This post actually summarizes my views as well. Overall we have a pretty dicey cultural divide that doesn’t lend itself toward resolution.Kishkumen wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 3:56 pmAt the end of the day the thing to take away from this situation is not a tool for solving ideological squabbles but some ideas about how to do better in the future. Of course, this kind of thing simply will happen on occasion. We have a gun-friendly culture, and that horse left the barn a long time ago. At this point in time, it would be incredibly risky to try to turn the gun situation around, so I think it is a better idea to try to find different solutions to our cultural and societal sickness.
It is madness to keep provoking the gun issue. It is clear that as liberals have become more anxious about guns, conservatives have become more aggressive about guns. Honestly, I grew up with guns, so I am not all that worried about the guns themselves. If we are going to be surrounded by lunatics, we might as well be armed and proficient ourselves, unless we are too emotional about the whole thing. A gun is a tool. Its misuse is an evil. I am not exactly a pacifist, so I would have no problem squeezing the trigger if my life were at risk.
One thing that would be nice to see is for us all to accommodate ourselves to risk, or individually find less risky places if we cannot do so. If it is that important for me to be in a place that has no guns, maybe it is time to move to such a place. I live in the American South, so there are guns all around, and yet I don't really feel all that anxious about it. Of course, I was always the kid who liked military stuff and I liked to shoot guns, so there you have it. Maybe I am just the kind of person who is not all that upset about them.
What I have seen over time is that certain people seek out extra risk. I look at everyone involved in this situation, and I see a bunch of people who probably didn't think carefully before they put themselves in harm's way. I am not happy that this came back to bite them in the ass, including Kyle himself, but this is the way of things. You go out and look for trouble, and don't be surprised, please, if you find it. People who have already been convicted of crimes are probably, statistically speaking, more likely to find themselves in new trouble. A seventeen-year-old kid who owns an AR15? LOL! I mean, I owned regular rifles, but I never owned a handgun or an AR15, especially at the age of 17. Kyle was the kind of kid who was looking to jump into the mix. Really, there are no surprises here. He just turned out to be a lot more effective with his weapon than his attackers were wise.
When I briefly worked in the Utah state prison at Draper, I got a pretty good sense of how it is that people end up in prison. The factors are complicated, but risk seeking behavior and poor impulse control are often among those factors.
Michael Moore, love him or hate him, called it a long, long time ago. The media finds it very profitable to stir up crap. This thing with Kyle and the people he shot is a story, sure, but it is not all that everyone has made it out to be. In some ways it is a lot more boring than the media would have it. Put together a lot of people with poor judgment who want to be in the thick of excitement and play hero or something, and this is what you get. I think we can be happy that there were no truly innocent victims here. There were a lot of dummies doing dumb crap.
- Doc