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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: December 19th, 2023

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  • The problems with mass shootings are stem from psychological problems. These problem stem from a culture that normalized posting photos on facebook posing with firearms. The point of these posts is to appear intimidating which associates firearms with power over others. This puts people that engage in this behavior one bad day from going on a killing spree.

    You know that Canadians have had these kinds of firearms for decades, right? The guns themselves aren’t the problem, it’s the violent rhetoric. Facebook is definitely a problem, and I wouldn’t care if they banned that instead (though I imagine it would be a far less popular move). Addressing the root cause would be more beneficial, instead of treating the entire adult population with undue suspicion and fear. Besides, you can already report unstable people with firearms to local police, and if they decide to investigate, they’ll confiscate those firearms pre-emptively.

    So firearms need to be regulated similarly to tobacco. We don’t want tacticool firearms for people to pose with on facebook, which starts them down a dark path. Ideally firearms should be lame looking, and not have the capability of killing large numbers of people. Many weapons aren’t suitable for hunting, but pose a significant danger if used for killing sprees have been banned.

    I don’t own firearms for mass killing. It’s a sport that I enjoy that requires a unique blend of practical skills that translate to other parts of life. Are firearms dangerous weapons? Yes, that’s why we have licencing programs that require training and education. You know, kinda like cars.

    Lame-looking guns still kill just fine, and these bans haven’t removed all semi-automatics anyway. The SKS is still non-restricted; it was left alone because it’s incredibly popular with First Nations hunters, but that doesn’t mean Mr. Mass Shooter can’t pick one up to replace his AR-15 or 9mm PCC.

    And yeah, guns get across the border. This is also illegal, so not sure why you’re trying to make a point about it being somehow hypocritical to have both owning weapons suited for mass killings be illegal while smuggling guns is also illegal.

    The bans don’t stop the crime, that’s the point. Taking guns from lawfully licenced people won’t impact the crime statistics because they’re almost entirely absent from those statistics. Spending the gun buyback money on increased border enforcement would’ve been a more effective method.

    If you don’t like it, go move to the US and have your kids go to schools where they need to do mass shooting drills.

    Telling me to move to the US to enjoy mass shootings is not a reasonable or stable response to my objection to the assault on gun ownership in Canada.

    What I like about Canada’s gun culture is that it’s focused on safe use and ownership of firearms. The irony is that we try very hard not to be like Americans in that respect, but we’re still villified as if we’re the same simply because we have/want firearms.

    Not everyone has the luxury of buying meat at a grocery store, and not everyone is silly enough to think carrying a bolt-action rifle in the woods is sufficient enough for safe predator control.

    Finally, if you know anyone who has a really fast car, and doesn’t race it anywhere but the racetrack, would you ban those fast cars because someone could do something illegal with them? After all, propaganda films glorifying illegal street racing like The Fast and Furious are programming impressionable young minds to drive recklessly on our roads, threatening to make every commute a deadly gamble!






  • I was thinking like this a few weeks ago but with more thought I think we are geographically too difficult to invade by force.

    It’s unfortunately much the opposite; our geography makes us easy to divide and conquer through a combination of the Canadian Shield being difficult to develop on, and the Trans Canada highway being a single point of failure.

    https://youtu.be/550EdfxN868

    I know the video is about invading the US, but it covers the general strategy the US could easily use to prevent troop movements between the western and eastern parts of Canada.

    The rest of the world would also have boots on the ground here to help us out.

    The US Navy could easily blockade or destroy the entirety of Europe’s combined naval forces in a matter of days. Large-scale troop and equipment transport to bring reinforcement would be extremely unlikely to work, and Europe’s militaries know this.

    Also I think the vast majority of Americans would just refuse the order to do it.

    20 years ago, Ukrainians would never have entertained the idea that Russia would invade and annex them. Many families lived, and continue to live, across both countries. Pernicious propaganda combined with authoritarian rule eventually removed the risk of sufficiently organized opposition.

    Will it take 20 years for the US oligarchy to do the same? It’s only been two months and we’ve gone from mutual cooperation to booing each other’s anthems in sports games and AI-generated pictures of geese smashing eagles.

    Increased trade with China at the US’ expense will be the grain of truth buried in Trump’s lies about Canada being owned and run by China (it doesn’t need to be true, he just needs a fact he can grossly misinterpret, and often, not even that).

    I wouldn’t underestimate just how thoroughly ignorant and upset many Americans are. A little push in the right direction and the promise of wealth, even if ill-gotten, might be all they need.











  • “American fascism is entirely due to Russian operatives and trolls” is laughable because of how hard it glosses over the steps you have taken to ensure fascism in your own country.

    I’m not American, and it’s not fascist thinking to point out the fact that Russia is literally running a fascist playbook to encourage aligned fascism globally.

    Pointing that out isn’t meant to excuse the existence of fascists within the US; if anything, its about the idea that there are fascists to work with in every country, and they’re coordinating their efforts.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Democracy_Union

    The difference between the US and Russia is there are still people like the head of the FTC trying to curtail corporate power however they can. Russia only does it to enforce loyalty amongst its oligarchs.

    This idea that Russia is both too weak to win a war against Ukraine but also strong enough to covertly topple the world’s foremost superpowers is honestly fascist thinking.

    The too weak/strong argument is fallacious in this instance because the dimensions we’re comparing aren’t equivalent. A nation that heavily invests in intelligence and asymmetric warfare at the expense of conventional warfare capabilities will be strong in the former and weak in the latter. In Ukraine’s case, Russia thought they were strong in both and found out that they weren’t quite as capable as they had led themselves to believe. That’s why we’re seeing them ramp up the tactics as described in the article.

    Once Trump pulls the plug on Ukraine’s funding and access to US intelligence systems, they’ll fall to Russia because they won’t have enough of either capability to win a war of attrition with a larger, richer state.