OT: Prayers in Minneapolis

Howard's Jock

All-American
Aug 6, 2010
3,315
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We need more responses like this. Tip of that hat to you. We need to stop pointing fingers and have good discussions without being a butt. Look, you poke me and start out being a butt, I respond in kind (I know I should not), but if we can have a good discussion and disagree, thats beautiful!

We need to tell folks "thanks for the good discussion" so others can see that we dont have to be butts and we can talk about difficult things without yelling.
i have my moments of being an ***, but this doesnt seem like the time...i will say that the mayor's "gotcha" comment about not being the time for prayer is bothersome to me and an example of things that are counterproductive imo. Both sides are full of examples of it...just really bothersome
 

yoshi121374

Heisman
Jan 26, 2006
12,876
21,893
113
i have my moments of being an ***, but this doesnt seem like the time...i will say that the mayor's "gotcha" comment about not being the time for prayer is bothersome to me and an example of things that are counterproductive imo. Both sides are full of examples of it...just really bothersome

Agree it's a little bit snide, but It's hard not to understand his frustration. At what point do we do something instead of just offering the typical response?
 

tboonpickens

Heisman
Sep 19, 2001
20,063
35,565
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i have my moments of being an ***, but this doesnt seem like the time...i will say that the mayor's "gotcha" comment about not being the time for prayer is bothersome to me and an example of things that are counterproductive imo. Both sides are full of examples of it...just really bothersome
Why would you regard his comments as counterproductive? The "thoughts and prayers" trope offered by politicians who do nothing to help people in a meaningful way is a well established theme in the wake of these types of events. It's about time we quit bullshitting when our children are being murdered in schools/churches.

We've got to stop with the both sides crap. The voting records are very clear on variety of issues that feed into this uniquely American phenomenon.
 

GDead_Tiger

Heisman
Dec 7, 2021
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No one thinks "good guys with guns" are AN issue, much less THE issue.

Liberals (crazy people) with guns is the issue.
I don't know why I'm getting drawn into this conversation but I can only assume you are using an absurdly large definition here. Many of the mass shootings are carried about by white nationalists obsessed with great replacement theory are racism (Charleston, Tree of Life, El Paso, Buffalo). However many other shooters (Columbine, Sandy Hook, Uvalde, this one) are just your psychos
 
Mar 3, 2011
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I daydream about this feared scenario way too often when sitting with our family in Mass.

Gut-wrenching.

Motive could be any number of things, so best to wait for more info before making any reaching judgments.

My two cents, and it's nothing more than a single opinion, is that this becomes one side yelling at guns and the other yelling at people. The answer probably lies in some of both, and nothing will be done to reduce these events until both sides concede ground in an effort to do everything possible to reduce the violence here.
This.
 
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GDead_Tiger

Heisman
Dec 7, 2021
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cutigers76

Senior
Aug 11, 2003
2,913
911
78
Looks like an active situation unfolding. Shooting at a Catholic school during Mass, mainly a school for young children 8 and under.

Shooter is dead but unconfirmed reports of Children who were shot and injured.

Dont know how a person could ever do that, may the shooter rot in hell.

Prayers for the kids and Families and no fatalities.
Pure and disgusting evil. An evil person made a choice to use a weapon to go in and harm innocent children. Sickening...
 

CUFam98

Heisman
Dec 24, 2017
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My question FWIW

What is the solution? I know finger pointing isn't the answer. These type of things happen under all administrations. I am a gun owner, and I love to hunt. I also love my children a lot more than guns. I would trade in all of my guns today if it would stop another innocent child from being killed. I do not understand the hate that these topics start. I have thought about this a good bit. I am all for not allowing people with mental health issues purchase a gun. What determines a mental health issue...IDK. I do think we have major moral/political issues in this country. People are not willing to talk about problems. Most people just pick a side and are unwilling to accept another opinion. I think this country is overmedicated and also inundated with bad news. The divisiveness in this country is not good for anyone. There are extremes on both sides. I think deep down most people are good and just want to be left alone. How do we fix all of this? I certianly do not claim to know the answer. I just wish peolple a lot smarter than me would quit pointing fingers, beating their own agendas, and sit down and talk about a way to fix it. We are supposed to be the adults in the room, and we certainly do not act like it. I pray for these children and their families. I pray for this administration to be open to communication. I pray that people with common sense will come together to try to stop these cowardly situations from ever happening again.
I guess the answer is what are we really trying to solve because that will push the right solutions. A child is more far more likely to be the the victim of a mass shooting at a party with their friends and they "know" the shooter than in a school/movie theater/mall where the shooter is random. And actually most children who are victims of mass violence are more at risk in the home with their parent. Mass shootings in the workplace are most often targeted family violence with collateral damage (hate that term but can't think of another).

There should probably be coordination between police and mental health to identify red flags, but thats not allowed. There should be consequences for juveniles getting access to weapons, but how do we separate the legitimate uses. Most mass shootings are with handguns and shotguns than "assault weapons." We get hung up on the random, mass casualty, that really has no solution because the risk is infinitesimally small, but we could do much more targeted strategies to prevent the smaller/non-random violence that doesn't make the news but dominates the data, like the family annihilator.
 

_Puck_

All-Conference
Oct 31, 2005
2,255
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Why would you regard his comments as counterproductive? The "thoughts and prayers" trope offered by politicians who do nothing to help people in a meaningful way is a well established theme in the wake of these types of events. It's about time we quit bullshitting when our children are being murdered in schools/churches.

We've got to stop with the both sides crap. The voting records are very clear on variety of issues that feed into this uniquely American phenomenon.
What do you think should be done?
 

SDTiger9

Heisman
Jan 26, 2005
35,457
80,819
98
With all due respect, what would you suggest intelligent and ethical people do to remedy this situation when the same side that claims this phenomenon is just about mental illness repeatedly votes down mental health initiatives? Sorry, but the both sides talk here doesn't pass the smell test.

These are innocent children being slaughtered. Let's call a spade a spade here and not mince words. The same people who think it's just a coincidence that America is the only industrialized nation with more guns than citizens also don't put their money where their mouth is when it comes to prioritizing mental health.

You are 1000% correct. The biggest “immediate” mental health provision is giving everyone the opportunity to succeed in this life. Once that window narrows, mental health failures increase rapidly.
 

GDead_Tiger

Heisman
Dec 7, 2021
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I guess the answer is what are we really trying to solve because that will push the right solutions. A child is more far more likely to be the the victim of a mass shooting at a party with their friends and they "know" the shooter than in a school/movie theater/mall where the shooter is random. And actually most children who are victims of mass violence are more at risk in the home with their parent. Mass shootings in the workplace are most often targeted family violence with collateral damage (hate that term but can't think of another).

There should probably be coordination between police and mental health to identify red flags, but thats not allowed. There should be consequences for juveniles getting access to weapons, but how do we separate the legitimate uses. Most mass shootings are with handguns and shotguns than "assault weapons." We get hung up on the random, mass casualty, that really has no solution because the risk is infinitesimally small, but we could do much more targeted strategies to prevent the smaller/non-random violence that doesn't make the news but dominates the data, like the family annihilator.
One of the common focuses is obviously mass shootings, but a tragically common ways kids die from guns is by the adults being careless with secure storage, which allows kids to play with guns. When I was a kid my father had a shotgun under my parents' bed. When he thought one of us had touched it without his permission he got super mad and threatened to have his law enforcement buddies run fingerprints to see which one of us kids it was
 

OrangeRegalia

Heisman
Feb 4, 2011
12,773
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thanks for answering, whether we agree or not
Conversation always leads to more understanding of both sides. Whether we change people’s minds or not.

and I’ll admit, my thoughts are probably pretty hyperbolic. I have two young children. Two children like many others across this country walk into a school that should be a safe haven and in reality it isn’t. Do I feel they are safe, yes, do I know that has the ability to change in an instant if someone wanted it to, yes. So it hits home incredibly hard when we continue to see elementary age children murdered in a place that should be of peace and safety. I would even contend that a school should be those two things before education.

I think individually the majority of 95% or higher of the people in this country truly care about children. I believe you do even if we don’t agree on certain topics. People on a singular level truly care about them. But it’s why I said country because our country as a whole from a group and collective standpoint has continued to show by the policies enacted or the ones they choose not to enact that they don’t care about kids. I definitely do not believe our leaders on both sides of the aisle care about them, except their own.
 

GDead_Tiger

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Dec 7, 2021
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Pure and disgusting evil. An evil person made a choice to use a weapon to go in and harm innocent children. Sickening...
I went to a school like this, I have friends who send their kids to schools like this, and I even taught at a school like this. Just horrifying
 
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CUFam98

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Dec 24, 2017
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From stuff I'm seeing or friends are seeing online, it appears the shooter may have been trans but they were definitely involved with/inspired by the Order of Nine Angels, which is Satanic/Neo-Nazi type group. The members post on 4Chan/8Chan to goad mentally unwell people to commit violence


This report says that the shooters mom works/worked at the church school.

 

yoseftiger

Heisman
Aug 27, 2011
3,583
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No. And the data used is so politicized that it doesn't reflect what is happening in these extremely rare types of shootings so we really can't understand them.

There are basically 2 definitions of mass shootings. FBI uses 3 or more killed. CDC uses 4 or more injured in a single incident. Most mass shootings have a root cause of 1 of 2 categories....family violence and/or gang violence (gang being defined as a common group, not necessarily Crips vs Bloods, so mostly teenage and young adult males). A father killing his wife and 2 kids, or a 21 year old randomly firing into a group after being disrespected in front of his girl at a bar and injuring 4 is lumped into the same category as Vegas, Orlando, Uvalde and Dylan Roof. The vast majority of mass shootings aren't random acts of violence.

This is a pretty good running summary, although they use a slightly modified definition that includes "violence" not just shooting, but its valid none the less.
Even if you remove gang violence, domestic crimes, etc. our rate of mass shootings in schools and other public places still far exceeds any other developed country in the world. There’s only one true common denominator here.

It’s the guns and the ease of access to them. And I say this as someone who owns multiple firearms and has no intention of giving them up.
 

GDead_Tiger

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Dec 7, 2021
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This report says that the shooters mom works/worked at the church school.

Not surprised. I feel like a lot of the schizoid/incoherent shooters are going to target some place they are familiar with. Similar to Columbine, Virginia Tech, Oxford Michigan, and Uvalde
 

UrHuckleberry

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Jun 2, 2024
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You sorta brought up a big part of the problem in that we attach several high ticket items to one bill.

Why we can't vote on each individual item to me is asinine. Congressman and woman are not that busy. At a minimum, if they are, they are there to vote for the people.
That is often how compromise is done though. Both sides can get things through in a bill that they care about. Otherwise the majority would get its way on every single individual issue.
 

GDead_Tiger

Heisman
Dec 7, 2021
13,369
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That is often how compromise is done though. Both sides can get things through in a bill that they care about. Otherwise the majority would get its way on every single individual issue.
Omnibus type bills used to be pretty rare back in the day. I guess they still technically are because apparently the bills may not meet the example but they're closer to it than not. Most infamous one is the Compromise of 1850. I don't like the practice
 
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CUFam98

Heisman
Dec 24, 2017
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One of the common focuses is obviously mass shootings, but a tragically common ways kids die from guns is by the adults being careless with secure storage, which allows kids to play with guns. When I was a kid my father had a shotgun under my parents' bed. When he thought one of us had touched it without his permission he got super mad and threatened to have his law enforcement buddies run fingerprints to see which one of us kids it was
There's a fine line to walk here, but in certain circumstances I can see charging parents with at least a level of criminal negligence if not outright murder. The father was rightly charged in the Apalachee shooting. That boy was documented crazy and the family still kept giving him access to weapons. But that is only a small portion of the mass shootings in the country.

A parent that knows their child has a criminal history and knows their child has a handgun in the home should be subject to prosecution, but should a parent be charged if their well adjusted child with no history steals their responsibly stored handgun, takes it to a gathering of teenagers and injures 4? I don't like the slippery slope argument, but that does seem like something that could be quickly abused by overly aggressive prosecutors or charged for "political" reasons.
 

TequilasForLoss

All-American
Aug 4, 2024
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For your statement to be applicable, there would have to be evidence that suggests availability of weapons would always produce the current result.

We have laws against murder that don’t always stop murder.

We have laws against rape that don’t always stop rape.

We have laws against stealing from Medicare/Medicaid that don’t stop stealing from Medicare/Medicaid.

We have laws against insider trading by public officials that don’t stop insider trading by public officials.

So, enough with the ridiculous notion that any gun law must “always” stop the wrong evil heart from getting a gun.

If it saves one life …

edit to add i’m not coming head-on at @Willence the person here so much as the broadly espoused thought

also to add:
IMG_2821.jpeg
 
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Orangeoveralls

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Oct 6, 2006
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For your statement to be applicable, there would have to be evidence that suggests availability of weapons would always produce the current result. We have demonstrable evidence that's not the case. So even if we take away guns, we still have a sick culture. How about we fix our culture and then we can return to a place where we don't have to worry so much about restricting everyone's freedoms? Nah... that would be too logical, right?

I don't avoid anything man. I am ready and willing to talk about this in the most specific and blunt terms possible.

Can you tell us the impact the Federal Assault Weapons Ban had on the number of public mass shootings and what happened to those numbers after the ban was lifted?

Can you tell me whether gun violence incidents are higher or lower in states that have stricter gun laws than states that don't?

It is my understanding the research regarding the impact of stricter gun laws on gun violence demonstrably shows such violence is lower where there are stricter gun laws. you infer there is no such evidence.

Can you tell me what actual policy solutions/bills the Republicans have put up recently to address this epidemic of gun violence?
 

UrHuckleberry

Heisman
Jun 2, 2024
9,440
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Omnibus type bills used to be pretty rare back in the day. I guess they still technically are because apparently the bills may not meet the example but they're closer to it than not. Most infamous one is the Compromise of 1850. I don't like the practice
Yeah, there are certainly limits so I get it. But just bills or singular issues aren't that common unless they truly are bipartisan.
 

CUFam98

Heisman
Dec 24, 2017
8,376
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Even if you remove gang violence, domestic crimes, etc. our rate of mass shootings in schools and other public places still far exceeds any other developed country in the world. There’s only one true common denominator here.

It’s the guns and the ease of access to them. And I say this as someone who owns multiple firearms and has no intention of giving them up.
You're self selecting the criteria to get the result. The data only shows that if you use "mass shooting." If you compare "mass violence" the US is very much in line with the rest of the developed world.
 

tboonpickens

Heisman
Sep 19, 2001
20,063
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You're self selecting the criteria to get the result. The data only shows that if you use "mass shooting." If you compare "mass violence" the US is very much in line with the rest of the developed world.
If I tell you that you're going to have to walk into a movie theater with someone with an AR-15 or someone with a machete, I'm pretty sure you'll take your chances with the machete. Come on, man.
 

Orangeoveralls

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Oct 6, 2006
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You're self selecting the criteria to get the result. The data only shows that if you use "mass shooting." If you compare "mass violence" the US is very much in line with the rest of the developed world.
What is the distinction in the definition of these two terms as used here?
 

Trading Tiger

Heisman
Jan 11, 2006
33,357
37,581
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Surprise surprise...the shooter has been identified by name, I won't use it because phuck him, and of course it's a crazy liberal, trans idealogue...but it's "the other sides fault" because we aren't retarded??? LOL

Look, if the liberals wanted to sell everyone the solution of "banning guns" to solve their self-made problem of school/mass shootings, they shouldn't have played that card with covid to get Trump out of office in 2020.

But it's too late for that now. You don't get to create the problem, and then force everyone to adopt your solution. At least not for a long while.
 
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Yuthgi

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Dec 14, 2003
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Ok we'll start with mass shootings. This data is from January 2024, so it's a bit dated.

The U.S. makes up 33% of the population of the countries included in a the Rockefeller Institute of Government's study. Yet we account for 76% of public mass shooting incidents and 70% of victim fatalities in those countries.

Why does this only happen in America? What about Canada? They have access to the same media, video games, movies and TV ... same is the case for most of western Europe. And yet ... this is a one-nation problem.

And before it becomes "they'll use something else," the study also examined that.


Which definition are you using for mass shooting? The FBI's or Congressional Research Service's? Perhaps you are using liberal academics who have their own definition for mass shooting? Maybe you like Gun Violence Archive's explanation?

Lets look at Chicago, a place known for gangs, shootings and killings:
Based on the 24 mass shooting incidents noted in 2023 and the other documented events, we can reasonably estimate that Chicago has experienced at least 100–120 mass shooting incidents (as defined by GVA) over the past five years.

That said, this is a conservative estimate, and the true number could be higher.
(According to Chat GPT)

There isn't an agreed upon of what a "Mass Shooting" is.
 

tboonpickens

Heisman
Sep 19, 2001
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Can you tell us the impact the Federal Assault Weapons Ban had on the number of public mass shootings and what happened to those numbers after the ban was lifted?

Can you tell me whether gun violence incidents are higher or lower in states that have stricter gun laws than states that don't?

It is my understanding the research regarding the impact of stricter gun laws on gun violence demonstrably shows such violence is lower where there are stricter gun laws. you infer there is no such evidence.

Can you tell me what actual policy solutions/bills the Republicans have put up recently to address this epidemic of gun violence?
These people act like we don't have actual data that the average 3 year old could decipher. It's really frustrating when citizens abdicate their basic duty. It's not hard to find hard data that backs up what most sentient beings would consider common sense.

 

Cavitybacks

Heisman
Dec 4, 2012
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I can't comprehend why anyone would be against having a to obtain a permit in order to buy a gun. Not saying it solves everything, but why not enforcing taking a class an exam similar to getting your DL. Must have a "permit" to purchase a gun.

Again, not saying it solves much, but why would anyone be against that?
 

Yuthgi

All-American
Dec 14, 2003
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My question here, fwiw:

Can we ever fully prevent some lone wolf from inflicting damage on innocent people if that’s what he sets out to do regardless of the weapons he uses or whether he makes bombs or drives a car into a crowd?
Especially in a country of 330M people from very diverse backgrounds and who live in a country that values personal freedom above most other values.
 
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LiqMadiq

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Feb 22, 2015
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It is absolutely time to make a change! It’s time that we take mental health afflictions serious instead of applauding them. I know someone that is scared of their own minor son and can’t find anywhere in the country that they can commit him to. They have spent a lot of money on lawyers and drs begging for help bc they know what he is capable of to no avail. Other countries don’t worry about feelings when it comes to mental health, they put the unwell away and attempt to help them like we used to do. Instead, now we think it’s an honorable thing to want to be a different sex, or want to svit in a litter box until their mental health issues boil over into being violent and wanting to hurt the non afflicted. You’re damn right it’s time for change it just doesn’t have anything to do with guns.