Gold & Silver Forum

Gold & Silver Forum (http://goldismoney.info/forums/index.php)
-   Firearms (http://goldismoney.info/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=159)
-   -   at least they arent blaming guns this time (http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=364890)

silver_addiction 04-04-2009 05:54 PM

at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Analysis: Nation negotiates minefield of bad news


PITTSBURGH � Does the name Byran Uyesugi ring a bell? Odds are not. What about Robert A. Hawkins? Or Mark Barton? Terry Ratzmann? Robert Stewart?

Each entered the national consciousness when he picked up a gun and ended multiple lives. Uyesugi, 1999, Hawaii office building, seven dead. Hawkins, 2007, Nebraska shopping mall, nine dead. Barton, Ratzmann and Stewart � 24 dead among them in 1999 (Atlanta brokerage offices), 2005 (Wisconsin church service) and last week (North Carolina rehab center).

And each has been largely forgotten as the parade of multiple killings in America melts into an indistinguishable blur. We bemoan, we mourn, we move on.

What's even more disturbing is that the list above was cherrypicked from a far lengthier tally of recent mass shootings in the United States. And now, this weekend, on a crisp, sunny Saturday morning in Pittsburgh, the lives of three police officers ended in gunfire after a domestic dispute turned lethal.

The mass shootings that left 14 people dead in Binghamton, N.Y., on Friday were horrifying, depressing, nationally wrenching. They were also, to some extent, unsurprising in a society where the term "mass shooting" has lost its status as unthinkable aberration and become mere fodder for a fresh news cycle.

"We have to guard against the senseless violence that this tragedy represents," President Barack Obama said in Europe on Saturday. Senseless violence: Two centuries from now, if we're not careful, it could be an epitaph for our era.

Even in a media-saturated nation that encourages short memories, these numbers are conversation-stopping: Forty-seven people dead in the past month in American mass shootings and their aftermaths. It's to the point where on Saturday, dizzyingly, the mayor of Binghamton found himself offering Pittsburgh its sympathies.

Put aside for a moment the debate over guns. This isn't about policy. It's about asking the urgent question: What is happening in the American psyche that prevents people from defusing their own anguish and rage before they end the lives of others? Why are we killing each other?

This is not an era of good feeling in the United States. We have under our belt eight years of pernicious terrorism angst, six years of Iraq war weariness and, now, months of wondering how bad the American economy's going to get and when � or, worse, whether � it's going to come back. People are tense. There's less inclination to help out your fellow human being.

Meanwhile, anchors and analysts and witnesses and bloggers cast about in an information-age fog trying to make sense of something that is, in the worst way, nonsensical. They rush to offer solutions, but the thing they typically dodge is that we seem to be powerless to stop it all � that our community, our neighbors, may be next. That's too terrifying to contemplate, not to mention too open-ended for American news consumers reared on tidy Hollywood endings.

The Binghamton newspaper, the Press & Sun Bulletin, seemed to acknowledge the resignation in a glum editorial Saturday that wondered if it was simply, sadly, and inevitably Binghamton's turn to give up a few of its people to the juggernaut.

"It is our turn to grieve and to rally in support of those whose lives have been shattered," the newspaper said. "And it's our turn to hug those in our own families and wonder how a quiet, rainy Friday in a peaceful place became the setting for such a nightmare."

The strangest of contradictions hangs over the Binghamton shootings. The shooter and many of the victims were immigrants � part of the pool of human beings who look to America as a place of opportunity and take often anonymous steps to realize their dreams here. On Friday, the idea that had beckoned them betrayed them.

The man believed to be the shooter, Jiverly Wong, had lost his job at an assembly plant, was barely getting by on unemployment and was frustrated that the American dream, so highly billed and coveted, wasn't coming through for him. Early reports suggest that the suspect in the Pittsburgh officers' killings, too, was angered at being laid off from a glass factory.

People are of course responsible for their actions, but it's hard to avoid wondering what's afoot in the darkest recesses of what we like to call American exceptionalism. For so long, the national narrative has been so bullish about equality of opportunity, so persuasive in its romance of possibility for all. Is it so subversive to speculate, then, that when the engine of possibility runs into roadblocks, people can't cope?

Without excusing one whit of the violent tendencies that ended with so many bullets in so many bodies from Binghamton to North Carolina to Alabama to California in the past month, isn't it time, finally, to figure out where this national dream makes a wrong turn?

"Maybe research can prevent further tragedies of this type," a man named Charles Whitman wrote one day in 1966. Then he ascended a tower at the University of Texas, looked out over the campus, pulled out a shotgun, three rifles and three pistols and killed 16 people.

Forty-three years and countless reams of research and lost loved ones later, we have not figured it out. Today, the American Civic Association in Binghamton says so. The Pittsburgh Police Department says so. The vulnerable people at the Pinelake Health and Rehab Center in Carthage, N.C., say so.

Of Jiverly Wong, Binghamton police Chief Joseph Zikuski had this to say Saturday: "He must have been a coward." Perhaps. But that's the beginning of an answer, not the end of one. On Friday, the federal government announced that 663,000 Americans lost their jobs in March. What's truly unsettling in America's new era of gloom and dead ends is wondering how many of those 663,000 might be deeply, irrevocably angry about it � and might have a gun.

Because the American tragedies that haven't happened yet are the most terrifying ones of all.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090404/...ation_analysis

tanner12oz 04-04-2009 06:05 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
i heard a few comments on the news that i thought were scary for us 2nd amendment guys......

worst one was....

that the cops are totally outgunned and dont stand a chance against an AK with there 9mms......

obviously they could arm the police with AR's instead of just SWAT but what seems more likely....LEO's going up in arms or the average joe going down???

i do think that this kinda shit scares the government/LEO's...the average civilian right now is probably screaming at there TV to take away all of our guns and the government is thinking....hmmmm this might not be as easy as planned.

crazy times indeed....lots of news lately

LukeNM 04-04-2009 06:37 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Many of the patrol officers hear in NM have AR15's in the trunks of their patrol cars. I would see my next store neighbor bring out his M4 (pointed straight up in the air) every morning and put it in the trunk of his take home police cruiser. I have to admit it made me feel safer... Unfortunately he moved!

Twisted Avatar 04-04-2009 06:49 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
1 Attachment(s)
NOT BLAMING GUNS???

JUST WAIT.

WE ARE DEALING WITH BRADY LOVERS

silver_addiction 04-04-2009 07:23 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
i always say that if you want to ban things that have the ability to kill people you have to include planes, cars, bicycles, cigarettes, medications, ect, ect, ect.

mike77777 04-04-2009 07:24 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
he was sittin up there for more than an hour, way up there on the texas tower, shootin from the 22nd floor.........he didn't slash or choke or slit them, not our charles joseph whitman, he won't be an architect no more. there was a rumor about a tumor nestled at the base of his brain. he was sittin up there with his 36 magnum, laughin' wildly as he bagged em, who are we to say the boy's insane? lyrics from "the ballad of charles whitman", sung by kinky friedman and the texas jewboys. there's still a lot of eagle scouts around....................

Golddust 04-04-2009 07:29 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Twisted Avatar (Post 1662796)
NOT BLAMING GUNS???

JUST WAIT.

WE ARE DEALING WITH BRADY LOVERS


CNN right now.
:36_1_28:

Twisted Avatar 04-04-2009 07:35 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Golddust (Post 1662842)
CNN right now.
:36_1_28:

FORGIVE THEM .........THEY KNOW NOT WHAT THEY DO.

Golddust 04-04-2009 07:37 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Twisted Avatar (Post 1662849)
FORGIVE THEM .........THEY KNOW NOT WHAT THEY DO.


:111::111::111::111:

Twisted Avatar 04-04-2009 07:50 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Golddust (Post 1662850)
:111::111::111::111:

I WOULD LAUGH TOO.

IF THE SH!T WASNT SO SERIOUS.

BUT I DO KNOW WHO IS CRACKING UP TODAY.

Golddust 04-04-2009 07:54 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Twisted Avatar (Post 1662859)


I WOULD LAUGH TOO.

IF THE SH!T WASNT SO SERIOUS.

BUT I DO KNOW WHO IS CRACKING UP TODAY.

Agree

:biggrin:

silver_addiction 04-04-2009 07:54 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
i bought my guns to use if they try to take my guns. i am a man of principles. a patriot from the old school

Twisted Avatar 04-04-2009 08:04 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by silver_addiction (Post 1662867)
i bought my guns to use if they try to take my guns. i am a man of principles. a patriot from the old school


The Constitution of most of our states assert that all power is inherent in the people; that they may exercise it by themselves; that it is their right and duty to be at all times armed."
--Thomas Jefferson.



T

Usury 04-04-2009 08:17 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by silver_addiction (Post 1662755)
...What is happening in the American psyche that prevents people from defusing their own anguish and rage before they end the lives of others? Why are we killing each other?...

GOT JESUS?

Usury 04-04-2009 08:18 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by LukeNM (Post 1662788)
Many of the patrol officers hear in NM have AR15's in the trunks of their patrol cars. I would see my next store neighbor bring out his M4 (pointed straight up in the air) every morning and put it in the trunk of his take home police cruiser. I have to admit it made me feel safer... Unfortunately he moved!

So go get your own while you can and feel even safer still...

Goldhedge 04-04-2009 08:18 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Happyness is a warm gun...bang bang, shoot shoot....

Usury 04-04-2009 08:19 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by silver_addiction (Post 1662831)
i always say that if you want to ban things that have the ability to kill people you have to include planes, cars, bicycles, cigarettes, medications, ect, ect, ect.

Don't forget PEOPLE....PEOPLE kill more people than anything. Of course I'm starting to think a lot of these nutjobs won't be happy until we do all drink the koolaid together (the final kind) so then the "world" can be at "peace"....

Drumblebum 04-04-2009 08:49 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
They may not be blaming guns but would you believe "gun-loving maniacs"?

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_w...s_killed_.html

CQC McDuck 04-04-2009 09:05 PM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Drumblebum (Post 1662926)
They may not be blaming guns but would you believe "gun-loving maniacs"?

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_w...s_killed_.html


I saw that too. I'm so freaked out now it's not even funny.

JJ_ 04-05-2009 12:19 AM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Drumblebum (Post 1662926)
They may not be blaming guns but would you believe "gun-loving maniacs"?

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_w...s_killed_.html



Substitute some names that you know in that story and behold the future.
__________________

wallew 04-05-2009 11:30 AM

Re: at least they arent blaming guns this time
 
Yah, all us 'bitter clingers to our guns and religion"...


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:50 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright = None use it and Link to GIM