You won't see this in the national media! What was the school thinking???? If I was a teacher there and concealed carried there would be two dead cops.
Gunfire and moments of fear as a rural Oregon school tests its readiness
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Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:I find it hilarious that we normally label such activities "terrorism" but if the cops do it then it's fine.
-TG
BigBallinStalin wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:I find it hilarious that we normally label such activities "terrorism" but if the cops do it then it's fine.
-TG
Emotional trauma doesn't count as harming innocent civilians, and without a political goal, it's not terrorism.
(But yeah, I know what you mean, and that kind of drill is unnecessary).
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:I find it hilarious that we normally label such activities "terrorism" but if the cops do it then it's fine.
-TG
Emotional trauma doesn't count as harming innocent civilians, and without a political goal, it's not terrorism.
(But yeah, I know what you mean, and that kind of drill is unnecessary).
1) As Strike Wolf pointed out, the risk of heart attack is very real, especially as this is a rural school and many teachers in such schools are older. (I'm not going to sauce that, it's just something you'll have to take on faith.)
2) The political goal is to beef up security and instill fear. (Oh! We were so unprepared, I could've died. Guess I better support a tax levy that adds more sheriffs)
-TG
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:They do the same to their combat stats. I've known a couple of guys who were getting shelled with artillery on a weekly basis, but they never "saw" combat.
-TG
I find it hilarious that we normally label such activities "terrorism" but if the cops do it then it's fine.
Bruceswar ยป Tue Aug 28, 2012 8:59 pm wrote:We all had tons of men..
BigBallinStalin wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:They do the same to their combat stats. I've known a couple of guys who were getting shelled with artillery on a weekly basis, but they never "saw" combat.
-TG
Interesting, but let's get back to this:I find it hilarious that we normally label such activities "terrorism" but if the cops do it then it's fine.
Why does that happen?
I know for drone strikes, many people lean on their nationalist ideology, fill in some 'facts', support the attacks, and get angry if it's called terrorism (which it is).
It's interesting to see how much people have become conditioned over the decades. (The turning point is 1929-1945).
kentington wrote:What would have happened if someone retaliated against the perceived assailants and a death occurred?
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Oh I'm totally in agreement with you there. I find the use of drone strikes or drones in particular repellant. If you have to enforce your will onto a technologically and economically inferior culture by sending advanced robots with killing capacity to them, then perhaps we should inspect what the reasons are.
Funny story, I actually got into a huge argument with my dad a few years back over this very issue. I called the drones repugnant and those who supported them morally bankrupt (I was a bit more fiery then). He did exactly as you said, tried to justify them through the benefit to American soldiers and whatnot, never mind that innocents lost their lives. "The cost of war."
BigBallinStalin wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Oh I'm totally in agreement with you there. I find the use of drone strikes or drones in particular repellant. If you have to enforce your will onto a technologically and economically inferior culture by sending advanced robots with killing capacity to them, then perhaps we should inspect what the reasons are.
Funny story, I actually got into a huge argument with my dad a few years back over this very issue. I called the drones repugnant and those who supported them morally bankrupt (I was a bit more fiery then). He did exactly as you said, tried to justify them through the benefit to American soldiers and whatnot, never mind that innocents lost their lives. "The cost of war."
One main problem with drone strikes is that they reduce the price for war. There's no dead US soldiers, so there's hardly any chance of a backlash from public opinion. With a decreased cost in war, then the USG will simply engage in more wars on a more frequent basis.
That wouldn't be too bad if the program was effective--in that it would reduce/end terrorism, but given the civilian casualties and the numerous opportunities for media companies to sensationalize the US terrorism to sympathetic audiences, then I highly doubt drone strikes will be ineffective in reducing (contra American/Western) terrorism.
And since the costs of American weapons are externalized (i.e. not felt by US foreign policymakers and politicians, but rather taxpayers), then they'll continue supplying and warring at quantities beyond necessary. Eventually, we'll get another backlash from some terrorist group, which the USG will react to by bombing them (see: Afghanistan 1980s to today). It's an endless cycle of stupid interventionism, and unfortunately since it's profitable for politicians and bureaucrats to maintain this status quo, then the self-serving agenda will continue--until of course people start thinking critically and advocate for more libertarian policies (which may not happen).
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