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#61 | |
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Et in Arcadio ego
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Found an interesting article by a Sikh professor who has experienced some of the tension of multiculturalism. He mentions discussions within his community of how to respond to the Oak Creek attack, and of whether Sikhs in America should broadcast that they are not Muslims and did not have anything to do with 9-11. But (1) Sikhs are opposed to hate crimes directed against any group, and (2) it might not make a difference.
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#62 | ||
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Nailed It!
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 3,564
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Also, I'd love to hear from the two guys he encountered, because I wonder how "aggressive" they really were. Did they get all up in his shit, or did they just step slightly in front of him to get his attention so they could offer him some Stampede tickets? I'm not terribly inclined to trust his interpretation of events, given that his immediate instinct was to threaten to shoot people in one of the least-threatening areas in the entire city. Bottom line: I think someone with his mentality should be entrusted with a weapon. Too many chances for a misunderstanding to end really badly. Quote:
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#63 |
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Colonist
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: London, England
Posts: 15,816
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Shoot first, take a step back later?
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Gamertag: Narradisall Steam ID: Narradisall |
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#64 | |
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Colonist
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Given that, I'm especially unsure what the story is supposed to prove, because he'd still probably be armed even in a "police and military only" utopia. Keep calm and carry on? Where in there does he threaten to shoot anyone? Lots of supposition with a little info, I think, along with a bunch of people definitely overreacting to one guy probably overreacting. Last edited by Vigil80; 08-09-2012 at 12:21 PM. |
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#65 |
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Nailed It!
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 3,564
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Reaching for a weapon with intent to draw. Drawing a weapon is an implicit threat.
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#66 |
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Colonist
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Which brings me back to my previous point. We don't know he intended to draw or point the weapon right away. As long as we're talking about what he might have done, he might have rested his hand on it, then continued with his "we have no need to talk to you, goodbye." It's what I'd expect a cop to do.
The more I think about it, perhaps the story and reactions uncover at least as many questions about anti-gun culture. "He thought about a gun! That means he's going to murder people!" Last edited by Vigil80; 08-10-2012 at 10:43 AM. |
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#67 |
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Extraordinary Prick
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I agree with that assessment, Vigil. Police training would likely make him cover his weapon in case he needed it. A far cry from drawing it or even making it visible to the person in front of you.
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I think I want to be you when I grow up, but I'm far more likely to be Bone. - Superman's Dead XBL: xx 8one xx 3DS: 0516-7281-0600 Steam: -Bone- |
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#68 | |
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monoputer
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Vancouver, BC
Posts: 7,747
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On top of that, Calgary is one of the friendliest places on Earth (Minus the CoG'ers from there, of course). |
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#69 |
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Extraordinary Prick
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Someone who is trained to deal with a dangerous encounter, though, would have that reaction as part of their training. They also usually have a better situational awareness than the average citizen.
Have you ever had a random encounter turn into a mugging? I have. At first, it looks no different than walking past someone and saying hi. When someone I don't know gets too close in my personal space, and especially if they act aggressively, I am no longer inclined to give them the benefit of the doubt.
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I think I want to be you when I grow up, but I'm far more likely to be Bone. - Superman's Dead XBL: xx 8one xx 3DS: 0516-7281-0600 Steam: -Bone- |
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#70 | |
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Colonist
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![]() I'm glad for you. I hope you're never in such a situation. Last edited by Vigil80; 08-10-2012 at 11:15 AM. |
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#71 |
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Et in Arcadio ego
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I see some pretty clean examples here, not only in the Calgary story but in the reactions to it, for how America's often baseless neurotic impulse can cause and worsen violence.
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#72 |
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Lazzaloqu Devotee
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 3,684
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You're gonna need to clarify.
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#73 |
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Et in Arcadio ego
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Like I mentioned earlier, habitual mistrust, fear, and anger towards others tends to remove people from the social fabric of our common humanity and to encourage a violent solution to insecurity. That could mean physical violence or humiliation or financial exploitation -- any act that ignores the identity of the other.
It is something I see more where people feel insecure than in any other circumstance, and it is something I see spelled out clearly in the case where an overly aggressive, "You been to the rodeo?" can compel a man to reach for his firearm. However well-rationalized the insecurity, that kind of preemptive violence is a totally inappropriate response. |
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#74 |
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Extraordinary Prick
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Whereas I see no problem with situational awareness. The best training gives you the tools to deal with a situation as well as methods of de-escalation. I would love to live in a world where people don't randomly target others for violence, but as I and others have learned, it doesn't always work out that way.
Being prepared to resolve a violent situation is not the same as being violent.
__________________
I think I want to be you when I grow up, but I'm far more likely to be Bone. - Superman's Dead XBL: xx 8one xx 3DS: 0516-7281-0600 Steam: -Bone- |
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