Not even trying anymore.
http://ow.ly/i0zyV
LarryP wrote:I see low need to use a gun as a good thing. Better than the other way around.
“I’m a perfect example of that,” said Mike Briggs, a firearms instructor and permit holder who lives in Ramsey. Briggs said he was pumping gas in February 2012 about 4 a.m. in north Minneapolis when he saw four people drive up in a car with the headlights off. Briggs said he made eye contact with the driver and that the two stared at each other for three minutes until the group slowly drove away. Briggs said he never pulled out his Wilson Combat .45 pistol.
Paul wrote:“I’m a perfect example of that,” said Mike Briggs, a firearms instructor and permit holder who lives in Ramsey. Briggs said he was pumping gas in February 2012 about 4 a.m. in north Minneapolis when he saw four people drive up in a car with the headlights off. Briggs said he made eye contact with the driver and that the two stared at each other for three minutes until the group slowly drove away. Briggs said he never pulled out his Wilson Combat .45 pistol.
Really? A three minute stare down? Maybe if there was dramatic music playing and a camera panning back and forth focusing on squinting eyes and flared nostrils.
Likely another example of people being piss poor at estimating time accurately.
Paul wrote:“I’m a perfect example of that,” said Mike Briggs, a firearms instructor and permit holder who lives in Ramsey. Briggs said he was pumping gas in February 2012 about 4 a.m. in north Minneapolis when he saw four people drive up in a car with the headlights off. Briggs said he made eye contact with the driver and that the two stared at each other for three minutes until the group slowly drove away. Briggs said he never pulled out his Wilson Combat .45 pistol.
Really? A three minute stare down? Maybe if there was dramatic music playing and a camera panning back and forth focusing on squinting eyes and flared nostrils.
Likely another example of people being piss poor at estimating time accurately.
Of the 124 gun-related crimes committed by permit holders in Minnesota since 2003, 19 were assaults, 10 were for carrying under the influence, six were for drug-related crimes and one was a homicide.
Snowgun wrote:I love this beautiful use of descriptive statistics:Of the 124 gun-related crimes committed by permit holders in Minnesota since 2003, 19 were assaults, 10 were for carrying under the influence, six were for drug-related crimes and one was a homicide.
Ok, 124-19-10-6-1 = 88 gun related crimes ( or 71% of them) that were not mentioned were for what? I'm assuming not worse than the assaults, influence, or drugs...
AFTERMATH wrote:
Judging by posts on this forum, I'd have to say speeding....
Here's the real question - How many of those crimes were the same person in the same incident?
Could be one drunk guy: 10x the legal carry limit(.4 is possible) That's 10 crimes for under the influence.
He had 6 Percocets(not his perscription) in his pocket - That's the 6 drug crimes.
Dude got in his car and drove speeding down the road, completely blitzed he drove down the road pointing his gun at a bus with 19 passengers. That's 19 assaults.
Then he runs over a pedestrian. And there's the homicide.
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