What's new

Gun Control & Gun Violence in U.S | Mega Thread

Well why don't you lift your commie a$$ from that couch and pick up a gun like the Bolsheviks and bring a socialism revolution in India??
You just talk big mostly from your rear end without knowing facts and figures of different societies and cultures.

The Bolsheviks did not have to deal with 500 million Hindutvadis plus tens of millions more Muslim right-wingers and some Christian right-wingers. I will bring Communism to India my own way, without using an AK.

But about "facts and figures from different societies and cultures" what revolution did those Pakistani gun-wavers-in-weddings bring with their millions of AKs ? Why do they need to present themselves as aggressive ?
 
The Bolsheviks did not have to deal with 500 million Hindutvadis plus tens of millions more Muslim right-wingers and some Christian right-wingers. I will bring Communism to India my own way, without using an AK.

But about "facts and figures from different societies and cultures" what revolution did those Pakistani gun-wavers-in-weddings bring with their millions of AKs ? Why do they need to present themselves as aggressive ?
No unlike you they are not looking for any revolution. Not talking big like you with zero actions. If they just shoot guns at weddings for fun or use them for personal security that should be no ones concern. Their money their choices.
Those who are serious for a revolution don't find excuses like you. They just pick up a gun ,risk their life and raise a armed militia to fight with 500 million hinduvadis or whatever.
If you can't spread any positivity ,then you can prevent spreading negativity by keeping your hands away from a keyboard.
 
The PDF Chinese made it clear on this forum yrs ago. China is for Chinese and they like it that way. So what make you think China would take in the likes of you? Stop trying to avoid the question. :enjoy:

We all know Mr Churchill’s saying that there is no forever friendship between countries, he is right if the relations are based on interests exchanging.

So come back to your question, I guess the relations between China and Pakistan are beyond that level
 
We all know Mr Churchill’s saying that there is no forever friendship between countries, he is right if the relations are based on interests exchanging.

So come back to your question, I guess the relations between China and Pakistan are beyond that level
China and Pakistan have an inter-state relationship, but that is about it. The guy pretentiously said that if had to chose, he would choose China, clearly rejecting the US and implicitly solicited praise and acceptance from the Chinese. Unfortunately, none came, implicitly rejected him just as he rejected US. Unrequited love. :cry: :lol:
 
China and Pakistan have an inter-state relationship, but that is about it. The guy pretentiously said that if had to chose, he would choose China, clearly rejecting the US and implicitly solicited praise and acceptance from the Chinese. Unfortunately, none came, implicitly rejected him just as he rejected US. Unrequited love. :cry: :lol:
Its an all weather relationship.
As if you would know. lol.

How do you know, you probably know nothing about foreign affairs in Asia.
 
Really ? Pakistan has much gun culture itself. They think just waving guns and firing in weddings makes them a real man instead of becoming revolutionaries and changing the society including by using those guns on those terrorists like Lal Masjid in the heart of Islamabad :
Talk about Pakistanis bringing a revolution when you lot choose to stop being used as toilet paper by RSS fascists who lynch innocent Muslims every weekend

like seriously.... at least our dipshits are imported. But you clowns are actually stupid enough to democratically elect fascists and genocidal maniacs multiple times.
Baat krte hain revolution ki HAHAHA
 
This is an example of U.S. human rights.

After every mass shooting, U.S. politicians will light candles, flags will be flown at half-mast, and shooting continues.

No one give a shit about U.S. citizen human rights, the very basic human rights, the right of being alive.


U.S. need U.S. an embassy at home, to do a regime change.

1653461376948.png


1653461389303.png
MAP: 366 Mass shootings in the U.S. so far in 2019

1653461462560.png


MAP: 307 mass shootings so far in 2018

1653461527980.png



US mass shootings in 2015

1653462558107.png


US take the pill they spread to the worldwide.
Enjoy the freedom of disobedience.
Enjoy the freedom of anti-government.
Enjoy the freedom of firearm ownership.
Enjoy the freedom of world police at home.
Enjoy the freedom of shooting on the street.
Enjoy the freedom of tear gas, bean bags and rubber bullets.
 

Attachments

  • 1653462495699.png
    1653462495699.png
    535.6 KB · Views: 21
the best thing is..no tanks rolling over the people were needed in any of those cases!

But you are right...instead of lighting candles and lowering flags the US Government should be more like China...act like nothing happened!...and if you even mention the incident you could go to jail. Cool stuff!!!

I guess the US Government is too soft...needs to be more like China when it comes to human rights!
 
Last edited:
Is the US’s gun problem becoming Canada’s gun problem?
Relatively strict laws help keep firearms violence well below US levels but advocates say ‘there’s much more we could be doing’
May. 29 2022

In a spring evening in 2020, a gunman disguised as a police officer and armed with semi-automatic weapons began a shooting rampage in rural Nova Scotia that left 23 dead.

Days after Canada’s worst mass shooting, the prime minister, Justin Trudeau, promised swift action, announcing an immediate ban on about 1,500 makes and models of military-grade and “assault-style” weapons in the country.

“These weapons were designed for one purpose and one purpose only: to kill the largest number of people in the shortest amount of time. There is no use and no place for such weapons in Canada,” he said. “Effective immediately, it is no longer permitted to buy, sell, transport, import or use military-grade assault weapons in this country.”

Trudeau’s actions prompted minimal debate and were met with relatively little political resistance – in stark contrast to the United States, where the latest mass shootings have once again highlighted the calcified nature of the gun control debate in a country unwilling or unable to confront firearms violence.

But experts and gun control advocates caution that Canada’s relatively strict laws do not fully shield it from violence of the kind that is rampant in the United States.

A nation where hunting is common, Canada has one of the world’s highest per-capita gun ownership rates. According to the 2018 Small Arms Survey, there are an estimated 34.7 firearms per 100 people. Canada still trails far behind its southern neighbour, both in gun ownership rates and firearms-related incidents.

Part of that is credited to a gun ownership regime that mandates extensive background checks and requires that guns be kept locked and unloaded. There are no comparable “open carry” laws in the country, gun owners must be licensed and all handguns and most semi-automatic weapons must be registered with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

“When you consider us next to the United States, which is so heavily armed that it’s almost unbelievable, we look pretty good. But compared to other democratic countries, there’s much more we could be doing to address gaps in the system,” said Ken Price, a gun control advocate whose daughter Samantha was injured in a 2018 mass shooting in Toronto that killed two and left 13 injured.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers surround a suspect at a gas station in Enfield, Nova Scotia, on 19 April 2020 after Canada’s worst mass shooting.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers surround a suspect at a gas station in Enfield, Nova Scotia, on 19 April 2020 after Canada’s worst mass shooting. Photograph: Tim Krochak/AP

And the 2020 Nova Scotia shooting joined a list of incidents proving that even Canada’s relatively tight restrictions haven’t shielded it entirely from the horrors of gun violence.

In 1989, a gunman targeted women at Montreal’s École Polytechnique, killing 14 and wounding another 14.

In 2017, a young man entered a Quebec City mosque with a semi-automatic rifle and a pistol, killing six and injuring 19. Even the man behind the Toronto van attack that left 10 dead was inspired by an American mass shooter.

But unlike tragedies in the United States, these events are largely isolated – and have prompted changes to the country’s firearms rules.

After the massacre at the École Polytechnique, parliament passed laws that led to the creation of a nationwide gun registry. And Trudeau’s ability to ban certain weapons with little political opposition highlights the different way guns are perceived by much of the Canadian public.

“The second amendment plays a big role in the arena of US public discourse. Americans, in general, are suspicious of the state restricting their freedoms or telling them what they can and can’t do,” said Jooyoung Lee, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Toronto’s Center for the Study of the United States.

But advocates like Price say gaps in the Canadian system remain, allowing events like the Nova Scotia shooting to happen.

Neighbours had previously raised concerns over the behaviour of shooter Gabriel Wortman, to the point that police had previously investigated him. Officers also knew he had a history of domestic abuse and owned a number of firearms.

“You don’t just need legislation to tell you what kinds of guns and ammunition you can own. You also need institutions to have the ability to educate and to intervene,” said Price. “Police should be able to move swiftly and take weapons away when they suspect there’s a risk.”

And while the headlines often focus on mass shootings, the majority of shootings in Canada involve handguns in large urban centres.

“The bulk of the incidents are happening in racially marginalized communities. So in Canada, marginalized people bear the brunt of gun violence, just like they do in the United States,” said Lee.

A recent survey found that a majority of Canadians, particularly those in urban centres, worried gun violence was increasing in their communities – a reality reflected in data from Statistics Canada. Firearms incidents in 2020 were double that of 2010.

While straw purchasing and gun store thefts are a problem in Canada – the gun that wounded Price’s daughter was stolen from a location halfway across the country – experts say a significant number of firearms come into Canada illegally across the border from the United States.

“Increasingly, in many ways America’s gun problem is becoming Canada’s gun problem,” said Lee. “Even though the US has become an international poster child of gun control laws gone awry, there’s a lot more commonality here in Canada than people might be willing to admit.”

 
Violence is inherent in settler society, it's a cultural problem. If you can no longer direct that violence against the indigenous people like in the US and Canada then this becomes the result.
 

1 dead, 7 injured in Oklahoma festival shooting​

Authorities say one person was killed and seven were injured in a shooting early Sunday at an outdoor festival in eastern Oklahoma

ByThe Associated Press
May 30, 2022, 12:16 AM


TAFT, Okla. -- One person was killed and seven were injured in a shooting early Sunday at an outdoor festival in eastern Oklahoma, authorities said.

Two juveniles were among those shot at the Memorial Day event near Taft, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) southeast of Tulsa, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said in a statement.

Witnesses said an argument preceded the gunfire just after midnight, the agency said. No one has been arrested, it said.

About 1,500 people attended the event. Members of the Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office were also in attendance and immediately began rendering aid, OSBI said.

The agency provided no other details including the conditions of those injured. The Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office referred the Associated Press to OSBI for more information. A bureau spokeswoman has not responded to the AP's calls.

 

Back
Top Bottom