2 Points Tex! |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7956 |
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Hansel, You're trying to have an argument with the wrong guy. Go back and read my posts. Let's see your studies on politeness during the early 20th century.
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BuffaloBFN
Grand Poobah Joined: June-24-2007 Location: Gainesville,GA Status: Offline Points: 6094 |
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I still want to see something on the common use of the word 'democrat'; specifically in the 19th century.
At what age do parents start their kids handling guns? The boy in this story(wayyy back at the beginning) looked about 12-14. I met a guy yesterday who is selling a guitar to buy his daughter a Ruger 10/22. She is 12. |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7956 |
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I took my first shot at 6. I can't remember how old my kids were, but it was before 12. They were 6 & 7 when they started skiing, I can remember that! Parents should teach their kids basic gun safety by about 5 or 6, even if they never plan to own any guns.
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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I read the study that you are referring to, and I don't think it is as easily sunk as the radio host wants to believe. The authors themselves raise issues of inner city crime as one thing that may explain part of the pattern, but that data on race and poverty were not available from Vancouver and so there was no way to compare those numbers. However they show that while rates of crime were similar between cities overall, gun crime was far higher in Seattle. I think that is beyond dispute. Whether or not that is due to gun laws is up to you to decide. Thanks for the info. The original source (Sloan et al. 1988) is worth a read if you are interested in this issue. You can find a pdf of it here. |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Hi Bruce, I'm not really trying to have an argument with you, but I am trying to get you to clarify what you really mean. When you originally said that I "misunderstood" you I went back to see where I had gone wrong. I found that we agree that you should be able to carry a gun if you wanted to (provided you are not a felon, etc...), but that you continue to promote the view that guns create a "polite" society. In this post that I am quoting you end with "politeness in the early 20th century" which I assume is again an attempt to say that more guns leads to a polite (by that I think you mean "safe") society. From a quick look it seems that there is not a lot published on crime that far back, and I would guess that is so because good data are hard to find from that time period. From what I did see it appears that crime has actually decreased since the 19th century or at the least remained relatively stable. Even if I could find studies from that time period, I'm not sure why they would matter. We don't live in the late 19th or early 20th Century. "Democrats" and "Republicans" from that time bear little resemblance to their counterparts today (sorry Greg). Indeed the world was a very different place. I don't see how even if it were a more "polite" time (which I very sincerely doubt) why that should change my or your view on gun regulations in the 21st Century. Own and carry a gun if you would like to. The 2nd Amendment will back you up. But neither it nor social science back up claims that more guns reduces crime rates (that is, create "polite society"). In fact there is much evidence to the contrary. Indeed the 2nd amendment as written is mostly in the context of allowing a "well regulated militia" to ensure "the security of a Free State" though later Supreme Court rulings upheld the use of firearms for a variety of lawful uses including self defense. Maybe more gun deaths is the price we pay for our 2nd Amendment rights, and it seems many of us would think that the price is worth it. That is fine, but don't dress up our 2nd Amendment right as something that it is not. |
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skicat2001
Platinum Member Joined: November-24-2008 Location: Ft. Worth TX Status: Offline Points: 1950 |
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I personally was raised around guns.My dad enforced SAFTEY first.There are many who where not and crimnals and thugs get a hold of them and resort to violence.His ol lady cheats on him,he finds out and kills innocent people,which is sad.There is at least down here in TX,plenty of people that offer rules and regulations and classes to better if you are interested in carrying.
The 2nd amendment created by the founding fathers was they believed in protecting yourselves from the goverment and Native Americans taking peoples land. If a man walks in a restraunt or a public place and opens fire killing innocent people,would you rather hit the deck and hope and pray you dont get hit,or have the right to carry and fight back.I would like to know?? |
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davidg
Grand Poobah Joined: January-07-2008 Location: NW Chicagoland Status: Offline Points: 2239 |
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Hansel....I will have to find the time to read it. Thanks for posting the full study. What are your thoughts on stricter gun laws? I am pretty sure where you may come down on the issue.
My thoughts are that even if guns were totally banned today, criminals would have no problems getting them, and they would still continue to break the law with them. Gun owners need to be responsible in their ownership of them, and I know most are. It breaks my heart when I hear about kids getting ahold of a loaded gun in the house, and killing themselves or a sibling. When I was a kid, I came within a split second of having a very bad accident with a 12 gauge shotgun. Let's just say that my 42 year old brother is still here to tell the tale, but, our window and curtains in the dining room didn't fare so well. If ever I had an angel on my shoulder, it was that day. |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7956 |
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Hansel, polite means polite and not safe. It means people were not apt to get in each others face because they did not know what the consequences may be. People regularly give people the finger today, tell each to go screw themselves and many other forms of disrespect. Years ago people weren't so quick to display that type of behavior.
I don't wish to debate the subject as while you are obviously well spoken, you're whole view point is centered in liberalism and is not objective. The second amendment, is consistent with the rest of the amendments as an individual right and not a collective right. When the Bill of Rights was written there was no national guard or army and the country was dependent on people showing up with their own guns to form a militia. |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Hi Dave,
I'm actually generally in favor of guns. I have some, and plan to own more. I use them for hunting and sport shooting. I have friends and family that legally use concealed carry. One of the first things I bought with my own money as a kid was my beloved BB gun. Still have it! That said, I'm sure if we had fewer of them there would be less gun violence. People kill people, not guns. But sometimes guns make it easier for them. Our Constitution says we can have guns. Until our society decides to scrap that or alter it significantly, then targeted or random gun violence will continue to occur more frequently than perhaps it should. I suppose every freedom comes at a price. Bruce, it may seem like I am centered in "liberalism" and perhaps I am. I agree that there is WAY to much incivility and lack of politeness, and I wish I knew what to do about it. I am sure that you and I have a lot more in common in the way we carry ourselves, though we may at times differ politically, than lots of other folks that vote the same as either one of us. Thanks for going back and forth with me, I really do enjoy it and I always learn something. I hope you feel the same way. I really hope to make it to a reunion one of these days to meet some of you all! I agree on the 2nd Amendment, which is why I don't think it should be used to fight crime in general. A gun in the hands of a well prepared defender might be good for stopping an individual crime. I believe the gun owners on this forum probably fit into this category. I don't believe, based on published evidence and data, that those same guns reduce crime rates overall. Own, train, and use a gun to protect yourself if necessary but don't be under any illusions that you are also protecting your broader community by simply carrying. |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7956 |
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Hansel, I think we all here at CCF have a lot more in common than not, and I don't get excited talking about this stuff. My interest in boats is far greater than my interest is in guns or politics. The reunions are what has brought CCF together and made it what it is. I hope they haven't been dropped for good.
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peter1234
Grand Poobah Joined: February-03-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2756 |
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why do the reunions seem to have faded away ?
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former skylark owner now a formula but I cant let this place go
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TRBenj
Grand Poobah Joined: June-29-2005 Location: NWCT Status: Offline Points: 21190 |
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Reunions take 2012 off Long story short, organizing an official reunion is a lot of work, and its a thankless job! Plenty of mini-reunions around though- and theyre every bit as much fun (if not more so). |
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Riley
Grand Poobah Joined: January-19-2004 Location: Portland, ME Status: Offline Points: 7956 |
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My guess is they became too much work, and while initially they helped the site gel, it's gelled.
Minis seem to be the way. The Sebago Long Lake region would be an excellent place to have one, although there has always been limited interest in that area as it is so far away for most people. Seems like with the new Nautique dealer in Naples, there might be opportunity, but there would have to be interest enough to get people to travel to Maine. |
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JoeinNY
Grand Poobah Joined: October-19-2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 5698 |
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Faded Away!?
I coulda swore I went to 4 of them last year, not including a quicker gathering at ReidP's that werent too bad either and Green Lake.. took a week off from that one but I'll work it back in this year. |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Maine is one of the few US states that I have yet to visit but when I do I will look you up and buy you a beer or two in our own mini-reunion.
I've been watching this site for years, but I was always too busy to make it to on of the big reunions. Bummer... |
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quinner
Grand Poobah Joined: October-12-2005 Location: Unknown Status: Offline Points: 5828 |
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Maybe next year Hansel, Green Lake is only a day trip away from Mad City
Peter, you should have made an appearance at the benjii's, it was a great time!! |
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Hansel
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Green Lake is close to Madison for sure, but every summer since 2007 I've been living or traveling outside the state. Hopefully this year is the year! Otherwise someday I'll just have to crash a Chicago beers get together as a consolation prize.
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Waterdog
Grand Poobah Joined: April-27-2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2020 |
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Civility ? - We start talking boats & reunions and everyones civil. Civility starts and ends at home - home what a nice word,calming in fact. Your life is your great book. We are blessed with the freedom to write whatever we want in our own book today - BUT - tomorrow we can't erase what we wrote. So make sure you write carefully. = Civility PS The day "they" make my gun illigal I'll wake up a criminal. |
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OverMyHead
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I am finally finding some time to do my homework.
Here are a few fun facts. Based on survey data from a 2000 study published in the Journal of Quantitative Criminology,[17] U.S. civilians use guns to defend themselves and others from crime at least 989,883 times per year.[18] * A 1993 nationwide survey of 4,977 households found that over the previous five years, at least 3.5% of households had members who had used a gun "for self-protection or for the protection of property at home, work, or elsewhere." Applied to the U.S. population, this amounts to 1,029,615 such incidents per year. This figure excludes all "military service, police work, or work as a security guard."[19] * A 1994 survey conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that Americans use guns to frighten away intruders who are breaking into their homes about 498,000 times per year.[20] * A 1982 survey of male felons in 11 state prisons dispersed across the U.S. found:[21] • 34% had been "scared off, shot at, wounded, or captured by an armed victim" • 40% had decided not to commit a crime because they "knew or believed that the victim was carrying a gun" • 69% personally knew other criminals who had been "scared off, shot at, wounded, or captured by an armed victim"[22] Hansel, what do you have against John Lott. His story is interesting. He was/is an academic who became a supporter of the second amendment only after he did a nation wide survey of gun laws and crime rates. His supporters and detractors seem to fall along political lines based thier position on gun control. Here is an overview. Concealed weapons and crime rate In an 1997 article written with David B. Mustard[17] and Lott's subsequent books More Guns, Less Crime and The Bias Against Guns, Lott argued that allowing adults to carry concealed weapons significantly reduces crime in America. He supported this position with a statistical tabulation of time series data from census and other social and economic surveys of individual United States counties in different years, which he used in a multivariate model of crime rates. His published results purported to show a reduction in violent crime associated with states' adoption of laws that allow the adult population to carry concealed weapons. The work was immediately controversial, drawing both support and opposition. Several academics praised Lott's methodology, including Florida State University economist Bruce Benson,[18] Cardozo School of Law professor John O. McGinnis,[19] and University of Mississippi professor William F. Shughart.[20] The book was favorably reviewed by reviews from academics Gary Kleck, Milton Friedman, and Thomas Sowell.[21][citation needed] Other reviews claimed that there were problems with Lott's model. In the New England Journal of Medicine, David Hemenway argued that Lott failed to account for several key variables, including drug consumption, and that therefore the model was flawed;[22] however, Lott's book did account for other variables such as cocaine prices.[23] Others agreed, and some researchers, including Ian Ayres and John J. Donohue, claimed that the model contained significant coding errors and systemic bias.[24] Gary Kleck considered it unlikely that such a large decrease in violent crime could be explained by a relatively modest increase in concealed carry,[25] and others claimed that removing portions of the data set caused the results to still show statistically significant drops only in aggravated assaults and robbery when all counties with fewer than 100,000 people and Florida's counties were both simultaneously dropped from the sample.[26] In 2004, the National Academy of Sciences conducted a review of current research and data on firearms and violent crime, including Lott's work, and found "no credible evidence that the passage of right-to-carry laws decreases or increases violent crime."[27] James Q. Wilson dissented from that opinion, and while accepting the committee's findings on violent crime in general,[28] he noted that the committee's own findings in several tests showed "that shall-issue laws drive down the murder rate".[29] Referring to the research done on the topic, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that while most researchers support Lott's findings that right-to-carry laws reduce violent crime, some researchers doubt that concealed carry laws have any impact on violent crime, saying however that "Mr. Lott's research has convinced his peers of at least one point: No scholars now claim that legalizing concealed weapons causes a major increase in crime."[30] As Lott critics Ian Ayres and John J. Donohue III pointed out: "We conclude that Lott and Mustard have made an important scholarly contribution in establishing that these laws have not led to the massive bloodbath of death and injury that some of their opponents feared. Here is another well known comparison/ experiment. On May 1, 1982, a new ordinance was passed by the city council of Kennesaw. This law ( Sec. 34-1 Heads of households to maintain firearms) made it mandatory for each household to own and maintain a gun, as well as ammunition. Not only was the ordinance passed by city council, it was a unanimous decision. The ordinance states the gun law is needed "In order to provide for the emergency management of the City, and further in order to provide for and protect the safety, security and general welfare of the city and its inhabitants, every head of household residing in the City limits is required to maintain a firearm, together with ammunition therefore." Of course, exclusions were made to convicted felons, people with religious objections, and people with disabilities. Members of the city council introduced and voted for the ordinance to make a statement when a city in Illinois, Morton Grove, passed an ordinance banning hand guns from anyone other than peace officers. Morton Grove was the first community to ever ban the sale and possession of handguns. Both city ordinances drew worldwide media attention, with Kennesaw's attention being negative. Nicknamed "Gun Town USA" from a column titled the same and written by Art Buchwald, expectations were for the town to covert back to the Old West style of handling disagreements with ruthless shoot outs. This expectation never happened. In fact, more than 25 years after the ban, not a single resident of Kennesaw has been involved in a fatal shooting - as a victim, attacker or defender. There has been one firearm related murder but not from a resident of Kennesaw. Since the ordinance, no child has ever been injured with a firearm in Kennesaw. Crime dropped after the ordinance and the city has maintained an exceptionally low crime rate ever since, even with the population swelling from 5,000 in 1982 to approximately 30,000 today. The truth is crime has plummeted and population has soared. In comparison, the population of Morton Grove, Illinois has dropped slightly and the crime rate has increased, especially right after the ban. Putting a ban on owning a firearm may keep guns out of the hands of law abiding citizens but will it put them at a disadvantage when it comes to protecting their families and possessions? Criminals who do not abide by laws anyway, will still possess handguns. If you were a criminal planning on breaking into a home to steal or cause somebody harm, would you choose a home in a city where every homeowner is required to carry a gun and ammunition or a home in a city where homeowners are banned from carrying guns? |
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For thousands of years men have felt the irresistible urge to go to sea, and many of them died. Things got better after they invented boats.
1987 Ski Nautique |
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peter1234
Grand Poobah Joined: February-03-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2756 |
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Thanks for finding that information.. I guess if nothing else it doesnt increase crime .
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former skylark owner now a formula but I cant let this place go
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skicat2001
Platinum Member Joined: November-24-2008 Location: Ft. Worth TX Status: Offline Points: 1950 |
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Just curious is CT, a right to carry state??
Great post Dave... |
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1985 CC 2001-SOLD
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peter1234
Grand Poobah Joined: February-03-2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2756 |
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sick of the media ... aol headline a minute ago man wounds 3 at hospital.. police fatally wounded him.. how about police kill man who was trying to kill others .. seems more accurate why do they soften what the perp was doing it seems like they make the criminal a victim all the time
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former skylark owner now a formula but I cant let this place go
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bhectus
Platinum Member Joined: July-04-2010 Location: Gator Country! Status: Offline Points: 1809 |
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I usually stay out of the politics threads because in my opinion you can't change other people's opinions. So it isn't worth trying. But I am an advocate of the 2nd Amendment and am a gun owner, both for hunting and self defense purposes. I have a concealed weapons permit but don't carry all the time, I probably should more so but maybe complacency has gotten the best of me. But lately with all the senseless violence going on I should remind myself to carry everywhere I can. A month ago I missed this one by about 10 minutes. My friend and I were at the very ATM this happened at and then went into watch a Jai-Alai match next door:
ATM Robbery backfires Score one for the good guys. Score another here: Waffle House Robber killed Now my thoughts are, is it better to be a victim, or to watch other innocent people become victims, or is it better to be an upstanding citizen legally carrying to protect ones self, family, and others? Our country is broken, and every time there is a tragedy, people want to blame the guns and gun control. I don't understand this. Guns have been around and a part of this country since its inception. It would have been just as easy for that douchebag that just killed all those poor kids to hijack a school bus and run it into a river. Taking the guns away is not going to fix the problem of people killing each other. Does it make it any easier? Probably not. Criminals will always find a way to do the evil things that they do. He could have done a number of things to accomplish his ultimate goal. |
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'02 Ski Nautique 196 w/ 5.7 Apex bowtie - Sold
'87 Barefoot - sold '97 Super Sport Nautique - originally custom built for Walt Meloon '97 Ski Nautique '83 SN 2001 |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Dave,
Thanks for digging around a bit. Sadly though I find your "homework" to be less than convincing, and not just because you invoked Lott to back you up. Let's examine some of your arguments.
First of all, I think that you should let us all know when you are using other people's words and when you are using your own. You copy and pasted liberally (indeed almost your entire post from what I can tell). You need to provide your sources so that we can evaluate them. Luckily these sources are a short copy and paste away for me too. The above and stats that follow are from a justfacts.com page about gun laws. I looked at the actual study that they use to get these data, and then make their (wild in my mind) extrapolations from. The study (title and abstract of which you can read here) was never designed to study rates of crime. It was interested in comparing two types of surveys that got different results about crime rates. I cannot get the full paper so it is hard to say, but I'd hazard a guess that given its goals it is probably not an authoritative source of crime statistics, and the crass side of me suspects that justfacts.com probably went with the data that they liked the most from the paper in the first place.
This information is lifted directly from the Wikipedia page on John Lott. If you take the time to read the entire thing you can see that Lott has left academia to become a prolific op-ed writer and Fox News contributor. He himself is a political operative, even going so far as to recently co-author a book with everybody's pal Grover Norquist. He's is free to do these things, and probably get paid big bucks, and I am free to question his motives and methods, which I and many others do.
Ah Dave, such selective copy and pasting, or perhaps it was just an accident that you left out the final sentence in that quote... "On the other hand, we find that the statistical evidence that these laws have reduced crime is limited, sporadic, and extraordinarily fragile."
From the Kennesaw Historical Society President Robert Jones comes these insights, "Although the law is now being credited with a drop in crime, Jones said that was not the law's original purpose. He also pointed out that Kennesaw did not have a big problem with crime before. "The crime rate wasn't that high to start with. It was 11 burglaries per 1,000 residents in 1981," he said." and, "Jones said one motivation for the council passing the ordinance had to do with publicity. "It was done in response to a law passed by Morton Grove, Ill., outlawing gun ownership within the city limits," he said. "Several council members were upset Morton Grove had gotten a lot of attention with their ordinance so they decided to top them." --Gun Ownership - It's The Law In Kennesaw By Jonathan Hamilton and David Burch Marietta Daily Journal Staff Writers http://www.mdjonline.com/StoryDetail.cfm?id=10017128&Section=Home%20Page 3-14-1 Your source here appears to be some version of this website. One of the councilmen quoted, a Mr. J.O. Stephenson is quite adamant that the law reduced crime, but of course he probably thought it would in the first place and has every reason to take credit for the law's "success" today. I personally don't take these two cities as much evidence for or against the use of guns to lower crime, especially since they are both cities that are affluent and relatively crime-free in the first place. Indeed as I have pointed out repeatedly in earlier posts crime is much more well explained by other social factors. Indeed some later analysis has cast doubt on the conclusion that the observed drop in crime is attributable to the gun law (per the Kennesaw Wikipedia page).
Again, as I have posted previously there is very little evidence that your theory that guns deter crime from occurring is a valid one. All you've done in this post is liberally copy and paste sections of websites, conveniently leaving out portions that don't support your views or failing to provide adequate background that would help us to assess the context of the information. I'm not just trying to be a contrarian, but while you might be satisfied with your homework I think that you should probably go back and try again. Bring me a peer-reviewed primary source publication (non-Lott authored) that shows that more guns reduces crime. Not murky websites, Wikipedia copy and pastes, and anecdotes about cities and their laws. Until then I, and I hope others on this board, will not draw the lesson that guns reduce crime. |
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bhectus
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I just cited 2 instances where they did. Concrete, real evidence. Would you like me to find more? It's not hard to search them out. Here's some more fodder just in case: Gun carrying citizen stops man with knife before stabbing more victims Gun-carrying woman stops robbery suspect Concealed carry stops bank robbery in Missouri |
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'02 Ski Nautique 196 w/ 5.7 Apex bowtie - Sold
'87 Barefoot - sold '97 Super Sport Nautique - originally custom built for Walt Meloon '97 Ski Nautique '83 SN 2001 |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Hi Bret,
Yes, guns stopped crime in those instances. If you look back to some of my earlier posts in this thread you will see that I agree that guns can at times stop individual crimes. However some members have tried on this thread to promote the idea that increased numbers of guns decrease crime rates in society overall. As I have shown, and nobody has yet been able to refute, many published studies that examine the relationship between guns and crime find that there is no link between them; i.e. more guns do not decrease crime rates. Therefore, if you want to lower crime fix the problems in society (primarily socioeconomic). Own, carry, and use guns for the right reasons. A gun may stop a crime. But guns at large don't stop crime. There is a difference. |
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bhectus
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I couldn't agree with you more. But the masses don't want to hear this. It's much easier to make excuses, blame guns, prescribe more meds, and shovel the *************** under the carpet. |
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'02 Ski Nautique 196 w/ 5.7 Apex bowtie - Sold
'87 Barefoot - sold '97 Super Sport Nautique - originally custom built for Walt Meloon '97 Ski Nautique '83 SN 2001 |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Hey Bret,
I hope my post didn't come across as too heavy handed, it was a quick reply. I am glad we agree there! Cheers |
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OverMyHead
Grand Poobah Joined: March-14-2008 Location: MN Status: Offline Points: 4861 |
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Hansel You are correct that I cut and pasted information. You seem to be tired of my opinion and wanted me to provide information to back it up.
I like how you discredit a convenient compilation because you disagree with the compiler, but in effect you are saying we cannot trust the US center for disease control or the Journal of quantitative criminology. I choose the Wikipedia page because it seemed fairly neutral on John which I thought was big of me. As I am not an academic, and I am not providing research, I see this topic as a debate, where arguments are made pro or con and others can refute them as they see fit. By the way I edited out well over three quarters of the page and I did it selectively so as not to bore to many with excessive information and to support my argument. Here is a direct copy of the line you are questioning. "On the other hand, we find that the statistical evidence that these laws have reduced crime is limited, sporadic, and extraordinarily fragile."[24] and here is yours.
It would appear that you have manipulated the original content by making it bold to add emphasis that the author did not intend, and also eliminated the footnote that allows it to be further investigated in its original source. Such horrors from and academic. As for John, Again he became a proponent of the 2nd amendment after being convinced by his own research, not the other way around. At least he did some research, unlike like an Al Gore who went from politician to global warming (excuse me climate change now that the earth stopped warming) expert, and carbon credit salesman. Nearly all researchers are paid by someone. I am sure you do not work for free. Follow the money and you likely will find and agenda behind most research. If that is the criteria for discrediting someones work there is virtually no untainted research. As for kennisaw, guns are certainly only one factor, and yet the results were exactly what kennisaw envisioned. Coincidence? maybe. Fun? for sure. Back to my homework! |
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For thousands of years men have felt the irresistible urge to go to sea, and many of them died. Things got better after they invented boats.
1987 Ski Nautique |
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Hansel
Senior Member Joined: September-21-2006 Location: Twin Cities, MN Status: Offline Points: 415 |
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Hi Dave,
Thanks for engaging, as always. I'm not so tired of your opinion, which you are free to have, but I obviously get a little frustrated when an idea that doesn't actually have much support from the data gets entertained as a good one. I have used "I" way too many times in my posts, because really I am just doing some research and looking at information that other people tried hard to collect. The bottom line from everything that I have read, including five or so that I have read through rather thoroughly and another 5-10 that I have skimmed the main results, is agreed that concealed carry laws do not change crime rates one way or the other. Once again, for the record I am not against concealed carry, but I don't think that it should be advocated for a purpose that it clearly is not good for. I have two notions in your above post that I would like to briefly address;
You see this is a debate, but I don't think that you should. At one time there was an idea; people with guns scare bad guys from committing crimes, therefore more people with guns should scare more bad guys and crime rates should decrease. This is a nice idea, and makes some logical sense. Over the last two decades many crime researchers have examined the data and they have, aside from a small vocal minority, found that this is not the case. Therefore the debate is more or less settled. The question was raised, people did research on it, and now based on the best evidence available we have an answer. It isn't honest or fair to call it a debate anymore. Imagine the "debate" that a Bayliner was just as good as ski boat as a Ski Nautique. Sounds plausible, they are both boats and while the CC was designed to pull skiers maybe it is heavier and so still makes a bigger wake anyway. OK, you can measure things like how successfully can people run the course behind one boat versus the other, or the shape of the wakes behind the two. After examining the evidence most people would come to the conclusion that the SN is the better boat, but there will always be some people who like their Bayliner better, maybe because "they just ski better behind it." Because a few people, say 5 in a 100, prefer a Bayliner to a SN mean that you consider there to be an active debate on which is a better ski boat? I doubt you would.
When it is said, "All research is biased" it ignores the fact that lots of research is both explanatory and predictive. The vast majority of researchers that I know are open minded people that do as much as humanly possible to remove bias from their science. In fact the most exciting moments as a scientist can be when results come back that didn't match the expected outcome; many times this is where the great discoveries are made. Your viewpoint is rather crass, and conveniently allows the dismissal of science as an endeavor. It is kissing cousins with the notion of a scientific debate where there is none. It seeks to discredit and invalidate results that are inconvenient. True, some research is biased but that often occurs when an industry with a vested interest in the outcome is the funding source. Massive amounts of research is funded by the public and I am very confident that it is greatly bias-free.
I know you are winking here, but it is obvious to any reader where I got it and that I emphasized it with bold text. "Manipulation" is not a word that fits what I did very well. That sentence pretty much sinks your line of argument, and it appeared to me that you may have left it out on purpose, especially given the fact that it was the only sentence in that entire paragraph that you missed. Maybe that is just because it was the final one, or it was an accident. Only you know for sure. I would hazard a guess that you see research as looking for evidence that backs up your belief. Research is having a question and looking for an answer. When this all began last week I had a question, "Do more guns reduce crime?" I found an answer, a resounding, "No." From what I can tell you have a belief, "More guns reduce crime", and you've done your "homework" to find evidence that backs it up. There will always be some "evidence" out there for even the most far fetched ideas. But that "evidence" isn't "proof" of anything. If you have to work hard to find some evidence, any evidence, to support your ideas that is your first hint that the belief you started with is probably wrong and you might need to prepare yourself to change your mind. I suggest that you either find us enough evidence to change our minds, or that you change your own mind. Doing anything else just doesn't cut the mustard. |
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