Dunno...I'm not an authority...
Waldo err I mean google says a war chief is more a general than tribal chief
Dunno...I'm not an authority...
Please. Listening to Shemanese discuss what they don't understand is dull.Let's bring this back to the topic shall we?
I don't think so. I doubt anyone would argue that a (relatively) gun-free country will have a lower gun violence rate than a gun-permissive country. There are also too many demographic, historical, and cultural variables for a simple gun/no-gun (by which I mean fewer guns) dichotomy to explain much of anything.I think a good point was made about what countries should be compared when looking at the stats.
Should we be focusing on 'civilized', developed nations only or is it more appropriate to have everyone thrown into the mix?
Now....explain to me why the deaths of those in less developed countries are not important enough to be considered........no - OECD comparisons are the norm if one intends to compare like/developed countries. Of course, again, you would prefer the U.S. gun culture be compared to 3rd-world, war torn and/or shyte-house countries. I can see your thinking here! :mrgreen:
?
imagine... a comparison of GUN MURDER RATES actually including gun murder rate data! Go figure.
per the graph source: an acknowledgement that Mexico was not included was made and based upon the fact Mexico, "has about triple the U.S. rate due in large part to the ongoing drug war". No conspiracy Colpy... well... other than the one's you've already attached to the UN! But hey, there's still Estonia... what's going on there, hey!!! :mrgreen:
Please. Listening to Shemanese discuss what they don't understand is dull.
I don't think so. I doubt anyone would argue that a (relatively) gun-free country will have a lower gun violence rate than a gun-permissive country. There are also too many demographic, historical, and cultural variables for a simple gun/no-gun (by which I mean fewer guns) dichotomy to explain much of anything.
Here's the question. When you add up the benefits, actual or perceived, of liberal gun ownership laws vs. the benefits of gun control, do you consider the benefits of liberal gun ownership (hunting, home defence, self defence, resistance to tyranny) worth the cost (perhaps 20,000 lives lost per year in the U.S. that would not have been lost were gun ownership restricted)?
Your answer is no. Mine is yes.
Further discussion?
Or we can discuss various reasonable restrictions to make guns safer. Your call.
Please. Listening to Shemanese discuss what they don't understand is dull.
A common misconception is that firearms are illegal in Mexico and that no person may possess them.[3] This belief originates due the general perception that only members of law enforcement, the armed forces, or those in armed security protection are authorized to have them. While it is true that Mexico possesses strict gun laws,[4] where most types and calibers are reserved to military and law enforcement, the acquisition and ownership of certain firearms and ammunition remains a constitutional right to all Mexican citizens and foreign legal residents.[6]
Gun politics in Mexico - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Well then maybe they shouldn't have the right to bear arms then.
Just sayin'
Did you have a better idea?
Yeah.
Form them into local militias and arm them to the bloody teeth so they can drive the cartels out of their towns and villages.
Or at least allow them the ability to legally defend themselves.
Lmao
Vigilantes?
No thanks.
The left, I propose, actually is disgusted by, and afraid of the people, despite their pretense otherwise.
As an aside, this is something that always amazes me about the Left.
They talk a lot about the "people", they consistently go on about the oppression or the subjugation, or the rights of the "people", they pretend to be all for the "people"...............but when push comes to shove, they distrust the people at a visceral level, and look to the elites to establish control.
For all their talk of the "people" the left typically:
does not trust the people with their own money![]()
does not trust the "people" with freedom of expression
does not trust the "people" with power in the form of weapons.
The left, I propose, actually is disgusted by, and afraid of the people, despite their pretense otherwise.
Just an observation I have made many times....
Should we be focusing on 'civilized', developed nations only or is it more appropriate to have everyone thrown into the mix?
Now....explain to me why the deaths of those in less developed countries are not important enough to be considered........
Is it racism or elitism on your part?
Sorry, but vigilantism is not something the right or the left should ever endorse.
Not in Mexico, the states or anywhere else.
If the police can't do their job, then you need to just gtfo and go somewhere safer. Otherwise, you are just giving them an excuse to continue underperforming.
for "advanced... developed" countries, an OECD country comparison is the legitimate norm for a brazillion types of information/data. The only reason member Colpy is distracting/deflecting on the comparison is he apparently doesn't like the results that reinforce the impact of a U.S. gun culture society on U.S. related deaths associated with guns.
in terms of gun related murders, what's the point of comparing developed countries to a country undergoing a decade+ of drug cartel wars... like Mexico?... what's the point of comparing developed countries to 3rd world countries?... what's the point of comparing developed countries to countries actively engaged in wars or internal strife?
member Colpy ignorantly suggests I'm an elitist... a racist... for putting forward the OECD country data comparison. His desperation is glaringly evident in his following comment... the lengths he's prepared to take in the interests of his personal gun activism are highlighted through his "fake/leveraged concern" for gun related deaths in 3rd-world 'less developed' countries.