what about that statement is wrong?
are those red states not paying a price by voting for people who don't believe in science and thus not helping them avoid disasters etc?
Why did this guy pick this church if he is not from the area. This guy drove 35miles to kill strangers in a church?
What is going on here?
I can agree that guns are magnifying the total death count. I'm not sure how that can be disputed. We can regulate and regulate guns till the cows come home but that still is not addressing the real underlying issue as to why people are doing these things (non-Islamic terrorism).
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that's a hell of a leap there to try to make a bad point
but that's your go to move pal
these red states that don't believe in climate change having to pay the price for voting for the dumb**** orange one
Yes: ultimately we need to isolate and redress the underlying issues. Yes: that's much more complicated than simply "because guns". Yes: merely regulating guns is insufficient as a remedy.
But we could still talk about some common-sense steps to start mitigating rather than "magnifying the total death count".
Why did this guy pick this church if he is not from the area. This guy drove 35miles to kill strangers in a church?
What is going on here?
Yes: ultimately we need to isolate and redress the underlying issues. Yes: that's much more complicated than simply "because guns". Yes: merely regulating guns is insufficient as a remedy.
But we could still talk about some common-sense steps to start mitigating rather than "magnifying the total death count".
The motive is the most important thing in any of these cases.
How can you argue that an agent of ISIS killing people is the same as a white guy with no affiliations to an outside group? If he is linked to some right wing extremist groups then we need to seriously consider that threat against the livlihood of every American citizen.
i never once said those words aren't mine
i was commenting on your words and your point
thus why i said it was a leap to try to make a bad point
Dylann Roof traveled even further to murder people in a church, including a state senator I knew who had devoted his career to helping people, with the hope of starting a race war.
There are more heroine deaths than gun homicides in this country.
Which is really weird, because heroine is illegal in all states.
A simple law can fix this gun issue, folks... just like it fixed heroine deaths.
But the amount of people dying because of crazy white guys with no known affiliation to an extremist group are staggeringly higher than people dying due to ISIS in America. As JPX said, obviously we care about and want to eradicate ISIS. The problem I see with the approach being taken is that we're taking random Muslims that almost certainly weren't radicalized when they came here and instead of reflecting on why they might now be radicalized, are advocating for things like travel bans that will be ineffective. Meanwhile, we spend a week after each of these insane shootings bitching at each other about gun control and chalking it up to a crazy white guy with a gun. It seems insane to me that we don't worry more about the motive of a shooter if it isn't religion.
These false equivalencies kill me. People using heroin aren't generally trying to hurt other people. Maybe instead of crimalizing drug use and actually trying to help people, we could save at least a few more lives.