About uniforms: I went to a school which required uniforms. I can say with certainty that the myth of uniforms masking who is wealthy and who is not is flatly false. Uniform or not, you only have to be in a room with a bunch of other kids for a few hours before you figure out what the batting order is. That said, it does help a little to "put everyone in the same boat" so to speak.
Earlier in the thread Urwumpe mentioned cowardice, Eagle mentioned self-respect, and Ohmra mentioned "bravery and a Colt". Good points, all, and all are linked.
You guys all know I am rabidly in support of the right to keep and bear arms, but before you have the Colt you have to have the bravery, first.
And in order to have the bravery, you need to have self-respect and a sense of self-worth, along with a corresponding respect for the lives and dignity of other people.
Modern society is, in my opinion, structured counter to this. The combination of a fairly comfortable lifestyle, public officials who tell us not to take action but rather to let the professionals do it for us, and an educational institution which treats teenagers as if they're stupid, along with a general failure to teach people to grow up.
People have a right to defend themselves, of course. But if you want to put an end to these crazy killing sprees you need to fix a lot more than just some gun laws. You need to ask why a healthy teen with a comfortable life is so lost in despair and narcisism, so hopeless, that he could commit such a pointless act.
I had until recently thought this to be a mostly American phenomenon, but I see it is occurring with increasing frequency in other Western nations now. It obviously has little to do with the diverse laws; find the common threads of culture to find the common causes.
Earlier in the thread Urwumpe mentioned cowardice, Eagle mentioned self-respect, and Ohmra mentioned "bravery and a Colt". Good points, all, and all are linked.
You guys all know I am rabidly in support of the right to keep and bear arms, but before you have the Colt you have to have the bravery, first.
And in order to have the bravery, you need to have self-respect and a sense of self-worth, along with a corresponding respect for the lives and dignity of other people.
Modern society is, in my opinion, structured counter to this. The combination of a fairly comfortable lifestyle, public officials who tell us not to take action but rather to let the professionals do it for us, and an educational institution which treats teenagers as if they're stupid, along with a general failure to teach people to grow up.
People have a right to defend themselves, of course. But if you want to put an end to these crazy killing sprees you need to fix a lot more than just some gun laws. You need to ask why a healthy teen with a comfortable life is so lost in despair and narcisism, so hopeless, that he could commit such a pointless act.
I had until recently thought this to be a mostly American phenomenon, but I see it is occurring with increasing frequency in other Western nations now. It obviously has little to do with the diverse laws; find the common threads of culture to find the common causes.