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  1. #1
    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Default The Proper Moral Response As We Used To Be Taught In School As Part Of Citizenship Tr

    This is how I was taught to become self reliant as part of learning to become a good citizen back in the days when Real Americans accepted the responsibility for the difficult situations that everyone would face as part of life itself. Instead of falling for some left over pseudo commie euro trash philosophy.



    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQ6Ew...=results_video

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    Council Member Fuchs's Avatar
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    (1) Self-defence is no responsibility, but a legitimate choice.
    Inventing responsibilities which are none merely muddles the language and discourse.

    (2) The video games bogeyman is but another example of the U.S. lagging behind Europe in society development by a decade or more. We've had this discussion long ago and for a long time. Fact is the video games haters have not been able to produce meaningful empirical analysis to back up their claims after complaining about video games for more than a decade. It's a classic bogeyman racket and by now most interested Europeans are aware of it.
    (It's totally not surprisingly that the NRA picked it up as decoy to channel the outrage away from their pet guns.)

    The 'violent video games are evil' racket is about as nonsensical and obsolete as the 'bio fuels' racket the Democrats are falling for.

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    Council Member ganulv's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    (1) Self-defence is no responsibility, but a legitimate choice.
    Inventing responsibilities which are none merely muddles the language and discourse.
    I believe a civilized society could reach a consensus that self-defense is or is not first and foremost an individual responsibility and be just as right in either. The trouble is that in the United States we do not tend to do consensus well. Everyone’s opinion is equally valid an’ all that.
    If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed. – Mark Twain (attributed)

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    Council Member Fuchs's Avatar
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    The invention of rights and less often so responsibilities that actually don't exist or are a gross exaggeration or misinterpretation is a phenomenon which I only remember from encounters with Americans.
    It appears to be a cheap trick in American rhetoric, but it may be more widespread. My evidence is anecdotal.

    Another example is a confused person who believed his freedom of speech extended to getting whatever comment he has published on my blog.
    His freedom of speech didn't even extend to say his opinion like that in public due to its limits in regard to libel!
    More importantly, he had no claim to get his opinion published in the medium and place of his choosing, but rather to not be sanctioned for expressing it in whatever way he manages to express it (sans the libel).
    ______

    In this case, the team "pro guns" denies that self defence without guns is sufficient and goes on to claim a responsibility to self defend. In combination this asserts the team "contra gun" is not meeting its responsibility, a ludicrous implication. Moreover, asserting a responsibility where there is none provides additional (imagined) weight to the team "pro gun"'s case.
    A rational, mud-free discussion looks differently.

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    Council Member ganulv's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    The invention of rights and less often so responsibilities that actually don't exist or are a gross exaggeration or misinterpretation is a phenomenon which I only remember from encounters with Americans.
    It appears to be a cheap trick in American rhetoric, but it may be more widespread. My evidence is anecdotal.
    Sometimes it is a cheap rhetorical device, but in my experience it tends to be due to the fact that most Americans have not spent much time deciding where they stand on whether rights are natural or socially constructed, which is a conclusion one needs to come to before having an opinion worth opining as regards legal rights current or proposed. In defense of my fellow Americans, that stuff is not all that difficult to muddle. And we do not really have an illustrious ancestor like Herr Nietzsche who has sketched out the difference beforehand to help guide us in our thinking.
    If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed. – Mark Twain (attributed)

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    It seems to me that that Founding Fathers came down pretty forcefully on the side of natural rights. That is the basis upon which our laws and gov are established. Some progressive thinkers don't like that at all but that is the way it is. And just to make sure that everybody was clear on that, the Founders reiterated things in the Bill of Rights.

    Self defense is a responsibility, not a choice. If as a free citizen, you expect somebody else to help you with criminals and thieves, you have to help them help you. You aren't a employer of servants who commands and expects people to come help them out without a concomitant responsibility to try and help yourself. You want help, you better be willing to pitch in.

    Now if you don't expect anybody to come to your aid when you call, then it is a choice. You want to stand there passive while somebody cuts your throat, that is your choice. But if that is your choice you can't legitimately expect others to help you if you won't try to help yourself.

    Self defense without guns is ineffective. What are you Fuchs, anti-women? A petite, 110 pound 55 year old women with a gun, is as formidable an opponent as 3 NFL all pro linebackers. If you take that gun away from her, then she is unable to defend herself against most of the people out there, and especially against groups of people. You have deprived her of her right to self-defense. That is a right conferred upon her by her simple existence. Nobody can legitimately take that away from her.
    Last edited by carl; 02-02-2013 at 08:16 PM.
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Default Run,Hide,Fight Video by Houston,Texas

    Pretty good training film on accepting personal responsibility in an active shooter situation produced by Houston,Texas government with a grant from Department OF homeland security.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4IJA5Zpzz4

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    Council Member Surferbeetle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by carl View Post
    It seems to me that that Founding Fathers came down pretty forcefully on the side of natural rights. That is the basis upon which our laws and gov are established. Some progressive thinkers don't like that at all but that is the way it is. And just to make sure that everybody was clear on that, the Founders reiterated things in the Bill of Rights.
    Agree

    Quote Originally Posted by carl View Post
    Self defense is a responsibility, not a choice. If as a free citizen, you expect somebody else to help you with criminals and thieves, you have to help them help you. You aren't a employer of servants who commands and expects people to come help them out without a concomitant responsibility to try and help yourself. You want help, you better be willing to pitch in.
    There is indeed a real and ongoing cost/responsibility that comes with accepting the goodies that a society offers: security, infrastructure, rule of law, etc. This includes flesh and blood individuals as well as 'paper' individuals (corporations).

    Quote Originally Posted by carl View Post
    A petite, 110 pound 55 year old women with a gun, is as formidable an opponent as 3 NFL all pro linebackers. If you take that gun away from her, then she is unable to defend herself against most of the people out there, and especially against groups of people. You have deprived her of her right to self-defense. That is a right conferred upon her by her simple existence. Nobody can legitimately take that away from her.
    Free markets and natural rights are interesting to think about and experience in this context.

    During my travels in Iraq it was my observation that free markets very much in effect. I was aware of various 'impromptu' bazaars that had a number of items on offer to include long rifles and handguns. Tribal and personal responsibility was not an abstract topic to many, on either side.

    It was my observation that 'rights' that we take for granted here in the West were not won/kept there solely through discourse.

    As to violent video games and movies, perhaps they are a deep societal response to the bicycle helmet/pads/safety belt/risk averse forces of darkness?
    Sapere Aude

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    (1) Self-defense is no responsibility, but a legitimate choice.
    Inventing responsibilities which are none merely muddles the language and discourse.
    Spoken like a true Obsolete Euro-Communist. You have never been a free citizen, you have never known individual rights and responsibilities, all you have ever known is what the Government told you to think.

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    Council Member Fuchs's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by slapout9 View Post
    Spoken like a true Obsolete Euro-Communist. You have never been a free citizen, you have never known individual rights and responsibilities, all you have ever known is what the Government told you to think.
    My people do not tolerate that our government claims authority to execute us after trial or even without trial by order f the head of government. We cannot be interned indefinitely legally or be tortured legally.

    Stuff your "free citizen" stuff where it belongs; Germany is a more free society than the (U.S.) American one.
    We're not that ambitious and stubborn in our delusions, though.

    Besides, you obviously have no clue about Germany or what "communist" actually means, which is also very typical of U.S. people.

    Your part about "individual rights and responsibilities" is so obvious nonsense, I wonder if you are that ignorant or rather reached the point of desperation in the discussion where you don't really care about the real world any more.
    Yet another thing usually associated with - guess who.


    I suppose your nonsense and behaviour in this thread clearly shows everyone how much weight your opinion should carry in discussions. None.

  11. #11
    Council Member Surferbeetle's Avatar
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    It's always good to read your posts Slap. MOM: motive, opportunity, and method...thanks for that way back when.

    Have noted a shortage of 9mm out this way of late and that the firearms counter at Wally World is a very, very popular place. That's ok, got some stashed, there is still plenty of .38 available, and target practice is good for the soul.
    Sapere Aude

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Surferbeetle View Post
    It's always good to read your posts Slap. MOM: motive, opportunity, and method...thanks for that way back when.

    Have noted a shortage of 9mm out this way of late and that the firearms counter at Wally World is a very, very popular place. That's ok, got some stashed, there is still plenty of .38 available, and target practice is good for the soul.
    Not just 9mm. There isn't any .22lr to be had anywhere around here. (for less than 10 cents a round that it.)
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    My people do not tolerate that our government claims authority to execute us after trial or even without trial by order f the head of government. We cannot be interned indefinitely legally or be tortured legally.

    Stuff your "free citizen" stuff where it belongs; Germany is a more free society than the (U.S.) American one.
    We're not that ambitious and stubborn in our delusions, though.

    Besides, you obviously have no clue about Germany or what "communist" actually means, which is also very typical of U.S. people.

    Your part about "individual rights and responsibilities" is so obvious nonsense, I wonder if you are that ignorant or rather reached the point of desperation in the discussion where you don't really care about the real world any more.
    Yet another thing usually associated with - guess who.

    I suppose your nonsense and behaviour in this thread clearly shows everyone how much weight your opinion should carry in discussions. None.
    Now Fuchs, calm down.

    Let us return to basics. Do you believe in natural rights?
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Council Member Fuchs's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by carl View Post
    Let us return to basics. Do you believe in natural rights?
    That's totally unrelated. I certainly have never heard of gun possession being called a "natural right", and don't think "right to live" is particularly useful for a firearms policy discussion since the value of life should be obvious anyway.


    I have thoughts about natural rights that could contribute to an interesting philosophical discussion about rights in general, but not here.

    Why? And why should the lack of a permanent ATF director hinder enforcement of firearms laws?
    What I read about the issue points at gazillions of small provisions inserted by NRA's representatives in Congress into bills. These provisions ban this ATF action, exclude that, de-fund something else and so on.
    Up front the NRA appears to call for enforcement of existing laws before any new laws be considered while behind the scenes they make sure there's not going to be such an effective enforcement, thus the argument never goes away.



    @motorfirebox:
    That's a defect of many if not all Western democracies.
    The general public has limited attention resources, and spectacular issues as well as issues pushed by effective special interests are most likely to capture this attention.
    Meanwhile, the parliament can do its routine business largely unobserved, and not necessarily in our best interests.

    The assault rifle-related and other gun rampages of heavily armed madmen capture the attention, and political activism leads to proposals aimed against this spectacular stuff.
    Meanwhile, the vast majority of deaths in the statistics is being caused in a less spectacular way, and public attention is no help against it.

    Same as with 9/11 and tobacco-related massacres. The average tobacco industry worker puts shame on the average AQ terrorist in regard to lethality.
    Last edited by Fuchs; 02-03-2013 at 12:32 AM.

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    That's totally unrelated. I certainly have never heard of gun possession being called a "natural right", and don't think "right to life" is particularly useful for a firearms policy discussion since the value of life should be obvious anyway.


    I have thoughts about natural rights that could contribute to an interesting philosophical discussion about rights in general, but not here.
    Please Fuchs, answer the question. Do you believe in natural rights?
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fuchs View Post
    What I read about the issue points at gazillions of small provisions inserted by NRA's representatives in Congress into bills. These provisions ban this ATF action, exclude that, de-fund something else and so on.
    Up front the NRA appears to call for enforcement of existing laws before any new laws be considered while behind the scenes they make sure there's not going to be such an effective enforcement, thus the argument never goes away.
    Essentially, but it also directly taxes their ability to act. For instance, without a guy in Washington to stick up for them, it's difficult for the ATF to get US Attorneys to hand out warrants or to do so in a timely fashion. Straw buyers face hilariously small penalties, and the burden of proof against them is insanely high--prosecutors have no real incentive to go after them.
    Last edited by motorfirebox; 02-03-2013 at 12:51 AM.

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    The video games flap is just another moral panic. In the 50s we had comic books turning kids gay, in the 80s we had Dungeons and Dragons leading to devil worship, in the oughts and teens we have vidja games causing spree shootings.

    I think the right to firearms occupies an important spot in the protection of personal freedom as that concept is understood in the US. I'll note, however, that the threat to personal freedom that the right to firearms was intended to protect is best represented, in modern times, not by the national military but by local and federal law enforcement.

    It's quite clear, however, that we need to work pretty hard on our ability to prevent firearms from getting into the hands of those who should not have them. In large part that will involve "enforcing the laws that are already on the books", as the NRA rallying cry goes. But it will also involve new legislation, since NRA lobbying has effectively gutted law enforcement's ability to fight black market firearms (witness that the ATF hasn't had a permanent director for six friggin' years). Legislation to restrict weapon types is not needed; the types of weapons that Feinstein and others want to ban--"assault weapons", to use the ridiculous term being bandied about--participate in something like 2% of gun violence. What we need instead is, among other things, heftier penalties for straw buyers, relaxed standards on warrants for straw buyers (currently, investigators must show specific criminal intent for each and every gun in a suspected straw buy--that a particular buyer purchases well over their yearly income in guns every month, and that guns purchased by that buyer show up with great frequency at crime scenes in Mexico, is not currently considered to be enough evidence to prosecute), and universal background checks.

    The complaint that is lobbied most frequently against such measures--especially universal background checks--is that it will make it easier for Obama to collect our guns when he finally makes his move. These complaints are completely ####ing retarded. There's no other description for it.
    Last edited by motorfirebox; 02-02-2013 at 11:57 PM.

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by motorfirebox View Post
    But it will also involve new legislation, since NRA lobbying has effectively gutted law enforcement's ability to fight black market firearms (witness that the ATF hasn't had a permanent director for six friggin' years).
    Why? And why should the lack of a permanent ATF director hinder enforcement of firearms laws? The ATF should be able to go on with their job without a permanent director, who is only as permanent as his political acceptability anyway I believe. No matter what you do with the ATF, the bulk of gun law enforcement is going to be done by local and state agencies.

    We have universal checks here in CO at least for commercial and gun show sales. The concern that people have about that isn't so far fetched. Universal check done, no permanent record kept, no problem. Universal check done, no permanent record kept, (permanent record kept on the sly), big problem. What they say and what they do may differ. The phone companies rolled over for the NSA in the past I believe.
    Last edited by carl; 02-03-2013 at 12:28 AM.
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Council Member carl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by slapout9 View Post
    This is how I was taught to become self reliant as part of learning to become a good citizen back in the days when Real Americans accepted the responsibility for the difficult situations that everyone would face as part of life itself. Instead of falling for some left over pseudo commie euro trash philosophy.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQ6Ew...=results_video
    Slap: Check this one out.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZSS3yxpnFU

    The nuns showed us this more than once. I am forever grateful that they did. It had a genuine effect on me and I still remember.
    "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again." Gen. Nathanael Greene

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by carl View Post
    Slap: Check this one out.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZSS3yxpnFU

    The nuns showed us this more than once. I am forever grateful that they did. It had a genuine effect on me and I still remember.
    Yep, that is a good one. I am not Catholic but I had many friends that went to Catholic schools and the reputation of Nuns was always the same....they don't mess around!

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