The Firing Line Forums

Go Back   The Firing Line Forums > The Conference Center > Law and Civil Rights

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old March 14, 2009, 01:41 PM   #76
ftd
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 11, 2009
Location: Virginia
Posts: 109
Deterrence

Good post Semi –

Although this thread was not originally about why many of us believe that carry should be allowed most everywhere, it is hard to separate that issue from the “reasons” the professor and others think that someone who espouses the benefits of carry is automatically suspect as dangerous.

The threat of carry does seem to deter at least some crime and save some lives. Will legal carry stop someone intent on massacre from starting the deed? Might, but I’m not sure in very many cases. There have, actually, been instances where massacres have been initiated at gun ranges, military bases, and even police stations. This seems to be when the object(s) of the hatred? are within those venues. Of course, almost all massacre attempts are prompted by venue along with whatever other reasons for the decision to act. Choice of venue seems, to me, to be most driven by the choice of targets and just how specific that choice is.

Those who believe that carry should be allowed generally believe that there is a deterrent value, but most are mainly concerned with having tool(s) easily available that are needed to end an encounter quickly if it does occur. If someone is able to stop the perp, future casualties within the current event has been achieved, not just in future events.

Are (massacreists?) rational or irrational? By our society’s definition they are irrational (or that they are driven by evil, which is also thought of by most of society as irrationality/insanity, but who knows for sure?). However, once the decision has been made they seem to act quite rationally within the context of the task they have chosen. They seem to have a rational plan, to methodical pursue that plan, and to remain on track throughout the entire ordeal. While there are some instances where an armed person has stopped a perp by threatening with a firearm, most evidence suggests that this is the least likely outcome. Probably because the decision to kill a lot of people is, to the perp, irrevocable, to be ended only when it is stopped, even if that is by self inflicted means.

It seems to me that the student who is the subject of this thread is more likely, after being bullied and disrespected, to do something dangerously irrational than before, i.e., he was treated irrationally and badly, and that he has likely entertained inner thoughts of responding in kind. I really respect him for not raising the emotional level of the event and I pray that God has given him peace regarding the whole thing.
ftd is offline  
Old March 14, 2009, 02:18 PM   #77
BobH
Member
 
Join Date: March 4, 2009
Posts: 26
Probable Cause or Reasonable Suspicion?

Thank you, Al, for enlightening me on the nuances of these terms. As I said, I am not trained in the law but was aware of the concept and couldn't name it.

My question remains: What evidence is there that the instructor had a suspicion that could be reasonably held that the student represented sufficient threat to warrant the report? If evidence exists, we've not seen it. If evidence does not exist, then I suggest that the instructor acted inappropriately and the consequence was an abridgement of the students civil rights; AND the instructor's actions warrant criticism and censure.

The instructor's fear of firearms posited here - real or imagined - couldn't rise to reasonable suspicion in my mind, but it might at law. Certainly the instructor's political position against firearm ownership - posited here - does not rise to reasonable suspicion in my mind. Finally, absent threat stated or implied by the student, if the instructor acted out of caution based on reaction to VT or any other news story (IOW, from a 'better safe than sorry' mentality) as has been posited, there could have been no reasonable suspicion in my mind and no probable cause because LE should not have been involved.

Similarly, what was the probable cause for the campus LEO to question the student? If it was, as has been suggested, the instructor's report and if that report was incorrectly based, then did probable cause exist? Based on what I know - and that is only what has been presented in this thread and links posted herein - the instructor acted without reasonable suspicion and that action was reprehensible if not culpable. Her actions, in turn, caused the campus LE to act; and I question whether the report correctly constituted probable cause.

That the student lived off-campus should have been a fact easily established before any other LE action was taken. Should LE have questioned the student knowing that he lived off campus. Should the instructor's suspicion give rise to probable cause? Should the police have taken action given that the student lived off-campus? Does status as a student subrogate rights that might exist for a non-student? What, if any, bearing does the student's storage of firearms off campus have on the issue? How was it established that the student owned firearms? Unless memory fails me, there was no evidence that the student admitted to owning firearms. If there was no evidence that the student owned firearms, I suggest that both the instructor AND LE acted inappropriately and culpably.

Too frequently I've seen these points discussed only in terms of legal nuance and court precedent (IOW in terms of law instead of terms of justice and right). I, for one, don't believe that the legal system is consistently correct in its operation; nor do I believe that it is consistently concerned with rights and justice, especially where the latter might contravene the desire and perceived best interests of the legal system when there is a perceived conflict between those interests and the interests and desires of those who are subjected to the machinations of the system.

The burden of proof here should, in my mind, lie with the instructor and LE not with the student. Again, these are only my opinions. I am a layman, not someone trained or experience at law.
BobH is offline  
Old March 14, 2009, 02:32 PM   #78
Whiteboy67
Senior Member
 
Join Date: December 10, 2008
Location: California
Posts: 324
My college hosts swat demonstrations which is awesome. They get students involved with room clearing excercises (as clearers+hiders) and a lof other fun stuff. It was put together by our Administration of Justice club :P
Whiteboy67 is offline  
Old March 14, 2009, 02:36 PM   #79
ftd
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 11, 2009
Location: Virginia
Posts: 109
probable cause

Isn't probable cause established either by an LE's actual observations as witness to an active situation (and subject to review after the event), OR by a judge based a request and sworn testimony by LE('s)? That is, even a medicial/psych or other appropriate professional can only judge whether to report, not determine whether there is probable cause - and the LE needed a judge to validate any probable cause. Please, someone who knows, fill us in.

If my speculation is correct, probable cause was not established in this case.
ftd is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 11:40 AM   #80
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
Quote:
Really? Are you sure that is a completely honest or finished thought, or simply an emotional idea that wants the world to be a certain way that feels good or allows a specific world perception to be true? Think of the shootings that have turned into mass murders in the last few decades. Where have they occurred? Schools, churches, daycares, office buildings and malls that deny the carry of personal firearms, but no one goes into a police station, gun range, military base, guard armory, or any other facility where it is known and accepted that there are people there with loaded weapons who are willing to use it.
Deterrent?

1. Churches - Colorado church recently
2. Malls - Tacoma Mall
3. Police Station - Tyler, TX courthouse
4. Military base - there has been a marine (IIRC) who went on a rampage at a base.
5. DC sniper - in Virginia, there is CCW and open carry
6. There are several gun related suicides at gun ranges. Rampages - not yet.
7. UT Austin, TX tower - started a rifle fight in a venue awash in rifles as we saw.
8. Columbine - there was the known presence of an armed officer.

These kind of overblown arguments are sometimes due to zealotry but zealotry does not always aid in argument.

The deterrence argument is hard to demonstrate in the case of what is known as 'suicide with hostile intent'. The shooter wants to die. They have an issue, either specific or symbolic, with a locale. Their attack and their death is to make a statement. They want to punish and die as a 'warrior'. They expect to kill many quickly and then die reasonable quickly in the action. If they wanted to just kill, you would get folks like the DC sniper. Note, they were not deterred by Virginia CCW or open carry.

The reason for carry is that you have a better chance of stopping an attacker. A targeted attack by some who wants to die but kill first isn't going to be deterred that much by the small chance of having someone armed.

Only 1 to 4% of the population get permits/licenses. Some estimate only 80% carry even with a license. They want a 'car' gun - whatever use that is.

The argument needs to shift away from deterrence as the first point to being able to engage the shooter quickly as the strongest argument. BTW, that means if you claim this second argument - you need to train a touch and not just posture. Sorry to be seemingly nasty here but I see too much of that from some on the INTERNETS!

In some of the instances, I mentioned above and others, armed personnel aided in quickly stopping the shooting. However, at Tacoma and Tyler, the civilian didn't do well. At the Colorado church and Applachian law school - the folks were trained LEO or ex-LEO.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 03:45 PM   #81
Evan Thomas
Senior Member
 
Join Date: July 7, 2008
Location: Upper midwest
Posts: 5,631
Getting back to the OP for a minute...

As I think about this case, I can't help being struck by its resemblance to other cases in which people were detained based on some form of "profiling," i.e., were targeted because of their membership in a group which was seen as a threat by the people who reported "suspicious activity."

The case of the "flying imams" who were removed from a US Airways plane in Minneapolis in 2006 comes to mind here:
Shahin and the other imams were escorted from the flight in handcuffs after a passenger handed a note to a flight attendant expressing concern over the group's “suspicious activity,” according to the airport police report. The group was taken off the flight in handcuffs, and after several hours of questioning by federal authorities, released. But though the airline refunded their tickets, U.S. Airways—which released a statement Tuesday saying it does "not tolerate discrimination of any kind"—reportedly denied them passage on any of its other flights and refused to help them obtain tickets through another airline.

What was the group’s suspicious activity? According to the report filed by the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport police, the group’s loud chants of “Allah, Allah, Allah,” [They were praying -- V.] initially drew the suspicion of nearby passengers—one of whom said he heard the imams make anti-American comments regarding the war in Iraq.
(Newsweek)
Various other allegations of "suspicious behavior" were made -- where they sat on the plane, and such -- but essentially, these men, five of whom were either US citizens or permanent residents, were detained because of their verbal behavior: "expressing their views," if you will.

As in the Wahlberg case:
  1. They were members of a group another citizen felt threatened by.
  2. That person was made uncomfortable by their behavior and reported it to the authorities.
  3. They were questioned, determined to pose no threat, and released.
  4. This occurred in the context of a climate of fear of incidents of mass murder in the venues where the two cases occurred.

They filed a civil rights lawsuit against the airline and the airport; I think it's due to be heard in August.

In the meantime, the Dept. of Transportation has said that their rights were not violated:
The Associated Press, 19 Feb. '09
MINNEAPOLIS — The U.S. Department of Transportation says US Airways didn't discriminate against six imams when it removed them from a Phoenix-bound flight at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport in 2006.
So Mr. Wahlberg was seen as a threat because he was a gun owner who expressed his views; the six imams at the Minneapolis airport were seen as a threat because they were Muslims who expressed theirs. What is the difference here, in terms of the civil rights aspects of the two cases?

Last edited by Evan Thomas; March 16, 2009 at 11:02 AM. Reason: To correct a factual error.
Evan Thomas is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 04:30 PM   #82
Tennessee Gentleman
Senior Member
 
Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 1,775
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glenn E. Meyer
The deterrence argument is hard to demonstrate in the case of what is known as 'suicide with hostile intent'. The shooter wants to die. They have an issue, either specific or symbolic, with a locale. Their attack and their death is to make a statement. They want to punish and die as a 'warrior'. They expect to kill many quickly and then die reasonable quickly in the action. If they wanted to just kill, you would get folks like the DC sniper. Note, they were not deterred by Virginia CCW or open carry.
Glenn, I have often thought (in an unacademic and unscholarly way) that a rampage or spree killer cannot be detered only interdicted.

Would you agree with that simpleton thought? My question to you is what impact if any would the belief that a fair number of people were CCW have on the target selection process of the BG?

Would he look somewhere where there might be less CCW? Or would he not even consider it and just go wherever.

My sense tells me that someone who wants to die will not be deterred from the rampage by CCW and would instead seek "help". What do you think?
__________________
"God and the Soldier we adore, in time of trouble but not before. When the danger's past and the wrong been righted, God is forgotten and the Soldier slighted."
Anonymous Soldier.
Tennessee Gentleman is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 04:54 PM   #83
Semi-jacketed
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 7, 2001
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 171
Glenn Myer, I do not take your response as nasty. I see not ill intent there, but do see some frustration. Actually I agree with you, but there is indeed a deterrent factor. As an aside, a courthouse is not a police station unless one is HQ'd there. And my previous argument as to making carry onerous while allowing it remains valid in Virginia as well as Alabama. Saying that, "Yes, you can CCW," with one side of the mouth, while denying a host of places to legally carry out of the other side shows the real intent. (i.e., We'll let you carry to shut you up, but not places that make us nervous or where people actually congregate.)

A single, inattentive LEO is no deterrent to anyone. Which was part of my point. A single armed individual may deter a moment of opportunity; however, should there be no deterrent factor at all at least the act of termination of the threat is available when carry is actually freely allowed. That option does not exist when carry is so curtailed as to be unviable, but allowed in theory.

To a truly irrational person, there is no such thing as deterrence. In their damaged mind they have a mission. As you stated, then an armed response may be necessary to end it. Only possible when armed obviously. But to truly believe that a criminal wouldn't be deterred by the high probability of armed response is not thinking things through.
Semi-jacketed is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 05:08 PM   #84
TLeo
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 18, 2009
Location: NC
Posts: 254
Just to clarify a few questions about probable cause....probable cause is usually defined as a set of facts that would lead a reasonable person to believe that a person commited a crime and this probable cause is what is needed to make an arrest. Police do not need probable cause to question this or any person and he apparently willingly met with them when the asked. Unless he wanted to leave and was illegally detained his rights were not violated. They had a duty to investigate this report once it was made. The professor, on the other hand is in my opinion, guilty of at least a gross over reaction and unjustified in making this kind of report to police. In my opinion ,if the student feels he was somehow harmed by the actions of this professor then he may have a basis for a civil lawsuit against her and the school.
TLeo is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 05:14 PM   #85
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
Reasonable points, Semi - and I think we are getting somewhere.

It depends what you mean by 'criminal'. I have thought this through quite a bit and spent lots of time reading the professional criminological, law and psych literature on this.

I think the standard use of criminal refers to an economic motivation. The literature is strong in suggesting the economic motivation is subject to risk aversion at the level of what we see with standard CCW/CHL carry rates. Thus, we get deterrence. Same with home burglary - clearly influenced by the risk of an armed homeowner.

The rampage killer, with suicidal intent, wants to die and probably isn't deterred by the level of carry we would see in schools. This is my guess, of course, but even with legalization of carry, most classrooms will not have an armed person. There would have to be a change to an Israeli like situation to have a significant increase in armed folks around.

That 1-4% licensed with only 20% likely to carry isn't going to be different at schools.

To be ruthless - we know that women carry less (sorry, Pax, Tam). We have had killers with high levels of firepower deliberately target female run classes. Go to one of those. Even with carry permitted - the odds of running into an armed person are small in the initial wave.

From my reading, I just don't think that deterrent is our strongest argument. Just my view about what would really happen from the person who wants to die. That's why I think, my argument is:

What would you do, if you heard shots down the hall or Cho steps in?

If I weren't immediately killed and I had my normal carry gun - I might stop him.

Could you? You would die in the fetal position. Or trying the charge of the laptop and pencil stabbing brigade.

Now we are stuck with text messages and after the fact memorial services (which prime the next killer, BTW).

So to conclude, criminals and rampages - different contingencies IMHO.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 06:36 PM   #86
ftd
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 11, 2009
Location: Virginia
Posts: 109
Getting back to the OP for a minute...

Quote:
In the meantime, the Dept. of Transportation has said that their rights were not violated:
The Associated Press, 19 Feb. '09
MINNEAPOLIS — The U.S. Department of Transportation says US Airways didn't discriminate against six imams when it removed them from a Phoenix-bound flight at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport in 2006.
So Mr. Wahlberg was seen as a threat because he was a gun owner who expressed his views; the six imams at the Minneapolis airport were seen as a threat because they were Muslims who expressed theirs. What is the difference here, in terms of the civil rights aspects of the two cases?
The incident you cited, Vanya, is casually similar to the thread subject, but is crucially different. The most important difference is that under current law when people are flying commercially they do not have the same civil rights as when thay are not.
ftd is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 10:14 PM   #87
alan
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 7, 1999
Posts: 3,847
ftd:

Re your closing observation in post 86, "The incident you cited, Vanya, is casually similar to the thread subject, but is crucially different. The most important difference is that under current law when people are flying commercially they do not have the same civil rights as when they are not ", the following comes to mind. I could be taking what you said out of context.

In any event, the following question comes to mind. Do we retain the right of, and or the freedom to travel. It appears that you are saying that re a particular method of travel, we don't. I find this troubling, though perhaps I'm being overly sensitive.

Also, the following comes to mind, an observation attributed to Benjamin Franklin, circa 1760 or thereabouts. No quotation marks are used because I'm not sure of the exact wording, however I believe I've retained the general sense of Franklin's comments. He that sacrifices essential liberties to obtain temporary security shall have neither liberties nor security. Would you perhaps be willing to reconsider your reference to travel via a particuar method?
alan is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 11:10 PM   #88
ftd
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 11, 2009
Location: Virginia
Posts: 109
Quote:
In any event, the following question comes to mind. Do we retain the right of, and or the freedom to travel. It appears that you are saying that re a particular method of travel, we don't. I find this troubling, though perhaps I'm being overly sensitive.
Alan -
I'm not sure if I am understanding you. I'm reading it as you believe that I said that there is some limitation on the right to travel it self. If not, could you please explain? If so, that is not what I was trying to say.

During plane travel other civil liberties are blunted and or erased. The right to free speech is blunted (if you say or are thought to have said the wrong things you can be taken into custody and removed from the plane and even charged for a crime for what you said. Even vehement complaining about service while in flight has apparently resulted in criminal charges). You also undergo searches of possessions and body that in other circumstances would be illegal. Do I think that this is bad? I dislike it enough to now avoid air travel as much as possible. Do I approve? No, but I’m not sure that it isn’t necessary given the state of our world.

Also, in the recent cases of 12+ hour imprisonments (my word) on airplanes waiting to depart certainly approaches kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment. The practice, however, has been found (I think), uncriminal in these cases.

So in a way your right to travel via certain ways are restricted in that if you don’t sign off on losing other rights, you can’t fly commercial. That is not what I meant in post 86, but maybe I should have included that thought.

Either way, I was not trying to justify the situation, but rather differentiating the travel issue, given current law, from the school project issue in this thread, which Vanya tried to equate.
ftd is offline  
Old March 15, 2009, 11:59 PM   #89
BobH
Member
 
Join Date: March 4, 2009
Posts: 26
Incredulous

TLeo says (in part)
Quote:
Just to clarify a few questions about probable cause....probable cause is usually defined as a set of facts that would lead a reasonable person to believe that a person commited a crime and this probable cause is what is needed to make an arrest. Police do not need probable cause to question this or any person and he apparently willingly met with them when the asked. Unless he wanted to leave and was illegally detained his rights were not violated.
You might note that my misuse of the term 'probable cause' has been corrected. The circumstance that I was trying to castigate was the instructor's reaction not rising to reasonable suspicion. I commented further that I think the LEs over-reacted by not first determining the student's address. If they had called me to come in to talk (and not lied about why, as they are allowed to do), I would have told them to take a hike or get a warrant. Under no circumstance would I have gone in voluntarily to discuss it but might have allowed them to come to me to do so.

Then Vanya cites the case of people repeatedly saying "Allah, Allah, Allah" on board an airplane in at post 9-11 world and states (in part) the following:
Quote:
So Mr. Wahlberg was seen as a threat because he was a gun owner who expressed his views; the six imams at the Minneapolis airport were seen as a threat because they were Muslims who expressed theirs. What is the difference here, in terms of the civil rights aspects of the two cases
I have to say that this comparison must be a blatant troll.

In the college incident, the students were completing an assignment - their speech was elicited even if the subject was not proscribed. Unless there was something about the content or the manner in which the students made their case, there could be no reasonable cause for the police report. I'm amazed that academicians who are so often over zealous to protect academic freedoms could be motivated to take the actions they did. Absent any threat - real or implied - the instructor and the faculty were just wrong-headed. The LEA, however, was probably duty-bound to investigate after the report was made.

As for imams, one can speculate about their behavior and their intent as one can speculate about the intentions of the passenger who passed a note to the flight attendant; but I find it incredible that anyone can try to draw a parallel between the treatment the imams received and that dealt to the student. It seems to me entirely reasonable to observe the actions of a group of people traveling together and repeating islamic prayers on an airplane and conclude that their behavior was questionable after having experienced the attacks of 9-11-2001. Such behavior on the part of the imams could more reasonably (pun intended) be thought analogous to yelling "FIRE!" in a crowded theater, id est, the behavior was provocative and thereby not protected.

The example of individuals ceding rights by choosing to pursue certain activities - as is the case when one chooses to travel on airlines - has been well made. I find it entirely relevant and appropriate and the parallel to the school case to be . . . well, ludicrously naive or provocatively disingenuous.
BobH is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 03:04 AM   #90
gretske
Junior member
 
Join Date: May 3, 2008
Location: Lake Murray, SC
Posts: 182
Quote:
It seems to me entirely reasonable to observe the actions of a group of people traveling together and repeating islamic prayers on an airplane and conclude that their behavior was questionable after having experienced the attacks of 9-11-2001.
BINGO!

If you read the eyewitness reports of the actions of the 6 imams, there was a lot more involved than just chanting "Allah." They also changed seats after boarding taking "strategic" positions ala 9/11, asked for seat belt extensions when not needed, signaled to each other in code while on the plane, made loud anti-American comments and took repeated trips to the bathroom.

By the way, it turns out they were on the way home from a Muslim convention in Minneapolis, where political activism for combating anti-Muslim attitudes in America was extensively discussed.

There is no moral equivalence between the deliberately provocative acts of Muslim political leaders and a student authoring an essay advocating legal carry on-campus by licensed individuals. None.
gretske is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 09:47 AM   #91
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
Discussing specifics of the Imans is a bit of a thread diversion for this one.

I think the point was that in times of stress and fear, some folks overanalyze what might be harmless behavior but that looks frightening.

Someone not knowledgeable about the gun debate might overreact to someone postulating more guns on campus. After 9/11, any indication of terrorism might be overinterpreted.

For example, an extreme - Sikhs were harassed for their turbans when they have nothing to do with Islam.

Academics, Joe Six Pack and all of us - probably do such.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 10:10 AM   #92
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
Some more info on the German shooter and predictions as I mentioned before:

http://www.policeone.com/active-shoo...ned-of-attack/
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 10:33 AM   #93
pax
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 16, 2000
Location: In a state of flux
Posts: 7,520
Quote:
However, at Tacoma and Tyler, the civilian didn't do well. At the Colorado church and Applachian law school - the folks were trained LEO or ex-LEO.
Glenn ~

The intervention of both the Tacoma and Tyler civilians did save other people's lives. No question at all about that. They just failed to save their own lives while they were at it. (Tacoma survived, paralyzed; but his survival wasn't his own doing. He was down and helpless.)

If you're an ordinary citizen carrying a gun, get training. The life you save could be your own.

pax
__________________
Kathy Jackson
My personal website: Cornered Cat
pax is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 10:52 AM   #94
Evan Thomas
Senior Member
 
Join Date: July 7, 2008
Location: Upper midwest
Posts: 5,631
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glenn E. Meyer
I think the point was that in times of stress and fear, some folks overanalyze what might be harmless behavior but that looks frightening.

Someone not knowledgeable about the gun debate might overreact to someone postulating more guns on campus. After 9/11, any indication of terrorism might be overinterpreted.
That was exactly my point. Overreactions occurred in both cases, and in both cases the people who were "singled out" felt that they had been treated unjustly: that their rights had been violated. If we accept that it's OK to curtail the civil rights of airplane passengers in the interest of public safety, then it's OK to do the same thing in other situations -- it's just a question of where and when.

And in terms of when it's appropriate to be afraid of members of a given group, I'd add that, as far as I'm aware, since 9/11 no acts of mass murder have been carried out in this country by Muslim citizens; but several have been carried out by white, male gun owners (men who owned guns well before they committed their crimes) -- I'm sure we've all been annoyed at the way the press says "He had an ARSENAL!" when, say, eight guns are found in the house of one of these people. (I have seven... so I guess I'd better not buy any more...). So given that history, fearing gun owners might seem as reasonable to someone as uninformed as Professor Anderson as a blanket fear of Muslims does to many others.

My post on this was not intended as a troll, but as a way of getting all of us, myself included, to think more critically about the balance between protecting civil rights and protecting public safety. Note that I did NOT suggest that the case of the "Sheiks on a Plane" () should have been handled differently. What I asked was how the two cases compare, given that in both, the people targeted for investigation thought, with some justification, that their rights had been violated.

And here's a related question, also quite genuine: I believe (correct me if I'm wrong) that the current version of the Patriot Act includes the "John Doe Provision," which protects individuals who report suspicious activity from civil rights lawsuits. If Mr. Wahlberg were to try to sue Professor Anderson, would this provision apply? Why or why not? What's the threshold for "suspicion?"

Last edited by Evan Thomas; March 16, 2009 at 11:04 AM.
Evan Thomas is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 11:37 AM   #95
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
Pax - I know that - I tend to criticize those heroic folks in my mantra about appropriate training.

The Tacoma gentleman couldn't answer what Ayoob called the Question - could you shoot? Thus, he was brave but a lesson for those who would act.

The Tyler gentleman also violated tactical rules according to analyses by folks like Chris Byrd (Bird?). I don't mean to criticize them for trying.

It was only a side comment on the action and a caution that if one uses those cases in an argument for civilian carry - you should be able to deal with that critique. I like 'Red team' arguments so you avoid not being able to support yourself.

When it was claimed that rampages happen in places where victims are unarmed (as a blanket statement), that can be shown to be not accurate. That was my point. I think when we make the case for the utility of lethal force instrumentation, we have to have facts and arguments all in order.

I have seen folks argue that the Colorado intervention really 'didn't count' as a civilian intervention because the heroine was a past LEO.

So it was a training aside in the conversation of rampages only occuring in gun free areas. No offense to folks who tried. Just a reasonable after action view.

Thanks for pointing out that they did help.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 02:06 PM   #96
BobH
Member
 
Join Date: March 4, 2009
Posts: 26
Gagging on a Gnat and Swallowing a Camel

That's the only way I can describe the dismissals by both Vanya and Glenn. To take the 1% of similarity between the two incidents and use that 1% to equate them is ludicrous. Yes, the imams probably thought they were treated unfairly but they provoked the situation and thus the treatment. We have no evidence that the student felt he was treated unfairly and he DID NOTHING PROVOCATIVE! Where is your evidence that there is any equality of concept in the comparison? Your argument - a very, very weak and ill-considered one IMO - has no traction. It doesn't give credence to all of the variables at play but chooses only one tiny aspect. That's not just poor logic and bad debate technique (grade=F or "Fail" if Pass/Fail grading), it borders on dishonesty (to the same extent and in the same manner as misdirection in advertising, political campaigns, etc. do).

If you two can't produce more compelling arguments than those proposed so far, fold your tents and steal quietly away in the night. Your arguments are as specious and perverted as those who would attack the SA. We deserve better from you. You do yourselves grave injustices by the narrowness of your argument and the speciousness of your views.

A word to the wise: "Don't bring a knife to a gun fight!"
BobH is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 02:25 PM   #97
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
1. You misunderstood what I said. I was explaining the process, so your rant is quite off base. I did not dismiss anything. That is in your emotional misperception. I made no value judgment on the Imans. So you are wrong. What I did was an explanation of how behaviors are misinterpreted. Whether the Imans did XY or Z wasn't my point. Thus, your analysis of what I said was incorrect. I was discussing the general process.

The issue of the motivation of the professor is easy to view as a deliberate antigun agenda (as commonly done on the Internet) or perhaps someone going off on a misinterpretation of cues. That could be generated by fear and not a political agenda. That was what I was pointed out and not to be taken as perverted or an attack on the SA, unless you didn't understand what I said. So again, your analysis of my comments is specious, vacuous and incorrect.

Is that perfectly clear. I can write it five other ways if you want.

2. Personal invective is not allowed. You need to argue better than that. If you don't like what I said, even if you do understand it now - please feel free to have the list owners dock my salary or remove me.

There is an unfortunate tendency by some to want ideological purity to their self-defined ideological position on gun rights. If you don't fit in - then you are an enemy of their state of mind. But that is better argued if you understand the arguments. Get of the list, quit the cause. Only my definition of the true believer is worthy of contributing to my self-defined view of the world and/or 2nd Amend.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens

Last edited by Glenn E. Meyer; March 16, 2009 at 05:29 PM. Reason: I'm back.
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 16, 2009, 11:11 PM   #98
alan
Senior Member
 
Join Date: June 7, 1999
Posts: 3,847
FTD:

I had replied to your post, I believe it was 86, but my computer appears to have eaten the reply, and I'm quite annoyed, not at all your fault. I will therefore wait till tomorrow, and reconstruct my thoughts, when I cool off.
alan is offline  
Old March 17, 2009, 09:42 AM   #99
Glenn E. Meyer
Senior Member
 
Join Date: November 17, 2000
Posts: 20,064
In this thread - we discussed deterrence as compared to threat termination as reasons to consider carry at schools or anywhere.

For information's sake - if you can - read:

http://www.policeone.com/active-shoo...led-by-police/

http://www.policeone.com/active-shoo...more-violence/

Such a person is not deterred as he is clearly a case of suicide with hostile intent. He clearly wanted to die to make a statement, punish the specific locale, etc.

To make this clear (to some who need clarification) - I am not arguing against deterrence as part of the argument. In Israel - with an much higher level of armed presence, there is clear evidence of deterrence of gun based terrorist attacks from statements of captured terrorists. I am arguing that there is subset of folks who want to die and will not be deterred. In Israel - we probably saw the move to suicide bombers because gun based attacks lacked efficacy. Just as speculation, if we did increase carry, we might see a shift in such attacks to softer targets and other tactics. We know such occurs with property crimes. Terrible thing to think about.

I am arguing that we argue for quick termination of gun based attacks as the first argument for carry.
__________________
NRA, TSRA, IDPA, NTI, Polite Soc. - Aux Armes, Citoyens
Glenn E. Meyer is offline  
Old March 17, 2009, 09:54 AM   #100
Tennessee Gentleman
Senior Member
 
Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 1,775
So Glenn, although you did not answer my earlier question directly (that's OK) you would agree that Rampage/Spree killers cannot be deterred only interdicted? Therefore the best argument for CCW against this threat would be mitigation of damage?
__________________
"God and the Soldier we adore, in time of trouble but not before. When the danger's past and the wrong been righted, God is forgotten and the Soldier slighted."
Anonymous Soldier.
Tennessee Gentleman is offline  
Closed Thread


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:57 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
This site and contents, including all posts, Copyright © 1998-2021 S.W.A.T. Magazine
Copyright Complaints: Please direct DMCA Takedown Notices to the registered agent: thefiringline.com
Page generated in 0.12943 seconds with 9 queries