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TimeEntrance
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In my view there what I call the “is world” and the “should world.” I try to live in the “is world.” In the “should world” I might address realities about how my environment around me should be. But in the “is world” I just accept that my environment is the way it is. What one might term life on life’s terms.One solution has been offered, let’s turn our schools into mini prisons, and raise our children to think guns in civilian hands will always be necessary.
To me life in the United States may have just come to reach a point where armed guards in schools is just a practical response to a national and cultural phenomenon in a chaotic world. And a world in which U.S. culture has changed marked degrees (for good and/or ill) from what it was generations ago.
From a survival standpoint, it is in my opinion, reasonable to view Americans known and unknown to you as potential protagonists. In a more academic, scientific, or logical sense one might think of it as the difference between Type 1 and 2 Errors.
A long the way you may meet very good friends, comrades, some with patience and loyalty. You may cross paths with strangers that extend great courtesy and charity. But you undoubtedly will cross paths with persons that may potentially commit your homicide. Law-abiding citizens and hoodlums, cops and bankers alike, that might bury your bones and soon-to-be decomposing flesh underneath concrete or earth before they “lose.”
Excellent example and rhetorical question. You are correct. No one can be hyper-vigilent 24/7. At some point we all relax or have to place ourselves in one or more vulnerable positions. Think of having to go sit on the toilet in a stall in a public bathroom. Sleeping at night (or day) is one every human has to surrender to.A man in a police station, took an officer’s gun. He shot 3 policemen before they killed him. That just happened. So, arming teachers guarantees the children’s safety how?
While not impossible, it is very difficult to stop someone of reasonable intelligence from committing one or more types of homicides if they are seriously committed. The U.S. Presidency draws upon an incredible array and amount of resources to prevent such things being executed successfully by the protagonists of the U.S. President. Most of us have far less resources at our disposal.
This young female cop found shot to death while on duty, in a predominately well-off suburb of Milwaukee, was shot to death by her husband with his pistol and then with her own police issued semi-automatic pistol. And I seriously doubt it had anything to do with her being “a bad” cop lacking vigilance and awareness. We don’t have eyes in the back of our heads, and we naturally relax our guards in certain places or around certain people.
Those that think owning a gun = always prevailing, are wrong. Even one or a few armed sentry in every public school of the United States (may deter) will not de facto guarantee a committed person will not be able to carry out one or more murders on said property.
That said, I’d rather be caught with a gun than without one, especially in an instance that quickly turns into a gun fight.
White male, Iraq War veteran, U.S. Marine, by perception of this thread a law-abiding citizen the very contradiction of some of the more swarthy male members of the U.S. inner-cities. I don’t know, I’ve never murdered anyone (although being a murderer is inside of me I realize) but then… I’ve (fortunately or unfortunately) have gotten use to losing. For many American bred males in a win or lose culture, losing is a fate worse than death or a lifetime in prison.
wisn.com/news/south-east-wisconsin/milwaukee/Husband-of-slain-officer-charged-with-first-degree-intentional-homicide/-/10148890/17911062/-/f82ax2z/-/index.html
Husband of slain officer charged with first-degree intentional homicide
Bail set at $1 million for Benjamin Sebena
WAUWATOSA, Wis. —The husband of a police officer gunned down while on duty Christmas Eve has been charged with first-degree intentional homicide.
The complaint said she suffered five gunshot wounds to the head. Two of the bullets were from a 9 mm firearm and three others were from a .40-caliber firearm.
The complaint also states that Sebena told officers that he had been stalking his wife for several days. On Dec. 24, he told officers that he “laid in wait” for several hours.
According to the complaint, Benjamin Sebena fired at his wife as she emerged from a break at the fire department. After firing two rounds from his gun, he said he took her service weapon and shot her “three or four times.”
Benjamin Sebena is an Iraq War Marine veteran who was awarded the Purple Heart. He’s featured in a 2010 video released by Elmbrook Church in Brookfield in which he spoke about his wife.