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VA Tech official praised defeat of student self-defense proposal in 2006
Interesting.
-S http://www.onenewsnow.com/2007/04/va...ised_defea.php Quote:
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At least some sanity prevailed otherwise yesterday could have been countless more killed with panic fired unaimed reflex shots flying everywhere.
If only that similar sanity didn't apply outside and the guy that did the shooting couldnt just have gone to a shop and bought a gun. |
The AL posted this under the title of Irony elsewhere.
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I guess I should be clicking on every link. I do not read anything that doesn't look interesting from the title though, so that is probably why I missed it.
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Having been a college student, I have to say that letting folks walk around campus with guns is not a good idea.
Deputizing the Campus Police to allow them to carry guns, as my University did, is a much smarter alternative. |
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We like to think that citizens with CCWs would be able to lay down accurate and approprate defensive fire in times of danger. However, simply possessing a CCW permit does not mean that the person is in any way qualified or experienced in the proper use of a handgun under those situtations. In CCW classes you are taught the legal aspects of carrying as well as you are required to demonstrate a very very basic level of skill in the handling of a loaded weapon. It would be folly to assume that this would qualify someone to be able to safely and accurately use their weapon in a crowded panic ridden situtation. All you have to do is spend little time at a shooting range to see the skill level of many gun owners. Look at their targets and remember that this is in a safe controlled situtation not in an emergency situtation. People miss human sized targets at 7 meters all the time. Armed citizens have their advantages and disadvantages and is important to realize that just the existance of armed citizens does not guarentee a safer situtation. Imagine a group of really scared "dirty harry" types blasting away in a crowded classroom shooting at themselves because they can't tell which are the "good guys" and the "bad guys". Cops, with all their training and experiences make mistakes in these situtations. Is it safe to assume that unexperienced armed citizens won't? Personally, I am in favour of armed citizens, but I also recognize that there is a risk that needs to be considered. It is never an easy question to answer. |
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-S PS. I will ask for permission to repost a thread from somewhere else that expalins this, but I won't do it unless granted permission. |
I'm from Vermont though. Guns galore. But a gun, especially a hunting rifle, is almost a Mythological Weapon in Vermont.
I remember when I got my a 30-30 for my 10th birthday, which also happens to be on the first day of Deer Season in Vermont. I would just worry that Alchohol and Guns don't often mix. If I had a gun tucked in my bag, what if some drunken idiot grabbed it, and accidentally shot himself or someone else. |
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N17424561.htm
In this link witnesses say he walked silently and calmly from room to room, no chaos at all. Seems it wouldn't be that difficult to identify him, if the witnesses managed to do it, not being trained cops. The cold-headed guy walking around shooting at least three times per unarmed and helpless victim is the bad guy. |
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My CPP clearly states that it must be on my body at all times and under my control. If not, it is locked up out of site in the car, or at home. -S |
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I've seen enough fights around campus to dismiss an armed student body out of hand. The world is already paralysed by ****ing fear, we don't need reminders in shoulder holsters in every classroom And it's called discretion :) |
LEOs' usually only fire their weapon in two situations:
-Marksmanship certification -When using deadly force while on duty They aren't paid enough to have an interest in accurate marksmanship, which is unfortunate. And what makes a LEO so magically invincible when compared to other civilians? *FYI* I see people in 3 categories and 3 categories only: Military, Clergy, Civilian. If you're not active-duty military, or clergy, then you are a civilian. LEOs' are merely civilians who are granted the power to enforce the law, nothing more. |
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