T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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896.1 | Short term, they must be dealt with immediately | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Wed Dec 13 1989 12:11 | 72 |
| > <<< Note 896.0 by FRECKL::HUTCHINS "Always a choice" >>>
Your personal name actually says what Dana is implying here. CHOICE.
> -< Still trying to understand >-
> >Trying to reason with a homicidal maniac is futile. The
> immediate problem is to STOP him, right now.
>Dana,
>When I read about such violent incidents, I try to comprehend what it is
>that drove the person to such extremes in the first place. So far, I've
>come up empty handed, because it's such a complex answer, and blame is so
>easy to displace, rather than examining the situation itself.
> He may have been abused
> He may have had lousy teachers
> His parents may have been lousy role models
> He may have been been an addict
> He may have grown up in a wealthy family
> He may have grown up on welfare
> He may have asked for help, but no one listened
>No, there's no easy answer. I'm still trying to work on the question.
>Judi
I know that Dana can answer eloquently for himself, but this is my shot at it.
You are(IMHO) confusing two issues here, the first is the long term solution
to the problems of hatred/violence/-isms. the second is what to do "when
it(the violent act) is happening.
Despite stories to the contrary, neither the NRA nor any responsible gun-owner
advocates "guns for everyone" what we advocate is a freedom-of-choice.
The long-term solution to the problem will be just that, long-time coming.
I firmly believe that I am less prejudiced than my father, I believe that I
am raising boys who will be less prejudiced and more tolerant than I am
because I work hard at watching what I say/do that would promote intolerance.
There are many people in exactly the same situation.
Short term, I will not allow the predators and barbarians of this world
to destroy those who are the builders, the enrichers, or those-who-are-
working-to-make-it-better. I *CHOOSE* to arm myself, to practise pistol-craft,
and other defensive skills. I *DO NOT* limit my life to where I go or what I
do. I am not looking for a fight as some have accused me of in the past, but
I believe I have a right to walk or travel in any neighborhood. I do not
give-up turf because it is infested with vermin. I have used a gun to
defend myself, I have drawn a gun to defend others, I will do so again.
It is an automatic reflex(how I discovered that is another story), in a
situation involving danger I am ready to deal with it. in another note another
time someone said they didn't wish to be defended, unfortunately in a group
danger individuals may not have that choice if I am around. Another note
commented that it was just as bad to be kiled by a vigilante's wild shot
than by a crazed rifleman(if the quote is not exactly right I apologise)
I, and I am sure Dana also(and others I know), *NEVER* would "sling lead"
we practise, practise, and practise some more, so that when and if we need
to we can stop an attack without endangering others.
There are many of us that would gladly "hang up our guns" *IF* there was
a guarentee that the slime were all put away *before* they caused death
and destruction.
Amos
|
896.2 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Echo and the Bunnymen. | Wed Dec 13 1989 13:41 | 16 |
| What is the most effective way of dealing with slime? I've watched
both "Ghostbusters" movies, and it appears to me that if you shoot at
the gooey stuff, it still just continues to ooze all over the place.
Not very effective, if you ask me. As for "vermin", I suspect that
there are more practical methods of killing lice and worms than
shooting bullets at them.
Of course, while guns are not very practical when used against slime
and vermin, they are on the other hand quite effective when used
against human beings. But considering those you kill to be human
beings has all sorts of messy moral implications; why think of
something as, at best, a terrible but necessary evil, when you can
elevate it to a virtue instead? At least, that's what they teach you
in Neanderthal Morality 101.
-- MIKE
|
896.3 | human yes, worthwhile no! | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Wed Dec 13 1989 14:37 | 23 |
| > <<< Note 896.2 by CSC32::M_VALENZA "Echo and the Bunnymen." >>>
> in Neanderthal Morality 101.
> -- MIKE
OK OK OK, so you don't have to spend time thinking up cute replies!
I understand that people like lepine and purdey are human beings, under all
definitions of H. Sapiens. They are feeling, living, breathing, etc
people. however *they* made a choice to commit a rather anti-social act
(IMHO), I have made a judgement in *MY* moral-code that *WHEN* an act such
as those *IS BEING* commited(that means the here and now I donot believe
in track-em-down-and-kill-'em-later) Then *I* have a right to stop that
attack by whatever means is available *WITHOUT* endangering or further
endangering those others around me. I accept that I am killing a human,
however that bothers me(in the case of that type of individual) no more
than killing termites.
Satisfied?
Amos-who-really-hates-to-think-you-might-have-been-one-of-the-persons-I-was-
defending-in-a-certain-bar-incident-years-ago-when-obviously-you-don't-wish-
harm-to-anyone-for-any-reason-including-defense-of-your-own-life
|
896.4 | This puzzle shall continue | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | Always a choice | Wed Dec 13 1989 17:12 | 24 |
| WAIT A MINUTE!
Can we leave guns out of this one, please? What I'm trying to
understand is how someone gets to the point where s/he commits an act
of violence.
Many factors lead to that point, but it seems that people are reaching
the boiling point a lot faster these days. Or is that what the media
will have us believe?
Take a child who grows up surrounded by violence and sirens blaring.
When s/he reaches adolescence, how are conflicts going to be resolved?
The way they learned growing up?
Aside from the physiological factors, I'm trying to understand why
people react as quickly and as violently as they do in some cases.
What happened to the pressure valves that help alleviate the degree of
reaction.
This has been going on for millenia, and will continue to do so. Even
Shakespeare wrote about it in "Othello".
Judi
|
896.5 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | everything that is right is wrong again | Wed Dec 13 1989 18:00 | 55 |
|
> Many factors lead to that point, but it seems that people are reaching
> the boiling point a lot faster these days. Or is that what the media
> will have us believe?
Might frustration have a lot to do with it? Our society is
becoming more "me" oriented. And before I go any further, I
want to explain that I don't mean that in a bad way. People
are realizing that no one needs to take care of them any
more, that they are on their own to succeed, that they and
only they are going to be in charge of them.
It's sort of a growing independence.
Hence we don't want to be needed.
Perhaps people like Lepine have a need to be needed, and that
need isn't satisfied anymore with the way society is moving.
That need can fester and harbor anger to the point where the
frustration that no matter how hard you try, you don't get
what you need.
Frustration and anger can become a very violent painful
combination. I had a boyfriend once who was so angry that
his professors didn't give him better grades, and the
frustration that no matter how hard he tried he never get
better, led to him hitting me one night. (Notice, he thought
society owed him something...he thought these professors owed
him good graded, when in fact, only HE could give himself
good grades).
Perhaps people like Lepine and others have this
frustration/anger that society is not given them what they
NEED. (When, in fact, they are the only ones that can give
themselves what they need). Frustration and anger can be a
very blinding thing.
I have felt backed into a corner like this. I think I know
the ultimate helplessness feeling and frustration and anger
that could cause this kind of violent. Fortunately, my
violence has been directed internally. I'm not an outwardly
violent person at all. But I can understand what could blind
a person enough to drive them to this.
It's wrong and I hope to God that these people get help
before this happens, but I understand what it is that could
drive them to it. If you haven't experienced that immense
hopelessness and frustration, you can't understand what could
drive them to it.
It's horrific to think that people get that far without some
outward sign to others that there is a problem.
kath
|
896.6 | rambling conjecture... | LYRIC::BOBBITT | nature abhors a vacuum...& so do I | Wed Dec 13 1989 18:08 | 25 |
| Another possibility in society becoming more full of instant-violence
(add opportunity and mix?) is that we are becoming more
immediacy-based. Want dinner? Was: real oven. Now: Microwave.
See a movie? Was: drive or walk to the theatre. Now: VCR. Christmas
brings us more and more toys of immediacy - toys where children
live their TV and movie heroes, Nintendo games that allow them to
experience adventure, kick-boxing, commando-raids, spy-hunting NOW.
TV is so much more immediate than reading. News is delivered at
your kitchen counter minutes or seconds after it happens - no longer
must you wait for the daily news. Instant information. Instant
gratification. And sometimes the devaluing of the human life.
You ARE what you EARN says society sometimes. You ARE what you
WEAR. What you DRIVE. What you OWN. what you LIVE IN. If someone
are not successful, they are nobody. And of course, since they've
been labeled nobody by society, it must be society's fault. They
set out to be somebody. What went wrong? Fix it. Now. The loss
would take too long to recoup. Nobody's don't become somebody's.
Nobodies get no gratification at all. Nobodies become statistics.
And the NOW reflex takes over and demands they reconcile their
differences with a life they longed for but were denied.
BLAM!
-Jody
|
896.7 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Echo and the Bunnymen. | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:02 | 23 |
| If killing certain human beings is a positive virtue rather than a
necessary evil, with no troubling aspects whatsoever, and therefore
morally equivalent to killing termites, then that raises the question
of whether or not these two actions are equivalent in every other way
as well.
Actually, I can think of some reasons why someone who doesn't feel any
compunction about killing certain people might still be more bothered
by killing a human being than by killing a termite. First of all,
unlike humans, termites are not likely to leave large and messy blood
stains on the wall. Also, termites don't make annoying noises while
they writhe in agony during their final moments of life, which can be
distracting to you while you are doing important activities, like
reloading your gun. On the other hand, the worst that happens when you
squish a termite is that you have to scrape the remains off your shoe.
There are workarounds for those problems, though. With a little
creativity, for example, blood stains can actually add to a living room
decor. And if, for some reason, dark red blotches don't match your
color scheme, you can always paste NRA stickers over them.
-- Mike
|
896.8 | from the city that brought you drive-by shootings! | USIV02::CSR209 | Brown_ro in disguise | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:14 | 13 |
| Great note, Jody!
My primary objection to guns is that they're easy. One finger-squeeze
can fire off a barrage of bullets, and anyone can pull a trigger.
And does.
I don't think that the world is appreciably more violent now than it
ever was; through global instant communications the result is now
brought to us immediately. The means of death are more powerful, as
well.
-roger
|
896.9 | the answers elude me | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Dec 13 1989 19:27 | 20 |
| Where does everyone get off thinking that this sort of violence is
new? Or is it that it seems senseless as opposed to the Pinkerton's
comming in and slaughtering striking miners. Or the crime lords in
Chicago in the 20's and 30's. How about the mafia in Italy. Life in
our own frontier towns was full of bloodshed and peasants everywhere
are the canon fodder of revolution.
Women and children are beaten, abused and killed every day and have
been for centuries. Our country just managed to hide it under
suburban lawns and now it's more open. Yes, I believe that the force
of women's independence has frightened and angered men who are not
good enough to face us on equal terms but they were killing us
before this ever happened. Technology has just made it easier.
As someone mentioned earlier, we are the product of centuries of
violence and "might makes right" genetic and cultural selection.
I sadly find myself leaning more towards those who advocate
retaliation violence because, in the short term, nothing else works.
If we don't live through the short term all talk of changing the
future is meaningless. liesl
|
896.10 | living by *my* principles | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Wed Dec 13 1989 20:24 | 19 |
|
> As someone mentioned earlier, we are the product of centuries of
> violence and "might makes right" genetic and cultural selection.
> I sadly find myself leaning more towards those who advocate
> retaliation violence because, in the short term, nothing else works.
> If we don't live through the short term all talk of changing the
> future is meaningless. liesl
But if we choose to live by a philosophy we abhor, doesn't that make
the present meaningless? We end up perpetuating what we abhor, instead
of finding, learning, spreading a better way. We waste our short
chance to make it better for those after us. If *I* don't live through
the short-term (exposed as I am to disease, accident, violence, whatever),
I still want to think I did something to make it a more peaceful
loving world, for everyone else. And I can't make it peaceful and
loving if I am not peaceful and loving. And I can't be peaceful and
loving if I live by war and hating.
MKV
|
896.11 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Dec 14 1989 07:41 | 11 |
| Did someone say Shakespeare?!?!?!
Judi, do you mean Othello himself, or Iago, or the poor jerk Iago tricked into
participating, or Desdemona's pop, or all of these folks? I never thought of
Othello as a play about people responding too quickly and violently to anger
(which is what I'm hearing from you). Iago works Othello hard. Othello is an
old dude (there are several impotence lines), and is black in a society that
equates the Ethiopes ear with that which is non-beautiful. He's got lots of
reasons to be insecure.
Mez
|
896.12 | Warning: Armchair Psychologist Ahead! | NUTMEG::GODIN | FEMINIST - and proud of it! | Thu Dec 14 1989 08:57 | 31 |
| For what it's worth, my 40+ years' experience with life tells me that
part of the alienation in our society that leads to violence against
others and self stems from the loss of community and a feeling of being
part of something bigger.
Families break down, not just from divorce, but from splintering and
moving to distant areas. Support systems have to be purchased (from
social workers, medical personnel, mechanics, baby-sitters, lawn
services, etc. etc.) when once they were merely one of the benefits of
the extended family. Religion has slipped to the back burner or
completely off the stove for many of us; for others it has taken on an
unhealthy, compulsive and judgmental quality. Neighborhoods are places
to scurry through, looking neither to the right nor to the left, on the
way to and from work and home. People living in condos and apartment
houses -- so physically near to each other -- don't KNOW each other.
I could go on, but you get the idea. Look around you to where you turn
for basic support and compare that to the community your grandparents
lived inn.
Most of the "civilized constraints" imposed on people back in the days
when we imposed constraints on people came from the fear of "what the
neighbors would think" if we strayed from the prescribed path, or from
the disgrace we'd bring down on the family. Today, who cares what the
neighbors think -- we don't know them anyway. And the family is too
busy and too distant to be affected by OUR disgrace should we stumble.
Granted, we've gained some benefits from the looser controls, but we've
also lost as well.
Karen
|
896.13 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Je pense, je ris, je r�ve | Thu Dec 14 1989 09:31 | 39 |
| I would first like to address liesl's comment about retaliatory violence.
I prefer the concept of preventative violence (boy, is that a crappy
term. Valenza's already thinking up ways to ridicule me for it. :-)
Just like it is beneficial to the human body for a surgeon to cut the
body open and remove a ruptured appendix, it is beneficial to society
to remove violent individuals from placxes where they may harm society.
The act of cutting into one's flesh is indeed destructive, from an
immediate point of view. But in the long term, it is indeed beneficial
to remove the ruptured organ for the good of the entire body.
Rather than being retaliatory in nature, I feel that someone shooting
Lepine while he was on his rampage would have been providing a useful
service to his subsequent victims. Their families would likely agree.
If he had been shot after his first shot, would not the net result of
have been bnetter for all of the people involved?
>But if we choose to live by a philosophy we abhor, doesn't that make
>the present meaningless?
I think the difference is between idealism and pragmatism, and
pragmatism doesn't make the present totally meaningless.
>I still want to think I did something to make it a more peaceful
>loving world, for everyone else. And I can't make it peaceful and
>loving if I am not peaceful and loving. And I can't be peaceful and
>loving if I live by war and hating.
To carry the analogy, if one said "I cannot promote healing by
harming," surgery would not occur. And surgery is beneficial, in many
cases.
I understand how you feel (despite what you may think about my
positions). I believe that I am simply being more pragmatic in
addressing the problem. We both want the same thing- an end to
violence. It is the means over which we quarrel.
The Doctah
|
896.14 | I think I'm beginning to understand! | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | Always a choice | Thu Dec 14 1989 09:58 | 50 |
| re .11
Mez,
I was looking at "Othello" from the point of view that he believed what
his "friend" Iago told him, rather than Desdemona's actions. That
belief blinded him to what was actually happening. Had he not listened
to Iago, perhaps the outcome would have been different.
There are times where it's easy to get wrapped up in an interpretation
of the situation, not looking at all the facts. Police informants and
"expert witnesses", for example. Who's to say that their
interpretation is valid. Will all of the facts be presented, or biased
according to the "expert" sources?
In the Montreal massacre, lepine had tried to gain admission to the
engineering school, and failed. Did he conclude that that failure was
due to the fact the University admitted too many women, hence he wasn't
able to gain admission? Only he knows.
One thing that really bothers me about this case is how lepine walked
across the campus with his weapon, and no one noticed! It's not
exactly a concealable weapon, is it? Didn't anyone think it a bit odd
to see someone walking around with such a rifle?
In violent actions, the situation has reached the point where violence
appears to be the solution *to the perpetrator*. Something happens to
the person that says "This is the only way out. Deal with the situation
and get it over with." That something may be an innocent coment which
is misinterpreted; being in the wrong place at the wrong time -- whatever
it is, it sets off something that has been coiled within the person
for however long.
----------------------
re others
Thank you for your points of view. I still don't like the situation,
but I *am* beginning to understand it. I'll never accept violence as a
solution, but I'm trying to understand how it is that some reach that
point.
Yes, I want to volunteer, or help in some way, but is there a way to
accomplish that when I'm working 40-50 hours a week, just to make ends
meet? Time and money are both in short supply for me, but is there a
way that I can make a difference? I don't pretend that I can change
the world; I just want to try to be a positive part of it.
Judi
|
896.15 | It's not their fault you failed | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Dec 14 1989 10:39 | 36 |
|
Maybe I'm just weird or something, but it makes me uneasy to think
about what life would be like if everyone decided that it would be a
good idea to carry a concealed weapon at all times to defend
themselves. I mean I don't go to Homestead Avenue in Roxbury because
I know that there are a lot of guns around and I really don't want to
be shot. But if the lady in front of me in the supermarket has one,
and the obnoxious neighbor in back of me has one and the guy sitting
next to me in the movie has one? I'd personally be scared of EVERYONE.
People lament the loss of community, but I'd be wary of approaching
someone I didn't know if I knew they had a gun. And I'd really have to
be careful not to make anyone around me angry.
I guess I just don't like violence, and if US society got to the point
where it was pretty much a free for all, kill or be killed Mad Max
type of thing, then I'm sure there must be somewhere else I could go
where I wouldn't have to fear for my life when I got up in the morning.
As to why people go all strange and kill others, I think that one of
the main reasons is that no is responsible for anything anymore. It's
always someone elses fault. It's my professors fault I didn't get a
good grade, it's women's/men's fault that I can't get a date, it's the
doctor's fault that I'm sick, it's the woman's fault she got raped,
it's the TV's fault that my kid can't read, it's the school's fault
that my child didn't know about birth control and got pregnant, it's my
neighbor's fault that my kid got hurt in their yard (even though the
kid didn't have the neighbors permission to be there), it's the
driver's fault that Fluffy got run over (even though Fluffy was in the
middle of Route 20), etc....
NO IT'S YOUR FAULT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If people would just start being held responsible for their own actions
then maybe we wouldn't need as many scapegoats!!!!
Lisa
|
896.16 | | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Thu Dec 14 1989 10:56 | 13 |
| re:-1
I don't think it would be such a terrible thing for people to be
careful of other people. I think that if you would be a lot more
cautious if you knew someone had a gun, then I suspect that those whose
intentions are less than honorable would be a bit more hesitant too.
What's the problem there? If all the desirable metholds of setting
limits don't work then I am (unhappily) left with undesirable metholds.
What I am not left with is letting people with no emotional control do
whatever they want to do to me or mine just because the "nicer" ways of
coping don't work.
Dondi
|
896.17 | Ready to kill anyone you meet.... | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Dec 14 1989 12:11 | 26 |
|
re: -1
Well, I guess the disagreement is that those with less than honorable
intent would find a way to get around the situation. If you want to
attack a woman then wait until her hands are full and she can't get to
her gun. Wait until she's got a bag of groceries in her hand. Watch
her house and wait until she's taking a shower. Just shoot her first
then attack her, she'll be partially disabled. Get a friend, since
two guns are better than one.
But I guess what worries me the most are those who don't necessarily
make crime a way of life, but those people with short tempers. I mean
there's already so much violence over stupid things, can you imagine
if everyone was armed with a gun? And what's worse, someone armed with
a gun who is drunk. I certainly wouldn't want a bar in my neighborhood
if everyone had a gun. Or have some kids around whose parents had a
gun but weren't very responsible with it. Gee, let's have some fun
tonight randomly shooting people's windows. And what would you do with
kids? When would they be old enough to have a gun of their own?
Would they be able to bring it to school? They would have to defend
themselves on the way home wouldn't they?
A society based on fear.
Lisa
|
896.18 | Maybe it'll just take all of us to get there | THEBAY::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Thu Dec 14 1989 12:27 | 30 |
| re: .13
I do understand your position from a logical, intellectual
point of view, and respect that fact that this is just a different
means towards a common goal. And more importantly, am glad the goal
is the same.
I just can't reconcile morally, for myself,
compromising my principles in my daily life. And I think that I have
more chance to spread love than to stop a killer -- every day I
live, work, play, by my principles. If I spent a chunk of that
time preparing to make an exception to my moral code, for any reason,
I'm no longer living by my principles -- I'm living by
principles plus exceptions. (By "peace and love is good, killing
and violence are bad" *except* when I decide it's OK to make an exception.)
If I spend, say, 2 hours a week learning how to kill or hurt a
person, on the off-chance that sometime in my life, for 10
seconds, I am faced with that choice and can't come up with another way
out of the situation, I've corrupted myself. I'm less likely to find a
way out of the situation in accord with the principle of love.
I'm *more* likely to make a moral exception, because I've practiced
it, I've prepared for it, I've told myself, for 2 hours a week, that
it's OK. I've numbed myself to the moral implications of killing
by practicing -- kind of like, perhaps, the constant images of
"acceptable violence" in the media might be numbing us and our kids,
making violence for some reasons acceptable.
MKV
|
896.19 | | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Thu Dec 14 1989 12:29 | 11 |
| Hmm, a society based on fear? I think that's what we have now. It's
just that the "less-honorables" aren't afraid and the "honorables" are.
I see no problem with making the sides more equal. And, yes, I agree,
there are always those who don't care, have no sense of self
preservation, and are intent on committing acts of intrusion and
violence on others but we don't have to make it easier for them. I'd
much rather that some tiny part of that attacker be uneasy about
whether the victim will fight back or not instead of being sure it's
easy pickings.
Dondi
|
896.20 | nit alert | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Dec 14 1989 13:08 | 8 |
| <old dude (there are several impotence lines), and is black in a society that
<equates the Ethiopes ear with that which is non-beautiful. He's got lots of
<reasons to be insecure.
Nit: if an Ethiope's ear is not beautiful then why say in Romeo
and Juliet that "she hangs upon the cheek of night, like a jewel
upon an Ethiope's ear", which dosen't seem to mean that the night
ugly but made me think of black velvet. liesl
|
896.21 | fear is a choice | USIV02::CSR209 | Brown_ro in disguise | Thu Dec 14 1989 14:07 | 14 |
| re:19
National Public Radio is doing a series of shows on gun control this week.
They quoted the statistic that in 85% of the handgun homicides the
perpetrator knew the victim.
So, dividing society into honorables vs less honorables is bunk, in my
opinion. This concept of the professional criminal class victimizing
decent upright citizens is a false model created by gun advocates,
rather than a reflection of reality.
-roger
|
896.22 | this whole subject is depressing..have a merry christmas | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Dec 14 1989 14:10 | 29 |
|
RE: Society of fear
Well, I'm still at a point in my life where guns scare me, so I guess
that a scenario of have a gun or die is a no win situation for those of
us who just don't like guns. I don't like the idea of keeping my hand
on a gun at all times, so that I can be prepared to kill anyone at
anytime.
And even if everyone did have a gun, there'd still be some guaranteed
losers. What about people who wear glasses? Everytime they go to
sleep they'd be vulnerable because they have to take their glasses
off, and there's probably not time to grab your glasses and your gun if
the intruder is right there in the same room. And what about people
with bad aim? I wouldn't want to be near their conflict.
But the more I think about this, the more I worry about schools. How
many kids would bring guns to school? How many would take their
grievances against others out with a gun? Would parents let their
daughters walk home from school alone without a gun?
I guess that there are people who accept an armed society as
inevitable. I don't want to live in one, and I certainly wouldn't
bring children into one.
MHO, which is too ingrained for me to change, maybe I belong in another
country or something.
Lisa
|
896.23 | I respect your position, Mary | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Je pense, je ris, je r�ve | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:31 | 29 |
| >I do understand your position from a logical, intellectual
>point of view, and respect that fact that this is just a different
>means towards a common goal.
Well, that is certainly helpful. :-)
>I just can't reconcile morally, for myself,
>compromising my principles in my daily life.
Not only is that understandable; it is laudable. You're a bigger person
than I.
When someone is brutalizing you, especially out of a sense of sadistic
pleasure, it is difficult to cling to such lofty goals. When you are
feeling pain and fear, the concept of love seems so far away. I suppose
I might be more likely to simply suffer until it was over, resigning
myself to the fact that my life was in the hands of a antisocial human.
But when I think of the possibility that my wife or child(ren) could be
at the hands of such a person, I cannot simply do nothing. I feel I
must take an active role in protecting my family in the best means at
my disposal. And such protection may necessitate me to forgo my own
life for the mere opportunity for my family to escape harm. I feel
compelled to do my utmost to protect and defend my family, and myself.
I also believe that if I happen to wound or kill someone while
defending my family or myself, at least I will remain alive to continue
to spread love. I cannot spread love while dead. Only memories...
The Doctah
|
896.24 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Je pense, je ris, je r�ve | Thu Dec 14 1989 15:34 | 13 |
| > National Public Radio is doing a series of shows on gun control this week.
And not terribly accurate, from what I hear.
> They quoted the statistic that in 85% of the handgun homicides the
> perpetrator knew the victim.
Did you know that in over 90% of gang related violence, the victims
knew their attackers. This is supposed to prove that we're all buddies
until guns come around, then we blow each other away? C'mon Roger-
you've got more going for you than that.
The Doctah
|
896.25 | | USIV02::CSR209 | I will not be wooly-bullied | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:11 | 21 |
| Doctah:
>Did you know that in over 90% of gang related violence, the victims
>knew their attackers. This is supposed to prove that we're all buddies
>until guns come around, then we blow each other away? C'mon Roger-
>you've got more going for you than that.
This is still not the "criminal class" attacking the upright citizens
of the country.
BTW, do you have a pointer for posted statistics on homicide/accidental
cause of death information? I'm interested in whether or not the
perception of violence is or is not born out by statistics.
-roger
|
896.26 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Je pense, je ris, je r�ve | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:20 | 15 |
| > This is still not the "criminal class" attacking the upright citizens
> of the country.
The point is that "victims knowing their attacker" is a useless metric
because of all of the random categories lumped into it.
> BTW, do you have a pointer for posted statistics on homicide/accidental
> cause of death information? I'm interested in whether or not the
> perception of violence is or is not born out by statistics.
I would simply wait for the Texas Chainsaw Statistician to provide the
requested info. :-) Right Greg? :-)
The Doctah
|
896.27 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | hymn to her | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:36 | 13 |
| re: .21 & .25 (Roger Brown)
> -< fear is a choice >-
Maybe for you.
> I'm interested in whether or not the
> perception of violence is or is not born out by statistics.
The perception is real enough.
a statistic
|
896.28 | | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Fri Dec 15 1989 07:11 | 18 |
| I personally do not arbitarily divide people into honorable or
not-honorable categories except for the sake of defininition in
argument. I do think that the issue is boundaries. Where do you draw
the line that certain behavior is acceptable or unacceptable to you?
And where do you draw the line of what you will do to stop that
behavior? If I know my attacker, does that have anything at all to do
with whether or not I allow the attack to continue unblocked? I don't
think so. There is a serious problem with people who have no
boundaries of their own, no respect for others, no rational response to
a reasonable expectation of co-operative societal living. I am as
hopeful as anyone else that the world will become a peaceful and safe
place to live. But I am under no illusions that it is that way now.
If the world isn't safe by nature then I must protect myself and my
family from the evils as best as I can. If someone is afraid of me
because they think I have a weapon, that's fine. They will think twice
before they attack.
Dondi
|
896.29 | | USIV02::CSR209 | I will not be wooly-bullied | Fri Dec 15 1989 17:16 | 22 |
| Nancy Bittle:
>> -< fear is a choice >-
> Maybe for you.
> > I'm interested in whether or not the
> > perception of violence is or is not born out by statistics.
> The perception is real enough.
> a statistic
This is a bit cryptic for me, Nancy. As I don't know your personal
history, I would appreciate a somewhat clearer explanation of this
point of view of yours. Are you a victim of violence?
Thanks,
_roger
|
896.30 | | USIV02::CSR209 | I will not be wooly-bullied | Fri Dec 15 1989 17:31 | 24 |
| re:Dondi
>Hmm, a society based on fear? I think that's what we have now. It's
>just that the "less-honorables" aren't afraid and the "honorables" are.
>I see no problem with making the sides more equal.
This is the quote I was responding to, Dondi. This splits it very
clearly into sides, and I still believe this is an inaccurate model
of criminals vs. the good human beings. I don't think that arming the
general population is the solution to the crime problem, but will
instead produce more violence, in a destructive cycle of fear-based
violent acts.
Lebanon is a good example of a well-armed civilian population taking
the law into their own hands. Are these firm enough boundries?
Is there one acceptable standard of behavior?
-roger
|
896.31 | Another side | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Mon Dec 18 1989 10:43 | 13 |
|
There is a similar gun discussion going on now in the "Soapbox note"
in another conference. (A conference that was NOT set up for social
issues). There are quite a few members of the conference in Europe
and I thought it interesting that they really had a problem
understanding why many of the American noters felt that owning a gun
was necessary for survival. They got the impression that American
society was overly violent.
I'm curious if there are any =wn=noters who are from outside the US,
and if they get the same impression.
Lisa
|
896.32 | a back-link | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Mon Dec 18 1989 11:02 | 9 |
| Re .31, Lisa-
> I'm curious if there are any =wn=noters who are from outside the US,
> and if they get the same impression.
You might want to look at 218.195 and numerous replies, wherein
Kris Hatashita offered a Canadian perspective and questions.
DougO
|
896.33 | Shakespeare is never a nit! | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Wed Dec 20 1989 16:06 | 7 |
| re: .20 (liesl)
It's the high contrast (to my mind). The jewel/Juliet is incredibly beautiful;
everything else is not.
But I do see your point.
Mez
|
896.34 | CAUTION: MISUNDERSTANDABLE IDEA AHEAD | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Sat Dec 23 1989 01:37 | 59 |
|
I'd like to try an analogy here. If I fail in my attempt to
get my point accross I'll try again. The analogy is DELIBERATELY
simplistic so that a one-to-one mapping of analogy to reality
is possible. I'm not trying to compare apples to oranges.
Let me begin by saying that I am trying to grow the IDEAL
lawn. Now the IDEAL lawn (as perceived by ME) is beautiful
green grass, smooth, thick, etc. with no imperfections. There
is an expectation here that the IDEAL lawn will be a certain
way. (Over time, the expectations of the IDEAL lawn may change
as I learn more ABOUT lawns).
Every now and then, the universe being what it is and entropy
taking it's place, there appear things in the lawn which
TAKE AWAY from it's IDEAL state. Things like weeds, etc.
While these negative things have their place in the scheme
of things they TAKE AWAY from the IDEAL lawn. Now if I let
these things REMAIN in the lawn they will corrupt it. So
I remove the negative things.
The act of removing these negative things isn't right IN AND
OF ITSELF. In fact, there may be places in the universe where
the negative things (weeds) are the IDEAL. But not in the lawn
we have. So we continually try to remove the negative things.
And thus it is so continually forever since negative things
always present themselves and there really ISN'T an IDEAL
state of things WITHOUT INTERVENTION.
********
Life as we humans know it can be thought of in IDEAL terms.
We can continually try to evolve to the IDEAL state but it
takes deliberate action to remove the negative things.
In an ideal world NOBODY would need to carry guns. We wouldn't
even need police, etc. But since this ISN'T an ideal world
and the police aren't everywhere each of the "blades of
grass" must do what they can to remove the negative parts
of their environment. While the "removing" is in itself
a negative act, it is a positive act for the WHOLE (lawn).
Once the negative parts are purged from the environment
the "blades of grass" can continue to grow and evolve toward
their IDEAL state.
Those of you that GOT my message would you please help
me put what I just said into better words? Expand on or
edit the analogy as necessary. Or create a better one.
Just trying to help.
Warren
|
896.35 | Should this be in the "guns" topic? | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Tue Dec 26 1989 17:23 | 62 |
| re 896.34
Warren, I appreciate your taking the time to clarify your
position. Here's my two bits on what I thought when I read
your note (surprised I got the first response--everyone else
must be on vacation!):
Suppose that there are several techniques for removing
the weeds which are infesting our ideal lawn. Suppose
that Weed-Killer A gets the weed, nearly every time, and
seems to even prevent regrowth of that type of weed in
the same area. Unfortunately, over time, it seems to
weaken the surrounding grass blades, and there's even a
rumour that there's a really nasty type of weed out there
that *thrives* on Weed-Killer A!
Now Weed-Killer B isn't as effective as A, sometimes it
needs repeated applications to get rid of the weed, and
if I'm not paying attention, the weed may even spread a
bit before I get back for a second or third application.
On the other hand, it doesn't seem to kill the grass...so
if I use Weed-Killer B, I'm gambling that I can kill all
the weed before it takes over the yard.
I purposely used "seems" and other such fuzzy words in the
above: although we may have a pretty good idea what the
statistical chances are for a particular weed-killer killing
a particular type of weed without killing the grass or
encouraging other weeds (pause for breath), we generally
don't have such a good idea about techniques for social
change. It is my opinion that encouraging gun use on an
individual scale is like using Weed-Killer A: it may be
pretty darned effective, but I worry about the long-range
effects. On the other hand, attempting to educate ourselves
and others so that we don't need guns may be like using
Weed-Killer B: we may be overrun by the "weeds" before we
can educate everyone.
I was going to wind this up with some sugar-coated comment
about how I'll let you use your weed-killer on your part of
the lawn if you'll let me use mine on the part I'm taking
care of...but in the middle of it I realized I'd been led
astray by my analogy, as we're really working on the same
"lawn." Is it fair to say that legislation on gun control
seems to be an attempt to "ban Weed-Killer A" by persons
concerned about the consequences of its indiscriminate use,
while persons who are against tighter controls feel the
"lawn" is in imminent danger of being overrun, and thus using
only "Weed-Killer B" seems rather risky?
If I've phrased that correctly, then it sounds like we're
dealing with people's perception of 1) how much trouble we're
in, 2) whether certain "problem-solving" methods are
inherently dangerous or not, and 3) whether we've got the
time and resources to use slower (and less dangerous?)
methods to get ourselves out of trouble. And I'm really not
sure that we know enough about our society and techniques for
societal change to make even a stab at filling in some of
those fuzzy areas--so most of us fall back on gut feelings,
having very little "hard" data to base our judgments on.
-- Linda
|
896.36 | This belongs here...not in "guns" topic | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Wed Dec 27 1989 01:44 | 21 |
|
Thanks Linda, for adding so eloquently to my analogy.
I don't have an answer except to say that in the area of
social change think back to a little over 200 years ago.
A small group of people DRASTICALLY changed their social
environment, unfortunately using the very thing we're saying
is not desireable: violence.
But with all the other changes going on in the world WITHOUT
violence I'm inclined to believe that once we figure out what
the correct social change is we can MAKE it happen without
that ugly word "violence". The question is, how do we find
out (discover, invent, etc.) the correct social changes
to correct these types of deficiencies in our society.
Keep the ideas coming.
Warren
|
896.37 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Can you feel the heat? | Wed Dec 27 1989 09:29 | 39 |
| >Is it fair to say that legislation on gun control
> seems to be an attempt to "ban Weed-Killer A" by persons
> concerned about the consequences of its indiscriminate use,
That sounds like a fair characterization.
> while persons who are against tighter controls feel the
> "lawn" is in imminent danger of being overrun, and thus using
> only "Weed-Killer B" seems rather risky?
It's more like "weed-killer A" is something akin to the appendages found on
certain plants like pumpkins, squashes and cucumbers which allow the plants to
choke out competing weeds by cutting off their supply of nutrients. These
appendages look similar to corkscrews and grow coiled around the stems of
any nearby weeds. In this way, the plant is taking an active role in protecting
itself.
There are occasions when the plant will use the coil on another plant of
the same species- sometimes even itself. Usually, though, the plant is able
to distinguish somehow the difference between weeds and like plants.
Those that like "weed-killer A" recognize that the lawn keeper is unable to
be every place at once, and do not wish to be completely defenseless should a
weed crop up in their area of the lawn. They realize that the lawn keeper will
eventually root out the weed, but perhaps only after they or their loved ones
have been victimized. The end result is that the weed is eradicated; the
difference is that perhaps less of an infestation will need to occur before the
weed is removed.
I suppose one could make the argument that the "good of the lawn" is more
important than the good of the individual blades of grass, and that allowing
the use of "weed-killer A" is not in the best interests of the lawn as a whole.
That's a judgement call. I tend to shy away from having certain individuals
involuntarily suffer for the good of the whole. I also tend toward a situation
where the individual weeds and the individual grass are equally potent- thus the
tendency for victimization is reduced. Forcing the grass to fight with one
hand tied behind their backs seems somewhat counter-intuitive.
The Doctah
|
896.38 | The analogy's not perfect, but it does the job | PNO::KEMERER | VMS/TOPS10/TOPS20/RSTS/CCDOS-816 | Thu Dec 28 1989 00:20 | 25 |
|
Re: .-1
We're on the same wavelength I think.
If all the blades of grass worked well enough in a cohesive
way, the "problems" of the lawn would always get fixed. Not
that problems would ever stop showing up in the lawn, but
the overall reaction of the lawn as a whole (and the
blades of grass individually) would be more efficient
in helping the the whole evolutionary process towards
the IDEAL.
One wrench in the works: each blade of grass is it's own
individual and can tend to see things any way it wants,
whether for the good of the whole lawn or not. Perhaps
this is somewhat like the "me-ism" of the '80s?
It's getting better at each reply. And though the analogy
does have it's limits (after all, people AREN'T blades of
grass) I can see enough there for some real information
sharing to occur.
Warren
|
896.39 | <re: 896.10> | HIGHD::DROGERS | | Wed Feb 28 1990 15:25 | 12 |
| Nor can you be peaceful and loving if you are killed because you failed
to resist aggression. You can only live by "your" principles by
virtue of someone else taking responsibility for your protection -
and a good deal of luck. Such an attitude actually contributes to
the tragedies such as the type under discussion.
A sociopath gets a certain amount of encouragement from the knowledge
that there is little chance that he will encounter effective
opposition.
There is a big difference between declaring that one will never
INITIATE the use of force, and declaring that one will never USE
force.
|
896.40 | ** | LITE::J_CHRISTIE | Personal_name <set hidden> | Thu Mar 01 1990 18:43 | 12 |
| In a debate, a pacifist asked his ideological opponent, "If
the whole world disarmed, then would you be willing to
disarm, also?"
After carefully considering the question, the response was, "Under
those conditions, yes."
The pacifist concluded, "Then the main difference between you and me
is that I would be among the first to do what you would be among
the last to do."
R
|
896.41 | | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Fri Mar 02 1990 10:33 | 13 |
| <<< Note 896.40 by LITE::J_CHRISTIE "Personal_name <set hidden>" >>>
-< ** >-
Thank you I needed that light today.
It is a simple but major difference.
_peggy
(-)
|
Be one of the first in your neighborhood
disarm today, live in peace and harmony
and you will be a leader for the future.
|
896.42 | < first, last, never > | HIGHD::DROGERS | | Sun Mar 04 1990 17:41 | 8 |
| .40 and .41 ::
I make special effort to live my life in such a manner that no
person of good will would ever CARE whether i were armed or not.
I would not feel right about deliberately shifting the burden of my
defense to someone else, to whatever extent i am capable of providing
my own. Neither am i willing to be someone's abject victim. I don't
do these things to others, it is not right that i should endure them
myself.
|