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E.L. Green
Posts: 639
Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2005 11:36 am

nklr

Post by E.L. Green » Fri Jun 01, 2007 12:44 pm

--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "James Morrow Sr" wrote:
> > Your entirely right, someone like you shouldn't have a gun, probably
like
> most people. > > However, many who consider not being a victim, do learn to use a
firearm. I
> practice shoot more than 10,000 rounds per year. About 50X what an
average
> police office might shoot. >
So have you ever had a gun aimed at you? Do you know how you would react? Have you ever killed someone with your gun? Do you know -- I mean *KNOW*, not just conjecture -- that you would be capable of doing so? Or is this all just bluster based on conjecture? I've luckily never had to kill someone, either as a member of the military or otherwise. Those I've talked to who've had to do so report it is a very sobering event, and that only their military training and the fact that their buddies were depending on them allowed them to do it.
> Certainly a gun or nothing else, GUARANTEEs you will survive a violent > attack.
Yeah, that is why none of our soldiers ever die in Iraq, because their possessions of guns ensures their survival. Sigh.
> Not bringing a gun to a violent attack WILL GUARNTEE you will not
survive. Right, which is why I'm dead. (Sarcasm intended).
> The whole key here is, NO GUN CONTROL. Those that want them should have
I'm not going to argue this one. We have a 2nd Amendment. Whether it is a good idea or not, it's there and should be obeyed.
> them (criminals do), those that do not want them, do not have to
have. In
> CCW states, the majority of the people who are not CCW, are getting some > effect from the small number who do carry. Criminals are more selective > when they know their potential victim has the right to carry.
That is a nice theory, but the actual results do not seem to bear that out. COW states have much higher levels of gun violence than non-COW states (the much-heralded "improvement" in crime figures in those states is part of a nationwide improvement, but relative to non-COW states the improvement has been zero, zilch, nada). The fact is that criminals are criminals because, for the most part, they are *STUPID*. They don't consider shit like the possibility of getting killed by firearms-bearing civilians. I've dealt with criminals in an institutional environment, and the whole cause and effect thingy just goes *whoosh* right over their head. Indeed, that's one of the things we try to drill into them, that the treatment they receive in life depends on what they do. We don't succeed very often.
> On 6/1/07, E.L. Green wrote: > > > > --- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com
, "monte
> > quint" wrote: > > > You, "being the victim of gun violence" should have some special > > > insight. > > > > > > Were you a "clear headed negotiator" before the violence or
after and
> > > what good did the "negotiating" do you? > > > > > > Having seen some small amount of violence and its results firmly
believe
> > > a gun in my hand is far preferable to one at my head. > > > > Just out of curiousity, have you ever had a gun pointed at you? Do you > > have any idea how you would respond in that situation? Have you ever > > pointed a gun at someone in a violent situation? Do you have any idea > > how accurately you could shoot it under those conditions? > > > > I say this because police officers are actually trained in how to > > respond to that situation, and police officer firearms accuracy is > > legendary -- for being awful. Police officers are also actually > > trained in shoot/don't shoot situations -- and still occasionally > > manage to shoot people like Amadou Diallo, who was guilty of nothing > > more than standing in a darkened foyer. And despite the fact that they > > fired 41 shots at him at point blank range (less than 10 feet away), > > less than half the bullets (19) actually hit him. > > > > Frankly, I doubt my ability to a) accurately discern a threat in time > > to clear a weapon in a way that would make any difference, and b) > > actually hit what I'm aiming at when the adrenalin is pumping. As far > > as negotiating skills go, you never hear about the school shootings > > that did NOT happen because the kid got talked down. My response to > > those situations was always to get very, very quiet then start talking > > in a very calm and rational voice. It almost doesn't matter what you > > say in that situation, you just want to de-escalate from violence to > > words. 99.9% of the time, it does work. The kid ends up getting talked > > to the teacher break room (not the principal's office, there might be > > other kids in and around the principal's office, you know there won't > > be any in the teacher break room besides the kids are generally > > interested in seeing what's in there), and voluntarily hands over the > > gun then is turned over to the police shortly thereafter. I won't give > > you details (federal law protects student privacy, state law protects > > the privacy of juveniles in the juvenile justice system). Let's just > > say that more guns in this situation, for the most part, would result > > in many many more deaths than what currently happens, both because of > > the incompetence of untrained civilians who can't hit what they shoot > > at when the adrenalin is pumping (what, you think you can do better > > than a trained cop? HAH!), and because it escalated a non-shooting > > situation into a shooting situation. > > > > I find that people who get all macho about guns generally haven't had > > one aimed at them or had to aim them at someone. When you're in that > > situation, you become very serious indeed. > > > > Anyhow, get on back to your gun control discussion, I won't get > > involved in it. I just wanted to address the notion that "a gun in > > hand is better than one at the head." Real life just doesn't work that > > way, unlike the fantasies that so many people who think with their > > balls have built around themselves as some gigantic John Wayne figure > > who will shoot bad guys dead with one bullet to the head. Real life is > > that you don't know the bad guy is a bad guy until the gun is already > > at your head, and at that point a gun in hand just gets you dead. > > > > > > > > > > -- > James Morrow Sr > Union, MO > '00' RT + dual plug + Bunkhouse > '00' BUSA + 15hp > '05' KLR650 + big fun factor > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >

E Hines
Posts: 179
Joined: Sun Mar 05, 2006 10:16 pm

nklr

Post by E Hines » Fri Jun 01, 2007 2:34 pm

Not theory, fact. You need to look up the cites with the most violent crimes and it is always the cities and states that have the most gun control (look at Washington D.C.). I have lived in lived in four countries and on both coasts and now reside in Texas and have only had a gun pointed at me in California (three times). I do not want to live like those from New Orleans waiting for someone to help me because I can not help myself. I have some friends that worked in New Orleans after Katrina and than in Kansas after the tornadoes. They said the people in New Orleans where waiting for everyone to do everything for them and complained all the time. The wonderful people of Kansas almost had to be forced to accept any help and were very thankful to everyone. Now, how about we just talk about KLR's. "E.L. Green" wrote: --- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "James Morrow Sr" wrote:
> > Your entirely right, someone like you shouldn't have a gun, probably
like
> most people. > > However, many who consider not being a victim, do learn to use a
firearm. I
> practice shoot more than 10,000 rounds per year. About 50X what an
average
> police office might shoot. >
So have you ever had a gun aimed at you? Do you know how you would react? Have you ever killed someone with your gun? Do you know -- I mean *KNOW*, not just conjecture -- that you would be capable of doing so? Or is this all just bluster based on conjecture? I've luckily never had to kill someone, either as a member of the military or otherwise. Those I've talked to who've had to do so report it is a very sobering event, and that only their military training and the fact that their buddies were depending on them allowed them to do it.
> Certainly a gun or nothing else, GUARANTEEs you will survive a violent > attack.
Yeah, that is why none of our soldiers ever die in Iraq, because their possessions of guns ensures their survival. Sigh.
> Not bringing a gun to a violent attack WILL GUARNTEE you will not
survive. Right, which is why I'm dead. (Sarcasm intended).
> The whole key here is, NO GUN CONTROL. Those that want them should have
I'm not going to argue this one. We have a 2nd Amendment. Whether it is a good idea or not, it's there and should be obeyed.
> them (criminals do), those that do not want them, do not have to
have. In
> CCW states, the majority of the people who are not CCW, are getting some > effect from the small number who do carry. Criminals are more selective > when they know their potential victim has the right to carry.
That is a nice theory, but the actual results do not seem to bear that out. COW states have much higher levels of gun violence than non-COW states (the much-heralded "improvement" in crime figures in those states is part of a nationwide improvement, but relative to non-COW states the improvement has been zero, zilch, nada). The fact is that criminals are criminals because, for the most part, they are *STUPID*. They don't consider shit like the possibility of getting killed by firearms-bearing civilians. I've dealt with criminals in an institutional environment, and the whole cause and effect thingy just goes *whoosh* right over their head. Indeed, that's one of the things we try to drill into them, that the treatment they receive in life depends on what they do. We don't succeed very often.
> On 6/1/07, E.L. Green wrote: > > > > --- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com
, "monte
> > quint" wrote: > > > You, "being the victim of gun violence" should have some special > > > insight. > > > > > > Were you a "clear headed negotiator" before the violence or
after and
> > > what good did the "negotiating" do you? > > > > > > Having seen some small amount of violence and its results firmly
believe
> > > a gun in my hand is far preferable to one at my head. > > > > Just out of curiousity, have you ever had a gun pointed at you? Do you > > have any idea how you would respond in that situation? Have you ever > > pointed a gun at someone in a violent situation? Do you have any idea > > how accurately you could shoot it under those conditions? > > > > I say this because police officers are actually trained in how to > > respond to that situation, and police officer firearms accuracy is > > legendary -- for being awful. Police officers are also actually > > trained in shoot/don't shoot situations -- and still occasionally > > manage to shoot people like Amadou Diallo, who was guilty of nothing > > more than standing in a darkened foyer. And despite the fact that they > > fired 41 shots at him at point blank range (less than 10 feet away), > > less than half the bullets (19) actually hit him. > > > > Frankly, I doubt my ability to a) accurately discern a threat in time > > to clear a weapon in a way that would make any difference, and b) > > actually hit what I'm aiming at when the adrenalin is pumping. As far > > as negotiating skills go, you never hear about the school shootings > > that did NOT happen because the kid got talked down. My response to > > those situations was always to get very, very quiet then start talking > > in a very calm and rational voice. It almost doesn't matter what you > > say in that situation, you just want to de-escalate from violence to > > words. 99.9% of the time, it does work. The kid ends up getting talked > > to the teacher break room (not the principal's office, there might be > > other kids in and around the principal's office, you know there won't > > be any in the teacher break room besides the kids are generally > > interested in seeing what's in there), and voluntarily hands over the > > gun then is turned over to the police shortly thereafter. I won't give > > you details (federal law protects student privacy, state law protects > > the privacy of juveniles in the juvenile justice system). Let's just > > say that more guns in this situation, for the most part, would result > > in many many more deaths than what currently happens, both because of > > the incompetence of untrained civilians who can't hit what they shoot > > at when the adrenalin is pumping (what, you think you can do better > > than a trained cop? HAH!), and because it escalated a non-shooting > > situation into a shooting situation. > > > > I find that people who get all macho about guns generally haven't had > > one aimed at them or had to aim them at someone. When you're in that > > situation, you become very serious indeed. > > > > Anyhow, get on back to your gun control discussion, I won't get > > involved in it. I just wanted to address the notion that "a gun in > > hand is better than one at the head." Real life just doesn't work that > > way, unlike the fantasies that so many people who think with their > > balls have built around themselves as some gigantic John Wayne figure > > who will shoot bad guys dead with one bullet to the head. Real life is > > that you don't know the bad guy is a bad guy until the gun is already > > at your head, and at that point a gun in hand just gets you dead. > > > > > > > > > > -- > James Morrow Sr > Union, MO > '00' RT + dual plug + Bunkhouse > '00' BUSA + 15hp > '05' KLR650 + big fun factor > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

horkdoom
Posts: 15
Joined: Thu Mar 29, 2007 7:36 am

nklr

Post by horkdoom » Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:01 pm

As others have stated this conversation does not need to be here, as much as I love to argue about guns and gun rights, this is not the place, please take it somewhere else and bring back the talks about doohickeys and oil and tires and all that good KLR stuff that we can argue about. Thanks --Michael

Vladimir Vega III
Posts: 35
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 12:30 pm

nklr

Post by Vladimir Vega III » Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:05 pm

I will try to find this email, but on the concealed Yahoo group, someone seems to have quoted a study that concluded that CCW carriers are generally better shots than most cops; since they have a hightenend sense of liability--they MUST hit their targets or go to jail for hitting an innocent bystander--they practice more. Vlad ----- Original Message ---- From: E.L. Green To: DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, June 1, 2007 9:57:42 AM Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Re: NKLR
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogro ups.com, "monte quint" wrote: > You, "being the victim of gun violence" should have some special > insight. > > Were you a "clear headed negotiator" before the violence or after and > what good did the "negotiating" do you? > > Having seen some small amount of violence and its results firmly believe > a gun in my hand is far preferable to one at my head. Just out of curiousity, have you ever had a gun pointed at you? Do you have any idea how you would respond in that situation? Have you ever pointed a gun at someone in a violent situation? Do you have any idea how accurately you could shoot it under those conditions? I say this because police officers are actually trained in how to respond to that situation, and police officer firearms accuracy is legendary -- for being awful. Police officers are also actually trained in shoot/don't shoot situations -- and still occasionally manage to shoot people like Amadou Diallo, who was guilty of nothing more than standing in a darkened foyer. And despite the fact that they fired 41 shots at him at point blank range (less than 10 feet away), less than half the bullets (19) actually hit him. Frankly, I doubt my ability to a) accurately discern a threat in time to clear a weapon in a way that would make any difference, and b) actually hit what I'm aiming at when the adrenalin is pumping. As far as negotiating skills go, you never hear about the school shootings that did NOT happen because the kid got talked down. My response to those situations was always to get very, very quiet then start talking in a very calm and rational voice. It almost doesn't matter what you say in that situation, you just want to de-escalate from violence to words. 99.9% of the time, it does work. The kid ends up getting talked to the teacher break room (not the principal's office, there might be other kids in and around the principal's office, you know there won't be any in the teacher break room besides the kids are generally interested in seeing what's in there), and voluntarily hands over the gun then is turned over to the police shortly thereafter. I won't give you details (federal law protects student privacy, state law protects the privacy of juveniles in the juvenile justice system). Let's just say that more guns in this situation, for the most part, would result in many many more deaths than what currently happens, both because of the incompetence of untrained civilians who can't hit what they shoot at when the adrenalin is pumping (what, you think you can do better than a trained cop? HAH!), and because it escalated a non-shooting situation into a shooting situation. I find that people who get all macho about guns generally haven't had one aimed at them or had to aim them at someone. When you're in that situation, you become very serious indeed. Anyhow, get on back to your gun control discussion, I won't get involved in it. I just wanted to address the notion that "a gun in hand is better than one at the head." Real life just doesn't work that way, unlike the fantasies that so many people who think with their balls have built around themselves as some gigantic John Wayne figure who will shoot bad guys dead with one bullet to the head. Real life is that you don't know the bad guy is a bad guy until the gun is already at your head, and at that point a gun in hand just gets you dead. ___________________________________________________________________________________ You snooze, you lose. Get messages ASAP with AutoCheck in the all-new Yahoo! Mail Beta. http://advision.webevents.yahoo.com/mailbeta/newmail_html.html [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

E.L. Green
Posts: 639
Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2005 11:36 am

nklr

Post by E.L. Green » Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:31 pm

--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, E Hines wrote:
> > Not theory, fact. You need to look up the cites with the most
violent crimes and it is always the cities and states that have the most gun control (look at Washington D.C.). I have lived in lived Complete and utter nonsense and lies. Washington D.C. is an outlier. Here are the facts, which I have verified with the Uniform Crime Report (FBI) and with the U.S. Census statistics: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1447364 http://www.statemaster.com/graph/cri_mur_and_non_man_percap-murder-nonnegligent-manslaughter-per-capita The states with highest gun ownership - Texas, Louisiana, etc. -- have the highest murder rates, with Washington D.C. being the only exception. The state with the most stringent gun control, Massachusetts, also has one of the lowest rates of gun violence despite having a city (Boston) with a large minority population. Even adjusted for income level etc. as the Harvard study did, it is clear that guns don't stop murders. Indeed, it can even be argued that guns cause *more* murders because the perp is more likely to just cap you first and demand your wallet later if there's the possibility that you're carrying. I'm not saying guns should be banned or anything. Just saying that they're not magic. They're just tools. Guns don't make you safe. *YOU* make you safe. And in the end we're all dead anyhow, so I don 't worry about it too much. I've walked up to a crack house armed with nothing but a teacher's grade book. The most important tools of any man are cojones and your head. Anything else after that is just gravy. Once again -- I'm not typing this as an anti-gun message. I just get tired of the nonsense and lies that treat guns as if they were some sorta magic. They're not. Like a shovel, they're just a tool. If you go through life thinking having a gun is like having some sort of magic talisman that'll keep you safe, you are sadly deluded and mistaken. I've run through the scenarios, and there are very few of them where a concealed firearm can be deployed in time to shoot the bad guy before he shoots you. In the majority of other situations you'll need to use other tools -- tools you won't use if you consider a firearm to be some sort of magic talisman that will "keep you safe". Life isn't that simple, and anybody who tells you it is, is working some sorta agenda that probably doesn't have anything to do with your or my well being. _E

Jacobus De Bruyn
Posts: 209
Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 9:55 am

nklr

Post by Jacobus De Bruyn » Fri Jun 01, 2007 5:01 pm

Finally an intelligent and balanced, informed opinion, I agree with you, violence is better defused than promoted. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Fussy? Opinionated? Impossible to please? Perfect. Join Yahoo!'s user panel and lay it on us. http://surveylink.yahoo.com/gmrs/yahoo_panel_invite.asp?a=7

Mike Frey
Posts: 833
Joined: Sun Apr 04, 2004 10:53 am

nklr

Post by Mike Frey » Fri Jun 01, 2007 5:07 pm

I like KBC helmets. Good protection and value. LOL@attempted subject change

tlh
Posts: 72
Joined: Wed Apr 11, 2007 8:18 am

nklr

Post by tlh » Fri Jun 01, 2007 5:59 pm

I'm just breaking a great pair of Oxtar boots, ordering a tour master intake jacket next... Wife wants me to armour-up for going off road... albatross
----- Original Message ----- From: Mike Frey To: KLR List Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 5:57 PM Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] Re: NKLR I like KBC helmets. Good protection and value. LOL@attempted subject change [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

blocloc
Posts: 50
Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2007 5:46 pm

nklr

Post by blocloc » Fri Jun 01, 2007 8:56 pm

When I did my standing 40 MPH getoff a Oxtar Infinity were the boots worn.The bike came down on my left foot. Got a badly sprained ankle, bruised foot and shin and nothing broken except the 3 ribs. They are a good boot!!
----- Original Message ----- From: "tlh" To: "Mike Frey" ; "KLR List" DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 4:57 PM Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] Re: NKLR > I'm just breaking a great pair of Oxtar boots, ordering a tour master > intake jacket next... > > Wife wants me to armour-up for going off road... > > albatross > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Mike Frey > To: KLR List > Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 5:57 PM > Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] Re: NKLR > > > > I like KBC helmets. Good protection and value. > > LOL@attempted subject change > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > List sponsored by Dual Sport News at: www.dualsportnews.com > List FAQ courtesy of Chris Krok at: www.bigcee.com/klr650faq.html > Member Map at: http://www.frappr.com/dsnklr650 > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >

Tengai Mark Van Horn
Posts: 1922
Joined: Tue Nov 19, 2002 8:31 pm

nklr

Post by Tengai Mark Van Horn » Fri Jun 01, 2007 11:13 pm

Looks like bull$hit to me. To start, the stats below list "Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter" rates, but not by the instrument of crime. The fact is that people who are legally eligible to possess firearms generally do not use them criminally. Secondly, I know first-hand that Pennsylvanians are armed to the teeth, but rank mid-way down the list. Lastly, the gun ownership numbers are only wild guesses, or extrapolations at best. There is no Federal "gun registration program," nor do most states employ such a system of registration. It is impossible to get any REAL gun ownership numbers. Within almost every state, long guns may be transferred face-to-face, with no paper trail. Handguns may be transferred to family members (parents, offspring, siblings, grandparents) in the same manner. These firearms are referred to as "ghost guns," and there are millions of them out there. Mark At 9:28 PM +0000 6/1/07, E.L. Green wrote:
>> Not theory, fact. You need to look up the cites with the most >violent crimes and it is always the cities and states that have the >most gun control (look at Washington D.C.). I have lived in lived > >Complete and utter nonsense and lies. Washington D.C. is an outlier. > >Here are the facts, which I have verified with the Uniform Crime >Report (FBI) and with the U.S. Census statistics: > >http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1447364 > >http://www.statemaster.com/graph/cri_mur_and_non_man_percap-murder-nonnegligent-manslaughter-per-capita > >The states with highest gun ownership - Texas, Louisiana, etc. -- >have the highest murder rates...
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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