Shooting at school in Minnesota

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
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RE: Shooting at school in

ah. He liked you! and wanted to play! Horses are very intelligent)it kills me to say this: especially stallions and geldings) with great long memories. they're kind of like elephants...only smaller.

My dad had a Grey gelding when he was a boy. My dad said the horse was the meanest thing. Loved to bite people....bit my dad once. My dad bit back. they were bestest friends after that.. they use to enjoy beer's together.
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
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Re: RE: Shooting at school in Minnesota

no1important said:
Jay said:
I figured you felt that way...Most on the left do.


I just don't understand it.

Waht don't you understand? Why do people need handguns and assault rifles for? To protect yourselves from what? Iraq? The boogeyman? your neighbour?

Could that be the reason America has so much violent crime and crime in general? The easy access to guns?

America could never function as a peaceful society. It needs violence and war to function it appears, unfortunatly.


:drunken:
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
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Reverend Blair said:
I figured you felt that way...Most on the left do.


I just don't understand it.

If you aren't a good enough hunter to hit something with two shots, you shouldn't be there, Jay.

Best hunter I ever knew? An old native guy named Basil Buffalo (really...not making this up). He owned a single shot .22 made sometime in the distant past. He hunted everything from deer to ducks with it. He had a mongrel dog that could retrieve and point and a horse that used to steal my hat.

I understand the hunting part rev.....I'm a hunter.
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
38
Re: RE: Shooting at school in

Twila said:
I just don't understand it.



My dad ( a former hunter and ex navy) use to tell me that keeping weapons in the house is an excellent way to arm an intruder......



LMAO.



If only life were that simple.....
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
38
Re: RE: Shooting at school in Minnesota

mrmom2 said:
People need hand guns to protect themselves from tyranny.Do you guys seriously think for one minute the goverment wouldn't try it.Those who don't remember history are doomed to repeat it.

When the military bears down on the populace, I don't think a hand gun is going to do you much good. That’s why when they ban guns in America; they ban military guns and military ammunition, because they aren’t worried about hand guns. This is the largest proof that the government is starting to seriously worry about it's future.

People need hand guns to protect themselves from general harm.
 

Jay

Executive Branch Member
Jan 7, 2005
8,366
3
38
Re: RE: Shooting at school in Minnesota

missile said:
When something like this school shooting happens,I remember how the school bullies made my young life miserable. I could have borrowed my grandfather's pistols,rifle and shotgun and done a lot of damage. But,this didn't happen as I was just as bullied and abused at home as at school,so thought it was a normal,accepted way of life[the old School Of Hard Knocks!]

Borrowed?
 

crit13

Electoral Member
Mar 28, 2005
301
4
18
Whitby, Ontario
School shootings never happen in Europe?

Eighteen people died when an expelled former pupil went on a shooting spree at his school in the eastern German city of Erfurt.
Masked and dressed in black, the gunman walked through classrooms killing 14 teachers, two schoolgirls and one of the first policemen on the scene before taking his own life.



He was clothed completely in black and you could only see his eyes.

Pupil who witnessed the killing

Pupils of the Gutenberg School spent four hours trapped inside before police could declare the building safe.

Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder described the massacre in the quiet provincial city as "beyond the powers of the imagination".

As four other victims were being treated in hospital, people gathered in the city for a church service in the evening.
Pupils also tried to get help using their mobile phones


It is the worst school massacre in Europe since the 1996 shooting in Dunblane, Scotland, when a deranged gunman killed 16 children, a teacher and himself.

BBC Berlin correspondent Rob Broomby says the incident is also the worst of its kind in Germany's post-war history.

The German authorities have not given the name of the Erfurt killer but they said he was a 19-year-old who had been expelled from the school several months earlier and told he could not sit his university entrance exam.

Exams

"We were sitting in class doing our work and we heard a shooting sound," said eyewitness Filip Niemann.

Major school shootings:
1996: 16 children and a teacher shot dead at Dunblane Primary School, Scotland

When the killer turned up on Friday morning with a pump-action shotgun and a pistol, his former classmates were sitting exams.

"We joked about it and the teacher smiled," said Niemann.

"The teacher let us go out and see what was happening and when we left the classroom, three to four metres in front of us, there was a masked person in black holding his gun at his shoulder."

Niemann saw a teacher being shot and fled with other pupils as the killer stalked the classrooms, searching for more teachers.

Fifteen of those killed died in the first few minutes of the shooting, which began shortly before 1100 local time (0900 GMT).

After a caretaker alerted the police, two officers appeared at the school around noon, only to find dead bodies as they entered.
Police initially feared there were two gunmen inside


As they approached, the gunman shot dead one of them, a 42-year-old father who had been planning to celebrate his daughter's birthday that day.

The police then sealed the area and brought in special forces as scores of children remained trapped inside.

A handwritten note could be seen attached to a classroom window saying simply "Help".

The killer took his own life, reportedly when commandos finally stormed the building.

"This student seems to have had such hatred because he was expelled and couldn't sit his exam that he was driven to this terrible deed," said Interior Minister Otto Schily.

By a bizarre coincidence, he noted, the German parliament had passed new legislation tightening gun controls on Friday.
 

no1important

Time Out
Jan 9, 2003
4,125
0
36
57
Vancouver
members.shaw.ca
RE: Shooting at school in

School shootings never happen in Europe?

Nowhere near as often as America. America has the easiest access to handguns and rifles out of all so called civilized countries on the planet.

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I like the NRA's response to the issue. They're saying that they should allow teachers to carry guns now. YEEK! :roll:

There a bunch of fanatical neocons. More people with guns = more problems in my opinion.