T
TimeEntrance
Guest
You keep going back to the police station as an example and model of the U.S. workforce. Fort Hood is more representative of the U.S. workforce. Short of the Federal Government making it law all U.S. citizens must carry firearms cities, states, employers and their companies will have greater leeway on setting policies about carrying guns.So what’s your point? That mass shooters simply randomly select locations and would be as likely to start firing in the middle of a police precinct as an elementary school? Surely you jest.
Lisa
The United States is pretty lawsuit crazy too. I can just imagine someone walking into some building in downtown Milwaukee and being shot by some employee inside that building. The company would be sued into the high millions by having officially allowed its employees to be carrying guns on them.
The ammo is accounted for. I recall more than once walking around for hours during the day or even at night (with flashlights) looking for a single bullet some Marine dropped [chuckles]. No one being allowed to go to sleep until the bullet was found.You are correct. Guns abound on a US Military base. But if you read my statement and George’s, you will note that the AMMO is restricted. Even as an Officer, I could not regualry carry a loaded pistol.
Even when I brought my Troops tanks through the base to the range, we had no ammo. That was issued at the range and returned at the range.
There could have been a whole battalion of M1A1 Abrahms in the parking lot outside of shooting, and they could have done nothing other than provide a secure place to for the people to hide around.
But my experience in the Marine Corps was through Security Forces which I was accepted into after volunteering for the duty and MOS while in the School of Infantry. Mind you… Fleet Marines like to say barracks duty of Security Forces is not the real Marine Corps. There is truth in that. My Security Forces duty stations were all Naval. The U.S.S. Wisconsin and then the small base of CINCLANT compound.
And in Security Forces we were routinely armed with weapons loaded. Even many magazines loaded full of ammo. I think at the “Wire” were we guarded Naval tactical nukes we each had 6 magazines of M-16 ammo loaded, all on our flack-jackets, with rifles placed up on racks right in the area we slept in. Even then I was aware that a Marine that snapped could have grabbed his or another’s rifle, loaded it, and systematically shot everyone sleeping until someone on post (armed) stopped him.
On the battleship we would go to .50 cal watch with a 9mm pistol (3 mags), our M-16 (6 mags I think), and we had an obsolete Law rocket (if I recall correctly) already on the post. Few Americans - not even cops - are armed to the teeth, loaded, and ready to rock and roll like that.
I went from that to the civilian workforce were I never saw a single employee carrying even a little .22 caliber pistol on them while at work.
So, my memory of the military was one of sleeping in rooms with guns, living with guns. We used the M-60, M-16, 9mm, and shotguns in Security Forces. For some reason we often shot M-14s out at the ranges too, when it was only Fast Company that seemed to have those things for their Designated Marksmen (pretty much urban snipers).