18 Dead In First European High School Shooting - What About The Gun Control Argument?

If the only cites you plan to provide have glaring flaws, you’re quite right that I’m not going to accept them. And I don’t refuse to provide cites, I am unable to provide one because I don’t freaking have one. No one has any obligation to accept obviously flawed ‘cites’ as fact, whether or not they have access to the inforamtion in dispute. (Today I found one with US infomation, but I still don’t have one with european information).

:rolleyes Yeah, right, I’m going to spend an hour or so going through the columbine-angels page, sorting through what are relevant incidents and what aren’t, then adding up totals, only to have you, flowbark, or one of the others go ballistic because I excluded an incident by mistake, included an incident by mistake, or made an arithmetic error in totaling them up. I notice that you didn’t go through your supposedly comprehensive cite to come up with totals for US and European school shootings…

No, that’s not reasonable at all, especially for pre-Columbine incidents. If anything, the jumbled, ad-hoc manner in which incidents are chosen should lead one to doubt the comprehensiveness of the page on any topic.

I mean, do you really think that they’re going to include a fist fight among adults but are going to leave out a shooting incident??
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You mean like the school shooting that happened on 1/26/94 at Eau Claire High School in Columbia SC (see the cite below)? Earnest Dunlap (17) was shot three times by Floyd Brown (18) in a hallway, yet it doesn’t seem to have made your allegedly comprehensive cite. There are a whole host of others, and it’s pretty obvious to anyone with half a clue that the page you cited just collects stuff that hits the bigger papers and any papers local to them and isn’t an attempt at a comprehensive study.

Funny, the National School Safety Center does appear to take that position. Maybe you should stop using your hamster to practice arguing, it’s a lot easier to win an argument with a hamster than with a person. Take a look at http://www.nssc1.org/savd/savd.pdf (or go to their front page , go to the ‘School-associated violence report’ link, then grab the PDF)

(BTW, Quix, this is exactly the sort of site I would have accepted as a cite. I only found it today, and haven’t seen a similar one for Europe, so it’s still not all the needed information. For future GDs, it’s the sort of thing that’s FAR more likely to be accepted as a comprehensive list - not only does it purport to be a complete list, but it’s not just a newspaper article or anecdotal collection. It’s also roughly 5000 times as the columbine-angels page would be if it were complete, since it includes compiled numbers at the end - again, I note that you never gave a total for ‘US school shootings’ and ‘European school shootings’, most likely because compiling such a total from the page would be annoying and error-prone.)

LOL! Your “facts” that I refused to accept consisted of a newspaper article that, during the time of the debate changed the content of their page (so it was either wrong before or wrong after the change) and a newspaper clipping collection that is not only not complete, but includes all kinds of irrelevant information!

This is getting just plain insane. In this very post of yours, you both go ballistic because I try to say that you’ll probably agree with me (attempting not to assume your position) then get angry when I assume (apparently incorrectly) that you think that the biggest piece of gun control legislation ever passed by the US government, the 1968 GCA, had some effect in reducing gun availability.

Since I did also say “From what I’ve seen the US does have more instances of school violence, but the ‘far’ part is what I’m interested in seeing numbers for,” (which you didn’t see fit to quote, probably because it doesn’t support your rant) it’s pretty clear that the ‘probably’ is referring to your agreement on using ‘more’ instead of ‘far more’.

Prior to 1968, you could legally sell guns at any store (no FFL required) manufacture guns for sale when you felt like it (no manufacturer FFL), sell guns directly by mail order (no requirement to ship to an FFL), buy guns anywhere (no ‘pistols only in home state, long guns must follow state law’), buy guns without ID (no 4473 form), buy guns as a non-citizen (no citizenship requirements, and no requirement for a dealer to ask) and sell a gun to a felon (no federal ‘no felons’ law, and no requirement for a dealer to ask - hell, you could even run ). ALL of that was legal before the 1968 GCA, none of it is legal afterwards (there are some minor exceptions, pardoned felons and certain resident aliens can buy guns under some circumstances, for example).

If you don’t think that reduced the legal availability of guns, you’re simply insane. If you don’t think that made an iota of difference to the availability of illegal guns, why do you think any law is going to make a difference in it?

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And what do you offer as proof for this claim?

I don’t offer a cite for claiming that the sun rises in the east either. And if you don’t believe it, you could just ask for a cite instead of throwing a hissy fit.

It doesn’t use the word “violent”, true, however the ‘contact crimes’ are what are normally considered violent crimes.

You might want to get a better debate coach than a hamster.

What do you want a cite for? That crimes involving a threat of violence are normally considered violent crimes? That the murder rate (as cited by you) is roughly .01% the size of the contact crime numbers from the ICVS (should I quote a math textbook on calculating percentages)?

Except that I’m not dead wrong - even your cite of alleged school violence included crimes using the threat of force with no actual violence occuring. If I can use your cites to back up the “shit” that allegedly “don’t fly”, you might want to invest in an umbrella.

Well, first tell me if your definition of ‘murder’ has a flaw, ie it introduces an element of subjectivity, then tell me if your definition of ‘attempted murder’ has any subjectivity.

(I’m not even going to bother with the bit on self-defense as a legitimate use for a gun).

And yet you still have not shown that A leads to B; correlation is not causation. I could just as easily make the argument that ‘The greater availability of far-right political organizations in the US leads to more homicides in the US as compared to, say, Western Europe. This trend is poigantly illustrated in both statistically verifiable homicde rates as well as instances of of school violence’. And it’s got just as much support as the one you’ve made.

That’s an outright lie. I rejected his data on violent crime, but on no occasion did I assert that Europe had a higher homicde rate than the US, or dispute the claim that the US homicide rate is higher. It’s not suprising that you’d make this false claim, though - I’m quite used to your crowd switching ‘murder’ and ‘violent crime’ and hoping that no one notices.

You mean the one that collects newspaper headlines that the people running the site happen to see and which clearly is incomplete, or the one that was removing entries during the course of the debate, again being clearly incomplete?

So what?

Okay guys, when did ‘cites’ by others overcome common sense? A debate with just facts as in just ‘numbers’ means what? A debate? I don’t think so. if you can not draw logical conclusions from the numbers then there is no debate. IMO. So try some thinking guys and do not get so lost in the numbers. YMMV :slight_smile:

Good point, Gus. Unfortunately, the “numbers” are the underlying issue. The “numbers” of people killed with firearms; the “numbers” of “children” (I italicize the word children because some questionable research included “children” up to the late 20s in age; the well known “13 children a day” figure?); “numbers,” their relevance and their causes are one of the major underpinnings of the whole debate.

Before we can debate what the numbers mean, I think it would be useful to be able to establish, within an acceptable margin of error, just what the numbers truly are.

Because some people, even on this board, yet not necessarily in this debate, aren’t above fudging numbers to score a point where guns are concerned.

When their mathematical legerdemain in exposed, they usually fall back on the ol’ reliable “even one death from a gun is too many!” routine. I was curious to see if this debate was actually headed in that direction. I didn’t think it was; inspite of the little side fra

Dang 'puter. As I was saying, inspite of the little side fracas between Ribo, Quix, and flowbark, this debate has overall been fairly intelligent and reasonable.