Some registered account users are experiencing password recognition issues. The issue appears to have been triggered by a PHP update last night. If this is occurring, please try logging in and using the "forgot password?" utility. Bear in mind auto-generated password reset emails may appear in your spam folder. If this does not work, please click the "Contact Us" option near the lower right hand corner of the index page to contact me via email.
Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Not allowed to carry at MSU
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
Add this to the mix...
A legally armed civilian shot and wounded the suspected gunman in a fatal El Paso mall shooting, police say.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/18/us/el-pa ... index.html
A legally armed civilian shot and wounded the suspected gunman in a fatal El Paso mall shooting, police say.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/18/us/el-pa ... index.html
New York and Chicago were all in with respect to their sanctuary status — until they were hit with the challenge of actually providing sanctuary. In other words, typical liberal hypocrisy.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
One point for legally having a gun and using it correctly.Bryce wrote: ↑Sat Feb 18, 2023 5:14 pm Add this to the mix...
A legally armed civilian shot and wounded the suspected gunman in a fatal El Paso mall shooting, police say.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/18/us/el-pa ... index.html
Donald Trump… In your guts you know he’s nuts.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
I want your response to the video I posted. It is a textbook example of a few armed good guys stopping a lot of slaughter.Rate This wrote: ↑Sat Feb 18, 2023 7:02 pmOne point for legally having a gun and using it correctly.Bryce wrote: ↑Sat Feb 18, 2023 5:14 pm Add this to the mix...
A legally armed civilian shot and wounded the suspected gunman in a fatal El Paso mall shooting, police say.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/18/us/el-pa ... index.html
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
On one hand, you have this happen at the hands of a civilian. In a perfect world, all active shooter situations would end as clean as that.
On the other hand, you have a law enforcement officer, an individual who you would assume is better trained for these situations than a civilian, shooting the "hero" in an active shooter situation.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/11/us/color ... index.html
https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/secu ... -shooting/
I could go on...
This is a real problem because law enforcement will just shoot first and ask questions later, look what happened to this poor guy.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/po ... -rcna22505
So what should we do? Only allow citizens to carry since we have examples of incompetence such as that?
Considering more active shooter situations end by physical restraint than by a civilian hero and that even people with the training and development that a law enforcement officers hold will literally shoot or kill the guy who took out an active shooter, injecting more firearms into the situation seems like a bad idea.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
It seems to me that in the 3 examples you cited, the problem was not the legally armed "hero," but rather the responding officer. Are you suggesting disarming John Q. Public in favor of only police and criminals being armed?
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
Exactly! And if this is such a problem for law enforcement officers, who are supposedly well-trained, then I believe that an armed citizen, even well-trained, will have even greater trouble with decision-making.
No. I do believe that guns plus confusion is a recipe for disaster though.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
Do you have actual evidence of this though? You've provided 3 examples of cops shooting citizen heroes. Do you have 3 examples of people acting as citizen heroes accidentally killing innocent people?
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
Police officers are, I am assuming, better trained than civilians to make these split-second decisions. I don't understand how that assumption wouldn't be valid.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
We are up to 69 mass shootings for 2023 and NONE were stopped by an armed civilian.
It was nice you could find a few examples, but that still keeps you near 1% of all mass shootings responded to by civilians. I just don't see the need to ccw permits.
It was nice you could find a few examples, but that still keeps you near 1% of all mass shootings responded to by civilians. I just don't see the need to ccw permits.
For Kristian Trumpers are not serving our Lord Christ, but their own appetites. By smooth talk and flattery they deceive the minds of naive people.
-Romans 16:18
Posting Content © 2024 TC Talks Holdings LP.
-Romans 16:18
Posting Content © 2024 TC Talks Holdings LP.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
As dark as it sounds, it almost seems that self-defense training against an active shooter needs to become a part of not only teacher training, but something done with children. Considering the increasing threat in general, it might be for the best that they understand how to do this either way for when they get out into the world away from school.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
If your assumption is valid, I would think it would be easy to find a few examples.
This is a response to both you and Neckbeard - if your argument is simply that CCW permits aren't effective at stopping mass shootings, I don't see how that in and of itself justifies issuing fewer of them. Put another way: What is the harm in issuing them? There's no justification in banning things simply because they're "ineffective." I'm curious - of those 69 mass shootings, how many of those shooters possessed a CCW?
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
No it wouldn't.
Police walk into situations near 1:1 with a gun on their hip. Only like 6% of people have a CCW. Non-domestic violence mass shootings often happen in locations where concealed carry is not permitted. Police receive (I would hope!) more training than the average CCW-permitted citizen on decision-making for these situations, but still kill people who stop mass shootings without the use of a firearm.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
If an armed civilian stopped a mass shooting in progress, it wouldn't count as a mass shooting now would it? The El Paso incident as well as the mall in Indiana were stopped before they could reach said mass shooting status.
I am also circumspect of the number you cite. Reference?
New York and Chicago were all in with respect to their sanctuary status — until they were hit with the challenge of actually providing sanctuary. In other words, typical liberal hypocrisy.
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
Even considering that most guns involved in mass shootings were bought legally and there are literally dozens of CCW holders who have committed mass shootings, I believe that CCWs should be issued. However, if I was in charge, I would want to see research documenting the statistically significant characteristics of individuals that have used guns in violence against other humans, not in self-defense, in the past 50 years. That will likely mean that the only people who are issued a CCW are old rich White women, but it is what it is!bmw wrote: ↑Mon Feb 20, 2023 1:49 pm This is a response to both you and Neckbeard - if your argument is simply that CCW permits aren't effective at stopping mass shootings, I don't see how that in and of itself justifies issuing fewer of them. Put another way: What is the harm in issuing them? There's no justification in banning things simply because they're "ineffective." I'm curious - of those 69 mass shootings, how many of those shooters possessed a CCW?
Re: Not allowed to carry at MSU
I don't believe this to be true. CCW (CPL in the State of Michigan) holders have proven out to be more law abiding than law enforcement.
Do you have a source citing the "literal dozens?"“Among police, firearms violations occur at a rate of 16.5 per 100,000 officers. Among permit holders in Florida and Texas, the rate is only 2.4 per 100,000.10 That is just 1/7th of the rate for police officers. But there’s no need to focus on Texas and Florida — the data are similar in other states.”
Crime Prevention Research Center
New York and Chicago were all in with respect to their sanctuary status — until they were hit with the challenge of actually providing sanctuary. In other words, typical liberal hypocrisy.