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Forums - Politics Discussion - Active shooter situation reported in Christchurch, New Zealand

HylianSwordsman said:
o_O.Q said:

"Nope. At least not in an honest way."

wow you really couldn't find 3 criteria which could be used to distinguish between christians and atheists?

ok how are you able to distinguish between the two?

you are able i would assume to understand that i'm speaking of two separate groups of people... how are you doing that?

I meant physically, lol. Can you tell a Christian from an atheist just by looking? It's not like Christians and atheists come from a specific region. That's all I was saying is that with Muslims, a lot of judgement happens based on appearance, which isn't the case for most other religions.

" But the people that profile Muslims are doing it based on what region they look like they're from"

this is based on what? can you show me evidence that people are identifying people as "muslim" based only on skin colour?

Not sure why you're contesting this? What is your point that you're trying to prove? I mean if you really want me to break it down, I can, but it feels like you're arguing when it doesn't really seem like you're really arguing for or against a specific point, just trying to get me to excessively break down everything I'm saying for no reason. I suppose one thing that Christians and Muslims have in common that differentiate them from atheists is that they have a regular meeting place. You can go to a church to shoot up Christians (like that one shooter in Texas a while back did), or go to a mosque to shoot up Muslims (like this thread's shooter did). It's harder to do that for atheists. But between Muslims and the rest of the populace, there are more things people use, like cultural garb, or skin color. That's more for if a bigot is trying to harass someone in public. Sometimes they go after someone completely incorrectly, like that one shooter a while back that killed two Indians thinking they were Muslim. That's an example of identifying people as Muslims by skin color alone if I ever saw one. It's not a reliable way to do it, but that guy sure thought it was. It's more reliable than trying to do so by physical appearance with Christians though, so people do it. Doesn't mean they should, or that it makes sense to, but you see them do it. Shows up in the news all the time. But yeah, much harder to do with Christians. I mean what would you do to identify a Christian from an atheist based just on appearance?

"what toxic intent did she have?

To be mean to Muslims, as you yourself implied, though you'll probably deny it."

what mean things has candace said about muslims?

when atheists criticise christianity as a backwards ideology do you jump to the defense of christians?

Well she acted like it was a bad thing for there to be a lot of them. I think that's mean. If you don't, that's fine, I probably won't change your mind. And yes, I do tend to jump to the defense of Christians. I mean, I am one, so maybe that's a bit biased, but I also tend to jump to the defense of Jews, and even atheists and pagans, because I believe in freedom of religion.

"I did. I said I like Christian values"

you think abortion should be prohibited?

I don't. Not in all scenarios anyway. I don't think that's a Christian value.

"so I'd rather have separation of church and state. In other words, no."

but you don't see a problem with the influence of islam increasing?

Oh I do. Trust me. I just don't take the same approach to dealing with it as some people.

"I don't want that. That would be silly, but it looks like that's what the shooter thought."

the shooter wanted to increase the birth rates of people in france(which is what candace was talking about), so he shot people in new zealand?

No, I think he thought she was saying that to compensate for a lack of white birth rates, genocide was called for. Not necessarily the most logical thing to come to, but that's my guess as to what the shooter did.

"I'm not sure what the point of this argument is. I don't think that, the shooter does. He flat out said he was inspired by her."

yes and i'm asking you to make a logical argument for how that makes sense and so far you are failing

Oh I know I am. He's insane, you see.

"Unless you have a more likely tweet from her that might have inspired this?"

well that's the point

What's the point?

"gain, I'm not saying he made a rational conclusion"

your entire argument hinges on him drawing a logical conclusion from candace owen's tweet which to me doesn't make any sense

No, I'm saying he drew an illogical conclusion.

"That's all I was saying is that with Muslims, a lot of judgement happens based on appearance, which isn't the case for most other religions."

why do you think that's the case?

 

"But between Muslims and the rest of the populace, there are more things people use, like cultural garb, or skin color."

you mean like the burka? so you don't think the burka is a reliable way of determining whether someone is a muslim or not?

 

"Well she acted like it was a bad thing for there to be a lot of them. I think that's mean."

its about concern for people who have a different culture to you impacting your culture

muslims appear to have regressive views on women, such as, putting pressure on them to cover themselves

i can see why candace as a woman would be concerned about that for example if it appears that their influence is growing in her community

 

"Oh I do. Trust me. I just don't take the same approach to dealing with it as some people."

so why do you take issue with candace expressing her concerns about it? she simply seems to be saying that she does not want their influence on particular cultures to grow and i can understand that

 

"No, I think he thought she was saying that to compensate for a lack of white birth rates, genocide was called for."

and that's his conclusion... what does that have to do with candace?

to go back to the previous example i used if a japanese man took "we need to combat falling birth rates in japan" as justification for raping japanese women does it mean that no one should therefore talk about these issues? that's preposterous

to meet this standard that you all appear to be pushing no one would be able to talk about shifting demographics ever

 

"Oh I know I am. He's insane, you see."

i agree, so how can you ascribe logical arguments to an insane person?

 

"What's the point?"

that there is no evidence to demonstrate that candace owens has ever called for genocide

 

"No, I'm saying he drew an illogical conclusion."

don't you see how dangerous it is to try to assign blame to someone based on how a crazy person interpreted their actions?

its like telling a woman who got raped that it was her fault for tempting a rapist because instead of focusing on the criminal you're instead looking to how that criminal interpreted the actions of someone else



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jason1637 said:
Pemalite said:

Except the statistics in Australia don't lie. The overwhelming evidence is that Gun Control reduces gun related deaths, meaning your family is safer.

With gun control, criminals are less likely to own a gun.. Because it's a much more difficult process to obtain one.
However... By that same line of thinking, you are still fully entitled to own a gun, you just have to go through a process that ensures you are a mentally fit person to hold a weapon and have the appropriate precautions put in place to have said weapons secured.

Gun control doesn't mean guns are illegal to own... Which I think is ultimately the crux of the American line of thinking.

Anyway... Just because you own a gun, doesn't mean you are immune from being shot first before being able to pull it out... And then having the criminal proceed to shoot the rest of your family anyway.

If it wasn't for the fact I work in multiple emergency services agencies and thus often work with the Police, I would probably never even see a gun... Overwhelmingly, Gun control has worked in Australia, continues to work... And if you were to poll the citizens of this country on what they think, they would be supportive of gun control by a vast majority... You just don't see the weapons in the public limelight... Even robberies tend to use more primitive weapons more often than not due to how difficult it is to obtain guns.

NZ already has some strong gun control laws put in place. I just dont think they should make it even harder to obtain a gun.

And criminals will still find ways to get guns with stricter gun laws. So if you have a gun legally you have a better chance to protect yourself.

All the countries with strict gun controls sure have it hard nowadays. All the criminals own a gun while the normal and law trusting citizens have to go for a very harsh and difficult process of obtaining a gun legally. 

Surely the statistic reflect that in those countries.....

 

... Oh...



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Peh said:
jason1637 said:

NZ already has some strong gun control laws put in place. I just dont think they should make it even harder to obtain a gun.

And criminals will still find ways to get guns with stricter gun laws. So if you have a gun legally you have a better chance to protect yourself.

All the countries with strict gun controls sure have it hard nowadays. All the criminals own a gun while the normal and law trusting citizens have to go for a very harsh and difficult process of obtaining a gun legally. 

Surely the statistic reflect that in those countries.....

 

... Oh...

Well not all criminals will have one ofc. Gun violence will become rarer with stricter laws but it will still happen by criminals getting guns illegally.



jason1637 said:
Peh said:

All the countries with strict gun controls sure have it hard nowadays. All the criminals own a gun while the normal and law trusting citizens have to go for a very harsh and difficult process of obtaining a gun legally. 

Surely the statistic reflect that in those countries.....

 

... Oh...

Well not all criminals will have one ofc. Gun violence will become rarer with stricter laws but it will still happen by criminals getting guns illegally.

You have just eaten your own argument.

There will always be a way to obtain a gun, but the harder you make it for everyone the less gun violence you will have. The less protection from gun owners you will need. 

 

Just look at other countries how they do stuff and learn to adapt. 



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Immersiveunreality said:
deskpro2k3 said:

source: https://www.businessinsider.my/candace-owens-manifesto-new-zealand-mosque-terror-2019-3/

Here is some examples (Tweets) from Candace Owen that would inspire a lunatic to do something against a specific group, specifically Muslims.

There can be examples in the damn Harry Potter books,by reacting to it in this way you are doing what the shooter wants.

Edit: Btw he also said Spyro 3 inspired him,someone would like to use this for any agenda?

Do you mean to tell me you can't spot an obvious troll comment from an actual comment that has calibrating slurs?

And on your troll edit. I'll like to use that as evidence to support my statement above.

The dude I replied to ask for examples, he got it.

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o_O.Q said:

"That's all I was saying is that with Muslims, a lot of judgement happens based on appearance, which isn't the case for most other religions."

why do you think that's the case?

Probably because Christians, atheists, and Jews all come from a wide enough variety of areas that there's no one skin color, cultural garb, or visible practice that would even be remotely useful to identify them by.

"But between Muslims and the rest of the populace, there are more things people use, like cultural garb, or skin color."

you mean like the burka? so you don't think the burka is a reliable way of determining whether someone is a muslim or not?

Cultural garb would definitely be more useful than skin color, yeah.

"Well she acted like it was a bad thing for there to be a lot of them. I think that's mean."

its about concern for people who have a different culture to you impacting your culture

muslims appear to have regressive views on women, such as, putting pressure on them to cover themselves

i can see why candace as a woman would be concerned about that for example if it appears that their influence is growing in her community

I could say the similar things about conservative Christians and their regressive views on women, but I don't. For a long time, the country was majority conservative Christian, only recently have they lost enough ground to progressive Christianity and atheism to lose majority status and move to plurality status. Yet in all that time, even though I disagree with them as a fellow Christian about what values are really Christian values, I never at any point said they should leave the country or that we should kill them, instead I just speak out against their views. I'll speak out against Muslim views when I dislike their views as well. After all, it's not just the Muslims or the conservative Christians that have those regressive views on women, it's all sorts of people. It's the regressive views that need to be combated in whatever form they take, not the people that hold them. Remember when Clinton called a whole bunch of people "deplorable"? That was pretty mean, no? Just because you disagree doesn't mean you call people deplorable like in Clinton's case or treat them like their very presence might be a problem like in Candace's case.

"Oh I do. Trust me. I just don't take the same approach to dealing with it as some people."

so why do you take issue with candace expressing her concerns about it? she simply seems to be saying that she does not want their influence on particular cultures to grow and i can understand that

It's not that she expresses concern, it's how she expresses it and what her solutions are for dealing with it. Like what is she even supposed to be saying with that thing about France building an army? You said it yourself, it doesn't make sense. Armies don't fix birth rates.

"No, I think he thought she was saying that to compensate for a lack of white birth rates, genocide was called for."

and that's his conclusion... what does that have to do with candace?

He got his conclusion from Candace's statement, or at least it would seem he did based on what he said. That's the only connection.

to go back to the previous example i used if a japanese man took "we need to combat falling birth rates in japan" as justification for raping japanese women does it mean that no one should therefore talk about these issues? that's preposterous

to meet this standard that you all appear to be pushing no one would be able to talk about shifting demographics ever

Well that's because it's not the demographics that are the issue. It's the values system. Like in Japan, they're grappling with the effects their own values system has had on their society. They teach women to expect a man to be rich and able to completely provide for them, and to date based on that, instead of love. It's like culturally encouraged gold-digging, and it hurts men, women, and the society as a whole alike. There are other reasons why they're struggling, and obviously not all Japanese women do that, but it is a noted cultural phenomenon discussed at length by academics in both Eastern and Western civilization when they examine Japanese society. You could find a good bit of value in most cultures, but no culture is perfect, and sometimes on a society wide scale they need to examine certain cultural values that maybe worked in the past but are just hurting themselves now.

To take this back to America (I know, Candace mentioned France and the shooter was New Zealand, but she's American and her experience informing her worldview is largely drawn from there), we have a multicultural society, unlike Japan's largely homogeneous society. To have a multicultural society, there have to be overarching values that we cherish across all the cultures. Those overarching values often inform the future direction of the multiple cultures living within the society. So for America, we value life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness. We value equal rights, liberty and justice for all. You've heard it all before. Well if we valued equal rights and liberty so much, how did we ever own slaves? Was it all a lie? Of course not. However, since those overarching rights trumped the slavery tolerating culture of the South, the South had to change. It just takes some time for the overarching values to shape the path of every culture in the nation towards the same goal. It's the power of our democracy. You saw the same thing again with women and the vote. If we're all equal, why can't they vote? Were our values all a lie from the beginning just because women haven't been voting? Of course not. The values are real, we just all came to a new understanding of what they meant for our daily lives. Sometimes it affects the whole culture, sometimes just one region of the country. Sometimes it just affects one nationality, like when we treated Italians like dirt until we realized that was wrong. Until recently Mormons were treated pretty crappily, though not on the same level obviously, but they were very disrespected and essentially treated like a bunch of nutjobs. Now we have like 5 or 6 of them in Congress. This process repeats itself throughout our history and will continue to. Eventually we return to our deepest rooted values, the ones in the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. They win every time and I pray that they always will. 

In the case of Candace's concerns about the impact of Islamic cultural values on our own, I think rather than criticize the location and migratory habits of Muslims, I think we should criticize Islamic thought itself on an academic level. Doing so worked wonders for Christianity. Even the most conservative Christians you could ever find in America today (save for maybe the crazy offshoots like Westboro Baptist) are not as regressive in their attitudes towards women as they were 20 or 40 years ago. They maintained their cultural identity, but evolved towards the greater American culture of liberty and justice for all, with all of us equal. We can do the same with regressive Islamic views. Some of Islam's views are pretty irrelevant to everyone else, like when and how to pray if you're a Muslim. If you're not a Muslim, you just don't pray when they do, oh well. Others are more consequential, but can be respected, like abstaining from alcohol. You could drink it, your Muslim friend could be the designated driver. Still others are problematic and need to be confronted, like the views on women. I respect their right to wear a burka or hijab, but I disagree on a fundamental level with it, and at appropriate times, I'll tell them so. I support like-minded women in Iran right now who are taking off their head coverings in protest. Such a beautiful protest, I love it. Similarly, if I had a young female Muslim friend, I'd respect her right to wear a hijab or whatever, but I'd encourage her not to wear one, and support her if her family tried to punish her for it. Then there are even more serious things that not all American Muslims believe, but need to be confronted at all costs wherever it appears, like intolerance for other religions. I don't tolerate it when Christians hate on atheists, so I don't like it when Muslims suggest that theirs is the only acceptable religion, and wouldn't stand for that either if I ever saw it. Luckily I haven't, probably because such Muslims would rather live in a Muslim society than move to America, so there's not a lot of people like that over here.

"Oh I know I am. He's insane, you see."

i agree, so how can you ascribe logical arguments to an insane person?

I didn't, I ascribed an illogical one to an insane person.

"What's the point?"

that there is no evidence to demonstrate that candace owens has ever called for genocide

I'm not saying she did. I do think that the shooter thought she did.

"No, I'm saying he drew an illogical conclusion."

don't you see how dangerous it is to try to assign blame to someone based on how a crazy person interpreted their actions?

its like telling a woman who got raped that it was her fault for tempting a rapist because instead of focusing on the criminal you're instead looking to how that criminal interpreted the actions of someone else

I told you before, I don't blame Candace for the shooting. You may be confusing me for someone else in the thread. My initial quoting of that tweet was because you asked for an example of Candace Owens talking about Muslims, which seemed to come up because the shooter mentioned her. I'd never heard of Candace Owens before this thread, so I was curious too. It really was just a quick Google search that found that tweet I quoted earlier.



Peh said:
jason1637 said:

Well not all criminals will have one ofc. Gun violence will become rarer with stricter laws but it will still happen by criminals getting guns illegally.

You have just eaten your own argument.

There will always be a way to obtain a gun, but the harder you make it for everyone the less gun violence you will have. The less protection from gun owners you will need. 

 

Just look at other countries how they do stuff and learn to adapt. 

Not really. The harder you make it for someone to legally obtain a gun means that you are making it harder for them to defend themselves against those that il;egally obtain a gun.

Also the harder a government makes it for people to get guns the easier it is for them to oppress the people.



jason1637 said:
konnichiwa said:

In this age?  

Yes. Dictatorships can still happen and if the government passes laws that take away rights it's up yo the people yo revolt with gun power.


There is no reason for a 1st world country to be run as a dictatorship.

You are already oppressed through taxes and laws that ensure you are not motivated to rise above a certain level. The harder you work the less benefits you get. The less you work the more government benefits you get, and in turn these people vote for the gov that give them those benefits. A small price to pay to stay in power and get rich.

Then you got hidden taxes in all the things you buy which offset those benefits anyway. Then every so often they raise the retirement age for eligibility to get the pension.  The next generation will work till they die.



 

 

Pemalite said:

KLAMarine said:

This guy got egged, apparently...

Already linked to it. Hoping he gets charged for hitting a minor.

Hardly a minor, people younger than him went to WWI and WWII.

If some little grub did that to be he be laying flat on his back.



 

 

jason1637 said:

NZ already has some strong gun control laws put in place. I just dont think they should make it even harder to obtain a gun.

They should make it harder. The evidence says it saves lives... And as you should very well know, I am all about saving lives.

jason1637 said:

And criminals will still find ways to get guns with stricter gun laws.

So unless we can 100% remove all guns, then gun laws are pointless is what you are trying to say?
Never-mind the fact that homicide rates have remained low and is actually continuously decreasing on a per-capita basis?

https://www.factcheck.org/2017/10/gun-control-australia-updated/
http://crimestats.aic.gov.au/NHMP/1_trends/
https://aic.gov.au/publications/cfi/cfi066

There was a 47% drop in firearm related from 1991 to 2001. That isn't an insignificant statistic... That's hundreds of lives.

At the end of the day... It seems you are against the idea of saving lives because of a hypothetical what-if scenario?

Gun control removes guns from criminal hands, that is the biggest piece of information you can get from all of this, it's not a situation where law-abiding citizens (You can still own guns!) aren't allowed guns, leaving only criminals with guns, in-fact it's often the reverse that happens.

At the end of the day, you should require strict licensing for the owning of a device that can take lives, you need licenses for cars, motorcycles, boats and so on, due in part to their inherent risks, Guns shouldn't be an exception.

jason1637 said:

Not really. The harder you make it for someone to legally obtain a gun means that you are making it harder for them to defend themselves against those that il;egally obtain a gun.

No it doesn't mean that at all.

In-case you aren't aware... I am an Australian, I was actually alive when gun control was brought in, so I have seen the before/after affect if it... And trust me when I say it has absolutely worked and that is why the majority of Australians continue to support gun control.

I have also owned firearms before, it's not actually a difficult process via legal means, so you should probably stop stressing about it if you have nothing to hide... At the end of the day, I have experienced the effect gun control has had on my nation... And like you I was against the idea to begin with, but the statistics and real-world experience just doesn't lie.

The ironic part about it is that it was a conservative right-wing government that brought in the legislation as well, go figure.

jason1637 said:

Also the harder a government makes it for people to get guns the easier it is for them to oppress the people.

Ugh... Politics of fear. - I can assure you, decades after Gun Control was introduced, Australians are still as free as ever and aren't being oppressed.

Oppression can happen with or without gun control, if you think a powerful government organization is going to be fearful of a group of untrained civilians with guns... Well... Yeah.



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