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Black for Palestine
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Springpatch
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Let's research gun violence.
I've said this in a couple other threads, but I don't believe that gun control is going to get any traction in Congress. Some Democrats will push for it, some other Republicans will table it, some pro-gun control folks like myself will cry foul, and yet another Congress will pass without any gun control measures seeing the light of day.
But here's one thing that maybe we can start doing: better educate ourselves on gun violence, so we can stop stabbing in the dark as to what we can better do to mitigate it. The problem is that for a couple decades now, the government has not been able to produce any information on gun violence because the NRA has been threatening war if Congress failed to choke off all funding for gun-related research. The CDC and NIH used to conduct research for decades, but around the time of the late 90s, the NRA became so powerful it was able to prevent these agencies from granting funds to researchers on those topics. McClatchy DC: Quote:
Anyway, there's a ton of stories on this, but here's a really good one from last year in the Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/26/us...anted=all&_r=0 N.R.A. Stymies Firearms Research, Scientists Say By MICHAEL LUO Published: January 25, 2011 In the wake of the shootings in Tucson, the familiar questions inevitably resurfaced: Are communities where more people carry guns safer or less safe? Does the availability of high-capacity magazines increase deaths? Do more rigorous background checks make a difference? The reality is that even these and other basic questions cannot be fully answered, because not enough research has been done. And there is a reason for that. Scientists in the field and former officials with the government agency that used to finance the great bulk of this research say the influence of the National Rife Association has all but choked off money for such work. “We’ve been stopped from answering the basic questions,” said Mark Rosenberg, former director of the National Center for Injury Control and Prevention, part of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which was for about a decade the leading source of financing for firearms research. Chris Cox, the N.R.A.’s chief lobbyist, said his group had not tried to squelch genuine scientific inquiries, just politically slanted ones. “Our concern is not with legitimate medical science,” Mr. Cox said. “Our concern is they were promoting the idea that gun ownership was a disease that needed to be eradicated.” The amount of money available today for studying the impact of firearms is a fraction of what it was in the mid-1990s, and the number of scientists toiling in the field has dwindled to just a handful as a result, researchers say. The dearth of money can be traced in large measure to a clash between public health scientists and the N.R.A. in the mid-1990s. At the time, Dr. Rosenberg and others at the C.D.C. were becoming increasingly assertive about the importance of studying gun-related injuries and deaths as a public health phenomenon, financing studies that found, for example, having a gun in the house, rather than conferring protection, significantly increased the risk of homicide by a family member or intimate acquaintance. Alarmed, the N.R.A. and its allies on Capitol Hill fought back. The injury center was guilty of “putting out papers that were really political opinion masquerading as medical science,” said Mr. Cox, who also worked on this issue for the N.R.A. more than a decade ago. Initially, pro-gun lawmakers sought to eliminate the injury center completely, arguing that its work was “redundant” and reflected a political agenda. When that failed, they turned to the appropriations process. In 1996, Representative Jay Dickey, Republican of Arkansas, succeeded in pushing through an amendment that stripped $2.6 million from the disease control centers’ budget, the very amount it had spent on firearms-related research the year before. “It’s really simple with me,” Mr. Dickey, 71 and now retired, said in a telephone interview. “We have the right to bear arms because of the threat of government taking over the freedoms that we have.” The Senate later restored the money but designated it for research on traumatic brain injury. Language was also inserted into the centers’ appropriations bill that remains in place today: “None of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.” The prohibition is striking, firearms researchers say, because there are already regulations that bar the use of C.D.C. money for lobbying for or against legislation. No other field of inquiry is singled out in this way. In the end, researchers said, even though it is murky what exactly is allowed under this provision and what is not, the upshot is clear inside the centers: the agency should tread in this area only at its own peril. “They had a near-death experience,” said Dr. Arthur Kellermann, whose study on the risks versus the benefits of having guns in the home became a focal point of attack by the N.R.A. In the years since, the C.D.C. has been exceedingly wary of financing research focused on firearms. In its annual requests for proposals, for example, firearms research has been notably absent. Gail Hayes, spokeswoman for the centers, confirmed that since 1996, while the agency has issued requests for proposals that include the study of violence, which may include gun violence, it had not sent out any specifically on firearms. “For policy to be effective, it needs to be based on evidence,” said Dr. Garen Wintemute, director of the Violence Prevention Research Program at the University of California, Davis, who had his C.D.C. financing cut in 1996. “The National Rifle Association and its allies in Congress have largely succeeded in choking off the development of evidence upon which that policy could be based.” Private foundations initially stepped into the breach, but their attention tends to wax and wane, researchers said. They are also much more interested in work that leads to immediate results and less willing to finance basic epidemiological research that scientists say is necessary to establishing a foundation of knowledge about the connection between guns and violence, or the lack thereof. The National Institute of Justice, part of the Justice Department, also used to finance firearms research, researchers said, but that money has also petered out in recent years. (Institute officials said they hoped to reinvigorate financing in this area.) Stephen Teret, founding director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, estimated that the amount of money available for firearms research was a quarter of what it used to be. With so much uncertainty about financing, Mr. Teret said, the circle of academics who study the phenomenon has fallen off significantly. After the centers’ clash with the N.R.A., Mr. Teret said he was asked by C.D.C. officials to “curtail some things I was saying about guns and gun policy.” Mr. Teret objected, saying his public comments about gun policy did not come while he was on the “C.D.C. meter.” After he threatened to file a lawsuit against the agency, Mr. Teret said, the officials backed down and gave him “a little bit more leeway.” C.D.C. financing for research on gun violence has not stopped completely, but it is now mostly limited to work in which firearms are only a component. The centers also ask researchers it finances to give it a heads-up anytime they are publishing studies that have anything to do with firearms. The agency, in turn, relays this information to the N.R.A. as a courtesy, said Thomas Skinner, a spokesman for the centers. Invariably, researchers said, whenever their work touches upon firearms, the C.D.C. becomes squeamish. In the end, they said, it is often simply easier to avoid the topic if they want to continue to be in the agency’s good graces. Dr. Stephen Hargarten, professor and chairman of emergency medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin, used to direct a research center, financed by the C.D.C., that focused on gun violence, but he said he had now shifted his attention to other issues. |
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#781 |
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ARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRGH
Join Date: Nov 2002
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#782 |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2000
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BUT as I pointed out, to most of the rest of the world, the term assault rifle means AUTOMATIC. It's only because of our retarded 1994 law that we use the term to mean mostly cosmetic things. So, when a bogan says "assault" rifles should be illegal, just educate them that they are here.
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#783 |
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Keep firing, assholes!
Join Date: Aug 2000
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I wonder how of these liberal idiots (including some who post on this board) truly believe that our rifles are fully-automatic just because they look like the weapons in their ****ing Xbox games.
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I'm not mean; I just don't like you.
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#784 | |
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7000 RPM of tire churning fury
Join Date: Mar 2001
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Quote:
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Like "Cool Hand" Luke I'm busting rocks. __/|_/[___] |/ \\_| ---OllllO _( ))~-( ))-0--)) |
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#785 | |
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7000 RPM of tire churning fury
Join Date: Mar 2001
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Quote:
I'm pretty sure all that person knew about guns was handed to them by Hollywood.
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Like "Cool Hand" Luke I'm busting rocks. __/|_/[___] |/ \\_| ---OllllO _( ))~-( ))-0--)) |
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#786 |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2000
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I'd bet its a fair amount, especially the way the media indiscriminately throws the term around as a scare tactic.
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#787 | |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2000
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Quote:
![]() ..are more or less the same. OH, and here is a good example to teach them about clips vs magazines... the top gun uses a detachable magazine while the bottom one has an attached magazine and is often loaded using a clip. |
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#788 |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2000
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I'd also be willing to bet they would all call this...
an assault weapon.. even though it was not covered by the 1994 ban. |
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#789 | |
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MVP
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: KC area
Casino cash: $62820
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More or less? How about that the top one, with an average user on both, can shoot a lot more rounds, a lot more quickly, and a lot more accurately?
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#790 | |
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Roy E.
Join Date: Sep 2005
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"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." |
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#791 |
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All aboard the crazy train
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This was Clinton's answer to the AK-47
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#792 |
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All aboard the crazy train
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& Clinton's answer to the AR-15 assault weapon
No Bayonet lug or flash hider. |
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#793 | |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Austin
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Quote:
And btw, it does NOT fire them more accurately(where the hell do you get this idea from?) or "more quickly" the rate of fire is the exact same and reloading time is negligible (matter of seconds). |
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#794 | |
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Keep firing, assholes!
Join Date: Aug 2000
Casino cash: $2832653
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Quote:
A scope can easily be mounted on the unmodified rifle.
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#795 |
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Keep firing, assholes!
Join Date: Aug 2000
Casino cash: $2832653
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I feel like the little smart ass kid in class who blurts out the answer because he knows the dummy who was actually asked won't know.
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