Silva
Full Member
you're off by a bitWell a POTUS was shot
you're off by a bitWell a POTUS was shot
click the link
What's the death toll looking like?
Small blessing the way these things are these days3 (I think) including the shooter.
I didn't know anything about this incident until I saw the thread in the CE Forum.
But when I saw it was only 3 pages long, I knew for a fact the shooter wasn't going to be a Muslim.
I didn't know anything about this incident until I saw the thread in the CE Forum.
But when I saw it was only 3 pages long, I knew for a fact the shooter wasn't going to be a Muslim.
I didn't know anything about this incident until I saw the thread in the CE Forum.
But when I saw it was only 3 pages long, I knew for a fact the shooter wasn't going to be a Muslim.
Toronto though, so people can't fill it with posts about how shit the USA is and have discussions about gun control. Half these threads are usually just a repeat of something about Donald Trump or something about instead of thoughts and prayers how about ban guns. Those posts don't apply to events in Canada.Muslim shooter in Toronto only got two pages.
He might still be muslim, but he didn't look Arabic.
I’ve always struggled with figuring out the connection between literally interpreting the Bible and promoting gun ownership.
The closest I’ve seen to an explanation is that Jesus’ disciples carried weapons.
I didn't know anything about this incident until I saw the thread in the CE Forum.
But when I saw it was only 3 pages long, I knew for a fact the shooter wasn't going to be a Muslim.
In America, at an event involving video games... this thread could have turned out massive with a different narrative for people to hitch their wagons to.Some Muslim related terror doesn't even get a thread now
In America, at an event involving video games... this thread could have turned out massive with a different narrative for people to hitch their wagons to.
That’s how it always goes mate.
Black person - Criminal, gang violence
Brown person - Terrorist
White person - Mental illness
They always like to say it's too soon to politicise the event too if it was a white shooter.
I was thinking about this when I drove through some small towns. I don't think its a causal relationship so much as they both come from the same historical source. I think there is something about the frontier and frontier mentality that's embedded in America culture from the 1700-1800s that is just absent from European culture.
As the continent was colonized there was always a frontier (even space "the final frontier"). The frontier is always more dangerous, so guns are a necessary tool. I think the reason guns are seen so differently in Europe and America is at least partially because the long term cultural impact was very different in the 1700-1800s. Americans had the frontier which is a lonelier place. On the frontier guns are useful tools that can protect against predators. On the cynical side they were useful in achieving superior firepower over the native tribes.
Corn farming in America contrasts with rice farming in China. Corn is much more dependent on the weather whereas rice farming is more direct labor->output. I think its reasonable that corn farmers in the area that would become part of the bible belt were heavily dependent on "praying" for crop favorable weather, similar to how natives of this region would have rain dances.
But while America was dealing with the frontier, that concept I don't think had any cultural influence on Europe from the era of pre-Napoleon to French Revolution I to Napoleon through the Concert of Europe. Europe was dealing with issues like long wars then once a relative peace was established with the Concert, then the issues were internal and driven by monarchy, the reformation, revolution. Liberals taking from Adam Smith, revolutionaries of the Marxist influence, etc. I think Europe during 1700-1800 had a vastly different cultural experience with guns and god than America. In Europe there was definitely a war weariness by the time WWII ended.
While in America the frontier mentality still prevailed into the 20th century. Guns are the useful tool that is necessary for protection. God is embedded with the farmers, ranchers who prayed for favorable weather. I am generalizing a lot here but I think in Europe the war weariness translated into more wariness towards guns, while in America the frontier mentality of useful tool still prevailed into the modern culture along with a more interactive type of God.
The blood isn’t even dry on the bodies yet TM
The blood will never fecking be dry as long as people have that kind of access to guns.
In our case (Canada), it's not the cultural heritage from Europe but the cold () fact that without being a cooperative society that leans toward collective effort, most of us would have frozen to death long ago. Indeed, though most would not admit it, it's our nation's inherent heritage from our indigenous peoples that showed the way there.
Maybe, but during WW1 and WW2, Canada and the other commonwealth nations were still very close to the UK. Literally family close, a huge percentage of soldiers who fought in WW1 and WW2 from Canada, were either first generation immigrants, or, literally had close relatives fighting. So there is definitely a shared experience in WW1 and WW2 that Canada and Australia, New Zealand, South Africa etc have, that didn't exist to that extent in the USA. When London was bombed, there were a lot of Canadians who had siblings, parents, cousins who were being bombed and killed.
So Canadians learned more about violence from WW2 than Americans because they had relatives in London? Pearl Harbor and the horrific slog through the misery of the Pacific front just a sideshow in that instance, I presume?Maybe, but during WW1 and WW2, Canada and the other commonwealth nations were still very close to the UK. Literally family close, a huge percentage of soldiers who fought in WW1 and WW2 from Canada, were either first generation immigrants, or, literally had close relatives fighting. So there is definitely a shared experience in WW1 and WW2 that Canada and Australia, New Zealand, South Africa etc have, that didn't exist to that extent in the USA. When London was bombed, there were a lot of Canadians who had siblings, parents, cousins who were being bombed and killed.
So Canadians learned more about violence from WW2 than Americans because they had relatives in London? Pearl Harbor and the horrific slog through the misery of the Pacific front just a sideshow in that instance, I presume?
I struggle to see the relevance.
That doesn't help in regards to a predisposition against violence relative to each nation.Maybe I am wrong here, but he does not refer at the violence but what he is trying to say is that Canada, NZ, Australia and South Africa had more ties with UK than US, basically because they became independent later (Canada was only 50 years independent on WWI and they preserved more ties inside the Commonwealth while the US left after a n independence war AGAINST brits almost 200 years ago back then and had time to create their own identity