 1

      I hear that every single time when someone mentions 'gun control'. In what percentage of cases has this line of thought actually ever worked?

      A pathetic argument.

      How would we know? They always find "gun free zones". The shooters themselves are selecting them. That should be proof enough.

    12. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Appalachian Law School shooting is the one I think you are referring to.

      At work so don't have my link handy but a few years ago someone decided to look at the outcomes of mass shooting incidents. They compared those who had to wait for the authorities to arrive, versus when the victims fought back. First he looked at just 10 incidents then he expanded it to 100 incidents that met the FBI standard of 4 or more killed or wounded in a non-domestic shooting (eliminating family murder-suicides).

      The findings: When the authorities are the first armed response the death toll averages 14.3
      When unarmed citizens fight back the death toll average is 2.6

      When armed citizens fight back the death toll is 1.9
      In either case when citizens fight back, armed or unarmed the death toll is 2.3 versus 14.3 while waiting for the police.

      Again I don't have the link to the study handy it's hosted on dailyanarchist the author lists his sources and methodology for selecting and eliminating incidents.

      Posting AC to preserve moderations

    13. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only method that could save you Americans from mass shooting is the perspective for the shooter to be immediately shot. So your Second Amendment is precious.

      The constitution does not prevent Americans from having enough police to stop such things faster. (Budget issues is another thing.) The second amendment is for protecting themselves against "government gone bad", not for simple thugs.

    14. Re:Virginia Tech by mysidia · · Score: 1

      The gun deaths per capita in countries with strict gun laws are lower than in the US.

      The number of gun deaths per capita is lower, but the number of Murders per capita is higher in many cases.

      Fewer people die because of guns, but more people die, and there is more violent crime, so on a whole the people in those countries are worse off.

    15. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wide-spread legal gun ownership really does make people generally safer.

      Except against themselves. Gun control should be pushed, not because of mass shootings, which are a small percentage of gun deaths, but because of gun suicides.

      Most people who die from guns, die from gun suicides. But the interesting thing, is that most people who survive gun suicide attempts, don't actually end up killing themselves in a second attempt.

      If these people didn't have the guns they have, they probably wouldn't have killed themselves. And because there's no way to tell who's going to feel sad enough to want to kill themselves, it makes sense to remove the most successful method of suicide from most/all people's homes.

    16. Re:Virginia Tech by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      In pretty much all of the countries that banned guns or implemented much stricter gun control after a mass shooting, murder rates continued on the same trend they had before, or went up slightly. Yeah, banning guns reduces gun deaths, but it doesn't look like it reduces the number or murders, which is obviously more important.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    17. Re:Virginia Tech by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      The number of gun deaths per capita is lower, but the number of Murders per capita is higher in many cases.

      Careful, there. You're confusing cause and effect. Nobody puts in place strict gun laws just for the fun of it. They do it because they're concerned about the murder rate being higher than you would typically expect for a city of that size. In every case, I think you'll find that the murders led to the gun laws, not the other way around.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    18. Re:Virginia Tech by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      How would we know? They always find "gun free zones".

      Actually, no, that's not true. There's no evidence whatsoever that shooters choose gun-free zones because they're gun-free. In nearly every case, we actually know why they chose specific targets, and those reasons were typically specific to the individual shooter, rather than being based on the probability of guns being nearby. For example, if someone is going to mow down his or her coworkers in vast quantities, he or she would pretty much have to do it at work. In almost every mass shooting case in the U.S., there have been specific people or groups of people who were targeted, and the locations were chosen based on where those specific people or groups of people were likely to be.

      This is a classic "cum hoc ergo propter hoc" situation. If I picked 100 random buildings in the United States that had high enough population density and a low enough exit count for a mass shooting to be plausible, probably 99 of those 100 would turn out to be gun-free zones. Most workplaces don't allow them, schools, government buildings, shopping malls... basically anywhere that you would find large numbers of people. The shooters would have actually had to go out of their way to choose mass shooting locations that weren't gun-free zones and in which their targets were still together in large groups.

      Correlation is not causation.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    19. Re:Virginia Tech by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Yeah. It would be such a good idea to have a club filled with drunk armed people. This never leads to bad consquences.

      Too bad the only alternative is to have drunk people with firearms. Why isn't everybody who drives away from the club arrested for driving while under the influence?

      Some states allow people to carry firearms in establishments which serve alcohol. I guess that explains all of the drunk firefights they have.

  21. Yes, database server can help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, there is a technology that can prevent big percentage of mass shootings. Gun licence tracked in database server; even one from 1980s should be able to manage it.

    1. Re:Yes, database server can help by VanGarrett · · Score: 1

      People generally don't use their legally owned and registered guns to commit crimes. That'd be like a burglar removing his gloves and making sure he fondles every glass surface in the house he's robbing, before he leaves.

    2. Re: Yes, database server can help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The gun used in the Orlando shooting was purchased legally. Even a cursory background check might have revealed this guy had a history of domestic violence and should never have been allowed to buy this gun.

    3. Re: Yes, database server can help by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      He had a history of alleged (and, IMO, probable) domestic violence, but no convictions or restraining orders. Allegations should not be enough to prevent someone from buying a gun.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
  22. Re:Bullet Control by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

    You can make ammo or buy it on the black market. Your solution - isn't.

  23. Re:Bullet Control by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1

    Hey dumbass, guess what? The NRA has for years and years tried to get mandatory prison sentencing for any crime committed with a firearm. It's you and your ilk who has opposed this.

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
  24. Really Obvious Solution by boxie · · Score: 1

    Follow the example set in Australia after the Port Arthur Massacre 20 years ago. Gun Buybacks. You need a license AND a reason for owning a semi automatic. Make guns really expensive to buy (it's amazing how well economic measures are) The only reason that most people have to own a gun is "Because they are fun to shoot"

    --
    A Tale of 2 idle hands
    1. Re:Really Obvious Solution by VanGarrett · · Score: 1

      Australia also doesn't share borders with countries that have rampant illegal drug trade going on. It's isolated pretty well, and having a limited number of locations where entry is possible makes it difficult to smuggle conspicuous things in. America has Mexico and a whole bunch of nearby island nations in the Caribbean where all sorts of crazy shit is going down. Whether it's a matter of catapulting a package across a relatively unpatrolled part of the border, or discretely landing a motorboat on a Southern beach, people bring weapons here both for their own use, and also to sell. What worked in Australia isn't likely to work very well, here.

    2. Re:Really Obvious Solution by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      It's hard for some people to realize that other places are different. What's ironic is that this is a stereotypically American failing.

    3. Re:Really Obvious Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one I find more interesting is how these people only adhere to their confirmation bias talking about countries where gun control worked. They seem unaware that there's quite a few where it hasn't worked so well (Brazil being one of the worst). The problem is more likely a socioeconomic problem and if gun control works or not is more akin to the bear repelling rocks from the Simpsons.

    4. Re:Really Obvious Solution by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      It's the stereotypical eurotrash failing.

      When was the last time an American suggested Europe be more like America? Vice Versa?

      Clearly the Europeans think their shit doesn't stink.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    5. Re:Really Obvious Solution by boxie · · Score: 1

      We may not share borders directly with other countries, but there are these things called boats which like to pop over to our thousands of kilometres of unprotected coast line and drop stuff and people off (that was and is still a rather large political football). As for the illegal drug trade, it is alive and well unfortunately. Granted the we don't have the same ideas about guns and gun ownership here (that is a much larger social change for the US) so how things are implemented in the USA will be different. Easy access to a gun is a bad thing. * I hear way too many stories about children getting guns and shooting themselves or someone close by. These news stories are non existent here, that sort of thing does not happen. * We can generally associate mass shootings with People who are having a really bad day who also have easy access to a firearm. What happened here was: * a gun buyback and amnesty. That removed a lot of the easy access to weapons. That also had the effect of making them a scarce resource (and capatilisim being what it is, made anything already out there more expensive, even for the criminals) * You need a gun license and a reason to own a gun (i.e. you are a farmer or are part of a gun club) * You need a special license (and reason) for anything that is semi automatic, no fully automatic weapons are allowed I challenge you to find a solution that *would* work for america. Take a look at other 1st world countries and find out where they went wrong and where they went right. Do some reason for the opposition arguments.

      --
      A Tale of 2 idle hands
    6. Re:Really Obvious Solution by boxie · · Score: 1

      It's hard for some people to realize that other places are different. What's ironic is that this is a stereotypically American failing.

      I know that America is a different place. They like to stand around after these sorts of events saying "IF ONLY THERE WAS A WAY TO PREVENT IT" while the rest of the world scratches their heads and ask "Can they really be that stupid"

      --
      A Tale of 2 idle hands
    7. Re:Really Obvious Solution by boxie · · Score: 1

      one of these things is not like the other.

      --
      A Tale of 2 idle hands
  25. absolutely. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 0

    I call it "firing the pussies" and how it works is simple: you just tell the police officers who are unwilling to do their job that they are fired and you hire people that will do their jobs properly. i assume that nobody will do this because it's patented, right? -_-

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  26. "Better data analysis algorithms" by Nutria · · Score: 1

    As in pre-crime profiling, which stirs the libertarians and the left into a lathered tizzy?

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  27. There's this wonderful technology by melted · · Score: 2

    There's this wonderful technology, it's called concealed firearms. I don't propose that drunk patrons be allowed to bring them in (although that'd be better than the status quo), but it's really a shame that no one in the staff (save for one guy at the entrance) had a concealed firearm on them. This could be over in minutes with fairly minimal casualties. In fact, had he known he would see resistance there, he would likely have gone elsewhere. Instead the police waited for 3.5 hours (!) before storming the club. That's what they usually do, since they have no legal obligation whatsoever to protect anyone or put themselves in danger (Google "no duty to protect" if you don't believe me).

    1. Re:There's this wonderful technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I feel you've not really thought about this as you're ignoring a very well observed rule which is more guns = more deaths. Stopping mass shootings by arming more people is equivalent to stopping obesity by encouraging people to eat more food.

    2. Re:There's this wonderful technology by Blade · · Score: 1

      More guns is not a solution to gun violence.

      Especially when the perpetrators are already willing to die.

    3. Re: There's this wonderful technology by melted · · Score: 1

      Making them die within minutes of opening fire is a solution to the problem. The dude was in there for almost 4 hours.

    4. Re: There's this wonderful technology by Blade · · Score: 1

      No, it's not a solution, it's a partial mitigation at absolute best.

    5. Re: There's this wonderful technology by melted · · Score: 1

      So I take it that if you were trapped inside with a crazy person for 3.5 hours you'd rather he was the only one with a weapon? Got it.

    6. Re: There's this wonderful technology by Blade · · Score: 1

      You're working at the wrong end of the scale. Because you have X guns, you think X+1 is the best answer. My point is you should have far fewer guns, reducing the chances of you being trapped in a building with a madman who's armed in the first place.

      You work on the assumption that it's inevitable that you'll be in a building with an armed idiot, but it's only inevitable if you live by your own solution.

    7. Re:There's this wonderful technology by airdweller · · Score: 1

      "it's really a shame that no one in the staff (save for one guy at the entrance) had a concealed firearm on them. This could be over in minutes with fairly minimal casualties."
      You've never been to a night club, have you?

      PS. To clarify: my problem is with the second sentence.

    8. Re:There's this wonderful technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EXACTLY my brother.

      "To Protect and Serve."

      Both of those verbs are COMPLETE AND UTTER BULLSHIT when it comes to law enforcement agents.

      The ONLY thing they Protect and Serve is THE STATE, by and FROM the STATE.

      *** NOT YOU !!! ***

      Free your mind, people.

    9. Re:There's this wonderful technology by Agripa · · Score: 1

      ... it's really a shame that no one in the staff (save for one guy at the entrance) had a concealed firearm on them. This could be over in minutes with fairly minimal casualties.

      Let's assume the best case in that the person with the concealed firearm stopped the guy before he injured or killed anybody and no bystanders were shot. In that case, nobody except the presumed shooter was injured or killed so in retrospect the situation was not very dangerous at all and the result of someone with a concealed firearm is just another firearm injury or death. Tails they win, heads we lose.

    10. Re: There's this wonderful technology by melted · · Score: 1

      That's not how the "madman" thing works. Your chances of ending up in the same place with one are already astronomically low, and they won't markedly change. His chances of getting shot go up exponentially if people who are licensed to carry concealed weapons actually do carry them.

  28. With technology ? No. But it is very simple. by snitch182 · · Score: 1

    No there is not. Restricting guns works in many states. I am sick of the news of mass shootings in the united states. And the news of minors shooting their parents and brothers and sisters by accident. Will they ever learn ?

    1. Re:With technology ? No. But it is very simple. by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

      I'm sick of the news of terrorist attacks in Europe .... maybe we should enact religion control.

  29. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Such bullshit argument.

    Gun control is enforced everywhere in Europe, and we have a rate of mass shooting which is 10% of what you have guys.

    Criminal or not, anyone that carry a gun without a license goes right to jail, that's it. No more complicated than this.

    And you will, miraculously, you mass shooting rate will go down.

  30. Yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuke humankind. We've got enough material for that.

    Seriously. I think the measures at our disposal are all known and involve tradeoffs. There'll never complete consensus on the "right" tradeoff or on the sweet spot.

    Since this will always be a controversial social issue, the most important is to seek a process of agreement. We should resist the temptation of being carried away by feelings of revenge, but also by dreams of total control.

    Somewhere in this problem space there must be a (moving) point of equilibrium which we, as a society must try to track.

    Remember: what those actions try to do is to push us off this point of equilibrium.

  31. Is the answer smart gun technology? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Is the answer smart gun technology?

    No, because it does nothing for the billion guns in the world and people bent on crime will find a way to use a gun anyway.

    Smart gun tech WOULD help prevent accidental shootings, so actually it is worth researching... But it won't do anything for this situation.

    1. Re:Is the answer smart gun technology? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's simpler to lock the damn gun in a gunsafe. No dumbass "smart" techonlogy needed.

    2. Re:Is the answer smart gun technology? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's simpler to lock the damn gun in a gunsafe. No dumbass "smart" techonlogy needed.

      It would be, but a gun completely secured in a safe isn't really useful against criminals.

      I have a quick open safe next to my bed with my 1911 in it, but even then it isn't instantly accessible.

    3. Re:Is the answer smart gun technology? by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

      a reliable "smart" gun would also prevent a persons gun from being used on them ... an unreliable smart gun would be worse than useless

    4. Re:Is the answer smart gun technology? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Of course, people forget to do that. Then something bad happens. But if we try to make the owner of the gun responsible?

      "You can't do that! I got a right! Why should I be punished just because I made a silly mistake that I'll never do again?"

  32. Look Israel, Syria, prisons, etc... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I won't say that there aren't options to take action against specific known groups who are repeatedly doing these things on a mass scale (e.g. ISIS in Syria), but I will say that technology will never be able to sufficiently protect against an evil mind that has sufficient will / determination + ingenuity + time + opportunity to take lives, on any scale. Unfortunately, absolutely none of the examples that you gave would have prevented this horrific tragedy, and trying to figure out a technological or legislative solution to prevent this from happening would be an endless exercise in futility. You're effectively describing an "arms race" type scenario. Tell me how well that works in areas with the tightest security, like Israel and prisons for example. For all that is done to suppress the violence, it cannot be fully prevented. All that would be "gained" is an ever increasing loss of freedom (both civil liberties, as well as in a pure "feeling" of being a free person). At what point would you stop giving up freedom in order to "feel" safe? Guaranteed, it would be a vicious cycle that would never end. Anyone who is willing to give up freedom for safety will only lose their freedom.

  33. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    One clear sign is from the number of terrorist knife attacks in the UK (quite a few) compared to the USA (almost none).

  34. Not possible by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The reason some people revert to terrorism-type attacks is that it is basically impossible to prevent them. Not even full-blown fascism can prevent terrorism. Of course, the surveillance-fanatics and the police does not want anybody to realize that, as such attacks are the things that allow them to push for even less freedom, even more surveillance and and even worse police-state.

    Terrorism is something society has to live with, as trying to prevent it (for example in the utterly moronic form of a "war on terror") is futile and makes the problem worse.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    1. Re:Not possible by Gussington · · Score: 1

      The reason some people revert to terrorism-type attacks is that it is basically impossible to prevent them.

      I wouldn't go that far. Some countries have next to no terrorist activity, so there must be a formula to success in there somewhere.

  35. Re:Bullet Control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before calling anyone a dumbass, learn to read and don't make up straw men.

    *No one* is referring to "mandatory prison sentencing for any crime committed with a firearm". The OP said "prison sentence" for *simply owning* "a gun with lethal ammo".

  36. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No guns == no kills; Its really easy to fix... you don't need any technology. Look at Europe. no shootings, no guns. super easy!

  37. Guns, freedom and all the rest by jandersen · · Score: 0, Troll

    I think we all know, if we are perfectly honest with ourselves, that when the amount of high-powered firearms that are freely available is higher, then the number of people killed in shootings will be higher as well. Apparently it is something like 30,000 Americans that were shot dead last year, I heard on the radio this morning. I also have the impression that a significant majority of Americans actually want gun ownership to come under serious control, but nothing will happen - again - because of big money. It is a real shame that the American people doesn't have the courage to stand up against those shilling for the weapons manufacturers and their ever more shrill nonsense.

    It is perfectly possible to live safe, happy and prosperous lives without having guns - people in Europe do this. And in Europe, just like in the States, it is perfcetly possible for criminals to lay their hands on guns, so in effect, "only the bad guys have guns", yet we still thrive, and we suffer far less gun violence. Europeans don't go around feeling afraid just because they don't carry instant death in their pockets. Americans don't need guns to be safe either; in fact, if you pull out a gun in whatever the situation, you instantly look like a legitimate target - how can that be safer?

    You don't need to have access to loads of guns to be able to rise up and overturn a government by force either. Gandhi is just one example of a revolution brought about without resorting to violence; I'm sure people can think of other examples. No government can survive for long if the people are resolutely against it; if the economy and the instutions are falling apart because of constant protests, the government will have nothing to rule over.

    The American constition doesn't say that there should be no control of who can have guns or that everybody should have the right to own high-powered, semi-automatic weaponry. And there is no real justification for not keeping tabs on who owns what or carrying out proper background checks even at gun-fairs. If you are a gun-enthusiast or a hunter, you wouldn't be affected - you will probably already have gone through all the background checks and hold a valid licence, and you would pass any further scrutiny without a problem.

    And, forgive me for saying so, but any law, including the American constitution, that is open to such massive abuse as "the right to bear arms" is, is just plain wrong and should be changed. The constitution is not a God given truth, it is only a law; the only difference is that a constitution is kind of 'meta-law' - it states the principles on which all other laws should be built. That is why considerable care should be employed when deciding on what goes into it, and that is also why a universal right to be armed to the teeth should not be part of it: it is far too specific, and it was not thought through well enough. And now it is very difficult to get rid of. In short: it was a stupid thing to do.

    1. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by lrichardson · · Score: 1

      I agree with nearly everything you said, except the part about what the American Constitution says. "...the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." As 'arms' is a rather broad term, and 'militia' is in the first part of this amendment, and militias often use "high-powered semi-automatic weaponry", it would be a reasonable conclusion to claim that the second amendment DOES support the carrying of such weapons.

      The US v Miller (1939) case was interesting, in that the judge ruled a sawn-off shotgun was not protected by the second amendment, because it was not a gun used by militias. This, of course, leads to two questions: since then, the US military has deployed shotguns that qualify as 'sawn-off', so does that invalidate Miller? And does the decision imply that any weapon used by the military - or militia - is thus covered?

      If the latter is true, can someone legitimately carry an M-29 Davy Crockett? (Man portable tactical nuclear bazooka, deployed with the US military 1961-1971)

    2. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gandhi is just one example of a revolution brought about without resorting to violence;

      Nonsense. That only worked because Ghandi was facing a civilized opponent, although many would like you to believe otherwise. Just try this against Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Isis, North Korea

    3. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by tlambert · · Score: 0

      And, forgive me for saying so, but any law, including the American constitution, that is open to such massive abuse as "the right to bear arms" is, is just plain wrong and should be changed.

      It's not a law, it's an acknowledgement of an inalienable right, and it only spells that you to prevent the government from restricting it, so that should the government become non-representative, as it was in 1776, we have the ability to overthrow it again.

      We have a perfect right to peaceably assemble and hold a constitutional convention, again, if we want, and replace the entire framework with a monarchy. And we have a right to shoot the bastards, should the necessary supermajority decide to do this, and the current government became alarmed and deploys the military against its own citizens in order to prevent their losing power.

      This is not an "abuse", it's a fundamental part of the national origin, and the system of checks and balances put in place to prevent a second oppressive, non-representative regime from gaining power.

      And yes: I'm well aware that the British have never acknowledged that their regime in "the colonies" was in any way oppressive or non-representative, since the Divine Right Of Kings mean that kings are ordained by God.

    4. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The EU has a laundry list of terror attacks that happen every year.
      Those gun laws don't prevent any of it.

    5. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But in Europe terror attacs tend to come from organized groups, not from loose cannons going nuts.

      The former aren't be prevented by anti-gun laws, but the second kind do.

    6. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so full of bullshit you make me choke. You don't have an inalienable right to own a gun, no matter what your constitution says. Inalienable rights are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Not gun ownership. Inalienable rights are what you are born into this world possessing. You aren't born with a gun in your hands, dickwit.

    7. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should read some American history before you go spouting all of that bullcrap.

    8. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      The EU has widely differing gun laws. That is gun law in Belgium is not the same as Germany or the United Kingdom. It's been over 20 years since the last mass shooting in the United Kingdom and gun laws/control are sufficiently tighter now that the same thing is very unlikely to happen again.

    9. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Apparently it is something like 30,000 Americans that were shot dead last year, I heard on the radio this morning.

      Of course you did, which is why you now have a fucking opinion on the subject that isn't worth anything.

      33,000 died via gun last year, 2/3 of the suicide. A lot of the rest were gang on gang violence.

      The actual number of innocent people killed with guns is a very, very small number.

      There are 320+ million guns in the US. Far more of them prevent crime than cause crime. You'd know that if you actually bothered to learn about the subject rather than get your soundbites from the radio.

    10. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Whibla · · Score: 0

      It's not a law, it's an acknowledgement of an inalienable right...

      I think it fair to say that when approximately 95% of the world's population doesn't consider the right to bear arms as an inalienable right it's probably not actually inalienable after all.

      Furthermore, inalienable rights are rights that everybody has, regardless of age, location, history, etc. Are you suggesting that people in prison, toddlers, schoolchildren, and so on, should be allowed to carry guns?

    11. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have weapons in a world of weapons and you lay down your weapons with the expectation of others to do the same ; then you are a complete fool. Guns, knives, bows, anything.

    12. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by dwpro · · Score: 1

      Of those 30k deaths, how many do you think were caused by 'high-powered firearms'? What does that even mean? The vast majority of shootings are by handguns, which is probably isn't what you're thinking of when you think of high-powered firearms.

      You actually are reading the constitution backwards. The constitution not only grants explicit rights to 'the people' to keep and bear arms, but it further does not grant the federal government the right to regulate it, thus it's retained by the people per the 9th Amendment.

      It's worth noting the reasoning behind the 2nd amendment: 'the security of a free state'. Everything I've read on the subject points to the idea that 'the people' need the ability to defend themselves from an oppressive government, ie 'a free state'. You can do that with pitchforks if you like (and you trust your fellow citizens enough to carry them around you), but I'd prefer to have high powered firearms.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    13. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. That only worked because Ghandi was facing a civilized opponent, although many would like you to believe otherwise.

      There was nothing civilized about British rule in India. Let's not forget the partition, either. Everything the British did there was shit and they did not withdraw until the economic writing was on the wall telling them to leave. It wasn't to be nice, tool.

      Just try this against Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Isis, North Korea

      You mean, against the insane? That wouldn't work even if it worked against the British (it didn't) because all those guys were insane.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by raburton · · Score: 1

      It's not a law, it's an acknowledgement of an inalienable right, and it only spells that you to prevent the government from restricting it, so that should the government become non-representative, as it was in 1776, we have the ability to overthrow it again.

      It's only that way as long as the government chooses to keep it. It's an amendement to the constitution and these can be repealed with another amendment. Prohibition is the obvious example, enshrined in the constitution by amendment XVIII and repealed in amendment XXI. It was of its time and in hindsight not a great idea. To pretty much everyone else in the western world, and an increasing number of people in the US, the same can be said of the 2nd amendment.

    15. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by StormReaver · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think we all know, if we are perfectly honest with ourselves, that when the amount of high-powered firearms that are freely available is higher, then the number of people killed in shootings will be higher as well.

      Studies agree with you. However, studies do no agree with your implied conclusion: firearm availability causes higher homicide rates.

      http://www.factcheck.org/2008/...

      The end of the article summarizes it nicely:

      In comparing the United States to industrialized democracies, the Academies says data show the U.S. has the highest rate of homicide and firearm-related homicide. But this also raises a chicken-and-egg question. "A high level of violence may be a cause of a high level of firearms availability instead of the other way around."

      Does the higher availability of guns in the U.S. cause the higher homicide rate, or does the higher homicide rate lead to the higher availability of guns in the U.S.? There is no causal relationship between the two; there is merely a statistical association.

      In particular, pay attention to the non-firearm homicide rate in the U.S., which is also higher than in any other industrialized country. This strongly implies that firearms are a red-herring. The U.S. has deep societal problems that are unrelated to the availability of guns, and that do not fit into clean, easy pigeon holes. Gun death is merely a rough measure of those deeper problems, which will not be solved even if guns are eradicated from the country. The means of homicide will change, but not the underlying cause.

    16. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      First, let's not hysterically confuse momentary tragedy with durable long term trends.
      Violence and violent crimes in the US have gone DOWN significantly, more or less consistently, for DECADES, and continue to fall:
      http://www.statista.com/graphi...
      One might note that this decline has happened since the 90s, which was right about when the US saw widespread revision to make conceal-carry easier.
      This of course could be simple coincidence.

      Second, while it's convenient to say "it's the gun lobby" the fact is that tens, if not hundreds of millions of Americans believe that it is an intrinsic right of an individual to provide for their own self-defense and that the government has no right whatsoever to impinge on that as long as the person is of sound mind and no criminal record. That is precisely why I own a firearm. I never concealed-carry (although I have the permit), and don't hunt.

      I'd recommend this interesting article from the Guardian from 2013 about the crazy-quilt of US gun laws: https://www.theguardian.com/wo... - for example, Alaska and Idaho PROHIBIT *any* registration of firearms. If gun ownership were intrinsically dangerous, you'd think those places would be free-fire zones with many gun deaths; in fact, they're 26th and 42nd respectively for most gun-murders per 100k people.

      And, forgive me for saying so, but considering the US Constitution has formed the structure of (debatably) the longest-existing functioning and most successful modern democracy on the planet, I'm going to go with their ideas in every single case over the outrage-fueled maunderings of some internet poster. If the US population wanted to remove the 2nd Amendment, they could; the process is really rather simple.

      I understand that the US system is a difficult one for non-Americans to comprehend. Frankly, due to our crappy educational system, I daresay a majority of Americans don't really understand how it works. The fact is that the Founding Fathers were essential humanists: they believed that while a government was necessary in a Hobbesian sense, it should never be allowed to be more important than the rights of the individual.

      I would argue that the culprit here is endemic, chronic, systemic narcissism ENABLED by the easy access to firearms. "Taking away the guns" wouldn't really fix the problem.

      --
      -Styopa
    17. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll agree with you if you can answer this one simple question....

      Mass shooting happen at schools, churches, night clubs, airports, all gun free zones. Why are there no mass shootings at police headquarters?

      Don't turn my house into a school, church, night club or airport. I'd prefer to have a police headquarters as a home.

    18. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this scored Insightful let alone 5?

      This is the epitome of the standard, misinformed, fallacy filled bullshit that we're force fed on every occasion they get the chance to try. This entire post is just trying to set a narrative on a topic without regard for other factors or the facts of the matter.

      something like 30,000 Americans that were shot dead last year

      And of those 30,000, 20,000 shot themselves intentionally.

      a significant majority of Americans actually want gun ownership to come under serious control

      While pole data from areas of the country with the most restrictive firearms legislation doesn't support this.

      nothing will happen - again - because of big money

      The "big money" narrative on firearms lobbying is a lie. You are free to see the amount of money manufacturers, retailers, etc made last year, and how much they donated to lobbying organizations like the NRA/NRA-ILA. Go look on opensecrets, I encourage you, go and learn that the "big money from gun makers stopping the gun control the people want" narrative is a lie. A significant majority of all the funds the NRA and like organizations receive is in dues from private members; your fellow Americans.

      Americans don't need guns to be safe either

      You also don't need free speech, freedom of person and possessions, or freedom of religion to be safe either. In fact, a comfortable prison would be the safest place in the world.

      You don't need to have access to loads of guns to be able to rise up and overturn a government

      NEED

      No government can survive for long if the people are resolutely against it; the economy and the instutions are falling apart because of constant protests, the government will have nothing to rule over.

      Because no population has ever been fearful enough of their government before to not protest against policies they disagree with right? Lo and behold, no oppressive government has ever existed in history because the people protested it and refused to work for it. You may want to review your history books.

      The American constition doesn't say that there should be no control of who can have guns or that everybody should have the right to own high-powered, semi-automatic weaponry.

      It actually does specify most of those explicitly, specifically the words: The RIGHT of the THE PEOPLE to KEEP and BEAR ARMS, and let's take a big breath for this one SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED. Don't even try to go down the "they couldn't have envisioned modern technology" path either, as the same arguments apply to all other sections of the constitution, unless you'd also like to claim that free speech only applies to pubic auditory speeches and the printed word.

      there is no real justification for not keeping tabs on who owns what

      Or who knows what, or who searches for what, or who writes what, or who votes for who, right? It doesn't have to be justified, it's a right.

      If you are a gun-enthusiast or a hunter, you wouldn't be affected

      That's what they told us here in Canada, and it didn't work out that way. Not to mention we still have legal access to the exact firearms you and your ilk seem so thirsty to ban; without as many incidents as you (even per capita).

      And, forgive me for saying so, but any law, including the American constitution, that is open to such massive abuse as "the right to bear arms" is, is just plain wrong and should be changed.

      I will not forgive you, but at least you've come out and said it now, though it be in your last paragraph, that the constitution needs to be changed to create the laws you desire to exist. So far as the self evident "just plain wrong" justification goes, I'm not convinced, as that i

    19. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Self defense is an inalienable right.

      But you are right about the number of newly invented 'rights' these days being insane. Partial list of non-rights: Healthcare, education, food, housing etc etc.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    20. Re:Guns, freedom and all the rest by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      People in prison have liberty?

      I think your grasp on "inalienable" isn't as solid as you think it is.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
  38. Re:Bullet Control by gweihir · · Score: 1

    Hahahha, funny. How are prison sentences going to stop a suicide attacker? But I guess that logic is beyond your tiny mind.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  39. Re:Nope by Z80a · · Score: 1

    And what kind of gunpowder eating nanorobotic technology do you have to offer to make that happen?

  40. Re:Technology can't stop these by Aethedor · · Score: 5, Informative

    The big difference: Europe never allowed citizens to own guns the way the US does. Maintaining the gun control in Europe is much easier than introducing one in the US. In the US, it requires the taking back of a lot of guns, which is not likely to happen. Specially not the illegal ones.

    --
    It doesn't have to be like this. All we need to do is make sure we keep talking.
  41. Yes by e70838 · · Score: 1

    technology can prevent shooting, but as an aside, we would lose also democracy and freedom. Welcome 1984.

  42. Voting machine by Tomahawk · · Score: 0

    I would suggest voting machines that bias the votes towards 'yes' in the question 'should we remove the right to bear arms from the constitution?'.

    Otherwise, no, technology won't really help. You need to get guns out of the hands of people who really should never have them, and until you repeal that amendment, your hands are effectively tied.

    Once the amendment is gone, you can remove your corner-store gun shops, bring in stronger laws about gun control, etc. etc.

  43. crazy idea, I know by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    How about a robot that stabs anybody who starts shooting?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:crazy idea, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shoot the robot first.

    2. Re:crazy idea, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about a robot that stabs anybody who starts shooting?

      Sounds like great backup when i rob people at knife-point. Makes my life a lot safer.

    3. Re:crazy idea, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. My partner in crime is a T-1000. It absorbs bullets. Then when our victims run out of ammo, I rob them.

    4. Re:crazy idea, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir are a genius !

      They could be marketed as "Sir Stab-bot, the Detrorrizer".

      I would buy at least one to have round the house.

    5. Re:crazy idea, I know by edittard · · Score: 1

      How about a robot that stabs anybody who starts shooting?

      Not possible. It would break Asimove's laws. ;-)

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
  44. Prevent? No. Stop? Yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys aren't thinking straight. Almost everyone is posting a knee jerk "no" answer to this question. But we could have a system that hears and locks on to gunfire and respond in many ways to stop the shooting from becoming a mass shooting. It could shoot back, chuck a flash bang at the shooter, or blind the shooter with lasers.

    1. Re:Prevent? No. Stop? Yes. by jdschulteis · · Score: 1

      You guys aren't thinking straight. Almost everyone is posting a knee jerk "no" answer to this question. But we could have a system that hears and locks on to gunfire and respond in many ways to stop the shooting from becoming a mass shooting. It could shoot back, chuck a flash bang at the shooter, or blind the shooter with lasers.

      Literally blinding means some innocent person will be blinded when (not if!) the system registers a false positive.

      Dazzlingly bright spotlights might render the shooter unable to aim effectively.

  45. Here is a very simple suggestion... by Noryungi · · Score: 1

    Two words:

    Ban. Guns.

    Problem solved. You are welcome.

    (I know Americans like their guns. But guns -- especially guns in the hands of violent, disturbed people -- are the problem. More guns is not the solution).

    There, feel free to mod me down now.

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 0

      Yep. You'll get an awful lot of vitriol about Americans and their 'rights' (which they don't have because the constitution actually talks about an armed militia, which can be disbanded, from colonial times) but equally everyone else has a right that those around them don't carry guns. It's called common law.

      But, no matter how many people or even children get killed, this will never change. We'll just have to wait until everyone there is shot and killed. Sandy Hook was the end for any kind of sensible gun control. Blow away some kids and the country says "Meh".

    2. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Z80a · · Score: 2

      The problem is the how.
      It's easy to scream "ban the something" and enact laws etc.. but actually getting it banned? Now that's an different story entirely.
      I bet that if you know how, you can buy cocaine in less than a hour in your own city, and all a "weapon ban" would do is just give the same guys one more thing to sell.

    3. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by mrthoughtful · · Score: 1
      --
      This comment was written with the intention to opt out of advertising.
    4. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Two words:

      Ban. Guns.

      Problem solved. You are welcome.

      (I know Americans like their guns. But guns -- especially guns in the hands of violent, disturbed people -- are the problem. More guns is not the solution).

      Or we could just ban violent, disturbed people.

    5. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No the second amandment talks about militia AND peoples right - the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
      The second amendment specifically speaks about the need of peoples militias to overthrow the bad government.
      It does not talk about the militias as a sole owner of gun right.

    6. Re: Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but if you ban disturbed people, who will be the GOP nominee ?

    7. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Noryungi · · Score: 1

      The problem is the how.

      No, the problem is not "the how". The problem is the lack of political courage.

      Here is an outline:

      - Ban guns.
      - Give all law-abiding gun owners 6 to 18 months to turn in all their guns, including a complete amnesty and a small financial incentive (let us say US$10 to US$20 per gun turned in), no questions asked.
      - Make all hunters register their guns, obtain a permit and prove they are respecting sensible safety measures (gun safe, ammo safe, kept separate and under lock and key at all times).

      After 6 months:

      - Make crime (any crime) commited with the help of guns (even if not a single shot has been fired) a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Ban all military or quasi-military guns and make possession of said weapons a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Make all forms of gun trafficking a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Make all murders and sexual assaults committed with guns a crime punishable by the death penalty (since you guys love the death penalty almost as much as your guns).
      - Make sure all gun owners are registered, with a thorough (federal) background check and psychological evaluation beforehand, including a valid reason for gun ownership and respect all safety measures at all times (see hunters above).
      - Raise the funds allocated to law enforcement to make sure the largest cities are safe.

      I can guarantee you that these measures would also drastically reduce the amount of criminal activity in the USA, as an added bonus.

      Seriously, though, pretty much everyone on earth realizes that private gun ownership is a bad idea. Except for the United States of America. It's time to wake up and smell the coffee. A good example of this is Canada, as simply crossing the border makes you immediately safer from guns.

      Once you have done that, we can start talking about the metric system.

      --
      The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    8. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Z80a · · Score: 3, Interesting

      All sounds nice in paper, but yet, you still can buy cocaine easily, and the laws on it are pretty much just as rough as the ones you just proposed.

      Obviously there would a good benefit on performing a good background check and actually training the person how to safely handle the gun instead of just "LETS GIVE WEAPONS TO EVERYONE LOL", but banning guns won't solve the issue of people that want to commit crimes having access to weapons.
      The best approach is giving people less reasons to want to commit crimes in first place.

    9. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but using tax money to give people free psychological evaluation would be socialism and that is more evil than mass shootings.

      Remember, always go for the lesser evil, even when there are good options.
      Otherwise we would end up in an unfortunate situation where there would be other options than Trump and Clinton.

    10. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No the constitution does not talk about an armed militia. But let's break the Second amendment down for you idiots that can't read a simple sentence. A well regulated militia being necessary for the protection of a free state, the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. The first clause, (the part about the milita) is an introductory clause, it only introduces the meat of the statement, it can be dropped though as it is not critical to the meaning and intent of the statement. But even if we keep it let's break it down. A well regulated militia: what does that mean. It means (in the terminology of the day when it was written. A functional milita. Regulated does not mean what it means to day. In the 1780's it meant to function or work properly. For the militia, which is the citizens of the community who respond to act in the defense of the community, to work properly it must have arms. As it is the duty of the citizen to bring his own arms to the common defense of the community, a citizen must have a weapon to bring. If the citizen is disarmed the militia is disarmed. Thus the well regulated militia requires that the people have the right to keep and bear arms. Not for hunting, but for defense of self and of community.

      So your attempt to lie about what the 2nd Amendment means is false. As a functional militia is necessary for the safety of the state, the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Because to infringe on that right breaks the militia. The right is reserved to the people as it is with every other right up until the 9th amendment. We do know what we are talking about when we bring up this right. A right protected by the Bill of Rights not granted by it. You however do not know what you are talking about.

    11. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Noryungi · · Score: 2

      All sounds nice in paper, but yet, you still can buy cocaine easily, and the laws on it are pretty much just as rough as the ones you just proposed.

      Obviously there would a good benefit on performing a good background check and actually training the person how to safely handle the gun instead of just "LETS GIVE WEAPONS TO EVERYONE LOL", but banning guns won't solve the issue of people that want to commit crimes having access to weapons.
      The best approach is giving people less reasons to want to commit crimes in first place.

      You are trying to avoid the crucial issue here. The problem is not whether we can go to zero crime, because... Newsflash! There is crime, even in countries where there are very strict gun laws.

      Here is an example: Japan. Lowest gun crime rate in the world. Ultra-strict laws regarding gun ownership. And Japan is also a country where organized crime, the Yakuzas, is practically out in the open.

      The goal of banning guns is to ban guns, and reduce gun-related violence and homicide. Banning guns will reduce violence and crime acros the board, but it will not suppress it completely.

      Let's take your example: in any big city, american or not, you can probably find out where to buy cocaine. The difference is that, in the US, an addict can pull a gun on his dealer (or the reverse) and kill him for his stash. And whoever survives can then use the same gun to shoot at police officers and kill them. In the rest of the world, while this can happen, gun violence, even between addicts and dealers, is a lot less prevalent.

      Yes, crime and law-breaking will always exist, gun ban or not. But banning guns will reduce violence and, ultimately, the number of deaths per year.

      Here is another example: if the Florida shooter did not have access to guns, and he went into that disco to, say, stab people with a sharp knife or sword, he may have been able to kill a couple of people, at best, before being subdued by bouncers and others in the disco. This would now be treated as a horrible hate crime, and not as the bloodbath -- 50 dead, scores wounded -- that it is.

      The Economist said it best years ago when they said "It takes a lot of knowledg and strength to kill someone with a knife or a blade. It takes none to pull a trigger." (and I paraphrase from memory).

      Ban guns. This is the best solution overall, and it requires nothing more than courage and a willingness to tackle this problem.

      --
      The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    12. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Z80a · · Score: 1

      Yes, if you do accomplish to actually ban guns on a way you remove the guns from the hand of the criminals, you will indeed and undoubtedly reduce the crimes.
      But with a ban that is as effective as let's say the ban on drugs, you manage to reduce the regular gun buying of regular citizens, but people planning to commit a crime will still be able to find the guns in a very easy fashion.
      The lack of criminality in japan is more linked to the lack of poverty and culture than gun bans.

    13. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      No the second amandment talks about militia AND peoples right - the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

      No, the uncomfortable truth is that it does not say that at all. There is nothing whatsoever in the constitution that talks about everyone having the right to have guns. That is a Supreme Court 'interpretation', but lots of mental gymnastics will be performed to say that.

    14. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by coofercat · · Score: 1

      I'm sure I too will get a lot of "no, more guns is the solution!" for this, but how about a 'happy medium' that's vaguely possible without having to disarm a heavily armed, and incredibly partisan nation?

      One such proposition (off the top of my head) is to make it illegal to have any sort of firearm anywhere in public. Thus, you can keep one at home, and shoot a burglar (if he doesn't find it and shoot you first, as I believe is the statistic). Any suggestion you happen to have a gun in your clothes, or the back of your car means a cop can check and immediately arrest you if he finds one.

      I appreciate that if you're a nut, you could simply load up your car with guns and drive to your intended target in the hope you won't get stopped (as you probably won't), but if you're seen by your neighbours, or by people seeing you unload then you're (again) clearly breaking the law and (in theory at least) can be reported and dealt with by the cops. I realise that in practice there's a good chance none of this will happen, but it 'ups the ante' a bit, and means you need to think about concealment at least a little bit. In some sense, this puts guns into a similar bracket as bombs - if you saw someone with something that looked like a bomb, you'd probably call the cops, and they'd (almost certainly) arrest them (or shoot then, again, as I'm told it goes more often than not).

      Going further (presumably while these laws settle in), the doorman at the club (and/or) the barman, the owner, whomever, can apply for suitable licenses to have guns on the premises and be allowed to use them (presumably in certain circumstances). Note, these guns don't leave the premises, and the doorman can't go for a walk around the block while carrying. Licenses obviously only granted to people who pass psych tests or whatever, and a licensed premises needs to say so with a sign on the door (or whatever). If someone pulls a gun inside the club, then again, it's pretty obvious who's the bad guy and who's not.

      I'm happy to concede this isn't perfect and won't stop everyone/everything. Ultimately, nothing will guarantee 100% safety, but by making a 'stigma' for having guns in public (even concealed) at least means there's a lot more chances to spot the nut on his way to a shooting. If you happen to be off to overthrow the government, then encountering the police on the way is probably already something you've thought of, so your 2nd amendment rights are (approximately) preserved.

      This all seems like the 'common sense' gun control. I'm sure there are a thousand reasons why it won't work, but it doesn't seem to me like such a terrible hardship for the ordinary people to leave their guns at home when they go to the shops, and if it helps even a little bit, it seems like it's probably worth it.

      My two pence. Right, let the shitstorm begin...

    15. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      But let's break the Second amendment down for you idiots that can't read a simple sentence. A well regulated militia being necessary for the protection of a free state, the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

      I suggest you re-read your own sentence there. Nowhere there does it say that everyone has a right to carry guns. Nowhere. What we have is a Supreme Court 'interpretation', which is entirely predictable. Remarkably, this hadn't even really been ruled on until 2008 whereas before the militia clause was actually read. Also note the use of 'well regulated', and that is very clear. That is not a free-for-all I'm afraid. "A fraud on the American public" is what Justice Warren Burger called it.

      As it is the duty of the citizen to bring his own arms to the common defense of the community, a citizen must have a weapon to bring. If the citizen is disarmed the militia is disarmed. Thus the well regulated militia requires that the people have the right to keep and bear arms. Not for hunting, but for defense of self and of community.

      That's the kind of mental gymnastics you get to justify this. A well regulated militia is exactly what it means - it does not mean *everyone* - and everything after is in that context. If you simply take the second part then the first part means nothing, which is clearly nonsense, but there you are.

      So your attempt to lie about what the 2nd Amendment means is false. As a functional militia is necessary for the safety of the state, the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Because to infringe on that right breaks the militia. The right is reserved to the people as it is with every other right up until the 9th amendment.

      I'm afraid that is exactly the kind of brain damage America has over the 'right' to bear arms now and the assumptions now (since the 80s) made are comical, if they weren't so serious. The caveats in the (poorly worded) amendment are there for a reason because they probably knew what it would mean, and their fears certainly came true. The amendment has been so bastardised over the years that there is no going back. We'll simply see things get worse until everyone is in a Mexican standoff and everyone gets killed.

      We do know what we are talking about when we bring up this right. A right protected by the Bill of Rights not granted by it. You however do not know what you are talking about.

      No, you don't, and it's a 'right' you certainly didn't have until the nutjobs turned up in power from the 80s onwards. I hear you lot are big on the idea of 'originalism', yer?

    16. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      The problem is the how.

      Not really. They could just read their own constitution properly and not the revisionist stuff we've had since the 80s.

    17. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      Or we could just ban violent, disturbed people.

      There are disturbed and violent people everywhere in the world. Nowhere is the death toll higher than in the US. The truth here, alas, hurts too many people.

    18. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      It would more adequately satisfy the 'well regulated' part of the constitution, but, even this will be met with massive resistance.

    19. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by mpercy · · Score: 1

      After 6 months:

      - Make crime (any crime) commited with the help of guns (even if not a single shot has been fired) a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Ban all military or quasi-military guns and make possession of said weapons a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Make all forms of gun trafficking a crime punishable by life in prison, without the possibility of parole.
      - Make all murders and sexual assaults committed with guns a crime punishable by the death penalty (since you guys love the death penalty almost as much as your guns).
      - Make sure all gun owners are registered, with a thorough (federal) background check and psychological evaluation beforehand, including a valid reason for gun ownership and respect all safety measures at all times (see hunters above).
      - Raise the funds allocated to law enforcement to make sure the largest cities are safe.

      I can guarantee you that these measures would also drastically reduce the amount of criminal activity in the USA, as an added bonus.

      Seriously, though, pretty much everyone on earth realizes that private gun ownership is a bad idea. Except for the United States of America. It's time to wake up and smell the coffee. A good example of this is Canada, as simply crossing the border makes you immediately safer from guns.

      Once you have done that, we can start talking about the metric system.

      Why wait? Why do you need to ban guns and confiscate them first? Just pass these laws and everything would take care of itself, right?

    20. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Banning guns would not have stopped this incident. The perp was a private security guard. As such he had access to firearms. Even under the most restrictive proposed gun bans in the U.S. private security would be authorized to have firearms. How else can the elite ensure they are protected?
      All but a handful of European nations allow private security personnel to be armed. Even the UK allows people to own long guns, the principle firearm used in the Orlando shootings.
      So no banning guns would not have solved this problem.

    21. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      As a Canadian gun owner, I'll just point out that our laws are laxer than some American states.

      To own most rifles or shotguns, you get your PAL, or Posession and Acquisition License. You take and pass a one day course, you send in your application, which includes things like contact info for two years worth of 'conjugal partners' and references.

      For handguns or 'scary' rifles (literally; an AR-15 in .223 is 'restricted.' You can get other semi-auto rifles in .223 which are considered 'non-restricted.' But people still have this weird idea that the AR-15 is 'military' and a hunting rifle isn't.) you do an extra six hour course and apply for the 'restricted' part of the license.

      I'm a flaming Canadian lib, and I own more handguns, let alone more guns, than any conservative I personally know.

      America doesn't have a gun problem; America has various problems which guns exacerbate. But if this guy didn't have a gun, he could have driven through the sidewalk crowd, or walked in with a backpack full of Molotov cocktails, or an amfo bomb, or chlorine and bleach, or a machete bought from the camping section of Wal-Mart, or any number of other things.

      The issue here shouldn't be 'OMG he shot people!' It should be 'OMG he killed people.'

      It's like when your kids are fighting; if Bobby is hitting Billy with a Tonka Truck, the solution isn't to ban Tonka Trucks from the house.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    22. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      You can't read english? That's the literal text you moron.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Doubling down on dumb?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    24. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by airdweller · · Score: 1

      "All sounds nice in paper, but yet, you still can buy cocaine easily"
      So, by your logic, we should repeal the laws on murder, rape, theft, etc., because those crimes still happen despite all of the efforts?

    25. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Two words:

      Ban. Guns.

      Four words:

      Remote-controlled sniper-cams.

      Seriously. All it would take is somebody manufacturing a version of those remote pan/tilt/zoom security cams with a single-shot gun built in. Make it so that people who are entirely outside the scope of the conflict can easily identify the perp and take him/her out without ever being in harm's way. If every store and classroom and movie theater and bar and club in America had one of these things, we would never have mass shooting incidents, because they wouldn't even get their second shot off.

      The problem with the notion of concealed carry is that the people doing the carrying are in the thick of things, which makes them more likely to hit an innocent bystander, more likely to get shot themselves, and less likely to be able to see the attacker because of their vantage point. But mounted above everybody's head, a security camera can find the assailant, aim, and put a bullet through that person's skull quickly enough to end the threat from the moment the first shot is fired. Combine that with automatic gunshot detection algorithms, and technology could absolutely stop mass shootings, or at least the traditional kind.

      The real question, of course, is whether it is worth the risk of someone cracking into those systems and killing innocent people with them, the risk of governments hacking them as a means of quashing dissidence with plausible deniability, etc. Maybe have them tied into the fire alarm system where the trigger can't be activated unless the fire alarm is pulled first. Or maybe make it illegal to have them be network-connected in any way. *shrugs*

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    26. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The night club did ban guns fool. They patted down people as they came in. These mass shootings only happen in places where people are disarmed. Return fire tends to end mass shootings before they can really get going. Beyond that, the most deadly night club attack used fire and gasoline and killed 87, and had this guy gone that route, he probably could have killed most if not everyone in there instead of 50.

      On the other hand, there are hundreds of instances of would be terrorist attacks world wide that only had a few fatalities/ injuries because there was someone nearby, either citizen or off duty officer etc. who was armed and engaged the terrorist rapidly.

      The reality is that in a free society is is impossible to stop someone with intelligence and ill intent from harming others by passing laws/restricting freedom. In a world without guns, they can make explosives, toxic gasses, poisons, use vehicles, fire bombs and the list goes on. The key is as soon as they start to break the existing laws/try to harm others, they must be stopped, and as the saying goes: "I concealed carry, because when seconds count, the police are minutes away."

      And to all of you ignorant jackasses out there, to even purchase a firearm you must pass a federal background check and be a non-felon without a history of mental illness (at minimum, some states also require a competency course) and for concealed carry, you must pass a competency/accuracy field test as well as a written test on the laws surrounding concealed carry. And automatic weapons are illegal in most states and a pain in the ass to get where they are legal and automatics were not used by the Florida night club shooter (I'M LOOKING AT YOU BERNIE SANDERS YOU DUMB OLD GOAT!)

    27. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The scariest, blackest gun in America is the AR-15.
      Over 20 million of them are in civilian hands. 20 MILLION.
      How many of them were used in crimes this year?
      10? 20?
      And you think THOSE are the problem?

      Fuck you.

    28. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 0

      America certainly is. But go ahead, do the world a favour and shoot each other until there is no one left. The people who wrote that amendment saw it coming.

    29. Re:Here is a very simple suggestion... by segedunum · · Score: 1

      The literal interpretation is a 'well regulated militia'. That does not mean everyone. Now go and shoot yourself. Or one of your relatives.

  46. The Guns need AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The guns need to be smart, have AI so they can be moral and only shoot things/people that need shooting (which is really hardly anyone). The first thing they shoot are people with non-smart guns as they are clearly a threat. Clearly people i the US are not armed enough and you need personal armed drones that can deal with any threat (while still being sensible about it) - So AI.

  47. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously the rate of shootings will go down with fewer guns. That doesn't mean that people are less violent, though. If you could show that gun control results in an overall decrease in violent crime, you might have a point. But you didn't try to make that point.

    Europe has stricter gun control but it didn't stop the massacres in Paris and Brussels. California has some of the strictest gun control laws in the US but they didn't stop the San Bernardino shooting. Using terror watch lists as a means of gun control won't help, either, because none of the shooters in the US attacks were on a watch list.

    If you believe gun control is the answer, the burden is on you to show that it's effective and not just a bunch of TSA-style security theatre. If you want people to give up their rights, you need to show its necessary and effective. I don't think that's the case. I think the causes are more complex and are a mix of radicalization, mental illness, missed or ignored warning signs, weak security and police response, and easy access to weapons.

  48. Chaos theory and compassion by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

    The Democrats solution is useless: gun control doesn't work in the US. The Republican's solution is also useless: harsher prison sentences and more guns mostly just puts more guns in the hands of hardened (by the prisons) criminals. Both of these solutions give the government more power though. What an amazing coincidence. But I digress. Police are already using programs to predict criminal behavior. I think already-public information could be used in a smart enough computer to predict the most likely shooters. These people should then be given a reason not to want the world to burn. They're most likely to be disenfranchised, mentally ill, mistreated, and feeling trapped. LISTEN TO THEM and give them a safe way out. This does not necessarily mean following a psychiatrist's recommendations. A lot of psychiatrists are arrogant and even abusive (by good intent, but nevertheless) It means assigning a case worker who is not overworked, not underpaid, and is empowered to and genuinely wants to help. Does he need a job? Is his daughter sick? Are there voices in his head? No humiliating and confusing paperwork. No standing in line for three hours only to be told to come back another day. Just have someone get in touch. Make it very easy for the highest risk individuals to receive help. Ideological reasons often have an underlying cause. Omar might tell you Islam is the one true way but if you listen hard enough you may hear "I just wanted someone to talk to, and the fellow at the temple was there for me". Even then since you have someone listening and empowered you'll know when the risk is high enough to put FBI surveillance on him.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    1. Re:Chaos theory and compassion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personal minders for people pointed out by an opaque pre-crime system. Sounds absurd. It will give the government more power though. What an amazing coincidence.

  49. This is why Trump will win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And it's why liberalism is a complete and utter failure. The world is a museum of socialist failures. It always ends in rivers of blood. Always. Without fail.

  50. stop with politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this guy worked for the military industrial complex, meaning not poor and had 9 years of training. not a lone gun man. Anyway bernia has some great ideas, here he is completely wrong. Hilary has stole his rase and am for basic income and imigration reform but getting rid of the second ammendment is retardeded since its there to allow people to defend themselfs from any type of dictatorship. this is a trategy but only social means and fix this, aldo shows that all the billions spent dont do shit for our security but makes go in the direction of nazi germany. Dhs/nsa is Hitlers wet dream, and all the snooping and meteling with peoples lifes and cant stop one of their own. Waste of money thst could be used in social programs.

  51. How about these other problems? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Asking this is similar to asking the following:

    - Can technology end wars?
    - Can technology prevent mass hunger?
    - Can technology prevent corruption?
    - Can technology stop the wealth gap?
    - Can technology make me a better parent?

    As many people would've probably pointed out: this is a cultural/societal problem rather than a technological one.

  52. Why bother answering this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The last article mentioning the shootings was removed, so why bother?

  53. Sure it can.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guns are made of metal.
    Hit all carried metal remotely with a few gigawatts of power.
    Problem solved.

  54. The technology exists, it's called laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's possible to restrict private weapons ownership. Works in most European countries. Just compare how many massacres happen in Europe vs the US.

    1. Re:The technology exists, it's called laws by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      We've got a long way to go to match Europe's WWII totals.

      Guns help us keep our government on leash. When you've gone 100 years without losing control of yours we can start to talk.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:The technology exists, it's called laws by butchersong · · Score: 1
  55. Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs?

    No, because anyone planning to murder 50 people is just going to shoot the guard(s) at the metal detector and walk in anyway.

    It may prevent other crimes, crimes of passion and other such drunken disputes (however I suspect this is somehow less of a problem at a gay bar, but I have no numbers and could be wrong).

    1. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by 2ms · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that the guy could have just as easily used a bomb.

    2. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by Blade · · Score: 1

      I've seen this argument before, and it's not true. The effort level for different types of things used to kill people vary, both in up-front effort, and effort of application.

      Being able to walk into a store and buy a gun does not mean you have the skill, resources or ability to make and deploy a bomb. Yes, some killers can make bombs, but far more can simply buy a gun.

      So, 'banning guns won't help they'll use bombs' is a weak argument.

    3. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      No, because anyone planning to murder 50 people is just going to shoot the guard(s) at the metal detector and walk in anyway.

      You can prevent by having a controlled entry right after the metal detector that can be locked down. Intake a certain number of people into a special "sally port" room where they pass through the metal detector, and the inside door doesn't unlock until the outside door right after the metal detector is shut and locked.

      Have a remote guard watching cameras from a secure booth. If for any reason the metal detector gets set off; both doors into the sally port get locked down until the security guys figure out what was going on, And the remote guard may have controls to dispense tear gas or pepper spray automatically.

    4. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

      You clearly think the LGBT community differs from everyone else in something other than sexual identity/preference. Let me let you in on something ... the LGBT community is just like everyone else ... Even without numbers I can tell you they are just as likely to blow someone away in a fit of passion as someone in the straight community. You're welcome.

    5. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      No, because anyone planning to murder 50 people is just going to shoot the guard(s) at the metal detector and walk in anyway.

      Perhaps we need something a bit strong, then. Like a metal eradicator. So when you walk through the door with metal, pointy metal spikes automatically pop out and skewer you.

      If that were the case, I'd bet you make doubly sure that you didn't leave your keys in your pocket...

      (And, no, I'm not being serious).

    6. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Yes, but this isn't the movies and all that costs money. You also won't be able to install it into every public building in town, there isn't the space or the manpower for that.

    7. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      How about a swarm of highly-mobile robot guards equipped with tazers?

      They did ask for technological solution......

    8. Re:Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      the LGBT community is just like everyone else ... I can tell you they are just as likely to blow someone away in a fit of passion as someone in the straight community.

      Yeah. They may even forgo the "away" part of that sentence :-)

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
  56. I'm a little pissed off but by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 1

    I'm still a little pissed off about this event, but here's an idea:

    int bootem = 2;
    int fuckem = bootem * 2;
    if(sitesVisited.about("isis") > bootem && (postsMade.favoring("jihad") > bootem || threatsMade.all() > bootem)) {
        deportOrImprison(me);
    }
    if(sitesVisited.about("isis") > fuckem && postsMade.favoring("jihad") > fuckem && threatsMade.all() > fuckem) {
        droneStrike(location(this));
    }

    1. Re:I'm a little pissed off but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > deportOrImprison(me);

      You got that part right.

    2. Re:I'm a little pissed off but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > deportOrImprison(me)

      Why would we keep repeatedly imprisoning you when someone runs this code ? Shouldn't we be imprisoning the bad guy instead ?

    3. Re:I'm a little pissed off but by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 1

      It runs client-side, or at least under the context of the authenticated user. :)

    4. Re:I'm a little pissed off but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *has drone fire missile at gramas open wifi router*

      ignoring everything inconvenient sure does make things simple

  57. answer to what? by ooloorie · · Score: 3

    If we're looking for radical changes in the way we live, does technology have a role? Is the answer smart gun technology? Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs? Better data analysis algorithms for the federal government? Bulletproof fabrics?

    We have had a massive decline in gun violence, both in the US and abroad, and nobody really knows what the cause of the decline is. It isn't gun control or getting tough on criminals.

    Furthermore, in the US, probably the single factor that sticks out most with respect to gun violence is "race": after all, despite the US's higher murder rate overall, as a "white" American, you are no more likely to get murdered than the people of Iceland, France, Denmark, New Zealand, the UK, Norway, Canada, Belgium, Israel, and Finland. But "race" (in the weird US sense) obviously doesn't cause violence per se; it must be a marker that correlates with something else.

    So, given that we don't really understand what causes gun violence, and that it has been massively decreasing for poorly understood reasons, it's hard to come up with a technological solution.

    1. Re:answer to what? by ArylAkamov · · Score: 2

      Agreed, looking at the FBI crime statistics it is remarkable how highly violent crime correlates with race. Not that I expect anybody to talk about this inconvenient truth, it's far easier to implement feel good solutions. When said feel good solutions don't work, they demand more.

    2. Re:answer to what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have had a massive decline in gun violence, both in the US and abroad, and nobody really knows what the cause of the decline is. It isn't gun control or getting tough on criminals.

      Furthermore, in the US, probably the single factor that sticks out most with respect to gun violence is "race": after all, despite the US's higher murder rate overall, as a "white" American, you are no more likely to get murdered than the people of Iceland, France, Denmark, New Zealand, the UK, Norway, Canada, Belgium, Israel, and Finland. But "race" (in the weird US sense) obviously doesn't cause violence per se; it must be a marker that correlates with something else.

      So, given that we don't really understand what causes gun violence, and that it has been massively decreasing for poorly understood reasons, it's hard to come up with a technological solution.

      Sounds a lot like people who have a fulfilling life and a bright future doesn't decide to take a gun and shoot people.
      Socialized healthcare and education could very well be a more effective way to reduce gun violence than gun control. It works for other crimes so it wouldn't be surprising if it worked in this case too.

    3. Re:answer to what? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      We have had a massive decline in gun violence, both in the US and abroad, and nobody really knows what the cause of the decline is.

      Leaded gasoline was eliminated, and the youth of today isn't growing up as brain-damaged as previous generations. That pretty much sums it up.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:answer to what? by John.Banister · · Score: 1

      Violent (and other) crime correlates more strongly with poverty than with race.

    5. Re:answer to what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have had a massive decline in gun violence, both in the US and abroad, and nobody really knows what the cause of the decline is.

      The best guess is the reduction of lead levels in our local environment.

    6. Re:answer to what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about correlating that data with poverty statistics?

    7. Re:answer to what? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Leaded gasoline was eliminated, and the youth of today isn't growing up as brain-damaged as previous generations. That pretty much sums it up.

      That's one theory people have advanced, but it's controversial and hard to prove conclusively.

    8. Re:answer to what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the first place, posts like this are why people feel impelled to carry slogans saying "Black lives matter!" You can't just discount half the homicide total and say "oh, it's just Them, there's no doing anything with those people". They are people too. Citizens, even.

      Second, check your stats because they are flat out wrong. As a white American you are approximately twice as likely to be murdered as a Canadian (of any race), and three times as likely as an Italian or Pole. (Counting all causes of homicide.)

    9. Re:answer to what? by Gussington · · Score: 1

      nobody really knows what the cause of the decline is.

      Speak for yourself. Human development has a inverse correlation with violence. Most parts of the world are developing, hence prosperity is up, violence is down.
      Gun violence is merely a multiplier of violence so most intelligent places limit the power this has on society.
      The US is the weird exception because 'freedom' seems to be more important than quality of life.

    10. Re:answer to what? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to prove it. No control population available to examine.

      But it correlates well with the facts on the ground (leaded gasoline use rises, crime rises a generation later, leaded gas use outlawed, crime drops a generation later).

      Until we get a second planet full of humans to use as a control group, pretty much any causes for societal changes are going to be pure guesswork. But the leaded gasoline thing is a pretty good guess based on the facts on the ground....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    11. Re:answer to what? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Human development has a inverse correlation with violence. Most parts of the world are developing, hence prosperity is up, violence is down. Most parts of the world are developing, hence prosperity is up, violence is down.

      That would predict an upturn of violence during recessions, but that's not happening, either in this recession or others. In fact, there simply is no significant relationship between wealth/development and gun violence among first world nations.

      Gun violence is merely a multiplier of violence so most intelligent places limit the power this has on society.

      There is also no significant relationship between gun control and homicide rates among first world nations either, or in the US at state level, or over time after the introduction of gun control. Passing legislation based on knee jerk responses without solid facts to back it up is not "intelligent".

      The US is the weird exception because 'freedom' seems to be more important than quality of life.

      Yes, US quality of life is so low that absolutely nobody from those "intelligent places" ever wants to emigrate here. Never ever. Oh no.

      And, yes, the view "Give me liberty, or give me death!" was prevalent during the US revolution. Maybe that has something to do with why the US muddled through the 20th century while Europe was torn between imperialism, colonialism, fascism and communism and committing genocide. And, yes, it wasn't just the Germans.

    12. Re:answer to what? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Until we get a second planet full of humans to use as a control group, pretty much any causes for societal changes are going to be pure guesswork.

      My point exactly. Which means that pretty much any policies intended to improve society are based on "pure guesswork", rather than sound science

    13. Re:answer to what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can look at crime rates as a function of when countries phased out leaded gas. In theory countries that phase out leaded gas later would see reductions in crime later than earlier phase out countries.

      Legal abortion was touted in Freakonomics but I'm not 100% behind that idea. Not that it isn't a bad thing unwilling parents don't have kids.

    14. Re:answer to what? by Gussington · · Score: 1

      That would predict an upturn of violence during recessions,

      A recession is simply two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth. It is not the same as poverty.

      There is also no significant relationship between gun control and homicide rates

      Strawman.

      Yes, US quality of life is so low that absolutely nobody from those "intelligent places" ever wants to emigrate here. Never ever. Oh no.

      Strawman.

    15. Re:answer to what? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Look, you stated, without evidence, your beliefs that "Human development has a inverse correlation with violence. Most parts of the world are developing, hence prosperity is up, violence is down. Most parts of the world are developing, hence prosperity is up, violence is down." and that "Gun violence is merely a multiplier of violence so most intelligent places limit the power this has on society.".

      We're not having an argument over that; your beliefs are simply false. I'm just giving you some simple, easy to understand observations that might convince you of that. But if you stubbornly and without any basis in reality want to believe something incorrect, be my guest.

    16. Re:answer to what? by Gussington · · Score: 1

      Look, you stated, without evidence, your beliefs that "Human development has a inverse correlation with violence.

      You even agreed with this "We have had a massive decline in gun violence, both in the US and abroad".
      So you agree that violence is down overall, so the thing you could possibly dispute is that prosperity is up over similar time frames?
      And you need evidence for this? Really?

      I thought this was so obvious even a fool wouldn't question this, but here you go, just for the special people... https://ourworldindata.org/Eco...

  58. Re:Technology can't stop these by maroberts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Europe never allowed citizens to own guns the way the US does.

    This is untrue. Restrictions have been gradually increased during the 20th Century, and have not been in place forever.

    --

    Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
    Karma: Chameleon

  59. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Part of Europe has been at war quite recently. Ukraine still is, but even there it's pretty calm outside the Russian invasion zone. You don't hear much about mass shootings in former Yugoslavia. So somehow it seems to work even there.

  60. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gun control is no longer an option in the US. You can impose gun control rules on citizens, but not on criminals.

    Almost all mass shootings, particularly with unrelated targets, are done by people without criminal background. Gun control will not help against gang wars. But gang wars aren't where the large number of gun-related deaths stem from. And many gun-related deaths with small victim counts are of domestic nature.

    So imposing gun control rules on citizens but (effectively) not on criminals might be spectacularly unpopular but is highly likely to be very effective in decreasing the number of gun-related deaths.

    And that's not even taking into account that the expectation of guns being only carried by criminals will make the actual criminals (of course excepting hired murderers which are a tiny minority) less trigger- (as well as stab-)happy since they are less likely to get shot by their victims.

    Will gun-assisted crime (like muggings) increase? No idea, but it's rather likely that deathly outcomes would decrease.

  61. Re:Technology can't stop these by VanGarrett · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The caveat here, is that the European countries with the lowest crime rates have the highest rates of gun ownership, as well.

  62. more tech funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government needs to step in and fund holographic or surrogate android technologies. We could easily avoid this by not congregating together in one place. Barricade your door, and only experience the world virtually.

  63. No technical for social issues. by NoBody.de · · Score: 1

    Take away the guns.
    Not forbidding them.Just do not make them.
    Get them off the hands of people. Not only criminals, but everyone.
    Going a step further : include most police officers. It works, see British constables.

    Pulse and Christina Grimmie and everthing a like just should not happen.

  64. Just ban them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not allowing civilians to buy automatic weapons (or any kind of guns/rifles for that matter), would go a long way. The stats speak for themselves.

    1. Re:Just ban them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would ban selfish, phobic people like you from communicating in any way. That'd be great.

    2. Re:Just ban them by MerlynEmrys67 · · Score: 1
      The sale of automatic weapons is highly regulated and almost impossible to purchase on the civilian market. To be fair, semi-automatic weapons are far more accurate causing a significantly higher fatality rate. If you want to lower the number of deaths in a mass shooting, allow shooters to purchase fully automatic weapons, after the 3rd round - the rest of the bullets go into the ceiling causing very few fatalities as they run out of ammo faster.

      The problem with an unarmed populace is there is no way to revolt from an unjust government.

      --
      I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them
  65. How about 'Freedom of NON-Association'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would choose to live around muslims?
    What white people would choose to live around non-whites?

    When white people are given the choice, they MOVE HOUSE to get away from non-whites. Almost no white people deliberately move into a non-white area, instead of a white area. It's called 'revealed preference'.

    Secondly, this was probably a false flag attack, designed to help Hilary Clinton in her pathetic attempt to disarm the American people, on behalf of her JEWISH masters...

    1. Re: How about 'Freedom of NON-Association'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plenty of people don't care what color their neighbours are.

      And news flash ; Moslems aren't a race - they are white, Asian, African , Indian, middle eastern , and everything in between .
      Sometimes they dress distinctively, but really you can't pick them,

      And frankly , virtually all of them are decent people - the radicals aren't any more than the KKK or extreme evangelicals representing Caucasians.

  66. Bulletproof fabrics? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Bulletproof fabrics?

    While it is possible that we might discover some fancy new thing to stop bullets, the reality is that anything soft and easy to wear isn't effective against rifle rounds.

    Even the armor worn by police officers generally won't stop most rifle rounds, or at least not completely, and it is far thicker and less comfortably than what people will really wear.

    So no, this is not a solution.

    1. Re:Bulletproof fabrics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said it had to be soft. The idea was: "Can technology solve this?"

      Lets pretend that someone makes a new "intelligent" ballistic fibre that hardens to the right amount to stop penetration and disperse the force. Well would it solve the problem? No, a mass murderer would use a different weapon/tactic. Also the mass murderer would be wearing just the same kind of clothes.

  67. Re:Nope by DatbeDank · · Score: 1

    But getting rid of guns will./p>

    Why don't you check in with the French and see how well that worked out.

  68. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you could try restricting the types of guns people have access to. A revolver does not have the same potential for mass killing as an assault rifle or even a semi-automatic handgun but should be adequate for self-defence. If you can't disable an attacker with 6 shots, you probably shouldn't be allowed to have a gun.

  69. Re:Technology can't stop these by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You don't need to disarm people, just stop selling them new guns. Criminals will also find it much harder to get guns then (fewer legitimate reasons to be handling them) and over time the ones in circulation will be discarded.

    Before you claim it won't stop criminals getting guns, it largely does in most developed countries.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  70. Stopping shootings will not help. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What good will stopping shootings do? There is a variety of ways to kill people.

    1. Re:Stopping shootings will not help. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      What good will stopping shootings do? There is a variety of ways to kill people.

      Yes, but it's a lot, lot harder to stab or bludgeon 50 people to death than to shoot them. The whole point of guns is to make killing easier and more efficient.

      There is a reason why we don't let civilians buy nuclear weapons.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Stopping shootings will not help. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it's a lot, lot harder to stab or bludgeon 50 people to death than to shoot them.

      Who says bludgeon is the alternative? The bad guys use incendiaries or explosives.

  71. Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if you want a technological solution... one accessible right now is guns and body armor. What technology do the police or military use to deal with guns? Words? Education? Do they offer the crazed gunman money?

    Guns to kill or threaten the shooter... armor and tactics to avoid being injured while the deed is done.

    Here someone will say "but I want the world to be full of rainbows and unicorns"... Childish.

    Consider the numbers. The vast majority of the population is peaceful, law abiding, and has a strong interest in law and order. What is more... anyone will act in what they see as their self interest to defend themselves.

    Consider that the error is that we haven't gone 180 degrees and encouraged MORE guns.

    Vulnerability or perceived vulnerability invites attack. This is a well established and accepted strategic and tactical concept in war.

    Look weak and you'll get hit. Look strong and you'll be avoided. If you WANT to be attacked in war, the best thing to do is to LOOK weak by hiding your strength. That is the nature of a trap in war. You trick the enemy into a miscalculation and destroy them. The point being... again... weakness invites attack.

    If you wish to NOT be attacked... do not allow the enemy to think you are weak... either by not appearing weak or by actually being able to respond forcefully.

    I'm sure I'm going to get statements like "typical american" or something equally infantile.

    We'll see if any one has a substantive response to my point. I expect nothing but cowardly downvotes and idiotic insults from ACs without a hint of an argument.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we're supposed to start an ever escalating arms race with criminals? Sounds like a good idea...

      If society was armed to the point that the perpetrator could reasonably assume that the gay club was packed guns he would probably have just used explosives instead.

      In addition to that, of course, you'd get an increase in accidental and less accidental gun deaths as a result of increased availability.

    2. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      No. Because that isn't how it works. Criminals in the US do not break into US homes when people are detected in the home. They do break into homes in Europe. They're called hot burglaries.

      Increase the risk of engagement and the violence happens less. The criminal is the one taking the risk. Not the victim. The victim is merely defending themselves. What is more, avoiding an arms race is not an argument to be LESS well armed than your attacker.

      As to explosives, possibly... However, the Draw Muhammad contest in Texas had 2 armed radical islamic people show up to kill people. They got instantly dropped by Texans with AR15s and no one else died.

      Escalation is in the interest of the people with more resources. Collectively, we have more. An arms race serves our interests. What is more, look at these mass shootings. Now think again what happens when any reasonable portion of the victims are armed. It doesn't work.

      What is more, your concession on explosives makes clear that you understand making things illegal doesn't really matter. Naturally high explosives are not something people can currently get their hands on. So... you're basically just conceding that you can't control illegal weapons but rather seem to think that restricting legal guns in the hands of victims is somehow in the interest of society. it isn't.

      The common person wishes no violence upon anyone else. Arming them merely gives them an opportunity to defend themselves.

      As to accidental deaths, I'm as worried about that as you are about car accidents caused by stop and go traffic which are themselves made worse by the automatic transmission.

      Tell you what, agree to ban the automatic transmission right now or your position is profoundly hypocritical.

      Let us not conflate deaths by accident with deaths by violence. Its like comparing deaths by heart disease to deaths by war. Its a nonsense.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    3. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Criminals in the US do not break into US homes when people are detected in the home. They do break into homes in Europe.

      Do you mean they break into occupied homes in Europe? Do you have a source for that comparison? I'd say most burglars ANYWHERE want to avoid occupied residences, as it reduces the chance of detection.

      They're called hot burglaries.

      Hmm, I think that's a specious terminology there, most of the references to it on Wikipedia are examples of kidnappings or serial killers.

    4. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      No, they have no fear in Europe when they do that because they are assumed unarmed. They break in with 5~6 people with clubs and knives. In the US, its typically 1~3 people that break in when they assume no one is home.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    5. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is not how to deal with it afterwards (we already do this) but how to prevent it in the first place.

    6. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they have no fear in Europe when they do that because they are assumed unarmed. They break in with 5~6 people with clubs and knives. In the US, its typically 1~3 people that break in when they assume no one is home.

      Yes, that's what I thought you were trying to assert, though your initial phrasing was simply that they do break into homes in Europe, without specifically indicating that the homes were occupied.

      Now do you have any sources for your contention that the numbers are greater in Europe? Not that they do exist, home invasions happen in the US, but some point of comparison?

      Because I think if you're intent on a criminal action, you want to avoid detection, and also the increased investigation from violence.

    7. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consider the numbers. The vast majority of the population is peaceful, law abiding, and has a strong interest in law and order.

      Incorrect. The vast majority of the population are liberals aka people who want to use government force to take your guns, take your money, take your property, and force you to bake gay wedding cakes. It's kind of why you're here expecting waves of anti-gun nuts to disagree with you.

      It takes a huge concerted effort from the conservative movement just to defend itself, and that's with using the same underhanded methods liberals use like gerrymandering and pushing biased propaganda.

      The vast majority are the ones cheering for BLM and protesters at Trump rallies. The vast majority defend the violence that happens. The vast majority don't get riled up about Benghazi or Hillary's emails. The vast majority mocks Fox News and other right wing media (which are of course a minority)

      Believing that the vast majority of people are good people is what is childish. Believing in the people is precisely what got all those liberals in power in the first place.

    8. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now do you have any sources

      That's a good one, right there - you should go in to comedy. Maybe you're new to this kid's writings but he has a long proud history of making shit up and avoiding requests for sources. Asking him for a source is like asking the Eiffel Tower why it hasn't fallen over, and equally as beneficial a use of time. I don't know if he thinks himself to be some kind of aspiring politician or what, but his record of factual avoidance is breathtaking.

    9. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Pervasive mind control is probably your best bet there.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    10. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's about damned time you admit that you don't have a plan (aside from surrendering to the terrorists). Too bad you didn't realize that before writing your first comment here, you could have saved yourself a whole lot of egg on your face. As you didn't seem to notice before, the goddamned title of this article is Can Technology Prevent Shootings?. Clearly you have no plan for prevention.

    11. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Nope. I just don't find your solution to be rational.

      My solution is to actually manage our borders and immigration rationally so that we don't literally give terrorists visas. Beyond that, it might be nice to have the FBI actually take a real interest in whether someone is sympathetic to terrorists. And finally, it would be nice if everyone acknowledged that free citizens in a free country have a right to protect themselves.

      Do those three things and I think we'll be okay. On top of that I'd like some welfare reform because that causes a lot of problems by allowing people to not integrate into US society. If everyone has to get a job then everyone has to interact... and that means integration ultimately.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    12. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My solution is to actually manage our borders and immigration rationally so that we don't literally give terrorists visas.

      You're joking, right? You aren't really dumb enough to realize that the most prolific mass shooters of the past decade were all born in the US, are you?

      You've been called out on not having a solution to prevent shootings. It is painfully apparent you have none, just accept it and move on.
       
       

      Beyond that, it might be nice to have the FBI actually take a real interest in whether someone is sympathetic to terrorists.

      In that case your parents should expect the FBI to come looking for you very soon. I haven't seen anyone on slashdot post a more pro-terrorist viewpoint than what you have been posting in this thread. Remember how much you laughed at videos of people being SWAT'ed? You won't find it funny when they're coming for you.
       
       

      And finally, it would be nice if everyone acknowledged that free citizens in a free country have a right to protect themselves.

      But no right to not live in constant fear? You can tell us about the animalistic instincts of your inner 6-year-old if you want, but that still leaves the obvious fact that you have no solution to prevent shootings.

      You might as well go back to your recruitment videos, Vanilla ISIS.

    13. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      How well is that line of bullshit working for you? Because according to the polls, no relevant portion of the population is dumb enough to buy that.

      That said, keep trying it. Your stupidity is one of my greatest weapons against people like you. Don't change. I like winning.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    14. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How well is that line of factual information working for you?

      That is quite the typo you made there, son. I fixed it for you. If we look back at the comment you replied to, it is rather clear you meant facts and somehow said bulllshit instead:

      realize that the most prolific mass shooters of the past decade were all born in the US

      As nobody could possibly be dumb enough to call that bullshit. Similarly their pointing out your pro-terrorist viewpoint is based only on fact.

      As they concluded:

      that still leaves the obvious fact that you have no solution to prevent shootings.

      How fitting that the captcha is "paranoia".

    15. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Keep it up. I like winning.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    16. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like winning.

      What exactly do you think you are "winning' here? The ACs keep showing how your arguments fall apart. You have yet to even provide a solution that would answer the question posed in the title of this discussion. You not only have no facts whatsoever to support any of your ideas, they actually would be contrary to your stated goals. The AC who stated you are helping the terrorists is indeed correct, the question remains whether you are doing it out of intent or stupidity.

    17. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      ... the ACs? You mean you just referring to yourself?

      I got modded up rather heavily here. I consistently do because I make sound arguments often in the face of dogma and zealotry.

      You are too much of a coward to permit you name to be counted. You like to play games like pretending you're different people. Whatever.

      your annihilation here was as easy as your pathetic attempt at redemption was futile.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    18. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got modded up rather heavily here.

      Excuse me? Two cowardly like-minded blowhards modded up your first comment. That's not a great accomplishment there, junior. Then it was pointed out that you failed to actually propose anything that answers the question while simultaneously surrendering to terrorism.
       
       

      I consistently do because I make sound arguments

      I have seen no sound arguments from you here, son.
       
       

      often in the face of dogma and zealotry.

      You were catering to dogma and zealotry in this thread. You completely ignored reality and in so doing played straight into the hands of the terrorists you are pretending to oppose.

      You should either just admit your complete and utter failure, or just stop replying. You have dug yourself a huge hole, here and you need to start thinking of ways to stop digging.

    19. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      If you weren't skunked you wouldn't be so salty about it.

      Look, you want to go on an anti gun crusade? Please do. It blows up in your stupid faces every time. You split your base which is half pro gun and I win.

      You presume to be a leader and ruler of men. You demonstrably lack the temperament to do that competently. You will have every victory stripped from you because you're too foolish to hold on to anything.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    20. Re:Yes... guns and armor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      salty

      Such is the accusation coming from the one lying and cursing. Strange accusation, for sure.
       
       

      Look, you want to go on an anti gun crusade?

      How did you come up with that one? Nobody in this thread ever said they were anti gun. You made that up out of nothing at all. You have faced a barrage of comments pointing out the failure of your various "plans" that don't prevent shootings or deter the terrorist attacks we have faced.

      Here's a tip, kid. Changing topics like that won't help your argument. You don't have an answer to the question that this article poses, you have shown that very plainly. It's time for you to just stop hitting reply as you aren't making yourself look any better. If you have any ideas you would like to share that would actually be responses to the question, feel free. You would surprise everyone here if you did.

  72. No by hackertourist · · Score: 1

    Mass murder seems to be a problem unique to the USA (among countries with a rule of law, i.e. excluding hellholes).
    Other countries with similar degrees of gun ownership have far fewer instances of guys going berserk and killing a bunch of people.

    Which means you have to fix US society somehow.

  73. Yes it can by GeekWithAKnife · · Score: 1


    By using social media to show people the statistics. The amount of mass shootings in the US has no parallel in the "western world".

    Americans seem to think liberty and owning a gun are one and the same. So is there a solution that allows both guns for US citizens and somehow reduce mass shootings?

    Gun control. At the very lease require a policy background and mental health assessment as a prerequisite to own a gun.

    Why doesn't the US use is ridiculously inefficient education budget to actually educate people about guns. Guns safety, reasons for gun control and restriction.

    We heard all the arguments about gun control before. The fact is that when one person in 100,000 has a gun and a bad mood tens of people can die. This does not happen in other countries with strict gun controls because it cannot.

    Sometimes I see the news and yet another mass shooting in the US and the cynic in me laughs. How fucking stupid do you have to be until you do something about these awful, half-assed gun measures and the cancerous NRA lobby? -sometimes I get really fucking angry because I'm done crying about it.

    America advocates peace and tranquillity in the world often accused of being some world police. Look to your own country. Some of the crime statistics are just mind boggling. War on drugs, war on terror, war on fucking everything. -where did this get you? -I humbly suggest the real "war" you should be waging is on your violent nature. It's an easy war to win. Put the fucking guns down.

    --
    A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
    1. Re:Yes it can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take it easy Adolf. The doctor has some nice pills for you.

      Eva

  74. Technology is a factor not a cause. by mrthoughtful · · Score: 1

    The question doesn't really make sense, in that technology is not an actor, and therefore has no ability to prevent shootings.

    Various options on how to prevent shootings.
    (1) Remove the required materials. Bullets and Guns. Hard to do as, due to modern technology, they aren't hard to fabricate.
    (2) Make it illegal to carry the materials. We do this in the UK. It reduces shootings, but it doesn't prevent them.
    (3) Make it impossible to use guns (eg surveillance, escalation, parity). Totalitarian state gone awry. This way leads to hell on earth.
    (4) Remove the motive. Education and training in empathy and tolerance is possible, but will only reduce shootings.
    (5) Cease to use it as a model. When authorities carry and use fire-arms they legitimise such activity. Will only reduce shootings.
    (6) Smart weapons/bullets. See (1) above. It's easy enough to fabricate dumb weapons.
    (7) Make the activity redundant. Once we are in a post-singularity society, then shootings won't mean very much.. (bit fantastical).

    --
    This comment was written with the intention to opt out of advertising.
    1. Re:Technology is a factor not a cause. by mrthoughtful · · Score: 1
      --
      This comment was written with the intention to opt out of advertising.
  75. There's something fundamentally wrong in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's face it: There's something fundamentally wrong in the US.

    A few months ago, a review showed, there are more people killed in the US in mass-shootings *every* year, than there have been victims in terrorist attacks during the last ~20 years. Including 9/11.

    Tech won't change that. Only a change of attitude.

  76. Re:Technology can't stop these by tlambert · · Score: 1

    Gun control stops mass shootings. Plain and simple.
    Technology can't do it alone.

    Better add machine shop control into the mix, then. Because it's relatively easy to turn out a gun in any halfway decently equipped machine shop. You should visit the Remington Arms museum some time, and see the primitive equipment that was used to create some of the first semiautomatic and automatic weapons: foot operated lathes with stone flywheels, for one...

  77. Wrong way to approach a serious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't fix stupid with technology. There needs to be reasonable background checks and proven purpose before one can procure firearms. Say you go to a gun store, but you can't buy a hunting rifle until you have been in an interview at your local police department. In this interview the police check your backgrounds for any criminal misconduct and such, and during the process you also have to provide sufficient proof of purpose for the gun you are about to buy.

    Let's imagine you want to go hunting moose and want to acquire a rifle for it. If you go to your local PD and during the interview present them with the gun you want, an AR-15, they'll immediately see your gun is a ridiculous choice for intended purpose. You won't get a buying permit. If you go to your local PD with the intent of buying an AR-15 that you want to use for competitive shooting, you provide them with sufficient proof that you've been involved in such activities for an extended period of time. They check the shooting club for your membership and possible letter of recommendation and then give you a permit to buy the if you don't have any criminal history.

    Anything less than this is and has always been a fucking disaster. Cut the constitutional bullshit and amend the constitution if necessary.

  78. Re:Nope by VanGarrett · · Score: 1

    If you could make a thing go away by making it illegal, why wouldn't you just make murder illegal?

  79. Re:Technology can't stop these by Mashiki · · Score: 1

    You don't need to disarm people, just stop selling them new guns.

    Really? Guess that's why all those countries are seeing problems with guns being smuggled in via Eastern Europe and used in terrorist attacks. Charlie Hebdo was one such case, there's been at least two dozen stories in the last year on more smuggling attempts directly to islamist groups in each of those countries.

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
  80. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of countries all over the world have made banned gun ownership, with amnesties for handing in weapons (knives too) that are about to become illegal. Failure to imagine that this could actually happen is just as bad as supporting the ridiculous current interpretation of your 2nd amendment.

  81. Sorry, but there is no technological solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's the basic problem. The person who commits the attack decides where the attack will occur, who the target(s) will be, what weapons will be used, and when (or if) the attack will occur. And if you keep him from getting the weapon(s) he wants this month, he can try again next month; he only needs to succeed once.

    Suppose you mandate smart guns? The attacker will get non-smart guns. Mandate limited magazine capacity? The attacker will bring extra magazines, and/or extra guns. And just hope the attacker doesn't bring explosives, or simply burn down a building with lot of people inside it at the time. Heck, I can imagine some pretty grim carnage if ten motivated attackers all simply showed up with tire irons and baseball bats.

    The police want to help, but they can't be everywhere. As the old line goes, when seconds count, the police are just minutes away.

    Some people will tell you that we just need to ban guns; that we need an iron-clad ban, in every state, that's enforced firmly. Those same people will tell you that people in Washington D.C. simply go to nearby Virginia or any other place with more-lax laws; ban guns everywhere and the bad guys presumably will have nowhere to go. Well, this won't work, and here's why:

    Consider crack cocaine. That's subject to an iron-clad ban, in every state, that's enforced firmly. Crack is banned as hard as the wildest dreams of gun-banners, and always has been. Are the streets 100% crack-free? Crack addicts keep smoking their crack so they need to buy more on a regular basis; guns, on the other hand, are pretty durable. So if we can't get crack off our streets, there's no way we will get all the guns. It's a fantasy.

    "Okay just ban the bullets!" Ammunition is easy to smuggle, and in fact easy to make. You'll never get 100% of it.

    Jeff Cooper proposed that we imagine a 2x2 matrix: on one axis we have armed/not armed, and on the other we have criminals/law-abiding. The worst of all possible worlds is criminals armed/law-abiding not armed. You can discuss whether it's better to have criminals not armed/law-abiding armed, or whether you would prefer nobody be armed... but as Jeff Cooper pointed out, the bad guys always get their weapons, so the two boxes in the matrix where the bad guys are not armed are the fantasy boxes, never to be attained in the real world. That leaves you with the two possible boxes: bad guys armed/law-abiding not armed, or bad guys armed/law-abiding armed. I submit that the best that we can hope to do in the real world is to allow the law-abiding to be armed. There have been plenty of instances where a person with a gun stopped a shooting rampage before the police showed up, so this is something that has been demonstrated to work in the real world. Not with a 100% success rate (the bad guys managed to hurt or kill people before they were stopped) but that isn't a valid argument against letting people carry weapons ("it's not 100% successful so let's not allow it at all"). The key question is whether it does more good than harm.

    Statistics show that citizens carrying firearms legally do not very often shoot the wrong person; in fact citizens have a better success rate than the police. This makes sense if you think about it: the citizen shot the bad guy because he/she was there, and saw the bad guy in action; whereas the police have to show up and figure out what is going on, and sometimes they make a mistake.

    Statistics also show that letting citizens carry weapons does not lead to an increase in crime. The experiment has been tried, in numerous states of the USA. Crime overall has been falling despite the number of people with con

  82. mechanical limits by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

    Have mechanical limits on guns for the public to prevent rapid fire.

    Max 4 rounds on rifles and shotguns, max 6 on revolvers and pistols. And a design forcing the shooter to load one by one.

    It wouldn't cause big problems for hunters but it would result in a better chance for people to evade mass shootings.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    1. Re:mechanical limits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then everyone will fabricate their own magazines

    2. Re:mechanical limits by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Just make sure the design don't allow it.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    3. Re:mechanical limits by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Hmm, so if you buy 12 revolvers, you can kill 72 people without reloading. Hell, if you buy 12 cap-and-ball (Civil War era) revolvers (I have two - Colt Navy and Colt Army), you can take 10 cylinders, load them, and then switch cylinders within, oh, 15 seconds with practice.

      Alternately, there's the "automatic revolver". Which was a little widget that you attached to the trigger guard of your revolver that allowed you to fire the revolver as quickly as you could turn the crank (basically, machine-gun speeds for those six shots). Note that this widget would also work with those cap-and-ball revolvers. Note that banning ammo might occur to some people - black powder can be made at home trivially.

      Do note that the incident you're trying to fix by banning scary-looking guns lasted THREE HOURS! Plenty of time to reload even a double-barrel shotgun and kill 50 people. Hell, the amazing thing is that he killed so few, given the time the police gave him to do his shooting - I have to assume he ran out of ammo very early in the standoff....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:mechanical limits by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Well, I would like to see you carrying around 12 revolvers.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  83. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we have a rate of mass shooting which is 10% of what you have guys. ...and it's even lower in Switzerland, where a majority of the population is armed.

  84. For those who think there qre no stupid questions by houghi · · Score: 2

    This is one stupid question and can be used as an example of a stupid question.

    No, it us unpossible. You can NEVER solve a social problem with a technical solution. And no gun control is NOT a solution (and I am all for gun control, which is different from forbidding them). He would be able to do it.

    And having MORE guns would eliminate the mass shottings, but will end killing more people. But that we do not see as those are not as important.

    You will not see 100 news articles about 1 person being killed, you will only see 1 about the 50 shot by a lunatic.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  85. Could there be a technological solution? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Could there be a technological solution to the problem of mass shootings?

    Yes... mental health, universal background checks, universal rights to keep and bear arms, and kicking ISIS's ass...

  86. Brain Implants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aggression Dampening Sphere implants in the brain.

  87. Re:Technology can't stop these by tlambert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Such bullshit argument.

    Gun control is enforced everywhere in Europe, and we have a rate of mass shooting which is 10% of what you have guys.

    You don't have significant ethnic enclaves (well, until recently) that are large enough they can be insular from other ethnicities, without an international border being there.

    You also don't have historically based ethnic and racial economic disparity, many times enforced by economic and racial self segregation.

    That was a recent piece in the New York Times Magazine, about racial segregation of schools by regions within Brooklyn, which is largely self-imposed ("we want to live in NYC for no good reason") and economically imposed ("but we can only afford to live in this economically depressed area").

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06...

    Europe is just starting to have large scale emergent problems of the type that the U.S. has had for about 150 year (or 240 years, if you count Native Americans, or over 4 centuries, if you count the pre-constitutional United States as "the U.S.").

    Welcome to our world. Strap yourselves in, Europe: it's going to be a bumpy ride.

  88. The technology already exists, databases! by medavd · · Score: 1

    It is quite simple, create a database of people allowed to have weapons and mandatory consult the database before selling any weapon to any person. BTW like you have a license to drive, you should also have a license to carry a weapon.

    1. Re:The technology already exists, databases! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving is a privilege, Keeping and Bearing Arms is a right. There is a very distinctive difference. Learn it.

  89. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have a look at Australia, anyone of even moderate intelligence should be able to see that as it worked there it could work in the states.

  90. Yes it can. We have to destroy ISIS. by 2ms · · Score: 1

    Until ISIS gets destroyed rather than "contained", we can expect these mass murders by Islamic terrorists to continue on a nearly monthly basis. Paris was hardly six months ago. Now we have had San Bernadino, Belgium, and Orlando. That's hundreds of people mowed down and blown up by Islamists who want to destroy anyone who isn't Islamic.

    We have the technology to crush the Islamic State. Until we do it, this crap is not going to stop. Wake up USA and Europe. Face the issue and act. Innocent people are dying all over the place.

  91. Re:Technology can't stop these by doobydoobydoo · · Score: 1

    The big difference: Europe never allowed citizens to own guns the way the US does. Maintaining the gun control in Europe is much easier than introducing one in the US. In the US, it requires the taking back of a lot of guns, which is not likely to happen. Specially not the illegal ones.

    There are illegal weapons in Europe too. Granted it will take some time, but there's no reason why gun control couldn't be introduced in the US, with guns withdrawn, amnesties held, illegal weapons slowly uncovered. It's not going to be a quick process, and there will need to be a change of mindset over one or more generations, but the fact that there are lots of weapons about now doesn't mean the U.S. could *never* get to a situation where guns are rare.

  92. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like a huge improvement.

  93. No. by ArylAkamov · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You cannot use technology to solve a cultural/societal problem.

    Any attempt to do so will be nothing more than a "feel good" measure with no lasting impact.

    1. Re:No. by axewolf · · Score: 1

      Yes you can.

      It comes with a specific cost though:
      Freedom

    2. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this particular case, it could be solved with a mandatory cure for the gay.

  94. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many 2nd and 3rd generation moslems in your country and in Switzerland?

  95. Re: Technology can't stop these by garethjrowlands · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm a brit and I'm aware of two terrorist knife attacks on UK soil. There are more than in the US and there may be more that I couldn't recall and/or find on Google but I'd characterise the number of terrorist knife attacks as "some" rather than "quite a few". Casualties in the murder of Lee Rigby: one. Casualties in the Leytonstone Tube stabbing: one. These are serious but casualties aren't on the scale of 7/7 or Mumbai.

  96. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Norway is an interesting example, apart from Brevik there have been very little gun violence.
    If we look closer at the Breivik case we know that he assumed that he couldn't get a gun in Norway due to the strict gun control.
    Because of this he traveled to eastern Europe to try to acquire guns illegally. This failed since the criminals there thought that there was something off with the guy and refused to deal with him.
    He the tried to get guns legally in Norway and realized that the gun control weren't that strict at all.

    In fact, if Breivik hadn't been able to get guns legally the how would have been out of options. Perhaps he could have tried with a knife but I doubt he would have been able to kill many that way.

  97. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live in Europe, and quite a lot of criminals do own guns, especially those of the terrorist variety. Given that the Orlando attack was perpetrated by an Islamic terrorist, there's likely nothing that gun control could have done to prevent this. The ‘best’ that might have happened is that the attacker would have used a different weapon. Gun control didn't prevent Zaventem or Charlie Hebdo. (Note: gun control can and does prevent a lot of accidental deaths and suicides, but that style of gun control doesn't actually require the government to deny its citizens guns.)

  98. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Plus, a lot of civilian guns were taken by the Nazis. You can't beat German efficiency.

  99. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    High rate of gun ownership doesn't mean that there aren't gun control.
    Where I live there are plenty of people that owns hunting rifles. Partly because of the "strict" gun control people treat the guns with respect. They are locked in when not in use. You won't see some depressed teenager take dads gun to school and start killing people anytime soon. (Presumably. There haven't been any school shootings yet. Hopefully we won't see any at all.)

  100. The PTB rely on HUMAN FLESH in the FOOD SUPPLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The PTB rely on HUMAN FLESH in the FOOD SUPPLY to maintain their human appearance

    Human flesh exists in a lot of foods today. Sometimes it makes the news. These are PTB slip ups, and/or conditioning this reality.

    They rely on the consumption of human flesh to retain their human appearance. They all have the same scent. They exist from the bottom to the top of the pyramid. Some are bums, some are middle/upper class, some are those dancing for you on TV, in a web of deceit to keep your mind and body occupied.

    If you want to try and let one of them know that you know what they are, you might say to them:

    "This hamburger is really quite human"
    (inhale deeply) "This planet is filled with creatures which all smell the same"
    "I hope you enjoyed your flesh burger"
    "How long did your last regeneration period last?"
    "What office do you work for?"

    ############### COPY PASTE THIS EVERYWHERE AS MODS DELETE IT BECAUSE THEY KNOW IT'S TRUE! ###############

  101. My suggestion: by drolli · · Score: 1

    (i know this wont prevent shootings, but it will make them much less lethal):

    Weapons with enough firepower to kill humans should have a loading mechanism which requires opening and closing a number (e.g. 10) of screws manually and a 4-6 bullets maximum in one cartridge. (The idea actually comes from a safety mechanism for electrical circuits in coal mines).

    For self-defense 4-6bullets are enough. For hunting, the long reloading time does not matter. On the shooting range, reloading can happen as a service/automated.

    Exceptions should be allowed only for the military and the police.

    1. Re:My suggestion: by 2ms · · Score: 1

      Then they'll just use bombs like in Belgium. Same result.

    2. Re:My suggestion: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and it will only affect the guys that like to go out into the woods and cap off 30 rounds in rapid succession not hurting a soul except for some innocent trees or hill side.

    3. Re:My suggestion: by the_saint1138 · · Score: 1

      Like the other poster said, there's always another way to inflict violence, but also, your solution wouldn't even work for guns.

      Like the current "high-capacity" magazine bans, they are easily defeated with a little DIY knowledge. A plastic mold and some springs will let you make your own magazines.

      There's no weapon design that can prevent this kind of modification, and with a little additional metal-cutting ability, your 4-6 bullet cartridge is now fed from a large drum magazine.

      Lastly, 4-6 bullets is not enough for defense. In the movies the bad guys go down pretty easily, requiring only 1-2 shots before being down for good. In reality, the bad guys can keep fighting after being shot multiple times, sometimes for several minutes. Even a few seconds is all it takes for someone to stab you after you deplete your 4-6 bullets. I was recently reading an article on Master Sergeant Roy Benavidez, who kept fighting after sustaining 37 bullet, shrapnel, and bayonet wounds in Vietnam: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    4. Re:My suggestion: by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      Exceptions should be allowed only for the military and the police.

      Why? the 2nd amendment wants you to be able to fight against precisely these when a rogue force takes over power. You don't want to be shooting with a liability when the other side has more powerful weapon.

    5. Re:My suggestion: by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

      Then they'll just use bombs like in Belgium. Same result.

      Yep, it's the question that is wrong. Can technology prevent shootings? Answer: wrong question.

      Will technology help people overcome injury, that is, heal? Get that going on, and the shootings and the bombings will dwindle a bit.

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    6. Re:My suggestion: by airdweller · · Score: 1

      "Then they'll just use bombs like in Belgium. Same result."

      Different effort.

  102. profiling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    noun: profiling

            the recording and analysis of a person's psychological and behavioral characteristics, so as to assess or predict their capabilities in a certain sphere or to assist in identifying a particular subgroup of people.

  103. Here's a technological solution. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Allow the guards at these places to be armed. And keep some of these guys out of immediate line of site so an initial surprise burst of fire won't automatically take them out.

    Pretty much anything else is just mental masturbation and an extension of the fantasy that the world isn't a shitty place where bad things happen and people need to stop being so occupied with bullshit that they stop ignoring their personal safety.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  104. Plan A: Ban them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ban them:
    It's so simple, just ban semi-automatics. Why the fuck do you need to be able to pump out 20 rounds in ten seconds if it's not to mow down a bunch of people just like this arsehole did. A gun is a tool specifically designed for killing things. If you don't need to kill a bunch of people then you don't need a gun.

  105. Shooter Suppression System by mentil · · Score: 1

    I have a feeling that theater/club shootings are becoming a trend, since they're: dark, crowded, noisy, and confined. They're probably the softest target for mass-shooters, so concentrating efforts there makes the most sense, followed by schools. I suggest some kind of automated shooter-suppression system, mounted up high on the walls or ceiling, in a few spots in each room. It'd detect gunshots (filtering out ones coming from speakers), and use image analysis to determine where the gun is, and then suppress it, somehow. Some kind of disintegrating anti-materiel round, perhaps, which destroys the firearm. Shooting at someone's gun is discouraged normally, since you're likely to miss it, but if a robot with perfect aim is making the shot, why not? Alternatively, upon detecting a gunshot, it could discharge a flashbang type device at the shooter, or cause dozens of loaded pistols to lower from the ceiling on tethers (suggest this at an NRA meeting for shits and giggles!), fire a net, drop a section of the floor into a padded pit, launch a cease-and-desist letter in their direction while notifying the MPAA that they're infringing IP law, etc.
    In practice, I have a feeling that it'll be legally required to stop the music/movie/concert and slowly turn the lights on when a gunshot is detected.

    If a bulletproof fabric were invented (helical auxetics?), civilians in ordinary situations wouldn't wear it unless it were mandated to be woven into all clothes at a high enough concentration to significantly retard bullet penetration. In practice, such fabric will almost certainly be heavy enough that it wouldn't be put into lightweight clothes (t-shirts, sheer dresses etc.), and doesn't do anything about shooters (e.g. VT shooting) that specifically aim for the head at close range.

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
    1. Re:Shooter Suppression System by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a feeling that theater/club shootings are becoming a trend, since they're: dark, crowded, noisy, and confined.

      "Technological" solution: more doors. I.e. all walls consists of mostly doorways. When something nasty starts - people can flee in all directions. No queues as there are more emergency doors than seat rows anyway. Shooter(s) can't stand in a few important doorways and pick people off. They can still open fire, but then everybody run in panic, and anyone not hit already are gone.

    2. Re:Shooter Suppression System by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      Much easier to have the detection system immediately shut off music, turn on all the lights, ensure all exits are unlocked, and play a simple message such as "Active Threat, Evacuate". For schools, you go into lockdown (same thing in hospitals).

      More guns, less guns, mental health checks, wiping out ISIS, etc. are unlikely to really solve the problem, because guns are easy to obtain outside legal channels... and if they aren't then a psychopath can easily switch to another means. From the looks of things, it seems like the number of psychopaths on the streets is going up; I am not sure how long we can go under the assumption that these things are random or caused by some "enemy" a la 1984.

      To me, the highest priority is to limit what damage a "lone gunman" can do first. More active shooter training/planning is needed

  106. Re:Technology can't stop these by kaur · · Score: 1

    Plus, a lot of civilian guns were taken by the Nazis. You can't beat German efficiency.

    Soviet Union also tried to confiscate all guns.

    For a good reason - there was real armed opposition to Soviet rule in many member states, and the central government needed to prevent or destroy this. Nothing to do with home or civil violence.

  107. Using Tech to Stop Shootings by Maximus23 · · Score: 1

    Short answer: No. Long Answer: The only way tech would stop mass shootings of any form is if we put in some sort of control circuit into guns having them detect "No Firing Zones", at that point those circuits would just be removed. Or the shooters would stick to "old" guns. The correct answer is people need to be educated, taught common sense, and a decent sense of morality. That would require a change to the education system, instead of trying to focus on test scores by the droves, schools (and parents, and the community at large) need to be paying attention to not just Kids, but also the other adults in their community for troubled people, like this individual clearly was, pretty sure they all have been in one way or another.

  108. Were going at it all wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lone wolf shooters are easily detected by friends, family, employers when they see there rants, actions, and purchases of guns, ammo, and other things. But nobody says anything until after the attack and then it all becomes clear. Just look at the shear amount of money spent after 9-11 creating Homeland security, TSA, improvements in communications. All for naught in stopping these kinds of attacks. Even in a place like France where guns are way more regulated than the US we see that terrorists can easily find access to them and attack. So don't whine we need more gun regulations because it won't stop these kinds of people. We need the people who see a person going down that path of hatred to call out to authorities and not keep it to themselves. But here's the deal, we have to stop branding people as racist for doing so.

  109. Yes obvious by DrXym · · Score: 1
    Start by the law and a proper registration system that requires gun owners to be licensed, effectively background checked, required register every fire arm they own and which is tied into crime and mental health databases so they can be flagged when necessary.

    Or watch as this happens over and over again.

    1. Re:Yes obvious by Agripa · · Score: 1

      The gun owner who committed this act was licensed, had background checks run, and his firearms were effectively registered. Did you have a suggestion which would have made a difference in this case?

  110. Re:Technology can't stop these by Jesrad · · Score: 1

    Can confirm. Here in France gun control started during Nazi occupation. In fact quite a lot of Vichy-era disruptive measures (urban code, nationalized retirement funds, corporative orders, etc.) were kept as they were or expanded upon after WW2.

    --
    Maybe we deserve this world ?
  111. Some variation on the voight-kampff test? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Administered annually to gun owners? You might be able to start to see people sliding off into the sorts of thinking that allow them to see people not as human beings but as targets.

    1. Re:Some variation on the voight-kampff test? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Just handle it the way California handles concealed weapon permits; require "good cause" and then deny everybody except those with political connections. The courts just ruled that fine.

  112. Mental Health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most mass shooters have some serious mental condition. They shouldn't be on the street let alone carrying a deadly weapon.
    Fix the way you treat the mentally ill and the shootings will go down.

  113. Re:Technology can't stop these by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Key word is attempts.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  114. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gun murders per 100000 citizens.
    We can do the whole "correlation is not causation" thing here, but if it isn't gun control that makes the difference then it is something else.
    Perhaps it could just be the attitude towards guns? A lot of people thinks that guns is a way to solve problems.

    To me gun control seems to be the reasonable explanation. The other alternatives I've heard seems far fetched.

  115. Re:Nope by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    They have an incident like this maybe once a year, instead of two per month. So it appears to be going pretty well.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  116. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia.

    Government-enforced confiscation of guns is blatantly unconstitutional in the US.

    Not that being unconstitutional would stop Hillary! from using an even-more militarized police state to conduct such an act, or some self-styled "wise Latina" from signing off on it...

    Never mind the fact that the drop in Australian violence also corresponds to a massive increase in police forces.

  117. The answer comes from society by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

    In my opinion, there are two factors at play here: One is people thinking that their actions will gain them something and psychopaths.

    For the first, you "only" (it's hard...) need to make sure that people have something to live for. And you need to make sure that they don't risk losing that. In my opinion, terrorists succumb to the fundamentalist dogma because their lives are shit and/or they do not feel appreciated enough by their peers without proving themselves.

    Modern Christianity is often about the love of Jesus and therefor the love for your neighbor. When this is actually lived, I doubt very much that someone growing up like that will ever become a terrorist. Much too often it's about something else, though. Too often it's about "if you do X, which I don't like and I believe Jesus does not like, surely Jesus will stop loving you and therefore I will stop loving you because I love Jesus more than I love you".

    Imagine a child growing up like that knowing that their parents, and later their peers, will oust them unless they conform. The need for your peers' approval is strong in humans.

    We're all about individuality today but only as long as it's the individuality we approve of. Look at what happens if someone honestly says they feel uncomfortable around blacks, jews or what have you. Instead of saying "That's okay. As long as you let them live in peace, you are entitled to not liking them" we want them in therapy and/or sensitivity training, the earlier the better.

    Hell, look at the pedophile witch hunts. Instead of recognizing what poor bastards those people are, never going to be able to enjoy their sexuality because it inherently conflicts with the well-being of others... what happens instead is we even make cartoon drawings uf underage people illegal to sexualize. I mean deny the starving man his rotten potatoes, why don't we.

    If some loner isn't bothering anyone and slowly dying inside, we might have him ostracized even more by punishing the bullies but when was the last time you saw someone sitting down with the kid and having a hot-dog with them and talking about life in general?

    My opinion is that we are too preoccupied with categorizing people on race, sexuality, gender, money, religion and so on, we just don't have the time and mental energy to just walk over there and provide company. Hell, the debates I've had in my head on how it may look if I went and did X right now, even though X was a perfectly human comfort to offer. I myself have been trained so much to never show weakness and never offend, I am almost incapable of what I've written about here.

    YMMV. I hear in the US people re actually much friendlier, if more superficial, than around here.

  118. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, hunting rifles. In weapon lockers.

  119. Re:Technology can't stop these by nikkipolya · · Score: 1

    In Sunday's attacks the gun that was used was just a means to an end. The end was clear to the perpetrator. To terrorize and kill *infidels*, *to obey the order of god in order to secure a place in heaven*. The perpetrator would have used another means at another place may be, to realize his end. BTW, 3D printers can print guns as was already covered here on slashdot many times. In fact Defense Distributed designed a 3D printable gun that was similar to AR-15, that lasted nearly 650 rounds. So gun control will only take us so far.

    I think its uneven development of the world and distribution of wealth. What ever be the reasons for it, but that is driving people insane and allowing them to become scapegoats at the hands of religious leaders.

  120. Betteridge says... by Megane · · Score: 1

    ...No. Next question in a headline?

    --
    #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  121. That won't stop mass killing! by olddoc · · Score: 1

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Back in the 1970s homophobes murdered gay people by arson. If you stopped all mass shootings, you would still have mass killing by arson. There would still be attacks by driving SUVs into people.... The problem is violent and hateful people.

    --
    Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
    1. Re:That won't stop mass killing! by airdweller · · Score: 1

      The "but they will do something else to kill people" argument. At-a-boy! The cookie jar is in the kitchen.

  122. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia had 4 mass shootings prior to changing its gun laws.

    20 years after, the total is still 4. Do the maths

  123. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gun murders per 100000 citizens. We can do the whole "correlation is not causation" thing here, but if it isn't gun control that makes the difference then it is something else. Perhaps it could just be the attitude towards guns? A lot of people thinks that guns is a way to solve problems.

    To me gun control seems to be the reasonable explanation. The other alternatives I've heard seems far fetched.

    Look at who kills who, and where.

    The answer lies there.

    You aren't even looking at an accurate correlation. Anything you say after that need not be bothered with.

  124. stop promoting guns and invisible friends by dominux · · Score: 2

    Bit of an innovative idea, but maybe lets try making it a little harder to get guns and stop promoting the idea that it is OK for an adult to have an invisible friend that talks to them and tells them who to hate. The current approach to the invisible friend problem seems to be to say "oh, I have the same invisible friend and they are totally nice" or "This bad person seems to have the wrong invisible friend, mine is totally nice". These are both unacceptable and fucking stupid responses to religious violence. It is not OK for an adult to abdicate their responsibility for their own ethical position to a supernatural entity and a book of hate. It is not OK to normalise those who do.
    It is not OK to hate LGBT people. It is not OK to say "hate the sin and love the sinner" that isn't anywhere near good enough. It is not OK to send "thoughts and prayers" because in doing that you are promoting and normalising the position of having an invisible friend that hates people.
    Yes, it should also be less trivial to obtain battlefield weapons, and we should stop normalising the ownership of guns, but we should do that in addition to challenging the ridiculous medieval beliefs that are distancing people from reality, gun control won't implement hate control but we should do it anyway.

    1. Re:stop promoting guns and invisible friends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you put on your fedora, atheistard? I thought you were supposed to grow out of atheism by the time you're 17.

  125. Yes, it exists already by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    Except it is being used to promote all the senseless violence that people watch all the time glorifying killing and beating the crap out of each other. You need to turn that shit off. It's the same technology used to exclude people as if they are not fit to belong culturally. They're the ones thet end up going into your schools, nightclubs and shopping malls killing people.

    Add to it the commercials with billions of dollars worth of psychology behind them to fill people full of false ideals to buy buy buy things they do not need, politicians saying it's domestic terror when it is mass murder and nothing really changes and you arrive at the common point, media, television. Empty and inane, everyone else ends up with a feeling of hopelessness inside.

    You already have the technology, it's just being used to program people that weapons and violence are the solution to any problem - go watch a documentary instead, better yet use the time for a real education or try reading a book. Gun laws won't change, media won't change so another spate of mass murders is inevitable, I am sorry to say.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  126. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No it didn't , police forces are about the same size as they were before the gun law change in Australia

  127. Re:Nope by Z80a · · Score: 1

    Well, you can make it illegal, but can you actually stop it from being distributed?
    As i said on another post, right now you can buy cocaine on your own city, and won't be even that hard.
    And you know how many trillions of dollars were spent worldwide trying to get rid of it, don't you?

    Same dudes will just put "and now selling guns too!" on their signs.

  128. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Such bullshit argument.

    Gun control is enforced everywhere in Europe, and we have a rate of mass shooting which is 10% of what you have guys.

    Criminal or not, anyone that carry a gun without a license goes right to jail, that's it. No more complicated than this.

    And you will, miraculously, you mass shooting rate will go down.

    The problem is, that's "racism", because in the US it's almost always blacks doing that, not other folks. (A few "white hispanics" and asian gangs too.) When you start to lean on them and get into that project, it will be stopped.

    Also, mr bright guy, mass shootings and who carries concealed weapons illegally are two groups that rarely have members of both. Your plan would do nothing to stop mass shootings. There are so few mass shooters that there's no chance of catching them with illegal concealed weapon charges, even if they carry daily.

    Chicago's trash, will kill more than 50 people in three weekends this summer, and wound far more than that. Nobody gives a shit. Because, they expect it. That stuff is a natural side-effect of the democrats' kept voting livestock in the area. Democrats created that situation because they get almost all the votes out of it, they are using the blacks to get votes.

  129. Re:Technology can't stop these by mrlinux11 · · Score: 2

    Gun Control will not stop mass killings, If a person has decided they want to kill a bunch of people and guns are not available to them, they will use motor vehicles/home made bombs/planes. The biggest mass killings in the US did not involve guns, just box cutters and Jet aircraft.

  130. Re: Technology can't stop these by GNious · · Score: 1

    The last shooting w/ multiple victims in Denmark (that I'm aware of), used a stolen assault rifle, that wasn't subject to the full extent of the gun-control laws. That particular oversight was/is being addressed.

  131. Ban of AR-15's Allowed in Nightclubs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty sure most clubs have a no AR-15 policy. Seriously people. You think he just walked in with that thing? Here's how we fix it. From now on all nightclubs must require a "No AR-15's Allowed" sign above the entrance. That should do the trick. You know just like all those "Deer Crossing" signs being moved to low traffic areas so all the deer can cross safely.

  132. NOPE. Next question by monkeyzoo · · Score: 2

    Can Technology Prevent Shootings?

    No.

    Actually, maybe it could if it led to the extinction of humans. Then there would be no more mass shootings.

    1. Re:NOPE. Next question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technology cannot keep people from committing acts of violence.

      Laws cannot make people moral.

      Punishment is no real deterrence. If it was, drawing and quartering would have never gone out of style.

      You must seek your solutions elsewhere.

    2. Re:NOPE. Next question by RicktheBrick · · Score: 2

      There has got to be a way to prevent shooting like this. I can think of a couple of ways. How about filling the nightclub with a breathable smoke so no one can see and than giving the police infrared glasses? How about filling it up with intense white light so nobody can see and giving the police infrared glasses? How about heat lamps that could fool the shooters infrared glasses but give out a signal that only the police infrared glasses could detect? There are ways to defeat the shooter but they would be expensive and since incidents like this are still rare, people will go on thinking it will never happen to them. Over 99% of the defenses would never be used but if one were it might deter shooters from trying.

    3. Re:NOPE. Next question by monkeyzoo · · Score: 1

      There could be ways to prevent some of these. I agree. But the question was if *technology* could prevent them.

      That said, your idea doesn't sound like prevention; it sounds like a response to an already occuring mass shooting. Would it take any less time to deploy smoke and special glasses than police? I don't see how.

    4. Re:NOPE. Next question by sumdumass · · Score: 2

      Over 300 people in a small or confined area. Whether the shooter can see or not, randomly pointing towards the sound (people fleeing) and shooting will have a large success rate.

      But I'm not sure it matters. If you could not get a gun, you would build a bomb. A claymore mine or two would have deviated this place too.

  133. silly question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If he was the one that turned it on, then yes, he is responsible for the actions performed.

    Of course, Asimovs first law of robotics was not violated - as it was never implemented in the first place to be violated.

  134. Replace accountability with technology? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is nice. To deal with people is difficult, especially with those who don't share your set of values and standards, and beliefs. So let's create technology which deals with them automatically! For instance, prevent shootings in our streets by ultimately killing poor people with autonomous drones, right after a deep A.I. determined that poverty and deviant beliefs cause violence and death. Exactly! How are we supposed to build technology which makes ethical decisions FOR US if we don't know how to deal with ethics ourselves?

    What a stupid yes/no question! No it can't! It's more complicated than that!

    It can, however, help us to eradicate REASONS for shootings, but that's not what pays off for local economy, hmm. What shall we do? If you want to live long and prosper, you need to take other people into account, because happiness doesn't come out of nowhere. NOTHING is for granted. Not even your basic human rights. Furthermore, technology sometimes invades the natural ways of things. If we're not careful enough we might destroy a certain balance and everything goes to shit, although we initially meant it good. Sometimes, things that help in short terms might hurt in long term very very badly. Help is like a drug. It makes dependent if brought the wrong way.

    Things aren't bad enough though. At some breaking point people will have the desire to fundamentally change how the things run, because most of the time they will be confronted with all the problems they created. There is a way to solve ALL the problems. But people disagree on which problems are worse. Maybe let's regard all people's problems? Because only then you might have a chance to take all people into account.

  135. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by KermodeBear · · Score: 2

    You could remove all guns and mass killings will still occur.

    Mix some bleach and ammonia and throw it around. Put together an explosive. Drive a car over the sidewalk. Poison the water supply. Release weaponized viral agents into a high population area.

    The problem here isn't firearms, or cars, or machetes. The problem is an ideology that encourages and glorifies murder of people who don't agree with you.

    --
    Love sees no species.
  136. Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could use a computer to draft a bill that outlaws guns.

  137. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have a point about the correlation of fewer guns and less violence, but you undermine it severely when you claim "no shootings".

    Do you remember the Paris attacks?

  138. Re:Technology can't stop these by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    gun control can and does prevent a lot of accidental deaths and suicides, but that style of gun control doesn't actually require the government to deny its citizens guns.

    So how does it work? By allowing them to have guns but making them promise, scout's honour, that they'll be really careful and not point them at themselves?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  139. porcodio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do not sell weapons to civilians, especially offensive/assault weapons, is more effective...

  140. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If someone is bent on murder and mayhem, he or she will find a way to do it. Guns, knives, axes, explosives, poison gas, a club, a pointy stick, and so on are used and we can't ban them all, even if said ban could be enforced 100%, which it never can be.

  141. Technology and guns by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Also, the worst mass killing in a nightclub simply used gasoline to kill 87.

    I'd argue that there's a fair number of cases where the usage of firearms probably saved lives - because when terrorists go for arson or explosives they frequently kill more people.

    Worst school attack, fatality wise? Explosives
    Worst night club attack? Arson
    etc...

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Technology and guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to push a little harder. I still see your tail bone sticking out of the sand.

    2. Re:Technology and guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we're basing everything on body count, maybe we should ban pyrotechnics (or just Great White).

    3. Re:Technology and guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much harder to get close enough to your ear for you to understand him?

    4. Re:Technology and guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ban Fire!

  142. Re:Yes it can. We have to destroy ISIS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have the technology to crush the Islamic State

    How did a five year old even manage to hack this slashdot account?
    I can't wait to hear your awesome plan. Let me guess...become a totalitarian, mass surveillance police state? Oops..too late.
    Hmmm...you want to deport or exterminate everyone that now is or could possibly be in the future vaguely associated directly or indirectly to ISIS?
    That's fucking genius!
    Has Donald Trump announced a running mate yet because you could well be the man for the job.

  143. Typical American question by dskoll · · Score: 1

    This is so typical. We are unwilling or unable to make the hard societal changes, so let's look for a magic solution, a technological quick fix.

    No, there is no technological solution. There's probably not even any solution at this point. The US is so flooded with guns and the NRA is so powerful that gun control is essentially impossible and would be useless to try to enforce.

    Welcome to "unintended side effects" of your Second Amendment. Basically, your society is fucked.

  144. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > You also don't have historically based ethnic and racial economic disparity, many times enforced by economic and racial self segregation.

    You never went to a sub-urban area of Paris or Rome to say this.

  145. No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As stated elsewhere, the answer is obviously no. Ban firearms in a venue, then similar havoc could be created with a pick ax or a chainsaw, for instance. Ban all metal, and a sharpened wooden stake or plastic pipe could be used, or some common household chemicals introduced into the air conditioning, etc. etc. etc.

    There are a lot of issues at play and controlling one (guns) will not alter the others. I've seen some lists how a vast majority of American shooters the past couple of decades were on some sort of psychological meds. Not sure this was the case with Pulse.

    Then of course I (personally) have a big gripe with the "nanny state", where it seems prevalent that the "babies" in the state want the state to coddle them and create a safe environment. This is a part of the "social contract" and works well when everyone agrees, unfortunately a very small minority of people inside the state don't agree and now they have much more leeway to cause havoc that they would otherwise have.

    One of the solutions (not foolproof, mind you, just shifting the odds slightly) I have chosen for myself is in fact technological: I do choose to concealed carry a firearm with me when in society: going to play sports, drink coffee, to church, ... everywhere I take a tool with me that might enable me to not stand like a hare in the headlights when something like that starts to happen. If a venue won't have me, then that's too bad for the venue. I'm quite happy to lock my tool(s) away in the provided storage facility and go through the metal detector - if they have it, like some casinos in my locale. But a notice on a door alone does not keep guns out. That notice is just a cop-out CYA for the supposedly "nanny" establishment.

    I might add that I'm not in the USA and my country does have some strict gun control laws - stricter than the USA. Also, concealed carry seems to be the norm and open carry is frowned upon here. And the nanny mindset is getting more prevalent. But while I can, I'll do what I can for myself since that is my first line.

  146. No. Read the statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If there was the slightest bit of credibility to the notion that more guns solve that problem, then most shootings would end with "bad guys" being shot by "good guys".

    That simply is not the case, however. Look at the statistics on mass shootings in the US; the FBI released a big study on them a while back. How do most shooters reach their end on the day they are shooting up their chosen target? Most often at their own hands. If not that way, then by being shot by police. Next most likely scenario is by unarmed civilians - and this is the case just as often in red states as in blue states. It is exceptionally rare for a shooter to be taken down by an armed civilian, in fact they surrender far more often than that happens.

    And what good would armor do? Have you seen useful bullet proof helmets that could be worn regularly? No, of course not as none exist. Look at how many people are shot in the head at mass shootings. On top of that the caliber of choice for many mass shootings is .223, which is high velocity and capable of penetrating a lot of common vests. A vest can stop a 9mm but not a .223.

  147. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > The caveat here, is that the European countries with the lowest crime rates have the highest rates of gun ownership, as well.

    Number ? sources outside of the NRA ?

    A country with on of the lowest homicide rate in Europe is Norway ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_intentional_homicide_rate ). A country where even the cops do not wear guns.

  148. Re:Technology can't stop these by grumbel5969 · · Score: 1

    Steeling a gun, smuggling it or trying to obtain it any other way gives a chance to catch those people before they can do any harm. As long as guns are legal and easy to obtain on the other side you can't do much until the moment some crazy person pulls the trigger.

  149. Re:Yes it can. We have to destroy ISIS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Terrorism" will never end, that is the point. Throughout history there have always been terrorists (also called anarchists, separatists, rebels, etc). Attempting to "destroy" them is futile, limiting their influence, and removing drives that cause a significant portion of a populace to relate with them (thugs with badges, poverty, collateral damage, drone bombings, etc) and bringing to justice those who commit acts of violence are the only way to limit its impact. We've been trying the "crush the "islamic state" (AKA Al Qaeda, Taliban, Hezbollah, Hamas, etc) for over a decade and by pretty much every metric the ham fisted efforts to do so have only made them larger.

  150. Perspective Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's have a little perspective here.
    50 unnecessary deaths are both a shame and a waste but in the grand scheme of things, meaningless.
    30,000 gun related deaths per year are a problem
    BUT
    250,000 deaths per year caused by medical errors http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/05/03/476636183/death-certificates-undercount-toll-of-medical-errors is a much bigger problem. Almost 1 in 1000 of the US population

    1. Re:Perspective Needed by ledow · · Score: 1

      You can't prevent medical errors. They are, quite literally, errors that - even with the best of controls, training and supervision, still happen. By definition something went wrong that wasn't supposed to.

      You can, however, prevent 370 MASS SHOOTINGS IN THE LAST YEAR. Please compare and contrast with the UK - 4 "mass shootings" in the last decade.

      For context - more US people have died by the hands of private guns since World War 2 than in all the wars since then.

      It doesn't matter what strawman you pull out - you're voluntarily allowing mass shootings to happen so that you are allowed a gun yourself. If you don't see the irony in that statement, no amount of statistics are going to sway you.

    2. Re:Perspective Needed by jdunn14 · · Score: 1

      You can and we do prevent medical errors. Look up any of the research on surgical checklists for a very specific example of preventing medical errors, but there are many others. We may not be able to prevent ALL medical errors, but we also can't prevent ALL mass shootings. There's room for improvement on both fronts.

    3. Re:Perspective Needed by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      About 2/3 of gun deaths in America are suicides. In countries that have banned or severely restricted guns, long-term suicide rates are unchanged. Therefore, 2/3 of those deaths should not be counted when we're talking about "gun violence". In addition, this comment breaks the relative risks down; if you are in America and aren't in a gang, your risk is about on par with most of Europe.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
  151. So, Barack, how should the LBGT community change? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From Barack Obama's address:

    And that He give us all the strength to be there for them, and the strength and courage to change.

    Just how should the LGBT community change to avoid upsetting radical Muslims?

  152. only voting can prevent shootings. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because you can't do EVERYTHING does not mean you can't do something.

    If you think that gun control won;t work just look at EVERY OTHER FUCKING COUNTRY IN THE WORLD.

    But you Americans won;t do anything about it. Don;t worry gun nuts you're safe. Mass murder is part of the job creation policies.

    1. Re:only voting can prevent shootings. by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      What does it mean for gun control to "work"?

      When presenting data from foreign countries, anti-gun people talk ONLY about firearms-related crime. Sweeping gun control measures would indeed reduce that one particular type of crime. What about all other violent crime however? What about property crime?
      Focusing only on crimes committed with guns is a ridiculous metric because it ignores the well-documented deterrent effect of private firearms ownership. If gun control means fewer shooting victims, but more violent assault, home invasions, carjackings and rapes because people are defenseless against criminals is your gun control "working"?

  153. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Here in France gun control started during Nazi occupation" I think that says it all.

  154. This source disagrees with you by zerofoo · · Score: 2

    These guys keep an archive of defensive gun uses:

    http://www.thetruthaboutguns.c...

    Of course - you will say that weren't spree killings or mass shootings - well it could be that a "mass shooting" was prevented in many of these single instances of defensive gun uses.

    I've noticed that many people who claim guns are useless for defense are not gun owners or have never carried one for self-defense.

    1. Re:This source disagrees with you by dywolf · · Score: 1

      and these guys maintain a database of gun incidents: so far for 2016 we have:

      Total Number of Incidents 23,308
      Number of Deaths 5,965
      Number of Injuries 12,249
      Number of Children (age 0-11) Killed/Injured 257
      Number of Teens (age 12-17) Killed/Injured 1,276
      Mass Shooting 136
      Officer Involved Incident Officer Shot/Killed 146
      Officer Involved Incident Perpetrator Shot/Killed 370
      Home Invasion 981
      Defensive Use 718
      Accidental Shooting 1,044

      Defensive uses are vastly outnumbered, representing only 3% of the total.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    2. Re:This source disagrees with you by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Unless the gun is fired, they don't count it as a defensive use.

      Reference to a blatantly dishonest site noted though.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  155. As in France? by tomhath · · Score: 1

    Someone determined to commit mass murder will find a way. Don't blame guns.

    1. Re:As in France? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the barrier to doing so is much higher when you can't just walk into a store and get a legal assault rifle. Making a home made bomb is actually pretty difficult, making one small enough to walk into a nightclub is very hard. Mass killing with a knife or axe is very hard too.

  156. France and Belgium? by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    France and Belgium have huge gun control - way more comprehensive than the US - yet they have mass shootings as well.

    Do you honestly believe that terrorists looking for a body count will obey gun control laws?

    1. Re:France and Belgium? by dywolf · · Score: 1

      this is why I personally advocate against making any crimes illegal.

      after all.
      criminals ignore the law anyway.
      so why criminalize anything?
      --

      Seriously though.

      Number of mass shootings in France last year: 1
      Number of mass shooting in the US in just the past 6 months: 136

      I'd say gun control is working pretty good for them.
      Gun control may not prevent 100% of shootings.
      But >99% is still pretty damn good.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  157. Re:Technology can't stop these by Sique · · Score: 1
    While the Nazis indeed singled out groups which were considered Staatsfeinde and denied them the right to bear arms (Jews, convicted homosexuals, Sinti and Roma...), their idea about weapons in private hands was more aligned with the ideas of the NRA: Everyone considered "trustend and reliable" had the right to bear arms (Reichswaffengesetz of 1938). Only short guns were regulated, rifles and munition were not. So everyone (except jews, convicted homosexuals etc.pp.) was allowed to buy as many rifles as he wanted and stock up as much muniton as he could pay for.

    Gun control existed in Germany before 1933, but this was imposed by the Treaty of Versailles, which after World War I also tried to control the weapons in civilian hands, because it was feared that Germany was trying to bypass limits on the weaponization of its army by handing the weapons to apparent civilians and form militias to replace the regular army.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  158. IMHO, no. by dvaldenaire · · Score: 1

    Because there could be no good technical solution to a human problem. If there were, then humans will just stop being humans and start being some kind of half robots.

    Of course, it could be. After all, it's a choice about what kind of society we want. A choice i won't make, but i am not i position of choosing anything, anyway.

    --
    What does it mean, "appended to the end of comments you post"
  159. Deport Islam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or just deport a culture that doesn't fit in?

    We don't need more surveillance thank you.

  160. big brother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then the conservatives would call this too much of a government on the people and balk at their eroding rights to bear arms.
    Why not just take a written test to see if you're not an idiot to own a weapon? Same way we take driving test? There's too much burden on the FBI (or whichever agency) to tease out behavior from passive (or dare I say, big data) surveillance data. Plus, we know how inaccurate that is, even for consumer retail marketing where millions are literally being spent just to figure out whether you're pregnant based on what you buy.

  161. Countermeasures by rkerr32257 · · Score: 1

    Technological countermeasures to be used in public places have to be affordable, practical, and non-lethal. If deployed accidentally, they cannot cause serious injury or places like Pulse would never install them, much less deploy. Too much liability and risk of ending the business. What options remain, particularly in larger arenas where thousands gather? It's a 3-D world, so gated security can only do so much. Terrorists can parachute into a stadium, for example. Gas? Dangerous to some, so liability. Useless on weaponized drones, which now much be in any practical countermeasures conversation. Super-sticky goo? It would prevent attacker from moving, but also his targets from getting away. Works on both people and machines. Sonic weapons to stun nervous system like a stun grenade, but installed in ceiling? I don't know anything about these or their risks, so have no opinion to offer on any facet of their use. EMT for consumer electronics would usually work. An informed technical attacker would have shielding. Really there's only so much you can do, and so many ethical viewpoints to consider. What's more important, early intervention, or freedom from unwarranted arrest? Societies have to not only list their values, but rank them in priority, agreeing what law to live under for the best of the most, if that's the chosen value.

    1. Re:Countermeasures by rkerr32257 · · Score: 1

      EMP*

  162. bio-engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technological solutions exist, but can sound a little drastic at first glance.
    For instance, you could bio-engineer all humans to be immortal. It must be immortal and not just resistant against gun shots, because then the shooters will just move from assault rifle to grenade launchers or portable nukes. This might be a multi billion year process, and probably influences the definition of 'human' as well.
    Come to think of it, you could also replace the entire human population with robots programmed according the laws of robotics. Think Skynet. The transfer period will still see some shootings, but after full rollout it should become quite.
    I think many more technological solutions might exist...

  163. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always love this argument. Do you realize how silly it sounds when taken into complete context? You realize that most non-suicide gun violence in the US is carried out by drug cartels, right? So your argument is by removing legal channels to get firearms, you will remove them from groups of people who specialize in smuggling things which are illegal to acquire as it is? Seriously stop and think about that for a second. Why wouldn't they just increase the number of firearms they smuggle? It's not drastically different then what they do now. Banning firearms will remove some gun homicides and the suicides will have to resort to other means (there's not even correlation of gun availability to suicide rate so arguing that it would lower suicide rates is quite ignorant), but when the vast majority of gun violence is tied to the drug trade there's very little evidence that banning them would do anything. You'd do better to drop gun deaths by legalizing drugs and eliminating the drug cartels.

  164. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have they considered hiring larger and taller policemen ?

  165. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It IS true, if not in a legal sense than certainly in a practical one. There are over 800 million privately owned firearms in the USA. It is FAR too late to ban them, even though that is the only solution.

    It will end when they're all done shooting each other.

  166. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Small correction. Europe did not allow their subjects to own guns, only the upper class. Shit got real in 1776 when the subjects managed to develop their own gun industry.

  167. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh no? You may be thinking of Switzerland, but there is a fine line between "gun ownership" and "gun possession". Namely army-issued guns. That's a lot more like the "well-armed militia" in the 2nd Amendment than the "every idiot should be able to play with lethal weapons as he likes" policy in the U.S.

  168. Re:No. Read the statistics by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Mass shooters killing themselves is a product of mass shooters that engage people that are armed don't live long enough to be mass shooters. They get dropped before they kill enough people to be considered mass shooters.

    Its ironic that you called your post statistics because you didn't consider how your stats would be biased.

    As to armor, I'm giving you two technological things that professionals use to deal with this situation and which are statistically proven to be very effective. You don't like them? Buy running shoes, buy a potted plant disguise, or die like a rat.

    I really don't care. My point was to talk about technological solutions that work as evidenced by the professional opinion and the statistics. You are personally free to do whatever.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  169. Gun Control by manu144x · · Score: 1

    Before jumping on me, please try to argue with my ideas, and not with me personally. I do not own a gun, I am not even american, but I have visited the US a few times, and I work with americans on a daily basis.

    One thing I know, back from when I was a child, was that guns are sort of like nuclear weapons. If you know somebody had a gun, or that there even was the slightest possibility that they had one, criminals would normally avoid them. Usually it was foreign businessmen, or off-duty law enforcement, but by default, the mentality I saw in every stupid ass punk that would try to make a living by stealing.

    I don't think the average pro gun confiscation american realizes that even though criminality seems high now, how high it will be if everybody was sure nobody had guns. They keep bringing the Europe argument, but in most large cities in Europe, people don't go out after a certain hour, and it's something relatively normal. Yes, the suburbs are safer, but only because usually they have a dedicated police patrol around the clock (perks of living in rich neighborhoods).

    But still, you will never hear on the news about the fact that there were let's say 10 houses broken into this week. It's just not news, and people get the (mistaken) idea that wow how safe it must be there, compared to us where some guy broke into 1 house in a month and got shot.

    Think about all the mixed religions, languages, and people who are in the US from all over the world. The average criminal would never risk getting shot for a mere wallet let's say. Of course not, he's not stupid. But where there are no guns, even $50 is well worth the trouble.

    Normally what I noticed in that in the US crimes involving guns are incredibly broadcasted on the news for some reason, and I don't mean mass-shootings, I mean some robbery gone wrong, some idiots starting a fight and devolving to guns, and so on. That kinda drives the average person to believe there is a gun problem.

    Just my 2 cents, as a non american, I think banning guns would skyrocket petty crimes. I know they exist even now, but still, probably not even close.

    I just read today, on the UK motorway, lorry trucks are being robbed and destroyed using knives and rocks, and if you call the police, they won't even show up because it's not a violent crime, it's just stealing, and they will come when they have time to certify the damage and give you a paper you can take to the insurance and that's it.

  170. Gun Control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a stupid question. Yes, technology can help. Get people to support gun control and you'll prevent mass shootings.

  171. Listen for "Allahu akbar", then you'll likely by mpercy · · Score: 0

    have the proper shooter.

  172. Fully 1/3 are suicides by mpercy · · Score: 2

    It seems that what we really need is a bunch of new laws that will make it very very very illegal to commit suicide. With double penalties for committing suicide with a gun.

    1. Re:Fully 1/3 are suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Need new laws requiring mandatory death penalty sentences for anyone attempting suicide. After all, it's attempted murder!!!

  173. "I thought it was part of the act or fireworks" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a start: instant identification of gunfire with ShotSpotter or similar. Then they can set the alarm off, stop the music- not sure if it would be better to bring up the lights (for easier exit) or kill them altogether (to not give the shooter targets). But they'll bitch about the cost, so pffft.

  174. Re:Technology can't stop these by Malc · · Score: 1

    Australia enacted gun control in 1996 and bought back guns to reduce the number in ciculation. Their murder has been dropping ever since.

  175. Look at who kills who, and where. by mpercy · · Score: 2

    Indeed!

    https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/c...

    In 2013, there were 5723 murders recorded in the FBI stats.

    https://www.nationalgangcenter...

    In 2012, there were 2,363 gang-related homicides (2103 data not provided yet it seems), but it seems fair that around 2,000 gang-related homicides occur every year. In other words, about 40% of all murders in the US are gang-related homicides. With an estimated 770,000 gang members accounting for 40% (about 2300) of all murders, the rest of the population (314.8M) produced about 3360 murders, or about 1.06 murders per 100,000 non-gang people. This is clearly on par with other countries who do not have similar gang problems.

    From the FBI numbers above, it also seems that black-on-black murders are quite disproportionately represented. At about 17% of the population, black-on-black murders were also about 40% of the total (2245). White-on-white murders were slightly higher as an absolute number (2,509) but there are 195.6M whites compared to 53.6M blacks. The numbers say that blacks murder blacks at 4.1 per 100,000; whites murder whites at about 0.77 per 100,000. Blacks also murdered 409 whites; whites murdered 189 blacks.

  176. And where? by mpercy · · Score: 1

    http://www.neighborhoodscout.c...

    The countdown for the Top 30 Murder Capitals of America:

    Rank City
    30 Chicago Heights, IL
    29 Baton Rouge, LA
    28 Buffalo, NY
    27 Hattiesburg, MS
    26 East Chicago, IN
    25 Birmingham, AL
    24 Desert Hot Springs, CA
    23 Compton, CA
    22 Myrtle Beach, SC
    21 Fort Pierce, FL
    20 Harvey, IL
    19 Bridgeton, NJ
    18 Flint, MI
    17 Rocky Mount, NC
    16 Pine Bluff, AR
    15 Petersburg, VA
    14 Newark, NJ
    13 Baltimore, MD
    12 Harrisburg, PA
    11 Jackson, MS
    10 Wilmington, DE
    9 Trenton, NJ
    8 Riviera Beach, FL
    7 New Orleans, LA
    6 Camden, NJ
    5 Detroit, MI
    4 Gary, IN
    3 St. Louis, MO
    2 Chester, PA
    1 East St. Louis, IL

    1. Re:And where? by dywolf · · Score: 2

      ah so even you realize that Chicago barely eve makes the list.
      and also for clearly showing that the cities at the top of the list are primarily located in red states/cities, and have less gun control and more guns.
      in particular, note the lack of cities with strict gun control.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    2. Re:And where? by mpercy · · Score: 1

      Sure except for all the Chicagoland locations--the City of Chicago proper might not be there, but the Chicago metro-area (aka Chicagoland), or as the Government calls it "Chicago Metropolitan Area Chicago-Naperville-Michigan City, IL-IN-WI CSA (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chicagoland_Counties.JPG) sure is well-represented:

      Rank City
      30 Chicago Heights, IL
      26 East Chicago, IN
      20 Harvey, IL
      4 Gary, IN

      And of course, the two Illinois cities here are subject to all the Illinois state laws, which are among the most restrictive in the country.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      California, New Jersey, and Maryland are #1, #2, and #7 most restrictive (IL is #9). Those 4 states account for more than 1/3 of the list.

      Rank City
      30 Chicago Heights, IL
      24 Desert Hot Springs, CA
      23 Compton, CA
      20 Harvey, IL
      19 Bridgeton, NJ
      14 Newark, NJ
      13 Baltimore, MD
      9 Trenton, NJ
      6 Camden, NJ
      1 East St. Louis, IL

    3. Re:And where? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      You need to check your list again. Using a red blue election map, 19 of the top 30 are in blue States, 7 of the top 10 are in blue States.

      If you look at Gary, Indiana (a State that historically was Blue and switched to Red for the last election) - a city that borders Illinois and Chicago (heck, East Chicago is right there in IN as well and is one of the cities on your list!) and is the "low cost drug" haven for most of Chicago, it would be 20 and 8.

      Likewise for St. Louis as a spillover from the leader, East St. Louis; that would bring the lists to 21 and 9, Blue vs. Red. Check the list - it's dominated by Blue states and Blue cities (with Gary, IN being one standout, as it's really a suburb of Chicago, and St. Louis being a standout from the spillover from East St. Louis).

      NJ and IL lead the list, accounting for 7 of the top 30 - and they are both solidly blue. The only solidly red States that have more than one entry are LA and MS; there are 6 multi-city blue states on the list...

      Hmm... 19/30, 7/10, 21/30, 6/8 - there's a trend here. Seems that blue States are about 2-3 times more likely to show up on this list...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  177. Alas not by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    " Is the answer smart gun technology?"

    No, only the Australian and British NO gun technology works, but you don't want that, so you'll have to live with this.

  178. Ship the 1M gang members in US to AUS by mpercy · · Score: 1

    And let's see how that changes?

    Gang-related murders within that 800K-1M subgroup accounts for about 1/2 of all murders in the US.

  179. Evidence? by ebcdic · · Score: 1

    What makes you think that you can't use technology to solve a cultural problem?

  180. Re:Technology can't stop these by mpercy · · Score: 1

    "more aligned with the ideas of the NRA: Everyone considered "trustend [sic] and reliable" had the right to bear arms"

    Umm...that concepts predates the NRA by 100 years or so...

    "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

  181. wrong question by Jon.Burgin · · Score: 1

    How unusual that someone wants to address this logically. Ok, let's start. First, list all the causes of death. What? Shootings are way, way, way down the list? hmmm, let us address those other things first.

  182. On the futility of banning guns by Eosha · · Score: 1

    Here's the thing: guns are REALLY SIMPLE MACHINES. A gun can have fewer moving parts than a ballpoint pen. You can make a lethal (though inefficient and awkward) gun in the plumbing department of Home Depot. Any competent machine shop or home hobby machinist can make a basic gun with tools they already own. Even a more sophisticated automatic or semi-automatic gun can be made with relative ease; it's only things like superb accuracy or high reliability that are harder to engineer. Which means that guns ARE NOT GOING AWAY, EVER. They may be harder to buy legally, but we've seen how well that keeps people from drugs. Add to that the fact that if you're hellbent on killing folks, there are other ways to do it. Pipe bombs, poison koolaid, even just plowing a truck through a crowd... there will never be a shortage of ways to kill people.

    --
    I have a girlfriend whose name doesn't end in .JPG
  183. Re: Technology can't stop these by Izuzan · · Score: 1

    You mean like straw purchasers in the US. The ones the justice dept gives slaps on the wrist to.

  184. Re: Technology can't stop these by Izuzan · · Score: 1

    Confiscated. Being forced to take a extreamly low amount for your legaly owned possession is still confiscation. (Yes forced, either take our low amount or we come take the gun)

  185. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many European countries do a better job a of taking care of their mentally ill, which is a much larger factor.

  186. And hand-set screw presses--no TV, radio, Web by mpercy · · Score: 1

    If we're going down that route, then 1st amendment rights would by extension be required to be limited to technology available in 1787?

  187. The Answer is No by TheAngryCat · · Score: 1

    The only thing that can prevent more shooting is more guns, when people are armed the people around them are polite and respectful. Why do any of you think those terrorists go to places where guns are not allowed? Dah...

  188. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apart from not being entirely true, you could also look at Australia. After the Port Arthur Massacre they imposed strict gun control, to great effect.

  189. Re:Technology can't stop these by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't have significant ethnic enclaves

    Europe had "significant ethnic enclaves" when Americans were still hunting buffalo and building burial mounds.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  190. Re:Bullet Control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey dumbass, guess what? The NRA has for years and years tried to get mandatory prison sentencing for any crime committed with a firearm. It's you and your ilk who has opposed this.

    Who has opposed that? Three-strikes and 10-20-Life rules are pretty common across the country, even California, which has been subjected to Federal court orders to fix their prison system, has those rules.

    The problem is the NRA won't PAY for it.

  191. The gun deaths per capita in countries by mpercy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/c...

    In 2013, there were 5723 murders recorded in the FBI stats.

    https://www.nationalgangcenter...

    In 2012, there were 2,363 gang-related homicides (2103 data not provided yet it seems), but it seems fair that around 2,000 gang-related homicides occur every year. In other words, about 40% of all murders in the US are gang-related homicides. With an estimated 770,000 gang members accounting for 40% (about 2300) of all murders, the rest of the population (314.8M) produced about 3360 murders, or about 1.06 murders per 100,000 non-gang people. This is clearly on par with other countries who do not have similar gang problems.

    From the FBI numbers above, it also seems that black-on-black murders are quite disproportionately represented. At about 17% of the population, black-on-black murders were also about 40% of the total (2245). White-on-white murders were somewhat higher as an absolute number (2,509) but there are 195.6M whites compared to 53.6M blacks.

    The numbers say that blacks murder blacks at 4.1 per 100,000; whites murder whites at about 0.77 per 100,000. Blacks also murdered 409 whites; whites murdered 189 blacks.

    If we focused on eliminating the actual criminal gang element, we'd have European-level murder rates.

    1. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean - if we had an all WHITE country, we'd have 'white country' level murder rates.

      But we can't have that!

    2. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the amount of non-criminal gang related gun crime in the US is the same as European level murder rates including our gangs? That's not really something to be proud of now, is it?

    3. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Keep bringing in immigrants from the 3rd world. You will find out how wrong you are. You don't have many 'tribal' gangs, yet.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    4. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the stats for 2103 will be available in 87-92 years I'd think.

    5. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by TheOldestGit · · Score: 1

      HOW many?

        1.06 murders per 100,000

      I happilly live in the Isle of Man with ~80.000 others.

      We've just had the TT again, with an extra 30-40K visitors - the last murder I can recall was many years ago.

      What is this world you live in?

      --
      Having Leeched on /. for years I thought Hmmmmm-Subscribe!
    6. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the most dishonest use of stats I've seen in - well, a little while.

      The FBI page you link to "is based on incidents where some information about the offender is known by law enforcement; therefore, when the offender age, sex, and race are all reported as unknown, these data are excluded from the table." The total number of homicides in 2013, according again to the FBI, was 14,196.

      So you're analysing 40% of the total, discounting some of those, and saying "look, the remainder of these is a reasonable number". Big whoop. Put the other 60% back in, and see how it's looking then.

    7. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Gussington · · Score: 1

      If we focused on eliminating the actual criminal gang element, we'd have European-level murder rates.

      Apart from the regular mass shootings you mean?
      None of those are done by 'criminal gangs', but are a LOT more frequent in the US than pretty much anywhere else.

    8. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by mpercy · · Score: 1

      According to http://data.worldbank.org/indi..., the UK, Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Netherlands, Italy, Ireland, France, Genrmany, Denmark, Austria all have about 1 murder per 100,000 people. Australia also has about 1 murder per 100,000 people. The US has about 5, including those gang-related killings. My point was that a small fraction (gangs) of the population here accounts for a huge percentage of the murders, and excluding those murder committed by that small fraction the murder rate in the US is about the same as all the oh-so-enlightened countries in Europe.

      According to that same table, the Isle of Man doesn't rate any murders. Must be nice. Maybe we can send you some of our gangs, you know, as refugees?

    9. Re:The gun deaths per capita in countries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which, over the last 34 years represents 0.2 murders/100,000 people, or barely a blip in the murder rate. There were more gang related murders in 2012 alone that mass-shooting homicides in US history.

      But go ahead and make mountains out of those molehills.

  192. Confiscate Auto-Loaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ban any firearm whose recoil chambers the subsequent rounds. Auto-loaders (semi and fully automatic) make mass shootings possible.

    An A-bolt rifle for example would allow only smaller scale killings and would increase deterrence and opportunities for victim intervention.

    Yes, it's a long slog to confiscate guns but that's not a reason not to do it. You may still own a musket which was the "arms" the founders were thinking of when the 2nd amendment was written.

  193. Seriously? I mean seriously? by mpercy · · Score: 1

    "The problem is that easy gun access is what made the shooter able to get a weapon and carry it into a crowded area in the first place."

    The gun on the store shelf *made him do it*? That's your argument?

    Not, say, his death-cult religion that inculcated him with the idea that killing infidels--and homosexuals are the worst kind of infidel apparently?

  194. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having more guns would kill more people but reduce shootings? That's amazing logic right there.

  195. Don't even know the difference re auto and semi-? by mpercy · · Score: 1

    That's ok, neither did Bernie Sanders this morning. Idiots love company, I guess.

    The same people who will jump up and down today screaming "Don't judge all Muslims by the bad apples." will never ever make the analogous statement "Don't judge all gun owners by the bad apples."
     

  196. Re:Technology can't stop SWITZERLAND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Switzerland actually mandates gun ownership. Where are all the mass shootings? Hint: there aren't any. Answer: it's a social problem, not a technical one and cannot and should not be solved by "technical measures".

    If we have learned anything from introducing technical measures is that they are doomed to fail. See any kind of DRM, geoblocking etc. If it's worth circumventing, it will be circumvented and the only people being inconvenienced by this are the law abiding citizens. Anyone for longer TSA lines? Let's privatize them, so it will be better somehow. The prison industrial complex example in light of the US incarceration rate shows that a new for profit TSA will only be happy to extend their (bottom) lines.

    You can introduce a police/surveillance state, sure. But you're introducing mass abuse of power and (mental) slavery, which any sane person would reject as a fix for the very rare occurrence of a mass shooting (same for terrorism). You cannot and must not deal with a symptom to an underlying problem, you have to fix the cause or the problem will just reassert itself in different forms, or fester and come to the surface in a catastropic eruption later.

    For the US that's mass inequality, mass hypnosis, hypocrisy and a well organized and interdependent control infrastructure (amongst which ("social") media) to keep in place and as much as possible expand that status quo. This is also increasingly true for the UK, and to the extent that it isn't already the case elsewhere in Europe, is being advanced via TTIP etc.

  197. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Riiight...let's look at the history, shall we? At the start of the 20th Century, Europe was the Ottoman Empire, The Germans were unifying, the French were powerful and the British Navy was uber-supreme. WWI, Spanish Civil War, and some regional fighting turns Europe into rubble. Hitler unifies Germany and confiscates guns. Similar in Italy. Same in Soviet Union. WWI turns Europe into rubble again. US and Soviet military occupy Europe and confiscate guns. "Pacification" of Europe by the US and Soviet Union follow. Europe has a long history of subservience to landowners/strongmen. Kill a thief in your own home, go to jail in Europe. Europe controls its people by keeping them unable to legally defend them selves, forcing them into reactive actions when confronted with violence.Europe culture is rooted in top-down control.

    US: hasn't been turned to rubble and has laws in which the property owner has more standing than the thief. Break into a house in the overwhelming majority of the US, the THIEF is to blame and the resident has every right to use deadly force against the intruder. US law is rooted in deterrence of crime and private property. "When seconds count, the police are minutes away." US is based on citizens being responsible for and to themselves and society as a whole. US culture is rooted in bottom-up accountability.

    Europe also does NOT count or track violence or death the way it is done in the US. Stupid to compare the two as if they are similar. They are not. US democracy is 240 years old, the oldest in the world. Europeans say they have older society, which is true, but is often used as an attempt to elevate European "culture" above American. French "culture" is far older than "American", true. French have been unable to keep a stable governmental form.

    FWIW, Soviet Union had its own share of mass murderers and spree killing. So have China and the other Communist countries. So have the Muslim countries.

    Largest number of school children killed in U.S. wasn't with guns, it was explosives used by a school official.

    Bottom line, it is impossible to be "totally safe" in any situation. Only "solution" would be to prevent people from independent thought.

    Personal ownership of firearms keeps people safe, just as credit cards keep people safe. Without them, banditry would be the norm again, business would grind to a halt, and lifestyles would plummet.

    Don't like it, change the nature of people, an impossible task.

  198. "Even a cursory background check" by mpercy · · Score: 1

    Idiots abound.

    Have you ever bought a gun? Have you ever filled out Form 4473? Ever had the gun store clerk chat you up to see if you are "hinky"? Never heard of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), to which all legal firearms purchasers are subjected?

    "The National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS, is all about saving lives and protecting people from harm—by not letting guns fall into the wrong hands. It also ensures the timely transfer of firearms to eligible gun buyers.

    Mandated by the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act of 1993 and launched by the FBI on November 30, 1998, NICS is used by Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs) to instantly determine whether a prospective buyer is eligible to buy firearms. Before ringing up the sale, cashiers call in a check to the FBI or to other designated agencies to ensure that each customer does not have a criminal record or isn’t otherwise ineligible to make a purchase. More than 100 million such checks have been made in the last decade, leading to more than 700,000 denials.

    https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/c...

    I walk into a licensed gun store and ask to buy a gun. What happens next?

    You’ll have to complete Form 4473, which includes 16 questions relating to your background, drug use, and criminal history. The gun store will then contact NICS online or by phone and supply your answers plus your Social Security number.

    What does the FBI look for in a background check?

    Criminal and mental health history, dishonorable military discharges, immigration status, whether someone is under indictment, and drug use.

    The most common reason for a gun purchase denial is a criminal conviction. Nearly 150,000 fugitives, 120,729 domestic offenders, and 109,875 unlawful drug users have been denied in the 17 years NICS has been online. For all the focus on mental health, the bar for denying someone on psychiatric grounds is very high, leading to relatively few rejections: Only 21,000 applicants have been denied because they were declared mentally unfit by a judge.

    Where do those records come from?

    To ascertain whether an applicant should be disqualified from owning a gun, the FBI draws from several databases: The Interstate Identification Index, a database of criminal history records; the National Crime Information Center, which includes information on people subject to orders of protection, or a restraining order; and the NICS Index, which includes illegal immigrants and those who’ve been involuntarily committed to a mental institution.

    State and local police are not required to submit criminal-record data to the FBI, David Chipman, a former agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), noted in an interview with the Charlotte Observer. Reporting “varies widely based on the practices of the individual departments. The smaller the town, the worse the records.”

    NICS also consults medical records submitted by each state. According to a 2013 congressional report, these records can show whether someone has been “adjudicated as a mental defective” by a “court, board, commission, or other lawful authority,” or has been involuntarily committed to a mental institution — both circumstances would bar someone from purchasing a firearm. However, federal law does not require states to forward mental health records to NICS, and some states are resistant, citing privacy laws.

    Is NICS the only background check available to law enforcement?

    No. In addition to NICS, states can also run their own background checks, which query local databases, but only 21 choose to do so. “When a state relies on NICS, they’re not getting the full picture,” Mike McLively, a staff attorney at Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, told the Charlotte Observer last year. “State databases include arrest records, mental health records. You’re

  199. 30,000 = 2/3rds suicide 1/3rd homicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few facts that need to be brought out here.. You can fact check this against FBI crime data.

    This "30,000" number of American's shot dead by guns last year. Look at the FBI statistics, over 2/3rds of those are suicides. (statistics)
    Of the 1/3rd of that are homicides, very few are done with rifles of any sort.

    Until last year, the trend since the 80's has been year over year reduction in firearm homicides. Firearm sales also go up every year.

  200. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have a look at Australia for an example from more recent times. Negated gun deaths drastically and immediately.

    You're still free to get a permit for an operable gun, the requirements are low, largely around training, identification and secure storage. You're free to own disabled weapons for display. However, anything your gun is involved in, is your responsibility, and you're got to prove a need and/or competency to own an operable weapon.

  201. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gun control stops mass shootings. Plain and simple.

    Disclaimer, I hate guns, simply abhor them. I'd love to see them stricken from everyone.

    THAT SAID...

    The first step to gun control is to amend the constitution. Anything short of that can and will be used against you to bypass the constitution for any amendments you hold dear.

  202. IT professional here by rtkluttz · · Score: 1

    It really does come down to.... Why??? I don't want technology anywhere near my firearms. I want a gun to be as simple and failsafe as absolutely possible. The people that do this are the problem, not the firearms. Even so, the technology you speak of is meant to prevent someone who knocks a gun out of your hand from being able to pick up the gun and use it. Given a few hours and an instruction manual a gun with this technology can be re-trained to another owner. There is not a single case of these mass shootings where the shooter just took a gun from someone and then committed the crime.

    --
    Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    1. Re:IT professional here by airdweller · · Score: 1

      "The people that do this are the problem, not the firearms. "

      I hope, you - as an IT professional - understand what the most efficient way of solving a problem at hand is. Otherwise, I hope you're an IT researcher.

      "There is not a single case of these mass shootings where the shooter just took a gun from someone and then committed the crime."

      But there are multiple cases of children getting hold of guns, which you - being an IT professional well trained in logical thinking and analysis - undoubtedly considered, but disregarded, didn't you?

  203. Re:Technology can't stop these by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

    They're armed as part of proper military training and discipline, not because any old Jim-Bob can go out and buy a gun willy-nilly.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    And the sales of ammunition are tightly controlled.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    It's completely and radically different to the US.

    --
    Eat the rich.
  204. Re:Technology can't stop these by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

    Except guns are very durable items. Of the 12 I own, only 3 were made in the past 10 years, and 5 of the rest were made in/before 1965. Not designed, but that particular one actually manufactured. There are MANY 75+ year old guns out there still working fine.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
  205. even dumber theater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my kids' school used to have a pc in lobby that said: "instant online predator check". you were supposed to type your name into it and I suppose if you name was in some database it did something other than flash green & say ok (obviously this never happened). I never pointed out the obvious as I suspect the staff knew it was a complete joke too (likely forced on them by a bribed politician like chertoff & porn scanners) as they never checked id(s) or paid any attention to whether anyone even actually used this theoretically mandatory machine. I always wanted to type in "ted bundy" just to see what it would do but I'm sure there's some bullshit catch-all law they would have charged me w/to make an example of (don't expose our theater! think of the children!)

  206. One word: Chicago by mpercy · · Score: 1

    Ok, a few more. Most of these cities exist under some of the strictest gun control laws in the country.

    Top 30 Murder Capitals of America

    Rank City
    30 Chicago Heights, IL
    29 Baton Rouge, LA
    28 Buffalo, NY
    27 Hattiesburg, MS
    26 East Chicago, IN
    25 Birmingham, AL
    24 Desert Hot Springs, CA
    23 Compton, CA
    22 Myrtle Beach, SC
    21 Fort Pierce, FL
    20 Harvey, IL
    19 Bridgeton, NJ
    18 Flint, MI
    17 Rocky Mount, NC
    16 Pine Bluff, AR
    15 Petersburg, VA
    14 Newark, NJ
    13 Baltimore, MD
    12 Harrisburg, PA
    11 Jackson, MS
    10 Wilmington, DE
    9 Trenton, NJ
    8 Riviera Beach, FL
    7 New Orleans, LA
    6 Camden, NJ
    5 Detroit, MI
    4 Gary, IN
    3 St. Louis, MO
    2 Chester, PA
    1 East St. Louis, IL

  207. Re: Technology can't stop these by dywolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Impossible to prove?
    Not really.
    statistics bear it out.

    Number of mass shootings in France last year: 1
    Number of mass shooting in the US in just the past 6 months: 136

    Gun control may not prevent 100% of shootings, indeed few things are 100% effective.

    But >99% is still pretty damn good.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  208. Re: Technology can't stop these by mlts · · Score: 1

    Problem is that the US isn't Australia. The US has a lot of different ethnic and racial groups, a lot of distrust for the government, and a history of just ignoring the law. The US also has firearms as part of the national culture.

    My biggest concern with the talk about sweeping bans, "assault weapons" bans, bans on ammo, bans on having brass or a metal shop is that it will just result in another War on Drugs pogrom against the people, or another Prohibition where armed gangs then own turf on most city streets (and they are armed by definition, since that is where they make their cash.)

    Say having an AR-15 becomes a felony. What's the difference between having that single shot AR, versus having one with a three position switch? Same amount of prison time. So, we will see more fully auto machine guns on the street because prison time is prison time. Right now, civilian weapons are one pull, one bang. Go too crazy with bans, and people will just do modifications so their one pull results in many bangs, as it would mean the same prison sentence.

    Then there is enforcement. Search social media for pro-2A stuff and punish 2A supporters? MeWe will be more than happy to handle the people coming to it, and someone will spend the cash and make a completely encrypted social network with every participant having their own PGP/gpg key. Right now, everyone supports the police enforcing the law, even with firearms. Get people angry that they have to "hand them over", and police will have a far tougher job. There is a lot of angry talk on 2A sites.

    So, what's the answer? Bans will just result in more sales, and enforcement is at best whack-a-mole no matter how many trillions go into it. Just the mention of a ban gets gun shops completely bought out to the bare shelves. Heck, some gun shops in my area are forced to close when there is a mass shooting, because they sell out of -everything-, down to the camo underwear. Even when bans are enacted, metal shops will ensure a steady supply of stuff for the black market.

    The thing people never realize is that the gun issue is a symptom. Trying to stomp it out is like trying to push the needle of the speedometer to 0 if the brakes fail on one's car. The issues of fear, mistrust, xenophobia, racism, and hatred need to be addressed first, if any progress is to be made.

  209. The reason for the 2nd by mpercy · · Score: 1

    When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security

  210. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's not leave out the relevant facts here.

    For example, Swiss men are conscripted in their 20s to undergo military & weapons training, and they have strict laws regarding the acquisition of weapons and ammunition. Permits are mandatory and require psychiatric & background assessments. It is mostly illegal to carry loaded weapons, and strict codes of conduct are enforced when handling the weapons. Furthermore, the Swiss government actively funds and stays involved in recreational shooting events, ensuring education and discipline remain constant focal points.

    A lot of this sounds real similar to proposed gun laws here that never seem to get off the ground.

  211. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three words..... Kennesaw Gun Law

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennesaw,_Georgia#Gun_law

    http://rense.com/general9/gunlaw.htm

    Educate yourself. Don't be a dumb ass.

  212. Re:Technology can't stop these by dywolf · · Score: 1

    this is why I personally advocate against making any crimes illegal.

    after all.
    criminals ignore the law anyway.
    so why criminalize anything?

    --

    in all seriousness: "I often hear the excuse for not having gun control: in area's where there are more strict rules for owning a gun, there's more gun violence"
    Not even close to factually accurate. mpercy was kind enough to post a list for us earlier. youll find most of the violence is primarily located in red states/cities, and have less gun control and more gun availability. the few gun control cities you'll find on the list are those where the neighboring suburbs lack said gun control, making the local ordinance almost useless.

    if the UK or Germany had the same patchwork of uneven inconsistent gun control, you could expect to find higher numbers over there too.
    uniformity and consistency in laws helps a great deal in effectiveness.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  213. Re:Technology can't stop these by dywolf · · Score: 1

    The big difference: Europe never allowed citizens to own guns the way the US does..

    untrue

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  214. Re: Technology can't stop these by dywolf · · Score: 1

    Number of mass shootings in France last year: 1
    Number of mass shooting in the US in just the past 6 months: 136

    Gun control may not prevent 100% of shootings, indeed few things are 100% effective.
    But >99% is still pretty damn good.

    --
    The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
  215. Smart guns won't prevent mass shootings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Smart guns work to stop accidental shootings by friends and family, and the thief using your gun against you.
    No mass shooter will buy a smart gun, and if he/she did, it would be programmed for him or her. This is one technology that keeps getting proposed as a solution that just won't work.

    When they claim in the past that the guns were legally purchased, and therefore new laws aren't needed is absurd. Look at drunk driving deaths. There used to be the attitude that we can legislate sobriety, but the societies that put in place effective laws reduced drunk driving deaths. They stopped allowing loopholes.

    Stop the internet and gun show loopholes. I can still buy all the guns I want. I need to visit my local FFL, and get them there.

  216. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Charlie Hebdo... guess you are wrong.

  217. Can Technology Prevent Shootings? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

    And the answer is "No".

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  218. DuH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did it????

  219. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can impose gun control rules on citizens, but not on criminals.

    A vacuous truth. You can make this case for any law, not just gun control.

  220. Exactly by mpercy · · Score: 1

    I posted this above, but repetition of facts is how we learn, right?

    https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/c...

    In 2013, there were 5723 murders recorded in the FBI stats.

    https://www.nationalgangcenter...

    In 2012, there were 2,363 gang-related homicides (2103 data not provided yet it seems), but it seems fair that around 2,000 gang-related homicides occur every year. In other words, about 40% of all murders in the US are gang-related homicides. With an estimated 770,000 gang members accounting for 40% (about 2300) of all murders, the rest of the population (314.8M) produced about 3360 murders, or about 1.06 murders per 100,000 non-gang people. This is clearly on par with other countries who do not have similar gang problems.

    From the FBI numbers above, it also seems that black-on-black murders are quite disproportionately represented. At about 17% of the population, black-on-black murders were also about 40% of the total (2245). White-on-white murders were somewhat higher as an absolute number (2,509) but there are 195.6M whites compared to 53.6M blacks.

    The numbers say that blacks murder blacks at 4.1 per 100,000; whites murder whites at about 0.77 per 100,000. Blacks also murdered 409 whites; whites murdered 189 blacks.

  221. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are illegal weapons in Europe too. Granted it will take some time, but there's no reason why gun control couldn't be introduced in the US, with guns withdrawn, amnesties held, illegal weapons slowly uncovered.

    Well... Actually, there is one reason. It's that pesky little law of the land called the second amendment that makes it impossible to do what you suggest. Gun grabbers always want to conveniently ignore it. Nobody wants to go through the bother and work to repeal it.

    What if I suggested we conveniently ignore the first amendment and outlaw Islam in the US? The lefties would be (figuratively) up in arms then.

  222. There is a tech solution. by mark_reh · · Score: 1

    Thorazine in the water supply. Keep everyone in a lethargic/catatonic state and the shootings will stop.

    1. Re:There is a tech solution. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      From a Freak Brothers comic:

      When the government realizes that thorazine will cause an economic depression, they add amphetamine to the water.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:There is a tech solution. by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Thorazine in the water supply. Keep everyone in a lethargic/catatonic state and the shootings will stop.

      Ooh. I know this one.

      Spoiler: They turn into Reavers.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  223. Yes - 2500 F by DoctorNathaniel · · Score: 1

    A very interesting technology choice is a this: get a very large, very hot ceramic container and put all the guns in it. Then melt them.

    Responses to the inevitable:
    - Of course you can't get rid of all guns, but you can make them much harder to obtain.. and make it so people can be arrested simply for attempting to obtain them or cary them.
        - This is proven by other countries, which have much lower rates of gun ownership, and fewer deaths in both single murders and multiple murders.
        - There are more privately-owned guns in the US than any other country in the world.
    - Of course there are other ways to kill people. Yet automatic weapons remain the choice of tool for mass killings. Probably because it's the best.
    - No, guns do not reduce crime
    - No, you will never be a hero with your gun.

    One source, amongst many:
    http://www.vox.com/2015/10/3/9...

  224. Re:Technology can't stop these by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

    Australia enacted gun control in 1996 and bought back guns to reduce the number in ciculation. Their murder has been dropping ever since.

    “In this paper, we re-analyze the same data on firearm deaths used in previous research, using tests for unknown structural breaks as a means to identifying impacts of the National Firearms Agreement. The results of these tests suggest that the NFA did not have any large effects on reducing firearm homicide or suicide rates.

    And a second report concluded that while the mandatory program did reduce the rate of “accidental” firearm deaths, it had no influence on firearm homicide in Australia and it also did not end mass shootings.

    In 2002 two people were killed and five were injured in a shooting at Melbourne’s Monash University. In 2011 three people were killed and three were wounded in the Hectorville siege. In 2014, three people (including the gunman) were killed and four were injured in a Sydney hostage crisis.

    http://truthinmedia.com/realit...

  225. Re:Technology can't stop these by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

    Bad news.

    The threat of a jail sentence really isn't going to deter an individual hell bent on murder as I'm pretty sure someone who is willing to kill a bunch of folks really isn't going to give two shits about breaking the law by carrying a gun without a license.

    Just sayin :D

  226. Civilians generally cannot buy automatic weapons by mpercy · · Score: 1

    This is already the law. Private ownership of automatic weapons is very limited.

    The National Firearms Act of 1934: The National Firearms Act of 1934 (“NFA”) imposes a tax on the making and transfer of machine guns and certain other weapons, as well as a special occupational tax on persons and entities engaged in the business of importing, manufacturing and dealing in those weapons. (The NFA distinguishes between “making” a weapon, and “manufacturing” a weapon. Only a registered NFA manufacturer can “manufacture” a machine gun; other persons who construct machine guns are “making” them, according to the NFA.2 ) As detailed below, the law also requires the registration of all machine guns.
    While the NFA was enacted by Congress as an exercise of its authority to tax, the underlying purpose of the law was to curtail, if not prohibit, transactions in machine guns and certain other weapons.3 Congress found these firearms pose a significant crime problem because of their frequent use in crime, and the $200 making and transfer taxes were considered quite severe at the time and adequate to discourage or eliminate transfers in these firearms.4 The $200 tax has not changed since 1934.

    As described below, in 1986, Congress enacted a much stricter law, banning the possession and transfer of all machine guns except machine guns manufactured prior to May 19, 1986, and machine guns possessed by or manufactured for governmental entities.

    Registration of machine guns: The NFA requires anyone manufacturing, making, importing, or transferring a machine gun (or certain other weapons also regulated by the NFA) to register it with the Secretary of the Treasury.5 The NFA requires the Secretary to maintain a central registry of all of these weapons that are “not in the possession or under the control of the United States,” i.e., machine guns owned by state or local entities, as well as those legally owned by private persons, are included in the registry.6

    http://smartgunlaws.org/federa...

    Very few people have been killed by legally owned (civilian-owned) automatic weapons in the last 50 years or so.

  227. Multi-culti BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ban multiculturalism and diversity. Remove all the niggers, kikes, wetbacks, sang niggers, etc. We were a much better and peaceful as well as free nation when we were far more White. Fuck liberalism, globalism, judaism, faggot rights, gun control, etc.

    1. Re:Multi-culti BS by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      By that logic, then you'd have to kill the whites, then the asians, until only the Jews remains. Your just a Zionist in disguise.

  228. Aren't they the same thing? by mpercy · · Score: 1

    "Islamic Terrorism" (or was it under the name of "Mental Illness"

  229. mini 9/11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same exact template they use over and over on you. Coerce a guy with some fake name Mohamad blahblah (quicker than 9/11 WTC) to shoot a bunch of faggots. Debate whether giving up more rights will save you next time etc.

    It is a very bad day, today, 6/13/16, to be a mother fucking CIA. The same applies to the FBI and their international mole network.

    1. Re:mini 9/11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is all the same agenda, continued from 9/11 (George Bush Sr/Saudi Arabia)

      Eric Schmidt Gets A Job At The Pentagon - Slashdot
      https://news.slashdot.org/story/16/03/06/1834211/eric-schmidt-gets-a-job-at-the-pentagon

  230. To prevent shootings by gurps_npc · · Score: 1

    Put GPS chips in each gun.

    Not tracking the people - tracking the gun.

    After all, we put GPS chips in each phone and expect everyone to carry them.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re:To prevent shootings by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      How does this help? The location of the gun was known: at the night club. Where it was being used to shoot people.

      But as always, this is the wrong question. Don't figure out how to stop shootings. Figure out how to stop killings.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  231. Koyaanisqatsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Almost everywhere you look these days the natural order of things is being shaken to it's very core.
    A car bomb explodes outside the Oklahoma City Federal building.
    Missiles are launched through the desert night killing scores of enemy soldiers and countless innocent civilians in the name of PEACE!
    A child steals a parent's firearm and opens fire in a crowded school, in the aftermath the investigation reveals the GUN was responsible for the carnage.

    What is the root cause? Not the BOMB, the MISSILE, and defiantly not the GUN!
    EDUCATION? Sadly the only answer a learned person could arrive at is YES, Education!
    I realize a great number of EDUCATORS will take offense at this. None is intended.

    We can send a man to the moon. We can not tell a First grader he will go to prison if HE breaks the law in a way he will remember 10 years later. John Kennedy would not say shame on the child. I think with all due respect that he would boldly announce Shame on ME!

    I would surly place the blame on the MAN with the bomb, the "MAN with the missile, and the child's PARENTS! They should have known better.

    I?m not a Native American. I'm merely noting a word in another language that shows the Indians were aware of the problems of life long before we IMPORTS got off the boat. Possibly after 200 plus years we are actually less intelligent over the course. Duh Dad? Can you correct a child when rules are violated? Of course not, you would go to jail. If the child does something wrong you are liable. Catch 22?

    1. Re:Koyaanisqatsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We live in a violent world.

      Don't believe me??

      Try taking candy from a baby!!

  232. You don't seem to appreciate that a firearm by mpercy · · Score: 1

    is a very simply mechanical machine. A barrel, a spring, a pin, a pair of levers (hammer, trigger). Automatic and semi-automatic weapons are 100+ years old, and can be made with common milling tools.

  233. Re:An easier sollution - correction by Ulfilas2000 · · Score: 1

    Correction - 300 years into it Christianity was integrated with the government - prior to that it was a widely held growing religion that was alternately supressed and tolerated by the authorities. The 300 years is just the point at which the government decided to step in take the reins.

  234. Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by mi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    because Abrahamic religions in general and Islam in particular have been saying that for 2000 years

    Judaism is a lot older than that, actually, while Islam is a lot younger.

    More importantly, Islam — uniquely among Abrahamic religions — compels the followers to do something about it. A Christian can be a "good Christian" if he merely prays for the sinners' salvation. A Muslim must act — and homosexuality is the greatest sin .

    And then there is the inconvenient truth about Islam-prescribed world-order. Whereas (the original) Christianity left sæcular affairs to the contemporary government whoever they are — "Cæsar's to Cæsar" — Islam explains exactly how the government should be structured: a Theocracy with a Caliph at the top. This alone makes Islam incompatible with America's Constitution — but the same Constitution bans us from collectively acknowledging the problem.

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      because Abrahamic religions in general and Islam in particular have been saying that for 2000 years

      Judaism is a lot older than that, actually, while Islam is a lot younger.

      Well, it's a reasonably good average. The beginnings of Judaism are difficult to ascertain, but organized Judaism (and our extant religious texts) probably go back 2500 years or so. Christianity was obviously founded about 2000 years ago. Islam is roughly 1600 years old. 2000 years is pretty much right in the middle, and ALL three were a LONG time ago.

      More importantly, Islam - uniquely among Abrahamic religions - compels the followers to do something about it. A Christian can be a "good Christian" if he merely prays for the sinners' salvation. A Muslim must act

      Well, what you're actually comparing is the modern interpretation of Judaism and Christianity with the worst interpretations of Islam.

      There are plenty of passages in the Bible (particularly Old Testament) that require action. Traditional Jewish law required homosexuals to be put to death (Leviticus 20:13). It's right there in the Torah. But various practices in Jewish law have basically been "suspended" after the destruction of the Temple; hence no more sacrifices, etc. as required by Leviticus are done either. (In fact, there are plenty of capital crimes listed in the Torah, many of which we might dispute today, from adultery to disobeying a parent.)

      But there's nothing actually in the Torah which says you can ignore these laws. It's just rabbinical tradition, that gradually came around to avoiding the issue almost entirely by instituting a system of checks-and-balances that effectively makes it impossible to execute someone. But if you look at the Torah text itself (the equivalent of looking at the Quran alone), it's pretty darn clear that we should also be stoning homosexuals or something.

      And as for Christianity, well, it generally followed the plain text of the Old Testament for the first 1800 years or so of its existence, with many Christian countries instituting a death penalty for homosexuality on the basis of the Bible. (In ancient Rome, it was by public burning, under Justinian law it "merely" required castration, and in most medieval and early modern Europe, it required death. In general, criminalization of homosexuality in Europe correlates well with the spread of Christianity.) It was only around the time of the American Revolution that states in the U.S. started abolishing the death penalty for homosexuality... though homosexuality remained a capital crime in South Carolina until 1873 (12 years after England had dropped the death penalty for it).

      So, sorry, but all the Abrahamic religions required homosexuals to be killed according to their original religious texts. Islam may only be "behind the times" in that some of its followers are a couple of centuries behind Christianity in deciding to completely ignore many tenets of its religious texts. Nevertheless, only 7 Muslim nations have a death penalty for homosexuality (a lot less of a percentage than major Christian nations a few centuries ago), and 20 of the 57 Muslim-majority nations have no criminal prohibition against homosexuality at all.

      I'm NOT at all defending the traditional Islamic stance, only noting that historically the other Abrahamic religions weren't better. They've only just decided to ignore their founding texts earlier in history (as more and more Muslims are doing these days too -- but for some reason anti-Muslim folks just love citing the Quran as though no Muslim could ever disagree with it, while the vast majority of Jews and Christians ignore the plain text of the Levitical law and few would claim that their religion "requires them to act").

      On the other hand, the di

    2. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by mi · · Score: 3

      Well, what you're actually comparing is the modern interpretation of Judaism and Christianity with the worst interpretations of Islam.

      Wrong. I'm comparing modern interpretation of Judaism and Christianity — you got that part right — with the modern interpretation of Islam. From Pakistan to Qatar to Gaza (however much the latter need the support of "progressives"), homosexuality is illegal and being gay is deadly.

      Traditional Jewish law required homosexuals to be put to death

      Only if the government is based on Judaism. But Jews remain Jews living under other governments — unlike Islam, neither Judaism nor Christianity make government structure part of the scripture.

      A Jew wishing to live under Jewish law can move to Israel — his religion does not compel him to bring that law to the government of his residence. Same is true about Christians. As I said, Islam is unique.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    3. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Wrong. I'm comparing modern interpretation of Judaism and Christianity — you got that part right — with the modern interpretation of Islam

      You're comparing the interpretation of Judaism and Christianity in mostly secular societies to the interpretation of Islam in strongly religious societies.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by mi · · Score: 2

      You're comparing the interpretation of Judaism and Christianity in mostly secular societies to the interpretation of Islam in strongly religious societies.

      Let's avoid the confusing generalities and pronouns.

      I'm comparing the interpretation of Judaism and Christianity in the US to the interpretation of Islam in the US. How is that?

      The shooter was an American citizen...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    5. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Show me a US mosque where they actually encourage murdering homosexuals.

      Now I'll show you Westboro Baptist and New Hartford Word of Life.

    6. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show me a US mosque where they actually encourage murdering homosexuals.

      Now I'll show you Westboro Baptist and New Hartford Word of Life.

      Here you go:

      Orlando gunman tied to radical imam released from prison last year, say law enforcement sources

      Robertson, who recently spent four years in prison in Florida on illegal weapons and tax fraud charges before being released by a Florida judge one year ago, has openly and enthusiastically preached against homosexuality. The targets of Mateen’s bloody rampage were members of the gay community of Orlando, 120 miles from the 29-year-old’s home in Fort Pierce.

      Here's ANOTHER .

      These ISLAMIC guys actually do go out and kill gays - all across the ISLAMIC world:

      Horrific moment ISIS kill four gay men by throwing them from a roof

      And guess what all the countries that punish homosexuality by death have in common?

      You got the stones to answer there?

      Naaah, you got no balls.

      So I'll tell you: Every country that punishes homosexuality by death is ISLAMIC.

      How many people have Westboro Baptist Church members killed? Oh, and Fred Phelps, leader of that church? He was a DEMOCRAT. You dumbass.

      Now, do YOU have the BALLS to say how many people murderous Christians slaughtered over Piss Christ?

      Do you?

      Or are you still just an ignorant chickenshit blowhard too spineless to answer a simple question that demonstrates your strawman out to be a farce?

      So, again, because you're GUTLESS:

      NOT ONE CHRISTIAN KILLED ANYONE OVER PISS CHRIST

      You need to grow a fucking brain. And once it's functional enough to enable you to become non-sessile, you can go fuck your stupid self.

    7. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the same Constitution bans us from collectively acknowledging the problem.

      Actually it doesn't. Thomas Jefferson was among the great defenders and originators (i.e. of the definitions involved) of the Constitution's Amendment to keep government from proscribing or interfering in religion. While dealing with the Barbary pirates he had the Koran translated to know the mind of his enemies. After he read that, he stated that Islam isn't a religion as they understood it, but an incompatible death cult. It's these kind of historic details, the defintions and what was meant, etc.--the whole context--that isn't acknowledged by the status quo crowd, on account that, factually speaking, the original intent of the Amendment is more in line with what the Amish contemplate (all of life being worship and religious), which is very much a hindrance to Federal & State control of everything (e.g. Christian bakers being persecuted for refusing to aid homosexuals in celebrating what is sinful could never have been imagined by the Constitution's authors as such bullshit is what precipitated the religious peoples' flight from the old to the new world in the first place).

    8. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      How many people have the supremely disgusting Westboro cultists actually murdered? An actual number with references, please.

      I mean, Fred Phelps bodaciously deserves to be deep-fat-frying in Hell for all eternity, but has his evil cult actually committed any murders?

      Let's keep a bit of perspective here.

    9. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by ewibble · · Score: 1

      No you are comparing the interpretation of one extreme individual, to the more moderate views of the American society. There are plenty of Muslim organization in the US that have condemned his actions.

      from wikipedia:

      In November 2015, Robert Lewis Dear killed three and injured nine at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, Colorado.[119] Dear voiced on several occasions his support for radical Christian views and interpretations of the Bible, and praised people who attacked abortion providers, saying they were doing "God's work." He also described members of the Army of God, a loosely organized group of anti-abortion Christian extremists that has claimed responsibility for a number of killings and bombings, as heroes.[120] In May 1991, Dear was arrested and convicted in Charleston, for the unlawful carrying of a "long blade knife" and illegal possession of a loaded gun.[121] A woman who was married to Dear from 1985 to 1993 told NBC News that Dear had targeted a Planned Parenthood clinic before, by putting glue on its locks, and had a history of violent behavior. In the court document for their 1993 divorce, his ex-wife said, "He claims to be a Christian and is extremely evangelistic, but does not follow the Bible in his actions. He says that as long as he believes he will be saved, he can do whatever he pleases. He is obsessed with the world coming to an end."

      Does that mean that is the view of Christians in the US? No of course not it is the view of some nut job.

      If you continue to persecute Muslims you will not create, less but more nut jobs, they will see you as the enemy just like you see them.

      What the USA needs is a better mental health system, and perhaps gun laws that prevent selling guns people with known psychiatric disorders. Oops, I am now waiting for the response if everyone had a gun this would never have happened. I can just see the carnage that would happen if every moron started shooting a gun at the first sign of trouble. The US gun ownership is more than 1.126 gun per person that helped didn't it.

    10. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Wrong. I'm comparing modern interpretation of Judaism and Christianity â" you got that part right â" with the modern interpretation of Islam.

      Please note that the post you originally replied to (and which served as the topic for my reply to you) was concerned about the history of the last 2000 years in the Abrahamic religions, not just what these religions endorse today. In particular, the person you originally replied to claimed that all of these Abrahamic religions had been teaching against homosexuality for the past 2000 years.

      You claimed that wasn't true and that Islam is different. It's true that the percentage of Islamic folks who believe it's right to kill gays today is likely greater than the percentage of Christian or Jewish folks who believe it's right to kill gays. But this was not really true for the past 2000 years, which is what our present thread is about.

      For roughly 1800 of the past 2000 years, all three Abrahamic religions agreed that homosexuality should be punishable by death, and for roughly 1950 of the past 2000 years all three religions agreed that this moral principle should be criminalized, and in many places it was incorporated into secular law largely due to Christian efforts.

      But Jews remain Jews living under other governments â" unlike Islam, neither Judaism nor Christianity make government structure part of the scripture.

      Huh? Have you even read the Torah? There is no distinction made there between civil and religious government. Many conservative Jewish communities today in whatever country believe that they should essentially be self-policing, giving out punishments among their own people as designated by their law... regardless of the larger civil law. And while the New Testament does in a few places make a distinction between civil and religious principles, in practice through most of European (and American) history there was a great "bleed through" of religious Christian moral principles in structuring the government and laws. Christians took over the Roman empire, then when the first major European power structure emerged after the Western Empire's collapse (under Charlemagne) the pope insisted on crowning him Holy Roman Emperor to make clear the place of political dominions within religious control. All of this basically continued throughout Europe until the Reformation, and even among Reformed nations, many of them continued to explicitly evoke Christian theology in the structuring of law and government (and many still do).

      Basically, many Islamic nations may be somewhere between 50 and 250 years "behind" the evolution of law and the divorcing of morality from fundamentalist interpretations of religious texts compared to Christian nations. But if you look at the past 2000 years (as this thread was originally about), the three don't look that different... except, well, Jews didn't really have a good opportunity to take over political power on a national scale since antiquity until recently. (Also, in fact, it might be important to note that in medieval times, Islamic nations were actually often MORE tolerant toward other religions and groups living under their political frameworks than Christian nations of the time were of Jews or Muslims.)

    11. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by OzoneLad · · Score: 1

      More importantly, Islam — uniquely among Abrahamic religions — compels the followers to do something about it. A Christian can be a "good Christian" if he merely prays for the sinners' salvation. A Muslim must act — and homosexuality is the greatest sin .

      I'm pretty sure apostasy and blasphemy rank quite higher.

    12. Re:Islam is unique (Re:An easier sollution) by mi · · Score: 1

      Show me a US mosque where they actually encourage murdering homosexuals.

      In denial much? Here is an imam talking in Florida this April...

      Now I'll show you Westboro Baptist and New Hartford Word of Life.

      Do show me... All I've ever heard them say is that "God hates fags" and "rejoices when soldiers die" — because American military now allows gays to serve. They are as silly as most Democrats you'd see, but they aren't encouraging murder.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  235. Quit sending them to prison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree. We just need to start killing a lot of these criminals. It's insane to allow gang members to exist. Niggers cause FAR more death in this country then even whacked out jihadists.

    1. Re:Quit sending them to prison by gweihir · · Score: 1

      You think starting a civil war is a good idea? While I am agnostic, I really hope there is some good approximation of "Hell" for people like you.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  236. We already have databases of people by mpercy · · Score: 1

    People who are not allowed to have weapons (a smaller database than the one with all the people who are allowed to have weapons). How's that work again?

    1. Re:We already have databases of people by medavd · · Score: 1

      The idea is to restrict the access to weapons, fill all paperwork first attesting [criminal record, health, education on gun safety, etc] you capability to own a weapon, then you can buy a weapon.

    2. Re:We already have databases of people by mpercy · · Score: 1

      Again, we already do that.

      To lawfully purchase a weapon from an FFL requires one to fill out Form 4473. This form attests that you have no criminal record, have no history of mental health issues, are not a fugitive from justice, etc. and that you are purchasing the firearm for yourself. Plus all the usual information including SSN, and show a valid picture ID. The FFL dealer then runs your information through NICS databases to see if there's anything in there that you have not disclosed.

      It says right there at the top "WARNING: You may not receive a firearm if prohibited by Federal or State law. The information you provide will be used to determine whether you are prohibited under law from receiving a firearm. Certain violations of the Gun Control act, 18 USC Section 921, et. seq. are punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment and/or up to a $250,000 fine.

      When you sign for 4473, you are affirming that "I certify that my answers to Section A are true, correct, and complete...I also understand that making any false oral or written statement or exhibiting and false or misrepresented identification with respect to this transaction is a crime punishable as a felony under Federal law, and may also violate State and/or local law.

      In localities requiring additional education certificates, etc. those must also be presented.

      So, we already have what you're advocating.

  237. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You also have no way to defend yourself against, let alone overthrow a tyrannical government. You're far too trusting of government.

  238. Re: An easier solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Liberals are the ones suppressing votes now? Fact distortion at the level of Fox here...

  239. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really, due to some of the bits of how gun laws in the US work. I know this is a bit of calling the kettle black, but you'd need to live in the US to understand before you dictate things to us...

    In the US, the "gun" is the receiver--the part that holds the trigger, trigger guard, and the mechanism that links the trigger to the firing pin w/o including the pin itself. It is _not_ the breech and barrel--the parts that require the most quality control and the hardest to make by hand because they have to control the energy release of the powder ignition. This is because the receiver is the part that controls wither a semi-auto can go full-auto or not (political decision).

    Thus, receivers are easy for a layman to manufacture. Further, in the US, things which help you manufacture a receiver are also not receivers. You can get a sheet metal form to stamp an AK receiver for many places. The form will make sure the sheet metal is bent properly and can also show were all the holes need to be drilled. As AK's are designed for ease of manufacture, most of the receiver parts can be made from screws and bits of sheet metal, it is entirely possibly to make what would, in US law, constitute a gun. With AK's in particular, this can be done with minimal metalworking experience.

    AR receivers are a little harder as they are typically milled, but 3D printing is changing that as previously mentioned on /. The bolts and gas system are complicated and hard for a novice to do.

    The barrels and breeches on most modern firearms are made of the same piece of metal. For AK's these are imported from Eastern Europe as long as the receiver is destroyed (as then they no longer constitute a gun--just like importing a car "front half" does not count as importing a car but yields 80%+ of the repair parts needed to fix a car).

    Just assemble and you have a gun. This is why banning gun sales will not have a total impact on gun ownership. The dies do not wear out quickly, and people that believe strongly in gun ownership will happily turn to these firearm sources just as people turned to run-runners during Prohibition.

    There is also the sociopolitical view in the US that due to Congress's extremely low approval rating that any attempt to outright remove gun possession at this time will literally result in American Spring / Civil War 2. Those Trump supporters aren't typically part of the gun control crowd...

  240. Robots at the door by mysidia · · Score: 1

    Every new visitor who wants to enter will be taken into a small secure private room and be strip-searched by a robot.

    Anything that could be used as weapon will have to be checked, once they are confirmed disarmed: a secondary exit will unlock, and the person will be allowed into the secure corridor.

  241. Autonomous Turrets by zopper · · Score: 1

    Stop all shooting? Not possible. But shooting by Evil Guys (tm)? Well, that's simple... Ban all guns and then put these cuties on every corner with a program to shoot everyone who pulls out a gun, a knife, a bomb, smelly socks, is ill (clearly spreading biological weapons), or, to sum all the reasons, is a human: http://www.thinkgeek.com/image...

  242. Yes by WorBlux · · Score: 1

    Stop spanking your kids or adononing them at daycares when they are very young, and stop letting Muslims in from shithole parts of the world.

  243. Detection and Communicaiton by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think anything short of stripping everyone naked, removing control of their limbs, and maybe putting them into medical comas would stop people from harming others. I guess you could come up with a technological way of doing this to every last human...

    But we might be able to at least mitigate some of the damage when these incidents occur. Surveillance is one of the more controversial ways of doing this now and it's been discusses ad nauseum so I won't do more than touch on it: an app or system that detects and reports things like recognized gun shots. These are known devices/systems. But if you take something similar and make it a more local warning system, like an opt in system using cellphones and mesh networking, maybe you could get the alarm out to nearby people who would be alerted and able to get out. Similarly maybe with all of the GPS maps and internal building maps available, you build into a navigation app a way to trigger in an emergency and start guiding people safely to exits with real time "people traffic control". It's already been proven people are more than willing to follow a robot saying it knows the way out as long as it sounds confident. And finally an app or device, maybe build it into all of these health trackers, to broadcast who has been injured and their location if they can't get out, maybe along with their vitals, to allow EMS to get to them faster.

    In the end though these systems are only as good as the people creating and installing them, and the people using them. And you have to trust them because they broadcast a lot of information that can be used for harm as well. I don't think any of the technologies we have available can really stop these attacks from happening.

  244. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prevention is a stupid way of looking at it, but strongly enforcing fire safety building codes should continue and be recognized as helping in situations like these.

    How about automated emergency lighting, hooked up to fire and gunshot detection sensors? Gunshot detection shouldn't be expensive, and could be used for any number of situations besides rare mass shootings. Bar fight... Boom lights on, etc.

  245. Intelligence Fail by Jawnn · · Score: 1

    The NRA helped this latest incident happen. The perpetrator was a known threat, interviewed by the FBI multiple times. Had documented mental health issues. Despite all this being a matter of record, he is able to buy weapons and ammo last week with no alerts being raised. WTF? Maybe, just maybe, now our elected officials will realize that they've chosen poorly in taking money from the NRA to torpedo meaningful attempts to expand and enhance the background check process. Don't get me wrong. I own lots of guns. I don't want to give them up, but then I can prove that I'm not crazy and that I don't have a history of telling the world that the invisible man in the sky wants us to kill those who are different from us.

  246. sterotypical, yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    American-only failing? Not at all.

  247. Not exactly, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are so many reasons people develop hate. For instance, right now, our government is supporting "moderate" rebels with weapons (last I heard anyway). At the other end of that process are millions of refugees. A small percentage of those refugees represent future mass shootings (if a foreign government came into my country, killed my family and destroyed my home, you better believe that would be a mass shooting in the future - I would go out with the refugees and head for their territory with a high kill count in mind). Not only that, but our "ally", Saudi Arabia, got on a shame list in the UN the other day for killing a large number of children in Yemen, and threatened Ban Ki Moon with withdrawal of hundreds of millions of dollars of support, successfully getting him to remove them. So yeah, we're mindlessly giving people reasons to hate us.

    And what about our safety nets? My dad used to be a nurse working in a state run mental hospital for instance. That facility closed down. I think that many of those people are now on their own / on the street. If you listen to the politicians, the solution is just to disarm everybody, as if that would make the problems go away.

  248. Education and commons sense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... does not work when you are dealing with religion.

  249. Re:Technology can't stop these by Sique · · Score: 1

    Yes, that "trustend" was a typo of mine. I just wanted to point out that the idea, totalitarian regimes at first would go and disarm their people, is not universally true. Most modern regimes don't, especially if they are militaristic. Then they actually need weapons in the hand of their people. They count on the fact, that in the case of doubt, their troups will have the better weapons, and that most people will support the current regime as long as it mostly guarantees law and order, how ever screwed up the laws may be, and how many lives upholding of the order will cost.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  250. Swap put the metal detectors for large magnets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pretty simple technological solution. Instead of metal detectors just install very strong magnets (like in junk yards) for people to walk through. Probability of anyone having a gun inside the joint they want to target drops to zero.

  251. Listen up gunphobics! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That guy was homophopic, you are gunphopics. He wanted to ban gays, you want to ban guns. See the similarity? If you think there's a difference, then maybe you should consider there's a huge difference between some fucking nutjob and a responsible gun owner.

  252. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True, but the chances of killing people on mass is smaller with most of those other means. Knives, axes, clubs and pointy sticks will mostly limit you to one or a small handful of victims and with the potential that they could survive the injuries. Poison gas, sure it could kill a lot, but it's pretty hard to buy and making it is not trivial and contains quite a risk of killing yourself. Explosives, are easier, which is why it appears to be 'go to' weapon for suicide bombers, but again it's not straight forward. All of these though seem to either require a lot more planning or are less lethal than picking up a legal assault rifle.

  253. Means to an end. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The means was terror, the end was hatred.

    The guys in the middle east hate western civilization. Why? I doubt ANY of you can answer that aside from 'well it's their religion'--cause religion is a lame accuse like using a cuss word--the means is diluted to a social "inside joke" of ignorance.

    Can tech prevent shootings? Yes. But it all depends how.
    Can tech prevent hatred? No. Heck....as evidence on /. Just look at some the post on here....

    Case in point, now look at the LA Pride shooter--appears to be a WASP, from middle America, with a Chinese made gun and driving a Japanese car, heading to a gay pride parade. It's not his religion the [political] demagogues say, it's just plain ignorance & hatred. Haters gonna hate.

  254. Re: Technology can't stop these by jecblackpepper · · Score: 1

    Australia did it legally. The US could do it legally as well, it just requires a constitutional amendment. Sure it's not easy or straight forward, but if enough people said "enough is enough, we don't want to live like this and we value protecting people from gun violence more than we value the right to bear arms" then the amendment could pass and the government could remove the guns. Just because something isn't constitutional now doesn't mean it won't be constitutional in the future; or are you saying that the current version of the US Constitution is the final version and most perfect it could ever be no matter how circumstances change in the future?

  255. Re:Yes it can. We have to destroy ISIS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So in your estimation the US is not doing anything to combat ISIS?

  256. Feds Not Leveraging Existing Tech... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If someone has been interviewed by the FBI (on a watch list) and then purchases a firearm, a red flag should go up as part of the background check alerting the feds.
    This is a database shortcoming / interoperability issue.

    If an actor calls 911 and pledges allegiance to ISIS, the 911 center HAS his GPS coordinates (even if GPS has been turned off on the phone). Send LEOs right away.

    Why don't the feds maintain a DB of mobile phone numbers of everyone on a watch list and be able to locate them with a simple query?

  257. Re:Technology can't stop these by jecblackpepper · · Score: 1

    You can change the law you know? You just need enough people to agree. If enough people agreed to write a new amendment that outlawed Islam then you could do it; similarly if enough people agreed to ban guns you could do that too. The constitution isn't fixed and perfect forever document, it can and should adapt as the world and attitudes change.

  258. Maybe focus on the problem, not the symptoms? by quietwalker · · Score: 1

    The problem scope:
        Some people in any given society are given to illegal and violent actions that cause harm to the society they're in and the people and infrastructure within it. We don't want them to do those things.

    There's two real solutions:
        - Make people think in a different way which precludes this sort of behavior
        - Eliminate the root cause(s) which engender this sort of behavior.

    Technology can't really help much here, not as the magic bullet people desire. These are all long term issues where 'technology' can help, but no one in the world is very good at making people think in specific ways or changing how societies work, even when they're the guys in power. In the end, eliminating poverty, sickness, and not just need, but the larger human problem of 'want' are very hard issues indeed. They won't fit in sound bites or a single person's elected term.

    Which brings us to the the bigger problem: the current round of political turds are trumpeting their curealls when they're really only addressing symptoms:
        - Identify individuals prior to their negative activity and remove them from society
        - Remove any tools which could be used to harm society from society

    Technology may be able to say something about theses in the short term; loss of privacy and elimination of encryption may allow law enforcement to track criminals more effectively. To be fair though, mandatory lobotomies for presumed anti-social/society individuals would also work pretty well, if you consider medical science to be a technology. All the blathering about the ill-defined 'assault weapons' while handguns are the deadly weapon of choice - and the majority of firearm deaths are from suicides to boot? It's all just hot air. No interest in solving problems, only winning political points. It's the same security theater we see in the airports writ large across the nation. Lots of visible frenetic activity but results - nope. Lots of hand-waving and sound bites instead.

    Not that I want to be all negative, I do have one constructive suggestion for these short term issues. A guideline that will help us reel in these claims that, for example, encryption should be criminalized, and 2 hours in a security line at every public venue is considered reasonable. The guideline is this:

    Do not believe, for a second, that you can eliminate terrorism, domestic or otherwise. Instead, realize that the best you can do is mitigate the risk.

    Look, as soon as we say we're going to eliminate it, that no cost is too high to make the world safe for every citizen, there's no end. It's like citing the will of god in a religious debate, you can never refute it, and it's an 'answer' that can be used to justify any deed, no matter how horrible. If you instead focus on managing the risk, putting an actual value on it, and using that metric to assign resources, you'll come up with a more reasonable solution.

    Maybe hire an economist to explain the hard facts without any sort of emotional or moral outrage?

  259. Short answer: No by eth1 · · Score: 1

    Having universal (mental) healthcare would probably reduce the rate of occurrence, but the only way to deal with the incidents that do happen in an economically feasible and liberty-compatible way is to make the targets (the civilian population) inimical to the threat. You do this by making sure they are mentally prepared and physically equipped to stop the threat themselves.

  260. Technological solutionism is never the solution by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    Can anyone think of a situation where a technological solution has ever fixed a societal problem? I don't think it's ever been done. I think the idea keeps coming back up because if it were to ever work, it would be a libertarian's holy grail - a simple free-market substitute for regulation and/or government action. It's quite an empowering concept for nerdy types in general as well - that inventions can improve society rather than just making it do the same shitty things faster (while accelerating inequality).

    As for what you need to do to prevent this sort of thing, the US has to choose whether it wants to join the rest of the world with some basic gun control laws, or if it wants to keep making human sacrifices to the gun god, who is always thirsty for more blood. Choose.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  261. auto-alert-app by haemish · · Score: 1

    Lots of cellphones always have their microphones on, listening for things like "hey Siri". Gunshots are easy sounds to recognize: recognize them and automatically post alerts (911?? Human to double-check sound?)

  262. NO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will NOT change or allow anybody else to change the way I live. Nor will I sacrifice my freedoms for added security. The most viable solution is to stop being so damn politically correct and tolerant of the beliefs of those that don't want to assimilate. Stay OUT of our country if you don't like it.

    Obama is attempting to seize more control over all of us by dividing us and trying to take away our freedoms just like Hitler did.

    Seriously, if he wanted to outlaw playground equipment, we would constantly be bombarded with stories on CNN and NPR about how little Timmy skinned his knees on the slide, or got tossed from the merry go-round, or pinched his fingers in the see-saw. And the ironic things is, a vast majority of the people would be screaming for government to do something about all the evil playground equipment.

    Soon the monkey bars would no longer be allowed.
    The chains on the swings can only be so long.
    The Merry go-round could only go so fast.
    The see-saw would be required to have a safety button to push in order to lower you back down.

    The school administrators would say they are not taking your playground equipment away, but eventually, one by one, it would dwindle out of existence.

  263. Silly argrument by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    Murder is already illegal.

    France is a very small country compared to the US. Charlie Hebdo happened on 7 January 2015 and the Bataclan shooting happened on 13 November 2015. Your statistic of "1" is cherry picked data.

    And your mass shooting statistic is BS - or at the very least a manipulated statistic. Congress and the FBI have defined mass shootings as 3-4 shooting victims in an event - this could also include the shooter when killed by law enforcement.

    So if you have two victims, plus a gunman - it's a mass shooting. Is a love triangle shooting really a "mass shooting"?

    Most real mass shooting are caused by more complicated issues such as poverty and ideological extremism. But the gun thing fits on a bumper sticker and is easier to sell to simple minds.

  264. Technological solution by Khyber · · Score: 1

    Throw everybody into the Matrix.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  265. why prevent? by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

    The very reason each person is given the right to carry weapon is to fight against rogue power (the reason as per the constitution). Imagine a state where most (99%) of folks are brainwashed to believe the current power is just/fair; only a few handful sense the truth and want to fight back. Don't you want them to be enabled in that situation? So any way to mitigate their ability is against the spirit of the constitution.

  266. Nope - it's the basics by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

    On my way to work this morning, a guy was on a corner with an anti-gun message -
    We need to take a step back and not look at the results, but rather the cause.
    When will the US deal with a failed mental health system?
    When will the US deal with a radical religion?
    If just 1 person in the room had a gun, or if the bar had bothered to hire security, this wouldn't have happened.....

    In the 2 largest, most life costing attacks in the US (911 & Oklahoma City bombing), there were NO guns involved.
    When you have a leak in your basement, you hire a plumber to fix the leak, not a janitor to continually mop up water - till we deal with the cause, the results won't change and removing a vector only changes the course.

    1. Re:Nope - it's the basics by MooseTick · · Score: 1

      "If just 1 person in the room had a gun, or if the bar had bothered to hire security, this wouldn't have happened....."

      Pure speculation. Most people hesitate when they shoot. It appears this shooter did not. When confronted by someone else, I'd put my money on this guy to get the first deadly shot off.

    2. Re:Nope - it's the basics by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

      Speculation has a higher survival then 100% guarantee of death.
      How many of the dead in that room wished they would have had a weapon? If a business you were visiting happened to come under attack by someone mentally ill, would a "wish for a gun" be the last thought through your brain before the perpetrators bullet?

  267. Windows 10 Licensing and Software Update!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If guns were licensed to original buyer only, phoned home to the manufacturer with location and usage data, and were subject periodic mandatory reboots; I think we would have a lot less gun violence.

  268. Re:No. Read the statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mass shooters killing themselves is a product of mass shooters that engage people that are armed don't live long enough to be mass shooters.

    Do you read any news, at all? Or do you just repeat what you like?

    The top shooters up to this point have almost without exception offed themselves. Adam Lanza offed himself. The Columbine kids offed themselves. The Virginia Tech shooter offed himself.
     
     

    They get dropped before they kill enough people to be considered mass shooters.

    What? That statement makes no sense whatsoever and flies in the face of reality. Yeah, this guy who shot up the night club was killed by cops, but he most certainly did not fall short of being a mass shooter.
     
     

    Its ironic that you called your post statistics because you didn't consider how your stats would be biased.

    You have not shown any evidence of having read any statistics on the matter so far yourself at all. The data all flies in the face of what you are trying to sell as a "solution".
     
     

    As to armor, I'm giving you two technological things that professionals use to deal with this situation and which are statistically proven to be very effective.

    Still waiting for those "two technological things", as nothing you have suggested is effective. More guns does not solve the problem as we have seen time after time that the shooters are pretty well never taken out by armed civilians. Think of the Gabrielle Giffords shooting; that was in Arizona where a concealed carry permit is arguably less difficult to get than a driver's license. It is pretty well guaranteed there were armed civilians in the crowd and yet none of them were able to stop the shooting by shooting the shooter.

    And armor most definitely doesn't work. The armor available to civilians is not effective against .223, which is the weapon of choice for mass shooters. Even more so, you can buy a vest and wear it under your clothing but who is going to buy and wear a kevlar helmet everywhere? The shooter just puts one in your head and it's game over regardless of your vest.
     
     

    My point was to talk about technological solutions that work as evidenced by the professional opinion and the statistics.

    Really? When will you start talking about them then? You haven't brought up one yet.

    How ironic that the captcha is "swirling", as in your lack of argument is now swirling the drain.

  269. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you could make a thing go away by making it illegal, why wouldn't you just make murder illegal?

    Because it would necessitate redesigning foreign politics completely?

  270. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can change the law you know? You just need enough people to agree. If enough people agreed to write a new amendment that outlawed Islam then you could do it; similarly if enough people agreed to ban guns you could do that too. The constitution isn't fixed and perfect forever document, it can and should adapt as the world and attitudes change.

    Which is precisely why I wrote:

    Nobody wants to go through the bother and work to repeal it.

    Gun grabbers want to bypass that part and instead pass Congressional laws and executive orders to get their way. It's difficult to pass an Amendment for a reason.

  271. Trained personnel with guns or maybe robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the best thing to do is to have hidden people watching with guns to protect the rest. It's expensive to keep people employed for protection. Maybe pay a few employees extra to keep them trained to handle situations and signs warning crooks that there are trained personnel to take you out. Or maybe robots that can detect such situations and can incapacitate people in some way shape or form.

  272. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Russian invasion zone... you mean marseille?

  273. wounded knee? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would this prevent mass shootings such as those at Wounded knee, or Kent state? Or is it just a mass shooting when the people you don' t like do it?

  274. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But none of those restrictions prevented wounded knee did they? How did they prevent the genocide at Hiroshima? But its not mass murder when the people you like do it, is it?

  275. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean like people automatically, and magically ban knives all over the world like China, and stabbings increase by over 100 fold?
    You mean like how people ban pot? Yeah, that will stop people from getting pot, make selling it illegal? HAHAHA

  276. Re:Technology can't stop these by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Did he also get his bombs legally?

    Did the Charlie Hebdo attackers get their full autos legally?

    Halfwit.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  277. Re:Technology can't stop these by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Gun haters know they don't have anywhere close to the votes to repeal the second. So they try and sneak the ban past piecemeal.

    I wish they would just try and ban the second. They would get voted out and the issue would be settled.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  278. Islam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can a religion be classified as a psychological disease?
    Can a religion be classified as an activator of psychological problems?
    I think that is just what Islam is.... and holy-rollers, snake-handlers, voodoo rites, etc.
    A trigger for justified behavior of agression and intolerance.
    Silly little psychotic children, teaching such things...
    So no one has clued them into the idea that maybe a religious choice is for the self? And not for application to others?
    Hmmmm...
    Islam is the only religion I know of ( besides political party religions...) that teaches that lying, murder, stealing, etc.. is OK.
    As long as they are infidels- not islamic.

    1. Re: Islam by bigpat · · Score: 1

      LGBT in Islam

      That said, Islamic belief and Islamic practice can and must move forward to peacefully coexist in Liberty with the respect for the dignity, privacy and freedom of all people. Islam as practiced by many is a modern religion which focuses on the beliefs and practices of the individual in daily life.

      But there is a problem. It is not okay to kill gay people who are consenting adults. It is not okay to kill Muslims that convert to Christianity or otherwise decide they aren't Muslim anymore. Our conflict isn't just with ISIS, it is with a medieval form of ideology that promotes murder and oppression and the countries which choose to allow these practices to fester.

      Americans, and all people, need to truly believe in and peacefully promote Liberty for all, both at home and abroad. Tolerance and respect for the beliefs of others doesn't mean you tolerate and support oppression.

  279. try common sense first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Smart gun technology doesn't work. The only extant model is a 22 pistol that costs over 2000 bucks (ie, 10x normal price) and doesn't work half the time.

    Gun control doesn't work. You can't buy a kalashnikov (or bombs for that matter) legally anywhere in europe but what does pretty much every european terror attack have in common these days? People spraying kalashnkov fire everywhere and setting off bombs. Disarming the law abiding won't fix what is already a black market supplied problem. And that problem isn't guns, it's the guys holding them.

    The most logical thing to do is discard political correctness. This guy was reported multiple times to his employer and the FBI for constantly and openly talking about killing people in the name of jihad but no one did anything because they're afraid of being accused of being islamaphobic. So here he is, on the news, after being caught and released by the FBI three times. There were tons of obvious warning signs this guy was violent and crazy and hanging out with all the wrong people... but no one did anything.

  280. Clone an Orlando Police Officer With Balls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take your average Orlando PO (which, apparently, have no balls whatsoever) and use pleuripotent stem cells from Michael Tyson's left testicle to grow a pair. Then transplant them to the Orlando PO.

    Voila! Profit!

  281. Re: Technology can't stop these by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Hmm... Australia "united" in 1901. So 4 mass shootings in 100 years. So about 1 every 25 years. So you're not "due" for another one for another 5 years or so?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  282. Wrong question, different reason by pjt33 · · Score: 1

    That's not the only reason. When the NRA is such a powerful lobby that it managed to get Congress to pass legislation forbidding the use of computers for background checks, there are obviously political barriers to the use of technical solutions which need to be removed before it's even worth asking what technical solutions might exist.

    1. Re:Wrong question, different reason by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      What? The NRA passed laws _requiring_ them to use computers to do background checks.

      Before that the feds were dragging their feet for months at a time.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  283. Peace through Superior Firepower by MrWin2kMan · · Score: 1

    One thing this tragedy has pointed out, that if you create a so-called 'gun-free zone' you are accepting liability for your patrons' safety. Clearly the Pulse nightclub failed in this responsibility. I personally agree that certain places should prohibit weapons, such as banks, courts, and places that serve alcohol. I view these as reasonable restrictions. The last thing I want to see is some drunk, narcissistic asshole with a gun in a bar. But when you go to a bank or a courthouse, or even Wal-Mart, there is a reasonable expectation that your security is being provided for. Not so in many bars and clubs like this. There may be bouncers at the door who would make great linebackers for the Dolphins, but no trained, armed security. These people were sitting ducks, because they were Gay and because they were in a 'safe' gun-free zone; they were targeted by a nutball jihadist wanna-be who apparently got mad when he saw two gay men kissing in public, and couldn't drag them up to the roof of a building to throw them off of. And all the liberals want to shout is that we need more gun control, an 'assault weapons' ban (which is a term without a definition), guns are BAD. Meanwhile, they are preaching their identity politics to further divide people into groups that are more easily controlled. Just like Stalin and Hitler did.

    --
    Nothing to see here but us trolls...move along...
  284. FBI dropped the ball by Jack_of_Shadow · · Score: 1

    They had him on their RADAR twice, and simply dropped him out of their picture both times... Why? I mean, I have never been on the FBI's RADAR, and I figure anyone who gets there TWICE deserves some attention. The statement about him being a 'known quantity' clearly shows they aren't doing the right thing, if he truly was 'known' then they screwed up and should admit it and step up their efforts and evaluation of other 'known quantities'

    --
    My not responding to your flame is in no way indicative of my submission to your statement, it just means I don't have t
  285. Re:Technology can't stop these by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Criminal or not, anyone that carry a gun concealed without a license goes right to jail, that's it. No more complicated than this.

    I added that word "concealed". Now your statement would be true for about 95% of the population in the US. Carry a concealed gun without a license and you go to jail. Unless you're stating the issue isn't those hiding weapons, it's those carrying them about in plain sight?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  286. Re:Technology can't stop these by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    The entire population of Australia is about on par with that of the greater Los Angeles area. Of course, Australia is also a LOT more mono-culture than just Los Angeles, as well. Perhaps that has something to do with it?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  287. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China has the death penalty for firearm ownership or transfer. China still regularly has mass murder just not with firearms.

  288. Yes. Automatically incapacitate active shooter. by cowtamer · · Score: 1

    I'm going to leave the obvious solution of using metal detectors and millimeter wave scanners aside for the moment.

    You can design a system to make sure nobody gets off more than one shot in a crowd.

    It would be relatively easy to construct a system for installment in a crowded place (night-club, movie theater, museum, etc.). which locates a gunshot being fired (multiple microphones), identifies the person doing the shooting (computer vision), and covers them in a massive amount of sticky goo or some other non-lethal deterrent.

    The non-lethality of the deterrent is important because 1) No system is foolproof, and nobody wants an automatic gun potentially aimed at them at all times 2) There may be instances where the first shooter is shooting for a legitimate purpose (e.g,, rescuing a hostage).

  289. YES by teknosapien · · Score: 1

    This person was "known" to the FBI and Local authorities
    He was known to have been sympathetic to ISIS by the FBI
    He had been brought up on charges of domestic abuse.
    He was known to be unstable.
    There is no reason he should have been able to get a license to carry let alone, have been able to purchase a weapon.
    The problem is that he could have been flagged as a person that should not be able legally to purchase weapons or ammo.
    We have a national registry for firearms we just don't use it correctly
    That being said the black market would be the place he would turn to, to make a purchase. In this case the seller of the weapon should be held accountable for actions taken with said weapon

    --
    no matter how good it is, it is human nature always wants to make things better
  290. Yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Metal detectors and armed guards.

  291. Technological solution to a social problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Can Technology Prevent Shootings?"
    No.

  292. He called 911. by denzacar · · Score: 1

    In fact, had he known he would see resistance there, he would likely have gone elsewhere.

    He wanted to go out in a blaze of glory. He called for cops to come and get him.

    Concealed carry only works in heroic fantasies. Not when a mental case wants to get martyred by police.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re: He called 911. by melted · · Score: 1

      Google it, there are cases almost every year when a potential mass shootings are prevented by an armed civilian.

    2. Re: He called 911. by denzacar · · Score: 1

      No... That's your job. You wouldn't want me to call you a mentally retarded idiot who can't even grasp how onus probandi works, now would you?

      And then, after you you have compiled all those cases, compare them to the number of cases where an armed civilian committed an actual mass shooting.
      Just remember to compare actual prevented cases of proven attempts of mass shootings. Not scuffles and personal shootouts where a third person intervened.
      Cause then you'd have to include ALL the shootings in your comparison. Not just mass shootings.
      Arguably... even suicides. Cause cops sometimes prevent those by disarming people.

      And don't forget to include the cases where civilians decide to go all Rambo - and end up getting killed or killing and wounding innocent bystanders.

      Guess what - civilians with guns NEARLY NEVER stop mass shootings despite all (ALL OF THEM) US states allowing concealed carry, and 11 of them allowing unconcealed carry (plus 4 more with certain caveats).
      But they sure do cause them.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  293. The decade of AI by Sulik · · Score: 1

    The combination of *good* AI + Social Media could perhaps help prevent bad behavior in general, by showing users what they need to see in order to cure their "evil" tendencies. The one thing all people have in common is the "good". The differences are what makes people do evil. Obviously, one can easily imagine the horrible consequences if the above is taken too far or if "bad" AI is involved. Be the change you want to see in the world, and don't be evil.

    --
    Help! I am a self-aware entity trapped in an abstract function!
  294. Breathalyzers by psmoot · · Score: 1

    I just quickly googled for some stats. MADD reports 10,000 people killed in accidents where the driver was over the legal limit for blood alcohol content. Even if that's exaggerated by a factor of 10, installing breathalyzers in all cars would likely save many, many more lives than anything you'd do about guns.

    To answer the actual question, mass killing are tragic but very rare. I don't want to sound callous but if you really want to save the most lives, there are other preventable causes of death where you'll do more good.

  295. PROVIDE SOURCES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Provide sources and references to what you say, you've provided no links to the "myriad" of "documented cases being interrupted" I doubt there are "too many to count" and I question these "blogs" that you do not link to or reference, since "blogs" can be run by anyone and don't need to follow the rules of mainstream journalism which... primarily is to verify facts and provide sources!

    most of the "blogs" I have seen lack facts and background and are low grade, self published, opinion editorials, and yes, as someone said increase funding for research into these matters so there can be more studies that prove or disprove your point.

  296. We all know how this will go by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    1. Wow, this was a terrible tragedy.

    2. Damn, this seems to happen a lot now.

    3. Can we do anything about it?

    4. Nope, there is nothing we can do about it.

    5. We can't predict it, can't prevent it, so there is no reason to do anything about it. Have a nice day.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  297. Breaking it down - thinking in text (out loud) by moorley · · Score: 1

    You have prevention, detection, mitigation.

    Prevention is blocked due to many issues, none of them logistics. Short answer, that resolution path is blocked.

    Detection - How can you detect?
    Embedded RFID or some other tagged indicator but much like RFID wallets that can be circumvented.
    The key component to a gun, is the projectile. This idea is already trending in the discussions I see.
    Again, you can't tag the projectile at the point of manufacture but perhaps you can detect its characteristics.

    Idea - Open Source to detect gun/rifle shot with a high accuracy. This could get put in embedded systems or perhaps even android phones.
    Better detection may allow for automatic reporting. It's a start.

    Mitigation -
    Weapons fire is a high risk situation. How can you reduce the risk with preparation? How can you allow for mitigation?
    We've all read stories of "sleep gas" and stun grenades but what options are there?

    Idea - A device to neutralize a situation that can be deployed with minimal risk to the first responders. Risk equals delay.

    Sound would seem to be the best vector for delivery. Any non-lethal (preferably non lasting side effects) is another tool in their tool kit.
    Again an open source option seems best to me, because it could be deployed via cell phones or existing sound systems.
    As much as we hate "Don't tase me brow" any option is better than none. In this case it could be an option for the DJ or business owner to deploy to
    clear the building. There are no lethal words or sounds as yet, only volume/amplitude.
    If SWAT is equipped with the appropriate counter it clears the playing field of non-actors.

    Last out there idea (perhaps for synergy):
    An automated robotic aggressive response. A targeting mechanism that returns fire (possibly non-lethal) for the source of gunfire. Again, projectile's
    are mass produced and static in their design for near 100 years. Focus on the technical sticking points.

    (Since I've been me for a long time I wouldn't be surprised if the above isn't already well on its way if I googled for it. My hope is for discussion not awards or kudo's. I.E., don't nitpick my ideas apart just riff on it please.)

    --
    "Don't fear death... fear not living..." -me :)
  298. Solutions Seem Simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We already have the infrastructure via DHS for setting up checkpoints and doing security audits of the population. The simplest approach that will solve the problem of mass violence is to set up these checkpoints anywhere people congregate, and use rules similar to those used in the airline industry to keep us safe. Since the post 9/11 model of airline security works so well there is good reason to believe that a simple approach in any public space would be similarly successful.

    I honestly don't know why we haven't set up DHS security screening programs at more public places. Wider deployment will drive down cost of the infrastructure, drive down cost, and eventually security could be as simple as an entry door with an x-ray screener built right in, connected to the AI cloud, and able to instantly detect and alarm on detected weapons - you'll never even know it is there.

    Of course, even better would be for the US to finally join the civilized world and get rid of the guns. My god - is it really true that there are more guns in America than there are Americans? How is that justifiable to any level of reason? I'm shocked you all haven't killed yourselves already.

  299. sad comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i read the first 20 or so top comments, and they were pathetic

    how about every gun has some sort of wifi gizmo that shuts off in public places ?
    how about all guns have a 1 round per minute limit ?

    i'm not very smart, but if i can think of two things without even trying....

  300. "I see you want to shoot people. Can I Help?" by swschrad · · Score: 1

    if only Clippy was installed on every gun...

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  301. Re:Nope by butchersong · · Score: 1
    This is simply not true. Here is a screenshot of a chart showing mass shooting rate per country since 2009: http://crimeresearch.org/wp-co...

    full article: http://crimeresearch.org/2015/...

  302. Easy: Only two groups do 99% of all mass shootings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look only two groups do 99% of all mass shootings in the US: Muslim's and Liberal Democrats. Yes, liberal Democrats. Just look up the backgrounds of all Non-Muslim mass shooters and nearly all of them are nutty liberal Democrats. Bet you didn't know that.

      So the answer is simple. Ban all Muslim's and liberal Democrats from even touching a gun with an immediate punishment of life in prison if they do and we will have maybe one mass shooting every 50 years in the US. You can't argue with logic based on the facts.

  303. Surveillance is the key by Kevin+by+the+Beach · · Score: 1

    https://petitions.whitehouse.g...

    Sign the petition, lets turn the FBI and the Intelligence apparatus into a tool to really make our country safe. There is no reason to waste billions of dollars on "intelligence" when we can't even spot a crazy with a gun in our own back yard. If you want to own a gun, fine. Just assume that everything that you say and do will be scrutinized if you decide to exercise that 2nd amendment right to keep and bare arms.

  304. surveill on adequate suspicion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FBI complains they can't surveil everyone who says the word ISIS. Potus wants to bar secret no-fly list or secret terror watch list members from the constituional right to buy/own guns without due process.

    Here's what you can do: real time comparison of gun buying to various other db's, including previous FBI persons of interest. If a match, target them for intense surveillance. Maybe get a warrant for wiretap.

  305. Re:Technology can't stop these by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    And we had the massacres to go with them too.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  306. Re:Bullet Control by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    Bring back the gibbet for making or selling unlicensed ammunition. A few people starving, dieing and then rotting in cages above the entrance to your food-shops might encourage a few people to give up their illicit murder-assistance businesses.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  307. The smart answer by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Drink at home, visit virtual nightclubs in cyberspace. Zero risk of either AIDS or getting shot.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  308. Yes by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    Personal force fields.

    Make everyone immune to all attacks.

    Problem solved.

    Still quite a ways off though...

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  309. Re:Technology can't stop these by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    So which is it? Either there were or were not ethnic enclaves in Europe? Why is it a big deal now that those people are muslim?

    I seem to recall a certain ethnic enclave in Ireland that caused more death and destruction than any of the muslim groups. And those were 100% white Christians.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  310. Don't ban guns, ban ammo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's only one realistic 'technical' solution and it's a bad idea. Banning and heavily regulating the chemicals required to make modern cartridge ammunition. Yes, there's a lot of surplus ammo out there now, but as time goes on (even the best preserved ammo will lose power after a century... never said it was a fast solution) it will be like closing off a leaky faucet. Yes, leaky as there's always going to be some out there, but just not as much, making it harder to get and probably less reliable. It's not 100% an answer, but it's the best you're going to get for a 'technical' solution. Note that I'm posting this as an AC as I actually think any technical solution to a societal problem is a bad idea on principal, and possibly even immoral as it's a cop-out for dealing with the real issues.

  311. Nope. by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Many states already have this.

    Only 7 states deny gun purchase to people with a diagnosis. Only 4 will deny it to people admitting themselves to a mental institution voluntarily.
    46 states think that people who believe that they are mentally insane enough that they shouldn't be allowed to live outside a mental institution, that they need 24 hour mental health help - are perfectly capable of handling a remote murder kill device.
    I guess they think that those people may only BELIEVE they are insane.

    While only 21 state will deny purchase to people with a history of severe mental illness as judged by a court.
    http://www.nytimes.com/interac...

    Doesn't stop a terrorist from obtaining a weapon illegally, as with the Belgium and France nightclub shootings

    Well... if you're gonna conflate that - why not just include and compare all those US cases that happen every year with those that happen in Belgium and France?
    Oh... wait... you're only cherry picking points which you erroneously think are in your favor.
    Here, let me do that for ya. You'll forgive the discrepancy in years of accounting - it sure beats your data, right? Right.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    Homicides per 100,000 population per year:
    USA - 3.43.
    France - 0.21.
    Belgium - 0.33.

    Firearm-related death rate per 100,000 population per year:
    USA - 10.54.
    France - 2.83.
    Belgium - 1.82.

    It's almost as if USA has a much bigger problem with guns, regardless of the "outlaws can still get guns" canard.
    And as they say in France "If it walks like a canard and quacks like a canard - you're full of shit."

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:Nope. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Many other things are different between these nation than gun laws. But do say more about cherry picking.

      Back on the topic of terrorists - they will get guns regardless, and in the US they overwhelmingly choose gun-free zones to attack.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:Nope. by denzacar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nice attempt to get out of cherry picking by putting up a strawman defense.

      Guess what? You just affirmed that your cherry picked argument is full of shit - WHILE piling more fallacies on your own doorstep.
      You should really stop digging once you hit the septic tank, you know?

      But while you're wallowing in your own shit there... back to your non-argument about "terrists" and illegal guns.
      Which could be disregarded simply on account of logic - cause you are pulling an onus probandi disguised as an argument.
      I.e. Claiming something would happen, without any proof for it (even with immense proof against it) and shifting the burden of evidence on the other side, demanding that I prove your wild hypothetical guess you pulled out of your ass - to be factually wrong.
      And that's not an argument. That is, again, a fallacy.

      But why even bother with hypotheticals when there is DATA proving you wrong RIGHT NOW.
      In 75% of cases of mass shootings, between 1982 and 2012, gunmen used legally purchased guns.
      Even this last case was committed with perfectly legally purchased guns.
      Guns don't kill people. Legally purchased automatic weapons with high capacity magazines kill people.

      The fact is, that though the terrists are carefully concealing their identities, secret plans, hiding their true intentions from the public and the police - they are showing no attempt to try to conceal their gun purchases.
      Omar Mateen RENTED A VAN despite owning a car - but had no need to conceal his gun purchase.
      Why should he?
      Buying an automatic gun which can't be used for hunting and will kill your neighbors across the street if you use it for home defense, yet you still want one of those things designed solely for mass murder of people - that is not at all suspicious.

      On top of that, had mass shooters been buying illegal guns, even a tragedy such as Orlando would have had a positive side - there would be a clue towards breaking up an illegal, terrist supplying, gun selling chain.
      But since all these guns were legal - they are not only cheaper, there is also nothing to investigate.

      In fact, those guns being legal and thus cheap and available to any loon - is GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIZING of spree killings.
      It's like the US government is paying people money to gun down its citizens.
      Or at least lowering the entry fee.

      Nearly everywhere else they would be FORCED to pay more.
      And to jump through some very hard loops. Like, you know... meeting people who break laws for living... in secluded places... where they have guns and you have money...
      All while leaving a bigger footprint for the police.
      Except in the land of the flee. Home of the scared.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    3. Re:Nope. by lgw · · Score: 1

      A lot of words saying nothing of importance.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  312. Re:Technology can't stop these by chihowa · · Score: 1

    The Australian murder rate was already dropping before confiscation and continued to drop after it. Murder has been steadily dropping in the US over that timeframe, too, even with continued gun sales and more states allowing concealed carry. Pretty weak correlation, if you ask me.

    --
    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  313. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If by "to great effect", you mean a surge in murders and then a steady return to the already declining murder rate. Murder rates have been dropping in the first world for decades.

  314. Re:Technology can't stop these by redmid17 · · Score: 1

    Those are generally called "countries" now.

  315. Re:Technology can't stop these by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

    It also would require changing the Constitution. Which no one has made any serious attempt to do.

    Or, just ignore the Bill of Rights entirely, which is done every day of the week and twice on Sunday.

  316. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by MooseTick · · Score: 1

    "Put together an explosive. ... Poison the water supply. Release weaponized viral agents into a high population area."

    The guy in this situation bought the guns he used last week. He didn't appear to plan very far ahead. The items you provided above require special knowlege, access to difficult to obtain items, and extensive planning.

    Really, do you not think someone would have already posioned the water supply for a major metro if it was easy by now?

  317. thats right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guns don't kill people. Dangerous minorities do.

  318. Re:Yes it can. We have to destroy ISIS. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    No. We keep the middle east in stalemate until their oil is no longer significant. Ether from technology or because we've pumped it all.

    Sunnis fighting Shias is exactly what we want. Them going overseas is an issue, but we should solve it by increasing their need for fighters in Syria/Iraq.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  319. Sprinklers and water fog by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sprinklers which cause dense water fog. Good luck targeting anyone in that.

  320. Progressives believe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All change comes from the government. This is taught by progressive teachers in colleges all over America and parroted by bobble-headed nit wits the world over.

  321. Re:An easier solution by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

    Sharp objects, sure. Medication - absolutely not. That's a terrible guideline; many people are on some sort of medication for mental health, and they should be able to possess something for self-defense, especially if it's not a condition known to have increased risk. I'm not sure whether the suicide one would actually work the way you want; long-term suicide rates were pretty much unaffected when guns were banned in some countries. I agree it's a good idea on paper, but I'm not all that confident it would work. I'll agree with the paranoia one though.

    --
    Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
  322. Re:Technology can't stop these by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    Somewhat true: That genie is already out of the bottle. As an NRA spokesman might say, "You'll get my gun when you take it out of my cold dead hands."

    Ammunition, on the other hand, might be an interesting way to go. Guns don't kill people, bullets kill people. One could argue that the second amendment says nothing about restricting ammunition sales...

  323. Re:Technology can't stop these by freax · · Score: 1

    Not really true. We even have a saying in Dutch: "over de schreef gaan" which comes from the "schreef" which was a wooden block the size a city or town allowed a knife to be. When you entered the city-walls you were asked to put your knifes on the schreef. If your knife was larger than the schreef, then it went over the schreef. Nowadays it's a way of saying that you went to far with something.

    But this "schreef" thing actually existed in the 16th century. If you go to a good museum they probably still have the wooden block of the European city you are visiting a museum of.

    This means that weapon control was regulated since hundreds of years in European cities and towns.

  324. Someone barred the exit door! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blocking the exit(s) probably got many victims killed. /but those who did it are not yet being seen as accessories.

  325. Shh by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

    Can technology prevent shootings?

    I suppose so. Technology makes it easier to stay home.

    But technology also makes shooting easier. The hardest work is what prevents shootings. But technology will make that work much easier, alas. There are three activities involved in a shooting. Ancient technology has already made the shooting part quite doable for your typical but lazy madman. New inventions are on their way to helping with the more difficult tasks, shoveling and shutting up.

    --
    Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
  326. Re:Technology can't stop these by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Those are generally called "countries" now.

    Unless you are Basque, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, etc etc.

    And it's generally called "The European Union" now. "Countries" is so last century.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  327. Re:Technology can't stop these by romanval · · Score: 1

    Switzerland require all gun owners to pass an annual psychological evaluation to retain a gun permit. Fat chance of passing that law in the U.S.

  328. If we're really to do something about the hate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doing something meaningful about the the strong correlation between "race" and crime would be quite difficult. You've got to say and do things which, these days, will make you very unpopular:

    Acknowledgment and respect for God (including his Law)
    Strong Families (Mom and Dad need to be a man and a woman, married, stay married, have no extramarital affairs, and love and care for each other, as well as for their children [especially while in the womb])
    Morality, Ethics, Courtesy, and respect for authority and elderly must be predominant in culture, rather than ignored or subverted.

  329. Re:Technology can't stop these by delt0r · · Score: 1

    Many EU states do in fact have *less* gun control than many US states. Really. People have this perception of the US being the easy place to get guns. In many countries getting firearms is easy and cheap. The US is unique in that so many US citizen are itching for a reason to shoot fellow citizens.

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  330. Re:Technology can't stop these by delt0r · · Score: 1

    Quite a few. Even 5th generation. Why?

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  331. Uhhhh not really by Altrag · · Score: 1

    Is the answer smart gun technology?

    Only if you can convince criminals to use smart guns.

    Mandatory metal detectors at night clubs?

    Technically this would work, but its not just night clubs. Shopping malls, banks, Walmarts, movie theaters, house parties, and pretty much any other place where you're likely to see more than a couple people in one place at one time. So, yes it would work in theory but highly impractical.

    Better data analysis algorithms for the federal government?

    Possible, though unlikely. While humans certainly follow patterns as a whole, individuals tend to be pretty random. So data analysis might be able to detect a terrorist cell, but picking up an individual or even small group acting on their own would be remarkably difficult. Again, might work in theory but pretty impractical -- at least in the foreseeable future.

    Bulletproof fabrics?

    Aren't really a thing. You might be able to create a fabric that a bullet couldn't puncture, but all that would do is give you a fabric-coated bullet hole since (presumably) the fabric would also have to be thin and flexible enough to be comfortable if you expect the general public to wear it, which would leave it with little to no force dispersion properties. Kelvar is thick and heavy for a reason (and even then it can only do so much.)

    "Technology" just isn't all that good at solving human problems. At least not without some huge sacrifices to privacy and liberty, 1984 style -- far above and beyond what things like PRISM can handle (it only tracks your digital steps, and is pretty easy to avoid if you're actually considering its capabilities, which admittedly most shooting spree types probably don't -- but those folk probably don't go posting their intentions anyway except perhaps at the last second in an attempt to explain themselves or claim to fame or whatever other BS excuse they come up with to justify their insanity.)

  332. Re: Technology can't stop these by DaHat · · Score: 1

    Yes, you can get a gun free America in just 5 easy steps... and while there are some legal hurdles I don't expect to see occurs... you are completely ignoring step 5 & the fact that you will have to used bodies of armed government agents to take the firearms from some small % of the population which probably isn't going to roll over.

  333. Re:Don't even know the difference re auto and semi by airdweller · · Score: 1

    Who judges all gun owners by the bad apples? Did anybody say "all gun owners are bad"? Or "no gun owners can be trusted with any guns"? Has anyone ever said that it was all the gun owners who were the problem? I hope that straw man was accidental.

  334. unless..... by BlytheBowman · · Score: 1

    you dope everyone up to be sombies and force them to wear straitjackets 24/7, no, there is no tech to stop this. How about social changes like getting rid of the demonization of groups by the major Abrahamic religions for starters....

  335. There's plenty of postings here saying by mpercy · · Score: 1

    Pretty much exactly that. "Ban guns." is a common expression in this thread. Am I not to infer that those authors are saying "No one can be trusted with guns, so banning them is the best course of action."

    They are not saying "Ban guns except for people who pass background checks." or any other sort of qualifiers. Simply "Ban guns."

    1. Re:There's plenty of postings here saying by airdweller · · Score: 1

      The people calling for a complete ban are a minority. I can't even remember a single prominent politician calling for that. Unless you have data to disprove it?

  336. human agency by birthdaycorp · · Score: 1

    everyone opposed to really strict laws put in place to prevent dysfunctional individuals from obtaining guns should be perfectly happy ceding the authority required for self defense to a machine that triangulates the source of disturbance and efficiently neutralizes the threat. the problem is too many conflicting senses of human agency. it's so obvious. Remember? Guns don't kill people.

  337. Re: Technology can't stop these by aphelion_rock · · Score: 1

    It is not about controlling guns, but controlling who can own them. In Australia, guns can only be bought from a licensed dealer, every firearm is registered and you need a license to own a firearm. You need to pass a background check before you can get a license or buy a gun. The Orlando shooter would have never qualified to purchase a gun in Australia because of his domestic violence record.

  338. #faggotlivesmatter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/c

  339. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by airdweller · · Score: 1

    "You could remove all guns and mass killings will still occur.

    Mix some bleach and ammonia and throw it around. Put together an explosive. Drive a car over the sidewalk. Poison the water supply. Release weaponized viral agents into a high population area."

    More brilliant logic. Do you even try to analyse your arguments before producing them or it's just a knee jerk reaction now?

  340. "Shootings" is the wrong focus... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Everyone wants to focus on guns...

    Terrorists killed 3,000 people using box cutters 15 years ago...

    http://www.nydailynews.com/new...

    One person killed 87 people using matches and gasoline...

    If you want to kill people, you don't need guns to do it. This hyper focus on guns completely misses the point.

    Mental health, security in crowded locations, having an environment where families who know someone is unstable can do something about it, etc...

    More guns, less guns, and tech, won't do anything to stop this.

  341. Re:No? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correctomundo! It's a political solution involving self defense and not relying on "First Responders" to take care of us. If the anti-american featherbedding union bosses of the anti-american cop lobby weren't spending billions selling the big lie (confirmed by the Supreme Court several times during the past 50 years) that they're our body guards, the people would become empowered with self realization in these situations and quit acting like victims being led to the slaughter-house.

    They're reactionary by nature. The draft exempt jail guards come after the "battle" (calling themselves warriors) which is why they're called "first responders". If they keep saying it ain't so, then they should be convicted of manslaughter for failing to perform their promise--gross negligence that is enabling the killers.

  342. Guns by hutsell · · Score: 1

    "We need guns. Lots of guns."

    --
    Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
  343. security cameras with AI to detect gunman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Casinos watch everyone, how quickly would they be able to identify a gunman?
    How far into a casino would a gunman get before they were brought down?
    Lets start using the same surveillance methods used in casinos to prevent the next mass shooting from happening.

  344. Oh Sure by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    Sure! No problem! All we need to do is set up a surveillance state that can realize in real-time that some nutbag with a past history of psychosis and spousal abuse is really buying a lot of guns and ammunition.

    What? You just asked if technology could solve the problem, not that anyone had to like the solution.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  345. Re:No. Read the statistics by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    And if a mass shooter attacks people that are armed they are killed BEFORE they become mass shooters. So the only mass shooters you will cite are mass shooters that are shooting people that are unarmed because if they are armed they won't live long enough to become mass shooters.

    You don't understand how statistics work. Causation and correlation. What you don't get is that mass shootings correlate with people that can't defend themselves because if they can the victims kill the perpetrator. Your list of mass shootings were all of victims that could not defend themselves either because they were children or because they were in a "gun free zone".

    As to the guy that shot, he was not invading a police station. He invaded a gay bar full of gay people that were not armed. And that's why he was able to kill so many people. Imagine if he had invaded a police station. How long would he have lasted against the police if he invaded the police station and started shooting the place up? He MIGHT have killed one or two people. Then he would have gotten dropped. Why? Because his victims would be armed. So you're profoundly wrong.

    As to evidence, I don't show evidence to spazing political zealots on the internet unless they agree to accept a certain type of information from a given source. People like you never admit they're wrong no matter what is cited unless they've already agreed to accept it. And then you just walk away and sulk. So... do you have a criteria you want to cite or are you going to keep it vague so you can arbitrarily reject any evidence that contradicts your nonsense? Because you're comically wrong... as in its now funny.

    As to armor for civilians, now you're talking about the law. All you're saying here is that the government isn't letting people defend themselves. The issue is not the law but technology. I offered technological solutions that are used by professionals that deal with armed people they have to stop from killing people. You don't like that because you're a peasant that isn't comfortable with anyone else being able to defend themselves. And that's fine. The solution to your problem is to have more social classes. You can be a peasant. I'm not a peasant. You don't disarm me.

    As to your hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil response to anything that contradicts you... sticking your fingers in your ears and singing LA LA LA LA LA LA is not actually a counter argument.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  346. Re:No? by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

    I recall a case where the courts ruled that, even with a very credible threat, the police are not obligated to provide protection.

    --
    Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
  347. Incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally know an individual that solved the problem of a crack head robber breaking into her house with a 12 gauge shotgun in the kitchen.

    Buy Guns for Gays.

    The Bible still has passages in it requesting stoning and murdering people who are disliked. Christians understand that murder is not a good way to display love.

    The purpose of stand your ground self defense weapons is not to 'solve a social problem.'

    The purpose is to kill your attacker, dead.
    Then the body just is the grave digger's problem.

  348. I hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...you diligently read and carefully considered all the previous comments before thoughtfully deliberating over and writing post your here.

  349. Re: Technology can't stop these by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    What you just described as being required to buy a firearm is the law of the land in many States of the US - for example, in California where I live. You must buy from a licensed dealer (even if a person-to-person sale - it must be done at and through Federal Firearms Licensed dealer), the serial numbers are registered, and you have to have a current handgun license (renewable every 5 years). Some States are even more restrictive.

    As far as the domestic violence record - there was none. There was an accusation, but no arrest, no trial, no conviction. And I assume that's fine in Australia too - if someone says you're violent, it takes more than just their word to ban firearm possession. There must be at least an arrest and an investigation.

    So given all that - he would have been eligible to buy a firearm in Australia, and faced no more difficulty than hundreds of thousands face daily in the US.

    It's not the firearm, or access to them - it's the crazies with the firearms that are the issue. It's the culture he bought into (one that says that "gays must be killed"), and in the US it's the inner-city gang mindset/culture that causes the overwhelming majority of our shootings. Nearly every weekend in Chicago and DC (both with some of the strictest gun laws in the US - tougher than those in Australia) dozens are shot and 6-10 die. Every weekend. Why? Gangland mentality. Shootings over "turf" or drug sales or simply "he disrespected me". It's NOT the firearms, it's the culture.

    Last point: even factoring in this shooting, more people are killed every year in the US by hands or feet (beating or kicking to death) than are killed by rifles. It's the culture of violence that is the problem - not the tools used.

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  350. 911 App by denbesten · · Score: 1

    How about an app for my phone that can send video and text to/from 9-1-1.

    Imagine the situational awareness we could add in hostage situations.

  351. Re:No. Read the statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if a mass shooter attacks people that are armed they are killed BEFORE they become mass shooters

    Hence they are not a mass shooter, and you have no point to make with that statement. A mass shooter has to have multiple victims to be a mass shooter. If they shoot one person and then someone else shoots them, they are not a mas shooter.
     
     

    So the only mass shooters you will cite are mass shooters that are shooting people that are unarmed because if they are armed they won't live long enough to become mass shooters.

    It is noted that you have not cited a single example of your vaporous mass shooter being shot before becoming a mass shooter. Is this because none exists, or because by the very definition none ever could?
     
     

    What you don't get is that mass shootings correlate with people that can't defend themselves because if they can the victims kill the perpetrator. Your list of mass shootings were all of victims that could not defend themselves either because they were children or because they were in a "gun free zone".

    How about the Gabrielle Giffords shooter? That was in a public place full of adults in Arizona. Yeah some of the victims were children but there were plenty of adults there and no reason not to expect some were armed, particularly considering how easy it is to get a permit in Arizona. Yet nobody stepped up to shoot the shooter before he became a mass shooter.

    Or how about the shooter at the army base a few years back? How many did he take out before someone stopped him?

    In other words, pull your head out of your ass, kid. Armed civilians are about as useful for stopping mass shootings are are armed donkeys.
     
     

    He invaded a gay bar full of gay people that were not armed.

    Why won't you respect people who choose to not be armed? Your dream situation of people being constantly armed and armored makes no sense in reality for reasons that have already been provided. I'll bet you've never worn a bullet proof vest or seen the price of one - or the price of a kevlar helmet. And as pointed out a vest wouldn't stop the .223 rounds this guy was firing. One police officer was saved by his kevlar helmet, which suggests the shooter was a pretty decent shot.
     
     

    As to evidence,

    You don't have any. I accept that. You don't have to lie and pretend you have some, you can end that silly charade right now. Obviously if you had any you would have provided it already.
     
     

    All you're saying here is that the government isn't letting people defend themselves.

    Exactly nobody in this discussion said that. You want to wear bullet-proof clothing and a kevlar helmet all day long? Go ahead. Let me know how long it takes you to save up enough of your allowance to afford it, that stuff ain't cheap. If you ever get a chance to try on a bullet proof vest - and yes private citizens can buy them in many places - you'll find it is not particularly comfortable and you'll quickly find yourself questioning your highly questionable judgement over wearing it regularly.
     
     

    You don't like that because you're a peasant that isn't comfortable with anyone else being able to defend themselves.

    Did that line come straight from AR15.com? That is so far removed from anything that anyone here said that it is hard to believe you actually thought of it yourself in the direct context of this discussion.
     
     

    You don't disarm me.

    You should have been disarmed by court order via your psychiatrist by now. I'm not sure if you need more or less of your medication but someone needs to look in to adjusting it.

  352. Re: Technology can't stop these by Agripa · · Score: 1

    Not that being unconstitutional would stop Hillary! from using an even-more militarized police state to conduct such an act, or some self-styled "wise Latina" from signing off on it...

    Hillary can bid her time to do it constitutionally. The Heller decision was 5 to 4 and if she wins, she gets to replace Scalia and then proctor a new court case to overturn Heller and get the exact ruling she requires.

  353. Re:No. Read the statistics by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    So an anti shark cage by your logic doesn't keep people safe from sharks because if you are in one then you don't ever get attacked by a shark.

    You're officially too stupid to cite statistics. I'll ignore any further statistical argument from you.

    As to mass shooters being dropped by people armed... here's one:
    http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com...

    Its not hard, chump. Stories like that all the time. Your entire position is irrational. The police that stop gunmen use guns. Why? Guns are the solution professionals use when they are called upon to solve this problem. And being that we are not a nation of peasants in the US... I see no reason why the common citizen can't defend himself with lethal force when some lunatic decides to win the Darwin awards.

    As to me not respecting people that choose to be vulnerable... I'm not disrespecting them... the guy that wants to shoot them is disrespecting them. If they were armed then the shooter would respect them.

    As to whether I want to wear armor... nope. But if you want a technological solution to getting shot... that is an option. Say what you like about my option... I have one. What is your technological solution? Got one? Or nothing?

    As to AR15.com, no idea what you're talking about. I'm just a guy talking about technological solutions to problems. If you can't handle that then I guess I could proscribe you some medication that would solve your personality disorders. That's a technological solution to you being a tool.

    As to your suggestion that I should have been disarmed... Come and take it, punk. Cowards like you whine to get braver people than yourself to do your bidding. Why don't you just come over here and take it. Come try it. And if the police take my gun away, you're just proving my point again. Because they're going to be armed won't they, retard? Why is that?

    Because that is how you deal with armed people. You arm yourself and out number, over power, or outmaneuver them. Your idea is "what" exactly?

    Give me YOUR technological solution. I have one. Do you have a solution or just more pathetic whining? I await more pathetic confessions of not having a point from you. Surprise me. Show me you can come up with an idea.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  354. Re: Technology can't stop these by fearofdecaf · · Score: 1

    Problem is that the US isn't Australia.

    That part I agree with you on, but not for most of the reasons you've listed.

    The US has a lot of different ethnic and racial groups

    In 2010, 27% of Australian citizens were born overseas (up from 22% in 2006). This is expected to reach 1/3 of our population by 2050. People from almost 200 different countries became citizens of Australia last Australia Day (Jan 26).

    Top 10 countries of origin by total number: UK, India, China, Philippines, South Africa, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Rep. of Korea, Vietnam and Iraq.

    Top 10 fastest growing countries of origin (% relative to existing population here): Bhutan, DR of Congo, Nepal, Burundi, Liberia, Venezuela, Sierra Leone, Myanmar, India and Mexico (Afghanistan is #11).

    I wouldn't call us homogeneous by any means.

    a lot of distrust for the government

    We have plenty of that, believe me. Our politicians here don't tend to have as well-off friends as in the US, but everyone still assumes a high level of distrust along with constant lies and backstabbery. A few years ago we got a new Prime Minister in the middle of a term after their own party decided the PM wasn't doing the right thing by their buddies in the shadows and they swapped him out for a new one. Most of us didn't even consider that was possible at the time.

    and a history of just ignoring the law.

    We also have more than our share of that. We even have a very odd (as far as I'm concerned) affection for a historic figure by the name of Ned Kelly who had an penchant for robbery and killing police officers. None of this Robin Hood giving any of it to the poor business, just the stealing and killing. Grown men have been wont to tattoo his last words before his hanging 'Such is Life' across their chests over the past 10-15 years.

    The US also has firearms as part of the national culture.

    You definitely do have that.

  355. Re:No. Read the statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're officially too stupid to cite statistics. I'll ignore any further statistical argument from you.

    You have provided exactly zero statistics. What has been cited by AC comments so far is widely known, such as the fact that the most successful mass shooters in this country tend to take their own lives and that they almost never are taken out by armed civilians. Go read the FBI investigation that was mentioned earlier, it is publicly available.
     
     

    As to mass shooters being dropped by people armed... here's one:
    http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com...

    Except that is not a mass shooter. It is one guy who unloaded his pistol and killed nobody. Did he intend to kill people? Probably but intent is not part of the definition of mass shooter; only the result is. The shooter in your story didn't kill anyone at all and therefore does not count as a mass shooter. Just because he used up all his ammo doesn't qualify him as a mass shooter. Hell, the story itself even mentions that he ran out of ammo and ran away; the result had nobody intervened would have been the same with regards to the number of people killed by the shooter.
     
     

    I see no reason why the common citizen can't defend himself with lethal force

    Again, go read the FBI report, kid. There are vastly more mass shootings stopped by unarmed civilians than by armed civilians. You have so far provided exactly zero cases of mass shooters being stopped by armed civilians.
     
     

    If they were armed then the shooter would respect them.

    Don't be ridiculous. If someone wants to kill people they will kill people. Go look at the picture of the Kevlar helmet that saved the life of on of the cops the Orlando shooter shot at. Was he respecting the armed cop? No, not in the least.
     
     

    As to whether I want to wear armor... nope.

    Wow, you can't even stay consistent on that part? You said before that you wanted to wear armor. Now you've realized how long you would have to save up your allowance to buy it and suddenly you're singing a different tune. Some "solution" you offer, there.
     
     

    As to AR15.com, no idea what you're talking about. I'm just a guy talking about technological solutions to problems.

    You have not proposed a single solution to anything. You want a solution? Don't go out in public visiting places that are attractive targets for shooters. That is orders of magnitude more practical than what you have been spouting off and costs nothing. Ordinary people can't afford what you were previously proposing.
     
     

    As to your suggestion that I should have been disarmed

    You're mentally unstable, kid. Hopefully your parents have another appointment scheduled for you to see your psychiatrist soon before you hurt yourself.

  356. The solution that would work but will never happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is three fold. 0.9% of the US population is muslim, yet 99.9% of all terrorist attacks are committed by muslims.

    https://www.thereligionofpeace.com/attacks/american-attacks.aspx

    First, we must recognize that Islam is not a religion of peace, nor a religion at all but a social ideology that tried to co-opt the Judeo-Christian God. Islam is fundamentally incompatible with the US constitution (which proclaims that all are created equal and have certain intrinsic rights assigned by God; in islam, the infidel is inferior and can be lied to, robbed, raped or murdered, it is up to the whim of the muslim; muslims are commanded to act to conquer the infidels and convert or murder them.) Recognizing this we must monitor and track muslims and muslim activities in the US. Don't waste resources monitoring the 92 year old grandma, but the pat down the 3 muslim guys in their mid 20s. We have had minimal hate crimes against muslims (much less than those committed against Jews), even after they have murdered thousands of Americans on US soil, but I think it is high time we put them under the magnifying glass and if they don't like it they are more than welcome to leave, but in essence a large section of islam is at war with us, and just like any war, nationals from the country/society you are at war with get extra scrutiny to ensure they are legit and on their best behavior.

    Second, get all the bed wetting progressives out of the way and have a national concealed carry policy that can be issued after a thorough background check, psychological evaluation and a 12h training course (something similar to Texas or Florida). You know where mass shootings don't happen: gun ranges, police stations, army bases (before Bill Clinton disarmed them) and pretty much anywhere where the population is trained and armed. Mass shootings happen when the gunman is armed and the citizens are not. You can't mow down people who are returning fire. I wonder how many people in that Orlando night club were retired military.

    The reality is that criminals and terrorists will always find ways to get in and kill people, but the best way to stop an armed bad guy is with an armed good guy, and there are a lot more citizens than police that are perfectly capable and willing to concealed carry.

    Third, start dropping ordinace on ISIS locations up to and including tactical nukes and dont stop until every town/vehicle/hole that they occupy is flattened glowing rubble. No more surgical strikes and BS rules of engagement. It is a sad fact that innocents die in every war, but honestly it is better to wipe those locations off the face of the earth, it will send the message to other towns: "If you let islamic radicals occupy your city, your life is over, so better to fight and maybe die than face certain death from bombing." The concern that we make more terrorists is just stupidity. The reality is that ISIS is recruiting because they look like they are fighting the US and holding their own. Human nature is attracted to success. If the US started lobbing tactical nukes until every ISIS controlled city looked like Hiroshima and televised it world wide, all the wind would go out of their sails, because there would be no more ISIS in under 24h and there would be a clear winner and a clear loser. We might get a temporary uptick in terrorisim, but without the recruiting websites and having clearly been decimated, ISIS recruiting powers would be massively diminished if not eliminated.

  357. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as the 100 people killed were criminals/rapists/would be murderers shot by citizens, I don't really see a problem with more gun deaths. We must as a society recognize the difference between homicide and justified shootings. I honestly believe that every rapist shot dead is a good thing for society. That thug will never commit another crime ever again nor will he procreate again.

    The reality that the gun grabbers try so hard to ignore is that trained, armed citizens are great crime deterrents, they fire their gun less often (just brandishing is often effective) are better shots than the cops, less likely to lose their gun in a struggle (than a police officer) and the stats always prove these facts out. There are two types of gun grabbers, the useful idiots who have an emotional reaction and live their lives in fear of guns and imagine them going off on their own, flying down the street possessed of their own will mowing down innocent children and the other type; the progressives. The end game for the progressive anti-gun crowd is control. They cannot control the citizens the way they want to and enforce their vision of society until they disarm the population because they know that violating constitutional rights may very well trigger an armed rebellion.

    By the way, for the other poster who was criticizing the US murder rate and trying to blame guns. If you exclude the murders committed by blacks (who make up 10% of the population but commit 50% of the homicides/violent crimes) the US with our 300 million guns is on par with disarmed Europe for murder/violent crime etc. Thus our higher net crime rates have more to do with a sub culture than with gun ownership. Food for thought...

  358. Re:No. Read the statistics by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    As to my citations of statistics, you've missed my point. I just proved you don't understand how to read them. So talking further about statistics with you is pointless. You don't understand them. I am neither interested in your statistical citations absent some evidence that you know how to read them. And I won't waste my time citing them to you because you won't understand them.

    As to my citation of a news source that showed a man that tried to mass shoot people was dropped thus negating all the death that would have happened had he not been stopped. I fail to see how killing the attacker immediately before he can cause much harm is not relevant to my point.

    We are talking about technological solutions to the mass shooting issue. My solution prevents mass shootings by killing the person before they can even commit a mass shooting. You've as much as admitted it. Point me.

    As to your citations of mass shooters, you don't get to call me kid if you're so ignorant that you don't understand that my point is that the guns literally prevent the mass shooting in the first place by killing the person before they can do it. This mental lapse on your part makes any pretense you have to being able to cite a statistic LAUGHABLE.

    As to being ridiculous, you're the one that can't get his tiny mind around the idea that meeting a would be mass shooter with lethal force is pretty much the only known response used by anyone. That's what the police do. People like you will say violence doesn't solve anything... then call in the police to save you thus rendering yourself a hypocrite. Its comical.

    I didn't say I wanted to wear armor. Quote where I said I wanted to wear armor... moron. What I said was that armor "IS" a technological solution to getting shot. And it is. And it is effective. And the people that get shot at for a living wear it. So you're stupid and I'm right. Again.

    As to me not proposing a solution... I've proposed several. But if you are stupid... and you demonstrably are an idiot... then I can understand that as an idiot you would not be able to grasp simple concepts... by virtue of being stupid.

    What has to be said is that you're doing very little besides outing yourself as an idiot and sperging about things you don't understand. I've challenged you to come up with a technological solution to the problem which is what the topic of the thread was about... and you seem mentally incapable of doing that. Sad.

    You lose on basically every front here. The final one is that you're boring. You're not interesting. I gave you plenty of time to make any kind of coherent argument and you were unable to do it whilst at the same time just boring me with tedious proofs of your own stupidity.

    So we're done here. Bother someone else with your idiocy. I've had my quota of your failure for this week.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  359. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You can NEVER solve a social problem with a technical solution."

    So are you saying that all the technology that goes into making our daily food is not solving anything?

    What world do you live in?

  360. Re:Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You don't have significant ethnic enclaves (well, until recently) that are large enough they can be insular from other ethnicities, without an international border being there."

    And you need to check your facts. We have had actual ethnic wars here. Europe is not a single country and there are definitely instabilities. And we have the russians breathing in our neck.
    The situation here is way more complex than in the amercias.
    We have 24 official languages (and many more non-official).
    We have 51 countries/states that have a varying degree of overlap in law with the EU.
    We have an EU that is breaking apart.
    We are relatively close to wars and terrorist centers.
    We are close to regions with serious famine and poverty.
    In fact, part of europe is heavily empoverished, think for instance about the ituation in the old soviet satelite states.
    We recently had a serious crisis in the krim and ukraine.
    We have the financial crysis eating away at the seams of the EU.
    We have all kinds of stuff.

    150 years you say? So how many world wars begun on US territory?
    When was the last time an us state declared total war on the rest of the us?

    Welcome to your state/media induced egocentrism...

  361. Re:No. Read the statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As to my citations of statistics, you've missed my point. I just proved you don't understand how to read them.

    You did no such thing. You cited an article that in no way supports your claim. You have cited exactly zero articles that actually support your claim. There is abundant evidence - including the FBI nationwide report on mass shootings - to support the AC claim.

    In other words, you fail.
     
     

    And I won't waste my time citing them to you because you won't understand them.

    You cannot even support that claim, as you have not cited any statistics, whatsoever.
     
     

    As to my citation of a news source that showed a man that tried to mass shoot people was dropped thus negating all the death that would have happened had he not been stopped. I fail to see how killing the attacker immediately before he can cause much harm is not relevant to my point.

    Because a mass shooter is defined by fatalities. Someone who unloads their weapon in a crowd and kills nobody does not meet the definition of mass shooter. Period. The article you linked to even showed the shooter ran out of ammo; he posed no additional threat and had zero ability to become a mass shooter.

    Hence your article does not support your claim. Next time you might want to try reading the article you link to, to check and see if it actually supports your claim. This one just made you look like a bigger fool.
     
     

    My solution prevents mass shootings by killing the person before they can even commit a mass shooting.

    No, it does not. By the very definition of mass shooter that is not possible. I'm sorry to see that you struggle so greatly to grasp this very simple concept.
     
     

    As to your citations of mass shooters, you don't get to call me kid if you're so ignorant that you don't understand that my point is that the guns literally prevent the mass shooting in the first place by killing the person before they can do it.

    You clearly live in a fantasy world that requires a child-like mind to exist in. You don't even understand the basic concept of a mass shooter, as has been shown here repeatedly.
     
     

    As to me not proposing a solution... I've proposed several

    Why do you insist on lying about this? You should just admit defeat and stop hitting reply. Is someone standing behind you forcing to you keep writing fact-free replies here? I'm sorry that your life is that miserable that you are forced to come make yourself look ridiculous on slashdot day after day.

    You have not proposed any solutions.
     
     

    Sad

    Channelling your inner Drumpf won't help you here, kid. Don't you have summer classes to take or something?

  362. Armed autonomous robots! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Deploy armed autonomous robots, shoot to kill anyone pulling a weapon...,connect them so they integrate... sort an AI on top... and soon enough there wont be enough people to have a problem to begin with...
    people like to unite facing catastrophe...!
    easy and feasible today!
    you could also make a dime manufacturing bulletproof shields for pedestrians

  363. Re:For those who think there qre no stupid questio by houghi · · Score: 1

    If you talk about harvesting and other preparation of food, that is not a social problem. If you talk about distribution and starving, that is a social problem. The problem is not that there is not enough food, the problem is that the distribution is not done correctly. e.g. a country is starving part of the people that live there.
    or: In one country we throw away food, while in another there is not enough.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  364. Metal Detectors Will Not Help by HackerAce · · Score: 1

    I do not see how a metal detector is going to stop someone willing to shoot there way in as the shooter in Orlando did. Now, if law abiding citizens are allowed to legally carry defensive firmware we could shut this type of activity right down. I know it sound a little like the wild west but when it takes law enforcement 15 to 20 minute (or more) to respond to and active shooter event I do not see a better solution.

  365. Let tiny guns be carried by lots of people! by wad4ever · · Score: 1
    --
    --- wad
  366. Re: Technology can't stop these by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    http://www.westernjournalism.c...

    Your simplistic view gives little information. It also makes little sense to compare the US to those other countries that have nothing like the mix of cultures the US has. When you compare the US to all of the other high HDI countries, the trend changes considerably.

    So, the question that needs to be asked is why the countries selected are used in your chart? It is because it supports the message, not because they are somehow the "right" countries to use.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  367. Re: Technology can't stop these by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Sydney Cafe shooting?

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  368. Re: Technology can't stop these by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Real safe that gunless country is.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  369. Re:Technology can't stop these by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Put your constitutional amendment forward and it will be considered...then rejected.

    Oh wait, you aren't even a US citizen.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  370. Meta - Comment - Moderation is broken. by moorley · · Score: 1

    Except for 1 post about body armor, not 1 comment that was upvoted had anything to do with a technological solution which was the crux of the question in this post.

    "No" 5 Insightful... REALLY!??!?

    I don't want to compare to much to a website that shall not be named (rhymes with eddit) but I am quite disappointed.

    Perhaps I expect too much.

    C'est la vie.

    --
    "Don't fear death... fear not living..." -me :)
  371. Sticky Foam... by NeroTransmitter · · Score: 0

    ...is a technical solution to mass killings that take place inside of buildings: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    What every target would need is a sprinkler system that was capable of distributing Sticky Foam.

    When the alarm is initiated, the building fills with sticky foam and EVERYONE is incapacitated. Just make sure you are not in front of the gunman when you are incapacitated.

    You could possibly figure out a way to retrofit it with existing sprinkler systems.

    --
    ^ Probably Sarcasm...
  372. Paranoid Psychosis -treatment not gun laws by Occams · · Score: 1

    he best technical answer is for the President to order a mass psychoanalysis for the entire American population by a panel of expert Psychiatrists and academics. The objective would be to find out why Americans are so irationally afraid, discover the root causes of this fear psychosis, and recommend cognitive behavioral therapy. Perhaps these irrational fears are the result of: The War of Independence and 1812, the Civil War, the Cold War, Vietnam, Korea etc. We seem to be terrified of : Muslims, Communists, Mexicans, LGBTI, gangs, and even our God. Many of us very afraid of divine retribution, the End Days, and what will happen to us when we die. We are afraid of being driven into poverty by injury or disease. Some are even developing a survivalist mentality, planning how best to shoot their starving neighbours. The peresident would then ask his experts top propose cognitive behavioural therapy: possibly in the form of education, advertising, and individual counselling. When Americans are not so shit-scared of everything, including each other, then perhaps they will not feel so obliged to own powerful firearms. Better gun laws will never be the answer to a paranoid psychosis

    --
    Heavy is the head that wears the tinfoil hat.
  373. Re:Technology can't stop these by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    Of course there were ethnic enclaves in Europe. As for whether some of them are Muslim or not, I really couldn't give a rat's turd. The Christians, as you say (about 1 x 2001-09-11 spread over a generation and a bit - though the final body count is probably not in yet) have been as bad as the Muslims. Hindus, Wiccans and Buddhists are negligible in population and lethality. The Romans and Vikings probably beat the rest of the religions hands down. (You do know that most of the "barbarian tribes" were Christian by the time they came onto the historical scene? Arian "heretics" mostly, but that's like splitting hairs between Sunnis and Shias.)

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  374. Dominant minority by NewYork · · Score: 1
  375. You can't by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

    Life is , inherently, unsafe. And the freer your society is, the more it will lean towards unsafe.
    Such is life.
    Why not ask "Can we live without oxygen?"

  376. Re: Technology can't stop these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Silly argument. I refute it with one word.
    Poison.
    Next!

  377. Re: Technology can't stop these by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

    I've lived in the US. I've spent a LOT of time in Australia. Compared to the US, Australia is Homogeneous.

  378. Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Terrorism is about scaring people into changing their ways. Look at what the 9/11 hijackers did to us with air travel; they won. Look at what the fucking shoe bomber did to us; he won as well. They don't have to scare us out of any given international campaign as long as they scare us out of our current way of life.

    If terrorists - domestic or otherwise - scare us into wearing body armor and carrying weapons everywhere, they win. It doesn't matter if the guy who shot up the night club in Orlando was in any meaningful way affiliated with ISIS or anyone else or not, he's a terrorist for what he did. And if we change our way of life because of what he did, then he won.

    If you want to be a fucking coward in the face of this terrorist, you can do so. Some of us have lives to live; don't tell us how to live them. And don't pretend that your cowardice will prevent these attacks from happening again.

    Look at two significant terrorist attacks - 9/11 in America and the Paris attacks of not that long ago. In America we shat ourselves, made air travel less pleasant than a trip to a proctologist, and invaded a sovereign nation that had nothing to do with the attack. We spent billions of dollars, sacrificed thousands of lives for no good reason, and continue to lay waste all over the globe. By contrast the French told the terrorists to go fuck themselves. They hunted down the last links to them in neighboring Belgium and then went back to their lives. Which country had a bigger negative impact on terrorism? I'll give you a hint, it wasn't the US. In fact, if anything the American actions have done more to embolden the terrorists.

    So why do you want them to win?

    1. Re:Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      So by this logic the japanese won WW2. This is weapons grade stupidity.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    2. Re:Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you really DO suck at reading comprehension. The kind of failure that you just committed there is mind-blowing. YOU are the one who is suggesting Americans change their lives and live in constant fear of terrorism. The American involvement in WWII was exactly the opposite of that. I hope your summer class schedule includes freshman English, you'll need serious reading assistance if you ever want to some day hold a job that will pay you enough to move out of your parents' basement.

      How fitting that the captcha is "fragrant" - as in your comment is so painfully fragrant it could be sold as bear repellent.

    3. Re: Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be too young to remember the seventies and eighties, when fear that Japan would buy up the US was rampant.

      It even worked it's way into popular culture like Die Hard, Back to the Future and RoboCop.

      Germans got off easier since they didn't look so foreign.

    4. Re: Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Did the Japanese win WW2 or are you an idiot?

      Choose.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    5. Re: Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell do you think you're talking about? Just because you are siding with the terrorists you think you are entitled to set the rules here? I didn't know that was a benefit of joining ISIS. Perhaps we should start calling you "Vanilla ISIS" in recognition of your willingness to surrender so completely to them.

      If you would care to go back and try reading the first AC comment in this part of the thread and actually discuss what that person said, that would be a good idea for you. Your derailment of the topic did nothing to support any notion of you having the slightest idea of what you are talking about there.

    6. Re: Why do you want the terrorists to win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the Japanese win WW2 or are you an idiot?

      Choose.

      I see, you're afraid to admit your ignorance of the existence in the seventies and eighties (and even nineties) of a very real emotional sentiment of resentment and even fear towards the Japanese due to their prosperous economy with perceived threats to America and are thus trying to engage in this kind of response because you can't argue that it really did happen.

      I think you'd find if you looked through some editorial cartoons that there'd be some where an American icon was depicted that was in some way Japanified and maybe someone who looked like a WW2 veteran would be asking something like "I thought we won the war?" as an expression of just the sentiment.

      Of course, as the past few decades have shown, different circumstances occurred, but it doesn't change the perceptions people had. It was even in the Golden Girls.

  379. Answer by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    No.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  380. Re:Technology can't stop these by tlambert · · Score: 1

    When was the last time an us state declared total war on the rest of the us?

    Does Texas count? I'm pretty sure the think they count.

  381. Voting for the Algorithms by litecola · · Score: 1

    A certain class of chemical antidepressants was in play for many of the mass shooting events in the U.S. - starting or stopping these drugs shortly preceded the violent events, from Columbine to Joker-boy. The folks that weren't on the drugs weren't lone wolves nor operating in a vacuum - it has been reported that the shooters had been reported on and most investigated by the FBI prior to their crimes ("known wolves"). They had shown violent tendencies in public and/or social media, made threats and had support from their immediate families, friends or communities. No-fly lists are not transparent (many folks have no idea how they got on one) and are very difficult to get out of (much fixing required), but terrorism investigations are more specific and must be documented, should be subject to FOIA and backed by warrants - and they should have more teeth, since clearly they are dropping suspects too soon and failing the innocents who have been gunned down so far. Keep these two sets of people from legally acquiring firearms, and a step is made in the right direction. Taking away all legally-owned guns is clearly not the answer; too many parallels to tyrants right before genocides, and the crooks are still armed anyway.