NRA Hijinks

Discussion in 'Politics' started by dbphoenix, Aug 27, 2014.

  1. Lucrum

    Lucrum

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    #311     Sep 21, 2014
  2. This guy is one dumb fuck.:wtf:ops:.
     
    #312     Sep 21, 2014
  3. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    [​IMG]
     
    #313     Sep 21, 2014
  4. dbphoenix

    dbphoenix

    By: Kristen Garcia, KOB.com

    An army recruiter was in court Sunday after police say he pulled a gun on two women.

    According to Bernalillio County sheriff's deputies, two women were trying to park near the Isleta amphitheater Friday night, when Christopher Schirmer allegedly told the women he was saving that spot for a friend. One of the woman stated it was first come, first serve and the two continued to pull into the parking space.

    Deputies say that's when he pulled out a gun and told them to leave.

    According to a criminal complaint, Schirmer told deputies the women continued to slowly pull into the parking space, pushing his legs with the vehicle.

    Schirmer told deputies he had a handgun in his truck, but he never pulled it out or threatened anyone with it. Police however did find a gun in his truck that matched the description the victims gave.

    Schirmer is charged with Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon.
     
    #314     Sep 22, 2014
  5. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Coming from you, that's a compliment.
     
    #315     Sep 22, 2014
  6. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Yes, we need to disarm the army right away!
     
    #316     Sep 22, 2014
  7. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    Stupid people do stupid things every day. And not just with guns but with autos, power tools, boats, bats, electricity, alcohol, drugs, fire etc etc etc...

    "Stupid people" including military and law enforcement personnel of course. What with them being people too and all.
     
    #317     Sep 22, 2014
  8. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    [​IMG]
     
    #318     Sep 22, 2014
  9. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    [​IMG]
     
    #319     Sep 22, 2014
    Scataphagos likes this.
  10. dbphoenix

    dbphoenix

    Seventeen-year-old Kai Kloepfer wants to sell you a gun.

    Dressed in a navy suit, his hair more neatly combed than is normal for a boy his age, Kloepfer was speaking to me just before taking the stage at a TEDx event, where he was set to showcase his newest idea: a gun that can only be fired by its owner or a select few with permission to operate it.

    The idea, which appeared to the high schooler in a dream, was born out of equal parts necessity and tragic inspiration. Kloepfer needed a science fair project, and about an hour’s drive away in Aurora, Colo., James Holmes had just murdered 12 people and injured scores more inside a movie theater.

    Seven months and over one thousand hours later, the budding engineer had created a model for a biometric firearm that requires an authorized user’s fingerprint to discharge. Kloepfer knew the design wouldn’t have stopped the Aurora massacre, but he thought it might prevent the kind of accidental shootings and suicides that cause more damage and get less media attention.

    The current prototype is just plastic. Kloepfer plans to move the technology to an actual gun with a recently awarded $50,000 grant, the first in a number of prizes from a pool of $1 million being awarded by the Smart Tech Challenges Foundation, Silicon Valley’s answer to the gun violence epidemic. Angel investor Ron Conway (with stakes in Facebook and Google, among other companies) started the group, in response to the December 2012 mass shooting deaths of 20 elementary school students and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The main goal, as Director Jim Pitkow explained it to me, is to stimulate firearms safety technology “by engaging directly with innovators and incentivizing their progress.”

    “We’re looking for the ideas that haven’t been thought of yet,” Pitkow said at a Fast Company event.

    If America still doesn’t have a widely-available smart gun—the nickname for a firearm that is useless in the wrong hands, able to recognize its shooter by PIN number, a radio frequency emitted by an owner-worn device, of some other biometric marker like a electronically recognized grip or a fingerprint—it’s not for lack of trying. For as long as we’ve had guns, they’ve fallen into the wrong hands (those of children, or mass murderers), and the people that make and shoot firearms have worked on improvements to make them safer. Now, decades of research have finally culminated in the first generation of reliable smart guns—including Koepfel’s prototype and the Armitrix, a handgun that uses radio frequency to identify its owner.

    But would-be manufacturers of smart guns and safety proponents face a new hurdle: no gun shop will sell the things, thanks to intense harassment from the NRA and its devotees.

    Yet an obscure state law, and a firearm maker that has been quietly selling its smart gun on the side, may soon force the hand of smart gun opponents, a move that could have far-reaching implications for public safety, the firearm industry and individual gun owners. more . . .
     
    #320     Sep 23, 2014