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27 dead, 20 gradeschool kids


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2012 Dec 14, 2:37am   128,861 views  376 comments

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147   121212   2012 Dec 14, 8:40am  

what kind of person posts video of another mass murderer on a thread about a poor class of 1st graders being mass murdered?

and then you "like" it yourself...

and then as the narcissistic you are "DISLIKE" mine zzyzzx?

148   rooemoore   2012 Dec 14, 8:43am  

Israel elementary class:
http://i.imgur.com/Ts1So.jpg

149   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 8:46am  

121212 says

what kind of person posts video of another mass murderer on a thread about a poor class of 1st graders being mass murdered?

and then you "like" it yourself...

and then as the narcissistic you are "DISLIKE" mine zzyzzx?

I liked his video.

Hitler parodies rock! My favorite is the one where Hitler loses his shirt in the housing bubble.

150   mell   2012 Dec 14, 9:10am  

Peter P says

121212 says

what kind of person posts video of another mass murderer on a thread about a poor class of 1st graders being mass murdered?

and then you "like" it yourself...

and then as the narcissistic you are "DISLIKE" mine zzyzzx?

I liked his video.

Hitler parodies rock! My favorite is the one where Hitler loses his shirt in the housing bubble.

My favorite one is where Hitler finds out he has CFS - epic.

151   Rin   2012 Dec 14, 12:52pm  

So the idea is that by preventing law abiding citizens from bearing arms, that only law enforcement officers, mobsters, & non-organized criminals can have them? Isn't that a bit unbalanced? I mean didn't the cops in NYC put nine or more innocent bystanders in the hospital, by taking down one guy in midtown Manhattan, last month. Since cops only need to go to the firing range every 6 mos or so, I feel really safe that they're the only ones, legally certified to empty a cartridge into a crowd.

I'm sorry but I believe that if a person is stable, has had a complete background check, and goes to a firing range regularly, then that person was the right to defend himself, or his store, or his homestead, with a firearm. I'm not willing to leave the protection of the avg person, in the hands of a public or privatized security detail.

152   MsBennet   2012 Dec 14, 3:54pm  

Jesus wept.

153   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 4:01pm  

What worries me is that there are so many troubled souls. What can we do about them?

154   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 4:17pm  

Peter P says

What worries me is that there are so many troubled souls. What can we do about them?

Not a lot. People are apes, apes that have a propensity to commit violence. Mentally ill apes or apes with abusive backgrounds or apes with generally difficult upbringings may well have a greater propensity to violence. A less individualistic society, one with less severe social equality, one with better health care - health care that is available to all and that includes better treatment and follow up care for those with mental illnesses etc. etc. would all contribute to a better functioning society, and that kind of society generally has lower overall crime rates. Not going to happen in the US though.

155   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 4:23pm  

Bigsby says

A less individualistic society, one with less severe social equality, one with better health care - health care that is available to all and that includes better treatment and follow up care for those with mental illnesses etc. etc. would all contribute to a better functioning society, and that kind of society generally has lower overall crime rates.

I always thought individualists are more civilized because they are less repressed.

Many coward evil-doers have abusive and/or repressive upbringings. I suspect they have a distorted moral code. They may even think they are doing the right thing. This is the scary part.

Japan has its share of crazy-man-attacks. It is NOT an individualistic society and it has good social equality.

I definitely agree that we need a single-payer universal healthcare system with a parallel private system.

156   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 4:30pm  

Peter P says

I always thought individualists are more civilized because they are less repressed.

A highly individualistic, dog-eat-dog society does not make for a particularly good society in my mind. You can have free expression of ideas, creativity etc. etc. but that also needs to be couched in consideration for your fellow beings and not just what I can get for myself.

Peter P says

Japan has its share of crazy-man-attacks. It is NOT an individualistic society and it has good social equality.

And Japan is a much safer society with a far, far lower crime rate than the US. You can't legislate for the occasional action of a crazy or crazies but you can't tell me that Japan compares with the US in this regard. Anyway, Japan can be too oppressive in the group mentality respect - the nail that sticks up needs to be hammered down as they say. A better example would be the Scandinavian nations.

157   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 4:37pm  

Bigsby says

A highly individualistic, dog-eat-dog society does not make for a particularly good society in my mind. You can have free expression of ideas, creativity etc. etc. but that also needs to be couched in consideration for your fellow beings and not just what I can get for myself.

A individualistic society needs not be a dog-eat-dog one because the participants can choose to be gracious even though it is not expected of them. I think that is the beauty of it.

Bad faith can ruin any system.

Bigsby says

And Japan is a much safer society with a far, far lower crime rate than the US. You can't legislate for the occasional action of a crazy or crazies but you can't tell me that Japan compares with the US in this regard.

The strange thing is that when people snap, it can still go very wrong even in a society like Japan. Perhaps it is about the breaking point.

But you are right, Japan is amazingly safe for a densely populated country.

158   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 4:44pm  

Peter P says

A individualistic society needs not be a dog-eat-dog one because the participants can choose to be gracious even though it is not expected of them. I think that is the beauty of it.

There needs to be a better balance between individuality and the welfare of the group as a whole in the US. There are far too many people in the US who seem far too focussed on what they can get for themselves rather than what would benefit society as a whole. All this bitter refusal to even consider a pretty minor tax increase on the wealthiest by some Republicans is just one very obvious example of that.

159   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 4:52pm  

Bigsby says

There needs to be a better balance between individuality and the welfare of the group as a whole in the US.

I guess it is a paradox. We can have a good society only if we have great individuals. But forcing the concept of a great society will not produce good individuals. This is just human nature.

Bigsby says

All this bitter refusal to even consider a pretty minor tax increase on the wealthiest by some Republicans is just one very obvious example of that.

That is an entirely different issue. It is a move in the wrong direction. You cannot make the society more fair by wealth re-distribution.

One thing is almost axiomatic. Whatever the herd wants must be wrong. Progressive taxation is appealing to the mass, so something must not be right.

The society will be fair only when most individuals become more aware of their surroundings and less herd-like.

160   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:02pm  

There is no balance between individuality and the group. A group is comprised of individuals.

I don't want to sound like a religious person (I do not belong to any organized religion), but one possible ultimate goal of man is to be more like God. (I am deviating from Nietzsche here.)

No one forced God to do anything, yet He is gracious. I think to emulate God man must learn to be gracious as well. (I believe that God is a morally-neutral, infinitely gracious being.)

Goodness ought to be a bottom-up process.

I bet humanity will end up being a failure, but perhaps there is hope.

161   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:11pm  

Peter P says

That is an entirely different issue. It is a move in the wrong direction. You cannot make the society more fair by wealth re-distribution.

One thing is almost axiomatic. Whatever the herd wants must be wrong. Progressive taxation is appealing to the mass, so something must not be right.

The society will be fair only when most individuals become more aware of their surroundings and less herd-like.

Of course you can. Taxation is wealth redistribution. It doesn't mean socialism. It serves the purpose of enabling a better functioning society. Better schools, better hospitals, better infrastructure, better general health care, better social services... all these things have to be paid for and that is best done with a progressive tax system. People earning $1m should be taxed at a much higher rate than those earning $86k because they are far less affected by that higher rate. The taxation system needs to be overhauled. For the life of me, I don't understand why there have to be these massive tax brackets. Why does everyone over $388k pay the same, or between 35k and 85k, or 85k and $178k? Surely in this day and age you could have a taxation system with far more tax brackets. This would raise more taxes and lessen the burden on those most vulnerable. Someone earning $10m+ a year is not exactly going to feel much of a pinch if their tax rate is a bit higher than someone earning 389k.

162   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:15pm  

Peter P says

No one forced God to do anything, yet He is gracious. I think to emulate God man must learn to be gracious as well. (I believe that God is a morally-neutral, infinitely gracious being.)

And I think God is a human invention, so not a particularly useful example. (by the way, I didn't press the dislike button on your earlier post in case you were wondering)

163   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:20pm  

Bigsby says

People earning $1m should be taxed at a much higher rate than those earning $86k because they are far less affected by that higher rate.

Some one should not be taxed more simply because he is less affected.

A society should not decide what someone needs and what someone can afford.

I fear that progressive taxation is simply an artifact of democracy. Besides, income tax affects only those who try to become wealthy. It does not affect those who are already wealthy. It is not a good incentive system.

I think a land value tax (instead of income tax) will be a better system. You simply cannot hide real properties.

164   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:22pm  

Bigsby says

And I think God is a human invention, so not a particularly useful example. (by the way, I didn't press the dislike button on your earlier post in case you were wondering)

It may be a human concept, but it is not any less useful. BTW, does anything really exist without concepts?

You think I care about "dislike" counts? :-)

I am pretty hard to offend.

165   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:25pm  

Peter P says

Some one should not be taxed more simply because he is less affected.

Why not? If society needs the money to function more effectively, then it is the obvious path. The money is needed, they can afford it, so tax them more.

Peter P says

A society should not decide what someone needs and what someone can afford.

Those kind of decisions are made all the time and for good reason.

Peter P says

I fear that progressive taxation is simply an artifact of democracy. Besides, income tax affects only those who try to become wealthy. It does not affect those who are already wealthy. It is not a good incentive system.

Marginally higher tax rates on higher incomes is hardly going to be a major disincentive. Richer people will still be massively better off. Those who are already wealthy can be taxed in additional ways such as higher rates on capital gains so that everyone contributes in a reasonable and effective way.

Peter P says

I think a land value tax (instead of income tax) will be a better system. You simply cannot hide real properties.

No, it could be part of a better system, but in of itself, it most certainly wouldn't make for a better system.

166   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:27pm  

Peter P says

You think I care about "dislike" counts? :-)

I am pretty hard to offend.

No, but I also don't want you to think that I press dislike on the post of someone with a reasoned opinion that just happens to be different to my own.

167   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:36pm  

Guess we will agree to disagree.

I do not believe equality should be a societal goal. It is really up to the individuals to decide who they are.

Bigsby says

Marginally higher tax rates on higher incomes is hardly going to be a major disincentive.

Really? There is so much more innovation going on here compared to highly-taxed nations.

168   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:37pm  

Peter P says

It may be a human concept, but it is not any less useful.

What is useful in saying God is this or God is that or God would do this or do that? You said God is gracious. You can't demonstrate the existence of God let alone assign personal characteristics, so to me it's not a very useful path to take.

169   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:37pm  

Bigsby says

No, but I also don't want you to think that I press dislike on the post of someone with a reasoned opinion that just happens to be different to my own.

Why would I think so? If you are staying up this late to chat, you are probably not someone who would do that. ;-)

170   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:40pm  

Bigsby says

What is useful in saying God is this or God is that or God would do this or do that? You said God is gracious. You can't demonstrate the existence of God let alone assign personal characteristics, so to me it's not a very useful path to take.

I think the literal existence of God (as a supernatural being) is not important, nor is it knowable. Then it is just a faith thing that I choose to have.

If you get to define God's properties, anything you like, what would they be?

171   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:42pm  

Peter P says

I do not believe equality should be a societal goal. It is really up to the individuals to decide who they are.

I'm not arguing equality. It has absolutely nothing to do with equality. Taxing wealthy people with marginally higher rates as their income rises (let's say 0.1% for every 100k as an example) is not a drive to equality. It's a step towards funding what is currently not being paid for. I'd rather do this than cut fundamental services to the most vulnerable in society. How would that benefit society as a whole? The richest in society would be totally unaffected whilst the poorest would be disproportionately affected.

172   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:44pm  

Peter P says

If you get to define God's properties, anything you like, what would they be?

I don't assign characteristics to imaginary beings, but if you were to do so for the God of the Old and New testament, it wouldn't make particularly attractive reading a lot of the time.

173   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:45pm  

Peter P says

Why would I think so? If you are staying up this late to chat, you are probably not someone who would do that. ;-)

It's 12.41 in the afternoon.

174   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:49pm  

Peter P says

Really? There is so much more innovation going on here compared to highly-taxed nations.

There's a lot of innovation going on in Europe and elsewhere. Innovation wouldn't be affected by marginal tax increases on the richest. I'd say the US was more innovative in the past and there have been far higher tax rates in the past than there currently are. Innovation comes from good education systems and business environments that support and invest in such things. Slightly higher tax rates that could be used to improve the education system (for example) might actually improve innovation.

175   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:50pm  

Bigsby says

It's a step towards funding what is currently not being paid for. I'd rather do this than cut fundamental services to the most vulnerable in society. How would that benefit society as a whole?

The government can be much smaller and yet services can be maintained.

Bigsby says

The richest in society would be totally unaffected whilst the poorest would be disproportionately affected.

Worse yet, we will all be affected because the incentive system is weakened.

Somehow I have a feeling that poor people will be better off if they become aware that they are much more than their labels.

For example, "X *is* a teacher" vs "X chooses to work as a teacher"

176   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 5:54pm  

Peter P says

The government can be much smaller and yet services can be maintained.

Hmm, major cost cutting means major cuts in government funded services.

Peter P says

Worse yet, we will all be affected because the incentive system is weakened.

The incentive system wouldn't be weakened. It wasn't weakened in the past when tax rates were considerably higher than now, so why would it be weakened with a more gradated system that involved relatively minor tax increases?

177   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 5:56pm  

Bigsby says

There's a lot of innovation going on in Europe. Innovation wouldn't be affected by marginal tax increases on the richest. I'd say the US was more innovative in the past and there have been far higher tax rates in the past than there currently are.

We have to agree to disagree. Much has happened in the last 20 years.

Bigsby says

Innovation comes from good education systems and business environments that support and invest in such things. Slightly higher tax rates that could be used to improve the education system (for example) might actually improve innovation.

My other pet peeve: education, in its current form, is over-rated.

First, we cannot force people to become educated.

Second, education needs to be flexible and board.

Third, students should be allowed to draw their own conclusions.

I propose teaching kids how to self-learn very early on. Then they can draw information from the internet. This can be done cheaply and effectively.

Internet is great. I wish I had wikipedia when I was young. But digging up information in the library was fun nonetheless.

178   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 6:00pm  

Bigsby says

The incentive system wouldn't be weakened. It wasn't weakened in the past when tax rates were considerably higher than now, so why would it be weakened with a more gradated system that involved relatively minor tax increases?

But the last 30 years have been amazing, if you can overlook the increase in wealth gap, then it comes down to the philosophy of equality again.

179   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 6:09pm  

Peter P says

We have to agree to disagree. Much has happened in the last 20 years.

It has and that is not going to be affected by minor incremental increases in the tax rates of the richest. We aren't talking a French style 75% tax rate here.

Peter P says

My other pet peeve: education, in its current form, is over-rated.

First, we cannot force people to become educated.

Second, education needs to be flexible and board.

Third, students should be allowed to draw their own conclusions.

I propose teaching kids how to self-learn very early on. Then they can draw information from the internet. This can be done cheaply and effectively.

Internet is great. I wish I had wikipedia when I was young. But digging up information in the library was fun nonetheless.

Everyone has their own theory about what would be best for education. Personally, I think building better schools, investing in smaller class sizes etc. etc. wouldn't be a bad use of funds. Better than spending money bombing the shit out of tribal states at the very least.

180   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 6:10pm  

Peter P says

But the last 30 years have been amazing, if you can overlook the increase in wealth gap, then it comes down to the philosophy of equality again.

One doesn't preclude the other. Great innovation isn't a product of massive wealth disparity. A decision has simply been made by those in positions of power to massively enrich themselves whilst wage growth for everyone else has stagnated.

181   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 6:20pm  

Bigsby says

One doesn't preclude the other. Great innovation isn't a product of massive wealth disparity. A decision has simply been made by those in positions of power to massively enrich themselves whilst wage growth for everyone else has stagnated.

I think the risk altitude also changed.

People working in risky businesses (e.g. technology) appear to be doing fine. Higher tax rate with better social service may lower the risk appetite, which may or may not be a good thing.

182   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 6:22pm  

Bigsby says

We aren't talking a French style 75% tax rate here.

Federal + State (CA) + FICA exceeds 50% marginal rate for many families that are not remotely rich.

Bigsby says

Better than spending money bombing the shit out of tribal states at the very least.

It is too early to judge what is happening in the Middle East. Energy is very important for growth and we are going to need fossil fuel for a long, long time.

But I agree that war is wasteful.

183   Peter P   2012 Dec 14, 6:24pm  

BTW, getting sleepy. Nice chatting. Perhaps we will meet in one of those coffee events in the future. :-)

184   Bigsby   2012 Dec 14, 6:56pm  

Peter P says

Bigsby says

We aren't talking a French style 75% tax rate here.

Federal + State (CA) + FICA exceeds 50% marginal rate for many families that are not remotely rich.

75% is the income tax rate on wages over $1.4m (or so). That's quite a difference to the rate in the US.

Peter P says

It is too early to judge what is happening in the Middle East. Energy is very important for growth and we are going to need fossil fuel for a long, long time.

They were and are quite happy to sell it without being invaded. As for Afghanistan...

185   BobbyS   2012 Dec 14, 7:23pm  

It's true that guns don't kill people, people do. Then why do we even care about the types of arms other nations have? Also, why aren't bazookas and rocket launchers legal to own? We should have zero concern about regulating anything that could be considered a weapon.

186   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Dec 14, 9:45pm  

It irritates me that the conversation about shit like this goes straight to guns. Most of the time, those who did these mass murder flipouts were diagnosed and treated previously.

* Where is the support/monitoring of the patients? ("Take your meds")
* Where is the support for Caregivers? ("How can we help you monitor your family member/Teach you warning signs")

Seriously, it ain't rocket science. Who does this shit? We know:

Shy/Socially Awkward young men with Depression, Schizo, or severe Personality Disorders aged 14-30.

The only gun control law you might need is to have doctors "strongly recommend" caregivers to give up any firearms they have in these situations. Maybe give them a form that says "I was told to give up my guns when caring for a mentally ill individual".

Seriously, if you have depressed or schizo children, get rid of the gun and get a tazer instead. The odds of you needing the gun are outweighed by the likelihood that your family member is going to do something stupid with it to themselves or others.

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