• Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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    1 年前

    This is why the “good guy with the gun” BS needs to die. The real world isn’t a movie: there are no designated heroes and villains. Everyone’s a good guy in their own mind until they point a gun at a 6 year old.

    • TechyDad@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      I’ve always wondered how people thought the “good guy with a gun” would work in a chaotic real world situation. Suppose you’re armed and there’s a mass shooting event. You pull out your gun and keep a look out for the shooter as you hear gunfire getting closer. Then you spot a guy holding a gun. You quickly take aim and fire…

      … And hit another “good guy with a gun” who was trying to take out the mass shooter the same as you.

      Oh, but then you get shot by a third “good guy with a gun” who thought YOU were the mass shooter.

      Arming everyone and telling them to be “good guys with guns” just seems, at best, like it would lead to MORE injuries and deaths.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          1 年前

          Yup, this is how it goes down in my head, and why I don’t carry a gun. I think there’s a decent chance that I could take down an active shooter (not sure if I have the guts to, but that’s beside the point) because I have the element of surprise on my side, but there’s an even bigger chance I get shot either in the crossfire or by the police. Most of the time it’ll be a single shooter, but I have no guarantee that’s the case, so I’d need to be ready for a second shooter.

          I’ve run through a few options, and I just don’t see a clear way to distinguish myself from an active shooter.

          • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 年前

            Of course, the other option is just say “please no don’t do it I have a wife and 47 kids!”

            You could also try running, yes, or hiding, but “carrying a gun” and “trying to get to an exit or shelter in place and only using said gun if he blocks the exit or finds your hiding spot” are not exactly mutually exclusive, you can do both, you don’t have to “run towards the sound of gunfire” like some marine. In fact that would be the much smarter way to do it, “camping” isn’t frowned upon in real life, this isn’t COD. As for identifying who the shooter is “it’s usually the guy shooting unarmed people,” but failing that, “better to be sure and confirm your target,” unfortunately this puts you at a disadvantage but he’s willing to shoot random people and you aren’t (I hope), so what’re ya gonna do.

              • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 年前

                Unfortunately from a realistic standpoint even with gun control laws this will not be an impossibility, though they may reduce the frequency. There’s already upwards of 600,000,000 guns in 50% of the populations hands (and women won’t stop buying them, they’re the fastest growing group of new gun owners. More specifically black women followed by all women), even if you ban them they’ll be out there.

                And unfortunately Rittenhouse was textbook self defense, he only shot the guy who grabbed for his gun, and then the guy who hit him with a skateboard and grabbed for his gun, and then the guy who pointed a gun at him, not any of the people who retreated or didn’t attack. I know, he lived in a different state and commuted 20 min to kenosha for work every day where his friends and dad lived, but the gun was kept at Dominic Black’s house and never “crossed state lines” (also, even if it did, it is legal to cross state lines with a gun so long as it is legal in the state, and WI is far more permissive than IL, any gun legal in IL is legal in WI by far.) Also it is legal for a 17yo to have a gun in WI for some reason. Unfortunately even if we agree with his political opinions we currently can’t put him in jail for that, he didn’t actually break any laws.

                • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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                  1 年前

                  Pass gun control laws and he showed up with a gun he should have gone to jail. Your bff is out there now as a darling of conservative media btw

                  • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    1 年前

                    But he was allowed to show up with a gun in case someone attacked him, can’t arrest him for defending himself if he’s allowed to do it, as unfortunate as that is. Sorry, I’ve never met him, you must have me confused with someone else.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              1 年前

              I’m not worried about me identifying the shooter, I’m worried about the police identifying me as the shooter or hostage taker if I somehow shoot the perp but don’t kill them.

              Best case scenario, I shoot someone and risk getting shot by the police, worst case scenario I get shot by the perp (and even worse, they use my gun to kill people), and average case scenario, I get out alive without using the gun. I just don’t see a lot of good things coming out of it. My area is incredibly safe, so the chances of needing it are extremely small, the chances of it helping are even smaller, and the chances of my kids finding it are much higher than I’m comfortable with.

              If I was commuting through a bad neighborhood, I could see it being useful. I live and work in safe neighborhoods, so it’s not an issue.

              • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 年前

                Well that’s why CCW training tells you to put your gun away if you’re sure it’s now a safe area, and if it isn’t now a safe area (possible other shooters for instance) to GTFO and call the cops and your lawyer. Also why you should give a description of the active shooter if you call it in, so they know “oh this dude in a T shirt may be a defender, we recieved a call about a guy in tac gear.” Of course, most often the shooters specifically target gun free zones because you can’t have one there, so you technically likely shouldn’t have one anyway, so makes sense the cops wouldn’t expect a defender in those cases either.

                Yeah it’s something that everyone needs to decide for themselves (my issue is when people like to decide things for others.) It definitely can be helpful in a specific scenario, like a hammer to a nail, but it is also a responsibility and if you aren’t able or willing to, you shouldn’t, that simple. Especially if as you say you are you’re priviledged enough to live in a good area, in contrast to pizza delivery drivers (well, “ex”) who live in bad neighborhoods who may need them.

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 年前

                  Agreed, and I’ll always defend the right to carry, for those who choose to. I think we should have some extra restrictions, like maybe a CCW for concealable firearms (and subsequent training), plus proof of secure storage in some manner if you have kids.

                  The only place I’d carry is at work, and it’s against company policy to carry. So I don’t, it’s just not worth the risk and the likelihood that I’d need it is so remote.

                  • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    1 年前

                    Well a CCW is already required in most states to carry except for those recently lightening restrictions. Secure storage is iffy, because the supreme court already ruled it invalidates the right to self defense (most home invaders aren’t kind enough to wait until you get your safe open to duel you, they typically just steal the guns from your safe after forcing you to open it at gunpoint when you ask if they’ll hold up a sec, and then use those in subseqent crimes.)

                    And yeah I hear that, unfortunately the fact that your work bans guns even with a CCW means that if you ever do need it, it’ll probably be there, gun free zones being the typical targets, and disgruntled employees and all. But I totally understand that it becomes not worth the risk then, you’d either have to risk being found out and fired or keep it in the car which while sometimes necessary because “gun free zone” always feels like you’re forced to leave a gun where it can be (and they often are) easily stolen.

      • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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        1 年前

        It’s deflective rhetoric so they don’t have to address the truth:

        We don’t know who is going to make a bad decision with their gun until after they do it.

      • Trigger2_2000@sh.itjust.works
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        1 年前

        Yeah, my coworkers said how great it would have been after the Colorado movie theater shooting (Batman movie) if everyone was armed. They just knew the original shooter would have been killed right away.

        So,

        1. Dark theater
        2. Smoke filled (by shooter)
        3. Bullets suddenly flying

        Who in their right mind thinks basically everyone wouldn’t have been mowed down in a hail of gun fire?

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        1 年前

        It’s either that, or the people with guns are afraid to use them when the time comes and they hesitate too long to do any good.

      • Garbanzo@lemmy.world
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        1 年前

        I’ve always wondered how people thought the “good guy with a gun” would work in a chaotic real world situation.

        They picture it pretty much how it went down here:
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwood_Park_Mall_shooting

        Personally, I would just prefer to have a pistol in hand if I ended up in the last part of ‘run, hide, fight’.

        • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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          1 年前

          Yeah they picture it as a very specific scenario with one mass shooter and one retaliatory shooter. Any more than one retaliatory shooter and it all falls apart as OP described though lol.

    • stella@lemm.ee
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      1 年前

      “There are no good guys with guns.”

      also

      “Cops are useless.”

      You see, this is why nobody takes sentiments like yours seriously. If you can’t defend yourself, and don’t have others to protect you, then you’ll always be at the mercy of whoever is the strongest.

      Something tells me all the ‘guns and cops are bad’ people don’t know how to fight.

      • Harvey656@lemmy.world
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        1 年前

        I’ve been looking at your other comments and have some things to say.

        1. Clearly your your out of your mind defending cops on Lemmy.world, for real when is calling the cops ever not put you the caller in a new type of danger? Fools with guns is bad regardless of the context and I for one cannot trust someone I have never met, especially the armed paramilitary we call police here in America.

        2. Nice 'something tells me comment, always makes someone’s comments feel real sincere.

        3. Most people can’t defend themselves, that’s reality. I’m actually pro gun but anti-idiot, and most people are idiots and that deeply complicates your arguments.

        Thanks for coming to my Ted talk, I’m not a professional nor frankly good at most things, if you have problems with my arguments please, comment it don’t save it to yourself.

          • ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world
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            1 年前

            I sure as fuck don’t wait around for the cops to show up and decide I’m the threat and kill me while the guy breaking into my house has been gone for 20 minutes.

            I’ll defend myself how I see fit and the cops will only be called if it results in death.

            • stella@lemm.ee
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              1 年前

              Do you think you would have a better chance at defending yourself with a gun?

              • Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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                1 年前

                Personally, I think if someone broke into my house, it would be dark…I’d have probably just been woken from a dead sleep. There will be dogs barking…possibly kids also just woken from a dead sleep who are now scared and either calling for me or running towards me. There’s no way I can put myself between my family and the bad guys in that situation. If I just start shooting, I’m liable to be shooting in the general direction of a pet or child. Even in the very best scenario, where somehow my kids, my pets, my wife, and my MIL who lives with us all happen to be in my bedroom in the middle of the night I’m still very likely to just shout that we’re armed and the police are on the way. Whether they steal a TV or I shoot a TV still results in me needing a new TV…but I also know that statistically, even me having a gun in my home escalates an already tense situation where I’ll be groggy but hopped up on adrenaline and not be a reliable shot. Even if it played out how folks like to imagine… one shot, one kill, I’ve still taken a life in front of my family. That’ll result in years of therapy for all of us. I’d rather just get a new TV or whatever. We’re more likely to get struck by lightning as a family than have a Richard Ramirez type who broke into the house just to kill us, and it’s more likely still that I’ll get depressed and use the gun on myself than it is that I’ll successfully defend my family with it.

                I say all that as someone with military firearms training, family members in the local PD, and as someone who’s been woken up in the middle of the night by an emergency (in that case, our house was on fire).

      • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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        1 年前

        I don’t recall saying cops are useless. Are you sure you’re replying to the right person?

        The police do illustrate over and over again that even trained professionals make bad decisions when issued guns. And of course the solution isn’t to escalate things by raising the threat of officers being shot, but instead in finding ways to have less people with guns, so police aren’t on alert all the time and aren’t as tempted to use their guns as their only solution.

        As a thought experiment: If we gave every adult in the world access to fire the entire planet’s nuclear payload and destroy everyone, do you think we’d all be safer? Would the world even last 5 minutes?

        The more people you give access to deadly weapons, the more likely you are going to run into someone who is stupid, impulsive, or downright crazy and is going to use that weapon to harm themselves or others.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          1 年前

          so police aren’t on alert all the time

          I got pulled over for not seeing a stop sign at night in a bad neighborhood. I remember the young cop watching my hands with the flashlight and the light was shaking slightly while I searched for my registration.

          That was not an enjoyable experience for me or him and it shouldn’t have to be anything except mildly annoying. He shouldn’t be thinking that I am ready to kill him and I shouldn’t be worried that he will make a mistake and me getting shot.

        • stella@lemm.ee
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          1 年前

          I think you’re asking the wrong questions.

          You should be asking if society is safer if people have guns than if they don’t. Of course, answering this isn’t so simple because which society matters.

            • stella@lemm.ee
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              1 年前

              Every developed nation with strict gun control is safer.

              Lots of rural America is still very underdeveloped. The only protection these people have from threats is the protection they can provide themselves.

              This is what I mean by ‘which society matters.’ There are many differences between nations than just their gun laws.

              • ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world
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                1 年前

                I think you’re confusing “rural America” with a movie called “Mad Max”.

                Which would have been safer without guns.

                In any case, it sounds like what you mean to say is “the lawless hellscapes of the USA need to be civilized by an accountable organisation of some kind”, not “guns fix everything, hyuck”.

          • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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            1 年前

            Society is never safer with guns, and the more society you have the fewer guns you need.

            If you live in barbarism, sure, you might need a gun, but barbarism is antithetical to a healthy society.

      • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        1 年前

        I don’t think cops are useless, I think they are a flawed institution that we as a society can fix by reforms. And I don’t even see the big deal in this, nothing is perfect, everything can be made better or more appropriate for the situation. Long run it would be better for police unions to agree to some changes in training, scope, and methods because it would restore and gain more public trust. And the public will benefit as well.