Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:[
You do realize that by banning guns on school and college campuses you are creating "predator free-fire zones" don't you?
No. I went back to visit my high school, and the only way to get in there was to go through a check-in area and obtain a pass. They didn't let anyone in there armed or who was not known, registered and identified.
"Let anyone in?" If someone walks into the school with a semi-automatic rifle or handgun, who, pray tell, is going to STOP them from entering the school, and how are they going to do so if they are unarmed? Or are you expecting an active shooter to change his mind after being politely asked for ID?
They can't walk in, except into the entry way. The door is locked with security glass which is bullet proof. Nobody can walk in there.
Good to hear, though I rather doubt it's actually bullet-proof. Most likely it's just wire-glass that will resist breaking. True bullet-proof glass is extremely expensive and very bulky and is generally beyond the budget of most school districts, even if they had the foresight to install it. However, suppose I come to the door and say that I want to talk to the principle, is there a body search performed in the sally-port area prior to being admitted to the interior? Is there an armed guard posted at all times to prevent someone from simply walking in armed during a passing period when there are hundreds of students coming and going? Is each student searched as they enter the school? Are all other exterior entrances secured at all times or guarded?
I doubt it. Seriously doubt it. And how about all the OTHER schools in the nation? I'm quite sure that most of them are ill-prepared for active shooters primarily because the leftists that run them don't want to believe it can happen to them.
Seth wrote:
I suggest exactly the opposite, I suggest that it be the law that some minimum number of teachers and administrators MUST be armed at all times, and that further, strategically placed gun lockers containing shotguns and semi-automatic rifles, accessible only to trained teachers and administrators, be installed in schools, along with other security measures that can compartmentalize the school with the push of a button to keep an active shooter from moving through the school.
Interesting suggestion, but not one that I agree with.
Seth wrote:
Why not? Do you prefer to leave schools vulnerable to Columbine-like attacks? If not, what's your practical solution to the presence of an active shooter at a school? Wait six minutes (minimum) for the police? How many people do you suppose an active shooter can kill in six minutes? Clue: The last guy managed to kill 32 people and wound 25 others at Virgina Tech in the 10 to 12 minutes before the police arrived.
So, what's your solution?
Secure the school with safety measures. Virginia Tech is a college, not a high school.
I'm all for that, and one of the best safety measures is to have armed staff available at all times, combined with physical security procedures and equipment. And it's irrelevant that Virginia Tech is a college, the "predator free-fire zone" concept applies to ALL schools, colleges and universities that ban guns from their campuses. No matter how good the physical security at a school (which is usually abysmally deficient), there's nothing as good as an ultimate backup as armed and trained staff who can respond in seconds to an attack. That was the lesson learned at Columbine by the police, who radically changed their tactical response to active shooters in the wake of that incident (which I covered as a reporter), but even so the police are still an average of six minutes away at any given time, and more if they are not individually prepared to form an ad hoc entry team, which is true of many police departments in smaller towns and cities.
The facts are simple and stark: when some nut starts shooting up classrooms full of children, you don't have six minutes, someone who is armed needs to respond within seconds to minimize the carnage by engaging the shooter and getting his attention off the kids so they can escape or be secured behind bullet-proof, locking classroom doors.
Seth wrote:
(3) crowded movie theaters which aren't on fire,
Why? Have you heard of a lot of shootings at movie theaters?
Some, yes.
Seth wrote:
And have you ever heard of a law-abiding, licensed citizen engaging in such activity?
[/quote]
That begs the question. I've never heard of a law-abiding citizen committing any crime. Once you've committed crime, you're not law abiding anymore.
It doesn't beg the question, it's the whole POINT. Law-abiding citizens who carry concealed are not going to suddenly become deranged and start shooting up movie theaters, and you can't point to ANY evidence that this has ever happened. However, when some criminal thug who is ILLEGALLY carrying a gun does so, and yes, it does happen, the ONLY people in a position to do anything about it in time to save lives are law-abiding armed citizens.
Seth wrote:
What happens when the gangbangers who disobey such laws decide to shoot up a movie theater with their illegal guns?
People will die
Exactly. But fewer people will die if there are armed citizens able to respond quickly when some gangbanger opens up on a crowd.
With regard to movie theaters, I think I'd leave it up to the theater owner and make him liable for negligence if he didn't take reasonable steps to keep his patrons safe.
Seth wrote:
But you'd be dead, so fat lot of good that would do you.
[/quote]
Movie theaters are private businesses. It's up to them, isn't it? Or, would your libertarianism involve forcing them to hand out guns to patrons?
Of course it's up to them. If they post a "no guns" sign, I take my business elsewhere, and I inform the management why I'm doing so and that I will recommend to all my friends that they do likewise. This sort of boycott worked well in Colorado Springs to reverse the anti-gun policy of one theater chain that has posted "no gun" signs. Enough people complained that they quietly removed the signs, and now I can once more patronize them. The same thing has happened with various restaurants and stores around town who overreacted at first to the "shall issue" law by posting signs, only to see their business drop off enough for them to reverse themselves.
But that's not what you were suggesting, you were implicitly suggesting laws to make it illegal to carry concealed in a movie theater.
Seth wrote:
What defense do the law abiding of the community have then?
Guns and other weapons owned and carried lawfully. But, that doesn't mean they can carry them everywhere, anytime, and in whatever manner, without restriction.
Seth wrote:
Nobody's made any such suggestion other than you.
[/quote]
No, I haven't made that suggestion. I told you some of the places I wouldn't allow guns. You can feel free to list yours and we'll see where we agree.
I'm comfortable with law-abiding citizens carrying guns wherever they wish, without any restrictions at all, including airliners, airports, federal buildings, courthouses and anywhere else on public property and on any private property where the owner has not posted prominent notice banning guns at EVERY public entrance to his property.
I'm comfortable with this because I know that law-abiding citizens don't often misuse their weapons, and when and if they do, or when a criminal does so, it's always better that many OTHER law-abiding people are armed and therefore are capable of dissuading or incapacitating the person who is misusing their weapon.
All gun bans do is prevent law-abiding citizens who might be able to prevent a tragedy from doing so without in the least inhibiting the ability of a criminal or deranged person to carry and use a weapon improperly and illegally. Such bans simply create known areas full of unarmed potential victims, which are attractive to deranged criminals.
Seth wrote:
(4) city council meetings in session, etc.,
Why?
So that people aren't armed at a time when the city council is evaluating things and making decisions that effect the people who are sitting their armed.
How is anybody going to know anyone else is armed if they are carrying a CONCEALED weapon?[/quote]
Metal detectors, and other security devices.
No, the question is "if you posit that armed citizens are going to influence public officials because they are carrying guns, if the guns are concealed, how would a public official know a gun is present and thereby be potentially influenced?"
And if public officials are so cowardly and fearful of their employers that they need gun bans to protect them while they deliberate, perhaps they should find other work, or carry a gun of their own.
Seth wrote:
Besides, there is a beneficial effect on public officials when they know that their employers are prepared to exercise their right to veto tyrannical acts by bureaucrats.
[/quote]
Says you.
Says the Founders as well.
Seth wrote:
Unless you're going to search everyone at the door,
Happens in most city, state and federal buildings around me. We have metal detectors and security guards checking things out airport-style.
Seth wrote:
You must live in DC, where paranoia and fear of an armed citizenry is at its penultimate high.
[/quote]
Tampa. The intrusion is minimal.
Only federal buildings, courthouses and jails generally get metal detectors in Colorado, although the cowards who work in the state Capitol recently reversed a century-long policy of allowing licensed persons to carry firearms into the building, so now we have long lines every morning the Legislature is in session...which did not prevent a nutcase from slipping past security with a gun, which he proceeded to wave about, which got him shot by a State Patrol officer, which is how it's supposed to work.
Seth wrote:
all you're doing is ensuring that when some angry nutcase with a grudge against the council shows up HE is the only one with a gun in the room. Stupid idea.
Hasn't happened around here. Things are pretty safe. I'm comfortable with it.
Seth wrote:
Where is "here" exactly? I'm pretty sure I can find examples of such things pretty much everywhere. Also, your comfort is hardly the appropriate metric.
Tampa. I'm sure things have happened, but your suggestions will not guarantee complete crime-free societies either. I'm comfortable with the measures being taken now.
Nothing will guaranteee a "completely crime-free society." The best we can do is to remain vigilant and well-armed and respond to crime as it occurs, on an individual basis. Thus the need for the average law-abiding citizen to have the right to carry a concealed weapon, since when it happens, nobody else will likely be in a position to do the job for them.
Seth wrote:
and that certain weapons be limited like: (1) M120's, (2) roof-mounted mini-guns firing 2,000+ rounds per minute, (3) LAWS rockets, (4) rocket-propelled grenades, (5) Stinger missiles capable of downing airplanes and helicopters,
Seen a lot of crime committed with lawfully-owned weapons of this sort in the US? .... Didn't think so.
That's because they are highly regulated, and it is limited who can own them, and where they can be carried. Mount a minigun on the roof of one's hummer and whether it's loaded or not, you're going to be arrested if you drive that thing through the city where I work.
Seth wrote:
For what crime?
Carrying an illegal firearm illegally (unless one has the required permit/permission to carry the weapon).
Um, I believe machine guns are legal in Florida. Perhaps not though. The are in Colorado, and Colorado is an "open carry" state, which means driving around with a machine gun on my Hummer is perfectly legal.
Seth wrote:
(6) fully automatic weapons, except in limited circumstances, etc.
Did you know that of the more than 400,000 machine guns in private ownership in the US, only ONE of them has ever been used by its lawful owner to commit a crime?
Good. Sounds like the current restrictions are working well. I'm comfortable with them as is.
Seth wrote:
I don't see why one would make that "mandatory." I don't want folks telling me what my child must do relative to guns.
I do. Your children will be adults soon enough, and they have duties to the nation that require that they be trained and competent in firearms use,
There are no such legal duties. Your opinion may be that there are moral duties, but opinions are like assholes...
You're absolutely wrong. Go check the Militia Act.
Seth wrote:
just as they require training in mathematics, science, history and other subjects.
No such legal requirements exist.
Check the Militia Act.
Seth wrote:
In fact, because at age 18 they automatically become subject to being called to duty in the Organized Militia,
No such legal obligation exists.
Check the Militia Act
Seth wrote:
it's actually more important that they learn a manual of arms than that they learn about safe sex and how to roll a condom onto a banana.
You're entitled to your opinion, and I think it is important for young people to learn to handle firearms too. But, it's not a legal requirement.
Sure it is, at the option of Congress, pursuant to the Militia Act.
Seth wrote:
Moreover, since it's mostly children who are uneducated in firearms safety when they are young who engage in unsafe behavior with firearms and kill themselves and others, public policy demands that your children be given uniform gun-safety, gun-handling and marksmanship training as a public safety measure.
No such public policy actually exists. It's what you think should be public policy, but public policy is what the legislature says it is.
Indeed. What I'm saying is that the legislature has full authority to require such training in schools, pursuant to its authority to call the state and federal militias to duty. Legal requirements to keep and bear arms, and appear with them weekly for inspection and training pre-date the Constitution and are found in several Colonial-era regulations and Charters. The power to raise armies by calling the Militias to duty is one of the inherent powers of government, both at the state and federal level, and the concept pre-dates the United States by several thousand years in English law.
Seth wrote:
If someone wants to have a gun, I think it would be fine for the State to require training. I see no reason for the State to have the authority to force someone to be trained for something they aren't doing or going to do.
The state already has that authority. It's called "conscription."
"There ain't no draft no more, son." Sgt. Hulka. But, conscription is not the same thing as mandatory civilian training.
If there "ain't no draft" then why are 18 year olds required to register with the Selective Service System? The answer is because at age 18 they enter the Unorganized Militia and Congress has the power to require them to register, and keep their contact information current, so that at need Congress may call them to duty (conscript) to serve the nation. This duty remains dormant unless and until activated by the Governor of a state or the Congress, but EVERY able bodied male between 18 and 45 IS a member of the Unorganized Militia with or without registration.
The "draft" can be reinstituted by Congress at any time.
Seth wrote:
It's part of the duty of all able-bodied males (and arguably these days females) between 18 and 45, who are by law members of the Unorganized Militia
What's the citation on this law? ___ U.S.C. Section ____? Or, is it in the constitution? What article?
Militia Act of 1792,
Second Congress, Session I. Chapter XXVIII
Passed May 2, 1792,
providing for the authority of the President to call out the Militia
U.S. Code
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TITLE 10 > Subtitle A > PART I > CHAPTER 13 > § 311
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§ 311. Militia: composition and classes
(a) The militia of the United States consists of all able-bodied males at least 17 years of age and, except as provided in section 313 of title 32, under 45 years of age who are, or who have made a declaration of intention to become, citizens of the United States and of female citizens of the United States who are members of the National Guard.
(b) The classes of the militia are—
(1) the organized militia, which consists of the National Guard and the Naval Militia; and
(2) the unorganized militia, which consists of the members of the militia who are not members of the National Guard or the Naval Militia.
My mistake, the age is 17 to 45, not 18 to 45.
Seth wrote:
and are subject to being called to duty in the Organized Militia when and if the country needs them.
Only if there is a draft. Nobody has needed to even register for a long time.
Wrong.
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TITLE 50, APPENDIX App. > MILITARY > ACT > § 454
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§ 454. Persons liable for training and service
(a) Age limits; training in National Security Training Corps; physical and mental fitness; adequate training facilities; assignment to stations and units; training period; medical specialist categories
Except as otherwise provided in this title [sections 451 to 471a of this Appendix], every person required to register pursuant to section 3 of this title [section 453 of this Appendix] who is between the ages of eighteen years and six months and twenty-six years, at the time fixed for his registration, or who attains the age of eighteen years and six months after having been required to register pursuant to section 3 of this title [section 453 of this Appendix], or who is otherwise liable as provided in section 6 (h) of this title [section 456 (h) of this Appendix], shall be liable for training and service in the Armed Forces of the United States:
Seth wrote:
This duty makes it necessary that all persons subject to militia duty be trained to use firearms, so that they can form an effective militia when called to duty.
Says you, but - not a legal requirement.
Not at the moment, but that can change with the stroke of the executive pen, and should.
Seth wrote:
I merely suggest that the training start early, with gun safety training, in the first grade, and continue every year through high school graduation, so that as high school graduates all young persons have received adequate safety, handling and marksmanship training as preparation for their service in the Militia. This has the added benefit of reducing accidental gun deaths and injuries by properly exposing youth to firearms and teaching them proper safety procedures should they encounter a firearm.
But the fundamental government authority exists, and has in fact existed since before the United States was formed, and was a well-understood power of government at the time the Constitution was ratified.
Citation needed.
I'll get right on that...

"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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