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"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. I grew up in a machine shop environment. At 10 years old, I was a good machinist. Look at what the kids build out of blocks, etc, and you see they have the dexterity to handle tools. And does not take a lot of smarts to use an angle grinder. |
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wrote:
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:46 -0600, Califbill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 15:01:23 -0400, KC wrote: Again, I agree. Youtube all you want, then try it. I tried to Youtube a lock for our trailer, the technique, perfectly applied failed miserably. When I was a kid I decided that since I kept losing house keys, I would just make a pic set and learn to pick the locks around the house. I was always pretty good with tools and such, had a friend who helped me make the tools (his dad did locksmithing) but never actually had success with a 5 pin houselock and rakepick... Lock picking just takes the touch,. Once you get the hang of it, you can do it. You put tension on the cylinder and probe each pin, feeling for the spot that it lines up, when you get them all, the lock turns. A high quality "pin" lock, where the tolerances are tight, can be tough, those with the wafers like a desk drawer lock are trivial. They have vibrating picks that are a lot easier to use Or you just make a bump key ;-) Some of the door locks are really hard to pick, as they have a notch in the pin to defeat the pressure method. But lots of locks are easy to pick. When I started at NCR we all made lock picks to open registers that the customer lost the keys, and we did not want to go to the office to get a copy. The IBM register locks were the wafer design and very easy to pick. I imagine NCR used the same type of lock. I think we only had about 12 keys anyway. I carried 2 on my key chain that opened about half the registers in Ft Myers. I still have a ring of about 50 different keys. Over the years the keys were different sizes. |
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On 11/4/2014 12:07 PM, Califbill wrote:
"Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. I grew up in a machine shop environment. At 10 years old, I was a good machinist. Look at what the kids build out of blocks, etc, and you see they have the dexterity to handle tools. And does not take a lot of smarts to use an angle grinder. Nope but I watched a 35 year old guy slice his stomach open with one. |
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On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote:
In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. |
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill
wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 1 Nov 2014 12:15:27 -0500, Boating All Out wrote: Gun registration does little in solving crimes; it reduces it. Keeps the guns in the hands of fewer people. Make it a big hassle to own a gun, and "marginal" people are less likely to get their hands on one. Simple as that. === One man's "marginal person" is another man's fine, upstanding citizen. Who gets to decide - some government bureaucrat who may not like guns in the first place? Lawmakers write the laws, last I heard. Vote for the ones you like, and live with it. By "marginal" I'm simply talking about non-gun nuts who won't go to the trouble to comply, so won't get their hands on guns. Their call. It won't stop the gun nuts. They can have their guns. "Casual" gun ownership is dangerous. Strict gun laws save lives. Let the gun nuts and cops take care of the bad guys. If you won't jump through some hoops to exercise you "2nd Amendment rights" you don't deserve them. What about the other 9 of the Bill of Rights? I hope he'll show us how many lives were saved in Chicago last year because of the strict gun laws. |
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On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. |
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On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act. -- “There’s more idleness and abuse of government favors among the economically privileged than among the ranks of the disadvantaged.” - Norman Mailer |
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 14:41:13 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. No ****. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Honestly, I was not espousing that as the proper way to do things these days. Nor was it meant to be a reason or excuse for not doing things your way. I think most people here wish the laws in existence would be enforced, rather than piling on more laws to *not* be enforced. Your solution seems to be lots of paperwork and more beaurocracy, as though that will make everything hunky-dory. Just as sad. |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 15:52:31 -0500, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act. Yup, we're all ****ed up. Now, are you and Luddite happy? |
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On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act. Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Those issues, although historically important, are not controversial now-a-days. Violent, gun related crime and accidents with guns in homes are. If gun ownership is important to people, they should be applying their thought process towards constructive ways to reduce gun crimes and accidents rather than just reciting the 2nd Amendment and providing excuses and reasons why nothing can be done. |
Had to share this story
On 11/4/2014 4:02 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 14:41:13 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. No ****. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Honestly, I was not espousing that as the proper way to do things these days. Nor was it meant to be a reason or excuse for not doing things your way. I think most people here wish the laws in existence would be enforced, rather than piling on more laws to *not* be enforced. Your solution seems to be lots of paperwork and more beaurocracy, as though that will make everything hunky-dory. Just as sad. Fair enough. What are some of your ideas? |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 16:12:54 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote: On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act. Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Those issues, although historically important, are not controversial now-a-days. Violent, gun related crime and accidents with guns in homes are. If gun ownership is important to people, they should be applying their thought process towards constructive ways to reduce gun crimes and accidents rather than just reciting the 2nd Amendment and providing excuses and reasons why nothing can be done. How about better law enforcement? That's *something* that could be done. |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 16:16:30 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/4/2014 4:02 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 14:41:13 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. No ****. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Honestly, I was not espousing that as the proper way to do things these days. Nor was it meant to be a reason or excuse for not doing things your way. I think most people here wish the laws in existence would be enforced, rather than piling on more laws to *not* be enforced. Your solution seems to be lots of paperwork and more beaurocracy, as though that will make everything hunky-dory. Just as sad. Fair enough. What are some of your ideas? Read the first sentence in my second paragraph. |
Had to share this story
On 11/4/2014 4:21 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 16:12:54 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote: On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act. Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Those issues, although historically important, are not controversial now-a-days. Violent, gun related crime and accidents with guns in homes are. If gun ownership is important to people, they should be applying their thought process towards constructive ways to reduce gun crimes and accidents rather than just reciting the 2nd Amendment and providing excuses and reasons why nothing can be done. How about better law enforcement? That's *something* that could be done. Ok. How? |
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On 11/4/2014 5:01 PM, BAR wrote:
In article , says... On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Having lived in Hawaii during the late 60's and watching them film Tora Tora Tora, my dad's ship, yes his ship, was used in the movie. We lived in the shadows of the Arizona memorial. All we did was play war, we fought the Japs all of the time. Since fire-crackers were common and you could buy them in the drug store just about all year round we used to throw fire crackers at each other all of the time, mostly inside of a mud ball, not a dripping wet mud ball, just wet enough to stay together while it could be thrown. Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. When you look at it with an objective eye the only thing that has changed is that everything occurs faster. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Nice slam of those who don't agree with you. Have any of us called you an out and out gun grabber yet? The 2A is not about reducing gun related crimes and accidents, it is about protecting yourself from persons who would do you harm and who would want to disarm you. If you think my comment was a "slam", so be it. It's truthful. With the recent exception of John H who suggested enforcing current laws (although it's questionable that they work to begin with) the only arguments posted so far are violations of 2A rights and slippery slopes leading to gun bans. Nobody has acknowledged the problem of gun crimes or accidents and nobody has any brighter ideas. Do you? |
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On Tuesday, November 4, 2014 4:12:56 PM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote: On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Seemed as though there were a lot of Democrats and almost *all* of the Republican senators who voted against stricter gun controls here recently. To say only the 'hard right' is far from accurate. |
Had to share this story
"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 11/4/2014 5:01 PM, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Having lived in Hawaii during the late 60's and watching them film Tora Tora Tora, my dad's ship, yes his ship, was used in the movie. We lived in the shadows of the Arizona memorial. All we did was play war, we fought the Japs all of the time. Since fire-crackers were common and you could buy them in the drug store just about all year round we used to throw fire crackers at each other all of the time, mostly inside of a mud ball, not a dripping wet mud ball, just wet enough to stay together while it could be thrown. Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. When you look at it with an objective eye the only thing that has changed is that everything occurs faster. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Nice slam of those who don't agree with you. Have any of us called you an out and out gun grabber yet? The 2A is not about reducing gun related crimes and accidents, it is about protecting yourself from persons who would do you harm and who would want to disarm you. If you think my comment was a "slam", so be it. It's truthful. With the recent exception of John H who suggested enforcing current laws (although it's questionable that they work to begin with) the only arguments posted so far are violations of 2A rights and slippery slopes leading to gun bans. Nobody has acknowledged the problem of gun crimes or accidents and nobody has any brighter ideas. Do you? Fix the drug war, and most of the gun crime will disappear. |
Had to share this story
"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 11/4/2014 12:07 PM, Califbill wrote: "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. I grew up in a machine shop environment. At 10 years old, I was a good machinist. Look at what the kids build out of blocks, etc, and you see they have the dexterity to handle tools. And does not take a lot of smarts to use an angle grinder. Nope but I watched a 35 year old guy slice his stomach open with one. That smarted! |
Had to share this story
"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. I think that most of us would support gun laws if they had a chance to reduce the violence. But, with as you pointed out the violent movies and games, and the culture of violence in certain areas, lots related to the Drug War, we do not see most gun laws being proposed not be other than feel good ****. No real worth. How many of those teenagers killing other teenagers and young adults in Chicago, Oakland, Detroit, Bakersfield are going to be affected by any of these new gun laws? They do not seem to care about the thousands of gun laws we now have. |
Had to share this story
On 11/4/2014 6:01 PM, John H wrote:
On Tuesday, November 4, 2014 4:12:56 PM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote: On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Seemed as though there were a lot of Democrats and almost *all* of the Republican senators who voted against stricter gun controls here recently. To say only the 'hard right' is far from accurate. John, you snipped Harry's paragraph to which my response was directed: "Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act." |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 16:12:54 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: If gun ownership is important to people, they should be applying their thought process towards constructive ways to reduce gun crimes === First, you've got to solve the drug problem. Next, you've got to tackle the inner city violence problem. Last but not necessarily least, you've got to solve the violence in media problem. You're trying to waltz around the symptoms while ignoring the root causes. Yes, I know that it would be easier to repeal the 2A than solve the 3 above, but at least you'd be working in the right direction. With regard to gun accidents, I really don't see that as a major issue. |
Had to share this story
On 11/4/2014 6:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 16:12:54 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: If gun ownership is important to people, they should be applying their thought process towards constructive ways to reduce gun crimes === First, you've got to solve the drug problem. Next, you've got to tackle the inner city violence problem. Last but not necessarily least, you've got to solve the violence in media problem. You're trying to waltz around the symptoms while ignoring the root causes. Yes, I know that it would be easier to repeal the 2A than solve the 3 above, but at least you'd be working in the right direction. With regard to gun accidents, I really don't see that as a major issue. I agree with those. I also agree they are probably more difficult to solve than just banning guns altogether which will *not* solve the drug, inner city violence or media problems. I have concerns that if nothing is done the easier route will become the preferred route by our government, especially if we continue to see these wackos conducting mass killings. I don't think the 2A will ever be repealed entirely but it may be modified or re-interpreted by a more liberal Supreme Court some day in the future. That's why, as a gun owner, having some willingness to tighten up on some of the gun laws and work on eliminating the illegal gun trade and loopholes may demonstrate a cooperative spirit that takes some of the wind out of the sails of those who advocate much more severe restrictions or outright bans. I don't advocate the banning of guns, despite what some may have concluded. |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 17:49:12 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/4/2014 5:01 PM, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Having lived in Hawaii during the late 60's and watching them film Tora Tora Tora, my dad's ship, yes his ship, was used in the movie. We lived in the shadows of the Arizona memorial. All we did was play war, we fought the Japs all of the time. Since fire-crackers were common and you could buy them in the drug store just about all year round we used to throw fire crackers at each other all of the time, mostly inside of a mud ball, not a dripping wet mud ball, just wet enough to stay together while it could be thrown. Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. When you look at it with an objective eye the only thing that has changed is that everything occurs faster. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Nice slam of those who don't agree with you. Have any of us called you an out and out gun grabber yet? The 2A is not about reducing gun related crimes and accidents, it is about protecting yourself from persons who would do you harm and who would want to disarm you. If you think my comment was a "slam", so be it. It's truthful. With the recent exception of John H who suggested enforcing current laws (although it's questionable that they work to begin with) the only arguments posted so far are violations of 2A rights and slippery slopes leading to gun bans. Nobody has acknowledged the problem of gun crimes or accidents and nobody has any brighter ideas. Do you? I suppose you missed putting undercover cops in the gun shows where all the illegal transactions occur. You say, 'Nobody has acknowledged the problem...' That's just bull****. No one has said there isn't a problem. Many have said that your 'solution', more paperwork and a bigger government, will do little or nothing. Are the current laws being enforced? If the police unions operate like the teacher unions, then perhaps we need to figure out a way to get rid of the deadwood so the current laws can be better enforced. |
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 18:10:08 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/4/2014 6:01 PM, John H wrote: On Tuesday, November 4, 2014 4:12:56 PM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/4/2014 3:52 PM, F*O*A*D wrote: On 11/4/14 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: Not all conservatives. It seems to only be the hard right. Seemed as though there were a lot of Democrats and almost *all* of the Republican senators who voted against stricter gun controls here recently. To say only the 'hard right' is far from accurate. John, you snipped Harry's paragraph to which my response was directed: "Conservatives have used the same excuses to fight the end of slavery, the end of child labor, to fight against giving women the vote, to fight against the passage of the civil rights act." So your comment had nothing to do with the 'hard right' excuses not having stricter gun controls? That makes little sense given the subject of the discussion. I don't recall anyone mentioning 2A with regard to any of those 'excuses'. If you've decided to use the lame, bull**** quotes of Krause, then do it on your own. |
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 17:09:33 -0600, Califbill
wrote: "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. I think that most of us would support gun laws if they had a chance to reduce the violence. But, with as you pointed out the violent movies and games, and the culture of violence in certain areas, lots related to the Drug War, we do not see most gun laws being proposed not be other than feel good ****. No real worth. How many of those teenagers killing other teenagers and young adults in Chicago, Oakland, Detroit, Bakersfield are going to be affected by any of these new gun laws? They do not seem to care about the thousands of gun laws we now have. And law enforcement seems to have about the same concern. |
Had to share this story
On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 18:46:42 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: That's why, as a gun owner, having some willingness to tighten up on some of the gun laws and work on eliminating the illegal gun trade and loopholes may demonstrate a cooperative spirit that takes some of the wind out of the sails of those who advocate much more severe restrictions or outright bans. === With all due respect I see that as appeasement of the mass hysteria without doing a thing to address the real issues. |
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 18:53:53 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote: I suppose you missed putting undercover cops in the gun shows where all the illegal transactions occur. === I have reason to think that it is already happening. I was talking to a guy running a booth at our local gun show a few years ago. He was selling a few highly specialized High Standard target pistols, not exactly your typical gun dealer, and not exactly your typical choice of a crime weapon. He told me that BATF (or whatever they are called now) had come to him and said that he needed to be an FFL. My conclusion is that someone *is* keeping an eye on this sort of thing. |
Had to share this story
On 11/4/2014 2:41 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/4/2014 2:05 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Tue, 4 Nov 2014 10:26:22 -0500, BAR wrote: In article , says... On 11/4/2014 9:58 AM, KC wrote: On 11/4/2014 9:47 AM, wrote: On Tue, 04 Nov 2014 01:58:45 -0600, Califbill wrote: You don't give kids enough credit. They are useless feel good devices similar to useless feel good laws. Just go in my garage and get an angle grinder or dremel or the cutting torch. I opened the trigger lock I have with a paper clip and didn't damage it at all. Mom and Dad would have no idea I have free access to the gun Like to see that vid... Me too. Kids using angle grinders, cutting torches and dremel tools. There's another solution. Don't have guns around when you have kids in the household. I never felt a desire or need for having guns in the house while we were raising our three kids. I didn't hunt and guns really didn't hold that much interest to me. It wasn't until about four years ago that I decided to get a permit. Part of the reasoning was because of the great guitar shop experiment that involved carrying a relatively large amount of cash and the recommendation of a lawyer. The other was the recognition that I was getting older, we had already experienced a home invasion and I wanted a last resort means of defending my wife and I other than a baseball bat. My parents gave me a .22 rifle when I was 12 years old. I still have it and will have it until the day I die. It has never killed a living breathing animal or human. It has destroyed countless targets. I received the firearm about 41 years ago and it has been in my possession every where I have lived since I received it. My kids didn't know about it until they were about 14 or 15. I was about the same age when I got mine. There were other guns in the house, my dad's, my grandfathers, several shotguns and rifles. I had three younger brothers at the time, and we had no special way we secured the weapons. They were kept in a closet...no lock or keys. Somehow we all lived, and no one had an accident. Uh-Huh. Did you have violent video games and gory movies back then that glorified killing and maiming with blood spurting out of gunshot wounds and guts plastering the walls? Or did you watch Davey Crockett and Daniel Boone like I did? This is a different age and a different society John. It's not the 1940's and 1950's. This thread has amazed me about one thing. It's incredible how many reasons and excuses people can come up with *not* to try anything to reduce gun related crimes or accidents. I guess most people here think everything is just hunky-dory fine the way things are. Sad. Even more than the violence in these video games I am concerened that most 10 year olds have already been trained by these things with nearly as much tactical information as most cops... They know how cops and military move, clear buildings, operate in general, what weapons they have, etc.... I just don't like 10 year olds that know how to kill so many people and how long it will take, what it will look like, etc.... |
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