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Fatal stabbings on Portland light rail

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RME
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Posted by RME on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:53 PM

 

n012944
That was on American, not United.

So it was.  Thank you.  (I musta been thinking of big dead rabbits!)

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 3:21 PM

DSchmitt
schlimm 'One can say with a fair degree of confidence that three large people confronting a clearly disturbed individual might well have pushed him over the edge and led to his pulling his knife.  In fact it did.'

Actually no.  All one can say is that is what appears to have happened in Portland.  There is no way of knowing that he wouldn't have pulled the knife anyway.  All we can know is what actually happened in an incident and even that is often open to dispute. 

Of course we cannot know what he would have done with absolute certitude.  Trained folks make behavioral predictions on probabilities based on clinical knowledge every day. That is their job.

"In your face" confrontatations are generally not the methods of choice for successfully resolving crisis situations involving mentally disturbed individuals. If someone has taught you otherwise, I would be very surprised.

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Posted by DSchmitt on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 1:29 PM

schlimm
One can say with a fair degree of confidence that three large people confronting a clearly disturbed individual might well have pushed him over the edge and led to his pulling his knife.  In fact it did.

Actually no.  All one can say is that is what appears to have happened in Portland.  There is no way of knowing that he wouldn't have pulled the knife anyway. 

All we can know is what actually happened in an incident and even that is often open to dispute. 

True we can look for overall patterns and make judgements on how things should be handled for the best outcome in the most cases, but cherry picking individual examples proves nothing. 

Properly trained police are generally better than civilians at handeling  potentially lethal situations, but they usually are not and cannot be there when needed.

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Posted by n012944 on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 1:27 PM

 

RME

Even out of the two pathetic references 

Pathetic?  I am sorry they don't match you expectations, however they were exactly what the poster asked for.  As I stated there were far more examples out there, however I was not about to spend a wonderful May afternoon doing someones reasearch.  I get it, the idea that guns don't solve everything seem to really hurt the gun fanatics ego,  but good lord....

RME

 

When I read this I thought of the United flight with the steward abusing the woman with the stroller, and the passenger who thought it was his privilege to argue with the little weasel.  We have police, in part, to do that sort of thing, fairly and equitably, for us.  At least in theory.

 

 

That was on American, not United.

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Posted by RME on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 1:05 PM

Paul of Covington
Then we can go back to discussing train related subjects.

Actually, most of the discussion has been related to the 'train-related' topic of 'fatal stabbings on Portland light rail' -- as far as that actually concerns light-rail trains.  I expected early that there would be some Godwin analogue involving gun control, even though no guns were actually involved, and I was not disappointed.  It has certainly gone on in exquisite detail, and I have not helped shorten the way.  But no one clicking on that thread title is expecting a discussion of the ease of cleaning blood out of low-floor transit cars or whether there should now be metal detectors in the cars or stations: it's going to be about what made the stabbings fatal, and by extension if the altercation could have been made less deadly.

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Posted by Paul of Covington on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 12:17 PM

   What do you people think of the idea of having the moderators set up a sticky thread on gun debate?   When a discussion degenerates into an emotional rant pro and against guns it can be diverted to that site.   Then we can go back to discussing train related subjects.

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Posted by zugmann on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 12:13 PM

Backshop
Not to mention this world class run-on sentence--"The thought of you or Sheldon attempting to manage a dangerous situation armed with a popgun that you might start firing on a crowded rail car would be hilarious if it were not so dangerous to innocent bystanders."

Not trying to be a grammar nazi, but I don't think that's a run-on sentence.  Correct me if I'm wrong - but I don't see two independent clauses. 

  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.

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Posted by RME on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 12:04 PM

schlimm
à la mode = in the current fashion, in this use, referring to the NRA's current rationalization for virtually zero regulation.

But this is not a Second Amendment issue.  The only "concern" here is the utter strawman argument that the three large 'confronters' would pull out handguns and start blasting away like ... well, like Chicago police ... perhaps even before the ranting nut produced a weapon.  And while I can't say that one or more of the responders "might" have done more than use firearms as a deterrent, you similarly can't say they would have been as responsible as most licensed, carry-permit-holding handgun owners are.  Blaming guns for a situation that turned lethal in the absence of guns is little better than sophistry.

"Covfefe, y'all!!"

Thanks for this -- it had completely escaped my notice until now.

(BTW, it's kinda fun to watch all the innuendos in the newsworker coverage that are trying to associate Trump with this nut.  It will probably work, too, which is something of a pity.  Where are the Walter Lippmanns now that we need them more than ever?)

One can say with a fair degree of confidence that three large people confronting a clearly disturbed individual might well have pushed him over the edge and led to his pulling his knife.

And that, in fact, was not only the situation, but (in my wimp's opinion) an example of why people should not intrude on this kind of situation with confrontation or the threat of opening cans of whup-ass.  If ever there were a time to involve the police power in a situation, this sort of thing would be it -- particularly since the women that were affected removed themselves from the situation.

That strategy is the opposite of how professionals are trained to deal with such people. Defusing the situation is the correct methodology, not pouring gasoline on the fire.

Conveniently discarding, again, what would happen if the nut gave the likely 'first responders' to an actual 911 call ... likely either what Chicago uses for transit police, or actual city police ... a ranting or backtalking attitude, or (heven forbid!) tried pulling out his knife.  Hint: trained negotiation would not have taken place, and I doubt much care for 'range safety' past his location in the resulting fusillade. 

Or are you saying that Chicago now trains police in hostage-negotiation skills and a kinder, gentler attitude towards demonstrated right-wing loonies?  If so, how can you type when your nose keeps bumping the monitor?

You and Sheldon are understandably not trained.

And you know this ... how?

I in fact have been, in different contexts, and the skills involved often do translate to the foreign-policy context.  What we can say is that the two people who were killed, and perhaps the third, were not so trained, and might well have been relying on some sort of bullying force majeure to teach the guy a lesson; that attitude, were it present, might well have been exacerbated by the presence of firearms and might have, although clearly not provably, led to use rather than just threat of deadly force.

Had one or more of the three had a handgun, the mere sight of it might not have caused him to not pull out the knife or to drop it, as it would with a rational individual.

I'm not sure that this sentence is entirely rational ... Smile

Relax, this is not going to turn into gratuitous ad-hominem insults like that other thread that shall not be named.  In the present case, we don't know whether a show of deadly force would, or wouldn't, have sobered the nut up enough to back down.  He certainly wasn't dissuaded by folks who didn't even bring a knife to a knife fight, which tells us little about whether he was suffering serious irrationality (you know far more than I do both about the syndromes or attitudes they provoke) or was chemically impaired. 

What then? Shoot him?

And that's the crux of any credible deterrent - what happens when the deterrence fails?

And yes, in this particular case, "just shooting him" (after the apparently frequently-documented manner of threatened police) would not be particularly justifiable, at least by private citizens who had arguably provoked and aggravated him.  They'd have to wait until he attacked them with the knife out to have any claim of self-defense, and I have not yet seen how he came close enough to knife two large men in apparently good physical condition lethally ... in that close contact, use of a firearm is far less likely either to produce 'misses' or ricochets around the car structure, but of course there is no guarantee of 'bystander safety' or, in fact, how a mortally-wounded gun user might handle their weapon.

A moral here (and it is, in fact, a fairly common theme in NRA materials) is to avoid getting into situations involving deadly force whenever you can, and only fire the weapon when there is literally no other recourse.  This is one key difference between Sheldon's situation, as I understand it, and the situation on a crowded transit vehicle ... or on the street outside a store, or "responding" to a carjacking: it's not appropriate for private individuals to actually use lethal police power when not essential to self-defense in a public situation.  That actually answers the question "what then?" -- you don't fire unless and until there is clear, present, and immediate danger of death, not just mere presence of a weapon, nonconformance with 'orders' you bark, or whatever.

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Posted by Backshop on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 10:19 AM

schlimm

You seem to be incapable of discerning the major difference between defending your family in your own home and using a firearm on a crowded train.  If you do not understand the difference, then you probably are not mentally competent to own and use a firearm.  

Now you're calling others mentally incompetent.  BTW, what is the difference between the two situations?  The law remains the same and, so do your skills.

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Posted by Backshop on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 10:14 AM

I find it highly amusing that anytime someone tries to be a grammar nazi, they make a mistake of their own in the next post.  Not to mention this world class run-on sentence--"The thought of you or Sheldon attempting to manage a dangerous situation armed with a popgun that you might start firing on a crowded rail car would be hilarious if it were not so dangerous to innocent bystanders."

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:47 AM

RME

 

 
schlimm
n012944 cited several cases that debunk the NRA's alternative fact ala mode. Comment?

 

First, exactly what is this "ala mode" business supposed to mean - it's not proper English use of the French phrase to begin with, and even if correctly cited it makes pathetically little sense in this context.

So you think that two examples from public sites "debunk" many years of Armed Citizen reports?  You must not have much more understanding of statistics than you do semantics.  You also seem to think that the only use of firearms in a tense situation is to whip them out and start blazing away, which is one of the points that the NRA reports repeatedly dismiss.

Even out of the two pathetic references you think 'debunk' something, the victim himself in the one from Chicago said he would have used a firearm in the same way if in similar circumstances -- which makes it somewhat less effective anti-gun propaganda than you apparently think it is.  I would further suspect that the typical Chicago police reaction to being fired upon by an armed robbery suspect would involve considerably more "bullets" flying in stray directions than the shopowner fired ... and of course the story is, so far, silent on whether it was one of the robber's bullets that caused the injury.  Those things are not relevant to the incident that is the subject of this thread, but they are very germane to the issue you have now brought up.

Returning to the specific incident here, the 'real' issue has nothing really to do with guns at all: it appears to involve at least one of the 'victims' actively confronting a ranting nut after the subjects of his verbal attacks had retreated to another part of the train.  That's the situation that apparently tipped the guy 'over the edge' into murderous rage -- and it may be fair to ask the question 'would he have pulled the knife if the person arguing with him was visibly armed'.  Certainly two people are dead because they were unarmed in a fight against someone with a deadly weapon, and prospective harm to bystanders from putative misuse of firearms is little better than a red herring in this specific respect.

 

[In the interest of fair disclosure: yes, I think the 'appropriate' thing to do in the situation on the train would be to call in an empowered police authority and not accost the guy purely out of a sense of chivalry.  When I read this I thought of the United flight with the steward abusing the woman with the stroller, and the passenger who thought it was his privilege to argue with the little weasel.  We have police, in part, to do that sort of thing, fairly and equitably, for us.  At least in theory.]

 

Well gee willikers, Mr. RME, excuse me!!  It was a typo in a bit of silly sarcasm. I foolishly assumed that someone with your polymath background should have seen that without resorting to a "cheap shot" [intended word play]. à la mode =  in the current fashion, in this use, referring to the NRA's current rationalization for virtually zero regulation.  Remind me to proofread more carefully and explain my lame attempts at humor more completely in the future.  "Armed Citizen" reports?  Is that akin to "Clean Coal?"    "Covfefe, y'all!!"

One can say with a fair degree of confidence that three large people confronting a clearly disturbed individual might well have pushed him over the edge and led to his pulling his knife.  In fact it did. That strategy is the opposite of how professionals are trained to deal with such people. Defusing the situation is the correct methodology, not pouring gasoline on the fire. You and Sheldon are understandably not trained.  Had one or more of the three had a handgun, the mere sight of it might not have caused him to not pull out the knife or to drop it, as it would with a rational individual.  What then?  Shoot him?  Are you so sure a stray shot or ricochet might not strike an innocent bystander in a crowded car?

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Posted by DSchmitt on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:33 AM

RME
In my opinion, the only long-run solution to problems of analytical bias is to educate people in the ways truth is spun, manipulated, misstated, and cut to fit some Procrustean narrative or other -- including detecting, and amending, the ways they find distortions of that kind in their own thinking.  And that is becoming a more and more unlikely thing generation by generation...

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Posted by RME on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:29 AM

DSchmitt
I looked at the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting web site and been unable to find any numbers clearly pertaining to the issue.

In no small part, it's because no 'crime' statistics even hint at the role deterrence of crime may have played.  That, again, is a point the NRA column often makes: the presence of the weapon deterred a would-be 'perpetrator' long before the actual use of deadly force in a deadly manner was employed.  And most of the incidents of deterrence, even when formally reported (what good would it do in our current system?) are only encountered in anecdotal (e.g. news) reports.

In my opinion, the only long-run solution to problems of analytical bias is to educate people in the ways truth is spun, manipulated, misstated, and cut to fit some Procrustean narrative or other -- including detecting, and amending, the ways they find distortions of that kind in their own thinking.  And that is becoming a more and more unlikely thing generation by generation...

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:18 AM

[quote user="schlimm"]

 

 
ATLANTIC CENTRAL

Schlimm,

And once again, how do you know what skills I do or don't possess for such a situation?

Once again the assumption that no one in the general population can do anything without the "government expert" taking care of them.

Popgun? How much range time do you have on what weapons? I hit what I aim at......my Beretta 92FS is hardly a popgun.

Interesting that you did not respond to my post.

As for this incident, I was not there, I'm not second guessing or assuming anything. If any of those three good men had been armed, it may or may not have turned out better, but again, it would have been better odds.......especially had such a person been reasonably well trained, something I am in favor of requiring for carry permits.

Sheldon

 

 

 

You seem to be incapable of discerning the major difference between defending your family in your own home and using a firearm on a crowded train.  If you do not understand the difference, then you probably are not mentally competent to own and use a firearm.  

Although the three "Good Samaritans" were well intentioned, the disturbed man did not pull out his knife until they intervened.  The two girls sensibly retreated to the other end of the rail car.  Diffusing potentially dangerous situations is a skill requiring training.  Pulling out your gun on a crowded train because someone is shouting racist abusive language is a dangerous overreach that likely will lead to tragedy.

 

[/edquote]

And I NEVER suggested anyone should pull out a gun simply because of the verbal threats. You read that into my comments, I suggested just the opposite, that most with carry permits would be VERY resevered about displaying or using their weapon. They would also generally be very careful in how they intervened, knowing the risks you state. Everyone I know with a carry permit would have gone to considerable effort to defuse rather than draw.

But unarmed good samaritans often overlook these risks........

Sheldon

    

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Posted by DSchmitt on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 9:13 AM

There are cases where an intervenion by a civilian, armed or unarmed saved the day.  There are cases where the intervention resulted in harm.  Each situation is different and one cannot know beforehand how a situation will end. We know what the outcome was, not what it would have been if actions had neen different.  Anecdotal evidence (news stories) prove nothing.  

Government statistics don't give an answer. Actual record keeping is poor and incomplete (even in the US). Records specifically pertaining to the issue not kept. I looked at the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting web site and been unable to find any numbers clearly pertaining to the issue.   There is are no categories " good samaration killed", "good samration saves police officer", etc.

Statistics on agenda websites and University studies are often based on compiling news articles and are subject to errors like missing incidents or counting the same incident multiple times, and to the interpetation and bias of the people gathering the data. 

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 8:54 AM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL

Schlimm,

And once again, how do you know what skills I do or don't possess for such a situation?

Once again the assumption that no one in the general population can do anything without the "government expert" taking care of them.

Popgun? How much range time do you have on what weapons? I hit what I aim at......my Beretta 92FS is hardly a popgun.

Interesting that you did not respond to my post.

As for this incident, I was not there, I'm not second guessing or assuming anything. If any of those three good men had been armed, it may or may not have turned out better, but again, it would have been better odds.......especially had such a person been reasonably well trained, something I am in favor of requiring for carry permits.

Sheldon

 

You seem to be incapable of discerning the major difference between defending your family in your own home and using a firearm on a crowded train.  If you do not understand the difference, then you probably are not mentally competent to own and use a firearm.  

Although the three "Good Samaritans" were well intentioned, the disturbed man did not pull out his knife until they intervened.  The two girls sensibly retreated to the other end of the rail car.  "Diffusing" potentially dangerous situations is a skill requiring training.  Pulling out your gun on a crowded train because someone is shouting racist abusive language is a dangerous overreach that likely will lead to tragedy.

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Posted by RME on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 8:54 AM

schlimm
n012944 cited several cases that debunk the NRA's alternative fact ala mode. Comment?

First, exactly what is this "ala mode" business supposed to mean - it's not proper English use of the French phrase to begin with, and even if correctly cited it makes pathetically little sense in this context.

So you think that two examples from public sites "debunk" many years of Armed Citizen reports?  You must not have much more understanding of statistics than you do semantics.  You also seem to think that the only use of firearms in a tense situation is to whip them out and start blazing away, which is one of the points that the NRA reports repeatedly dismiss.

Even out of the two pathetic references you think 'debunk' something, the victim himself in the one from Chicago said he would have used a firearm in the same way if in similar circumstances -- which makes it somewhat less effective anti-gun propaganda than you apparently think it is.  I would further suspect that the typical Chicago police reaction to being fired upon by an armed robbery suspect would involve considerably more "bullets" flying in stray directions than the shopowner fired ... and of course the story is, so far, silent on whether it was one of the robber's bullets that caused the injury.  Those things are not relevant to the incident that is the subject of this thread, but they are very germane to the issue you have now brought up.

Returning to the specific incident here, the 'real' issue has nothing really to do with guns at all: it appears to involve at least one of the 'victims' actively confronting a ranting nut after the subjects of his verbal attacks had retreated to another part of the train.  That's the situation that apparently tipped the guy 'over the edge' into murderous rage -- and it may be fair to ask the question 'would he have pulled the knife if the person arguing with him was visibly armed'.  Certainly two people are dead because they were unarmed in a fight against someone with a deadly weapon, and prospective harm to bystanders from putative misuse of firearms is little better than a red herring in this specific respect.

 

[In the interest of fair disclosure: yes, I think the 'appropriate' thing to do in the situation on the train would be to call in an empowered police authority and not accost the guy purely out of a sense of chivalry.  When I read this I thought of the United flight with the steward abusing the woman with the stroller, and the passenger who thought it was his privilege to argue with the little weasel.  We have police, in part, to do that sort of thing, fairly and equitably, for us.  At least in theory.]

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 8:41 AM

Schlimm,

And once again, how do you know what skills I do or don't possess for such a situation?

Once again the assumption that no one in the general population can do anything without the "government expert" taking care of them.

Popgun? How much range time do you have on what weapons? I hit what I aim at......my Beretta 92FS is hardly a popgun.

Interesting that you did not respond to my post.

As for this incident, I was not there, I'm not second guessing or assuming anything. If any of those three good men had been armed, it may or may not have turned out better, but again, it would have been better odds.......especially had such a person been reasonably well trained, something I am in favor of requiring for carry permits.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 8:33 AM

n012944

 

 
Backshop

 

 
n012944
 

Or another innocent person could have died because of a stray bullet fired in a stuggle....

 

 

How many times has that happened when a legally armed person has had to draw their weapon to defend themselves or others?  Actual newspaper articles or something similar would be appreciated.

 

 

 

 

Allow me to Google that for you....

http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/264755/carjacking-gone-wrong-houston-texas/

 

"A carjacking in Houston, Texas, turned bloody when an armed good Samaritan opened fire on the car thieves but hit the carjacking victim instead"

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-bystander-wounded-during-shootout-between-robber-shop-owner-20151206-story.html

"A man standing at a bus stop is recovering at home after being wounded by a stray bullet during a shootout between a shop owner and an armed robber "

Those are just the start, plenty of other articles out there, along with a FBI report that debunks the NRA's "good guy with a gun fixes everything". BS.  Do the research yourself if you are that concered about it.

 

+1!!   But I doubt if he will read them, much like understand.  He'd rather play "cops and robbers" v.2a.

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 8:09 AM

Backshop

Hindsight is 20/20.  Who said anything about vigilantes?  You keep talking about things that have never happened.  Hopefully, you are never confronted by a criminal and have people dependent on you for "diffusing the dangerous situation".  Why don't you just admit that guns scare you and because you can't handle them and don't think that anyone else can, either?  

 

It is people who do not know what they are talking about like you are a menace to society. The thought of you or Sheldon attempting to manage a dangerous situation armed with a popgun that you might start firing on a crowded rail car would be hilarious if it were not so dangerous to innocent bystanders. n012944 cited several cases that debunk the NRA's alternative fact ala mode.  Comment?   And BTW, you put "diffusing" in quotations as though someone such as I had ignorantly written that.  It's defuse.  Diffuse refers to scattered.

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Posted by Backshop on Wednesday, May 31, 2017 7:12 AM

I like how some people like blaming the victims.  "If they hadn't confronted him, everything would have been alright".  How do you know that?  The one victim was a retired Army sargeant.  That's what people do.  Or maybe, since the women were Muslims, some people don't think that they're worth defending?

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 8:40 PM

schlimm,

First, a gun, in the hands of law inforcement or a citizen, is no guaranty of safety, for anyone, it is simply a chance when otherwise one might not exist.

But I'm not really up for much of this conversation.

Come talk to me when you have had to defend yourself or your family against a half dozen thugs trying to break into your property while you are home - I have had such an experiance. Luckily the simple brandishing of my firearm scared them off. But there were six of them and one of me, so I'm glad it was a 9mm semi auto pistol with 15 rounds, plus one in the chamber, and another 15 round mag in my pocket.

My wife was ill and bed ridden, it was late at night, the police came, long after I had scared off the intruders, and the police were pre-informed that I was armed when she called 911. I carried my sidearm on my person the whole time the police were on my property - they had no problem with me being armed.

The criminals were captured later that night trying to break into another house.....and were caught with property from the break in before my house.....

And I live in the rich, cushy, rural suburbs.......

Am I a "vigilante" because I defended my home and family? Talk about a red herring......

You can wait for the police, I'm pretty well trained acording to my range instructor......

In a country of over 350 million people anyone can find a story or two to back up thier point of view. I'm only interested in the safety of my family and my community.

One last parting thought - any society that does not value the good people, more than the bad people, is doomed.

Sheldon

 

 

    

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Posted by Backshop on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 7:04 PM

So what are you supposed to do if a criminal pulls a gun on you?  BTW--those two incidents are far outweighed by these..

https://www.nraila.org/gun-laws/armed-citizen/

I know you won't read it because it's from the NRA, but they are actually reported by local news outlets.

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Posted by n012944 on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 6:46 PM

Backshop

 

 
n012944
 

Or another innocent person could have died because of a stray bullet fired in a stuggle....

 

 

How many times has that happened when a legally armed person has had to draw their weapon to defend themselves or others?  Actual newspaper articles or something similar would be appreciated.

 

 

Allow me to Google that for you....

http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/264755/carjacking-gone-wrong-houston-texas/

 

"A carjacking in Houston, Texas, turned bloody when an armed good Samaritan opened fire on the car thieves but hit the carjacking victim instead"

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-bystander-wounded-during-shootout-between-robber-shop-owner-20151206-story.html

"A man standing at a bus stop is recovering at home after being wounded by a stray bullet during a shootout between a shop owner and an armed robber "

Those are just the start, plenty of other articles out there, along with a FBI report that debunks the NRA's "good guy with a gun fixes everything". BS.  Do the research yourself if you are that concered about it.

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Posted by Backshop on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 6:38 PM

Hindsight is 20/20.  Who said anything about vigilantes?  You keep talking about things that have never happened.  Hopefully, you are never confronted by a criminal and have people dependent on you for "diffusing the dangerous situation".  Why don't you just admit that guns scare you and because you can't handle them and don't think that anyone else can, either?  

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 6:31 PM
Backshop: Your inaccurate reading of the article is prima facie evidence for why would be cowboy shooters are almost as dangerous as the initial disturbed persons. You clearly have no understanding of defusing dangerous situations other than to start shooting, even before the crazed man pulled his knife, nor any training. First responders do, thankfully. And BTW, nobody needs to show you any articles, anymore than you should show articles describing successful interventions by the sort of vigilantes you think are the answer.

C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan

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Posted by Backshop on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 4:58 PM

schlimm

As I understand it, the three "Good Samaritans" understandably confronted the disturbed man because he was shouting vile language at the two women, who retreated to the back of the car.  It was only at that point he pulled his knife and stabbed the attempted heros, two of whom died. In retrospect, it would have been safer to call 911 and let the police handle it.  Link to update

Having would-be cowboys having a shootout in a crowded train, as Sheldon's remarks imply, seems very dangerous to all involved. The notion that people like himself are as well trained in managing disturbed, armed and violent people is an insult to our trained police.

 

 

I'm still waiting for you to show me the stories of all the civilian "cowboys" starting gunfights in the streets and the blood of innocents flowing.  There aren't any, are there?

BTW--What are you supposed to do until the police show up?  You keep talking about "managing", when someone pulls a knife or other deadly weapon, you end the threat.  Two (almost three) men died, how much worse could it have been than it was?

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 4:46 PM

As I understand it, the three "Good Samaritans" understandably confronted the disturbed man because he was shouting vile language at the two women, who retreated to the back of the car.  It was only at that point he pulled his knife and stabbed the attempted heros, two of whom died. In retrospect, it would have been safer to call 911 and let the police handle it.  Link to update

Having would-be cowboys having a shootout in a crowded train, as Sheldon's remarks imply, seems very dangerous to all involved. The notion that people like himself are as well trained in managing disturbed, armed and violent people is an insult to our trained police.

 

C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan

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Posted by Backshop on Tuesday, May 30, 2017 3:21 PM

Exactly!

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