

Yup. And thanks to the NRA and misinterpretation of the Second Amendment, the Bushmaster is available at your local Walmart!
mirage wrote:lowlydog wrote:We are 100% responsible for our actions, not 50% or 75% or 99%, but 100%.
Is a person having an epileptic fit "responsible" for his actions? Or a person in fever? What about a person with a brain trauma causing all sorts of delusions? Where do we draw the line?
PorkChop wrote:JKhedrup wrote:http://cnn.com/video/?/video/world/2012/12/15/pmt-panel-gun-control-debate.cnn
Wasn't much of a debate when you don't let the opposition talk or explain themselves.
Sweden had some good gun control laws too, didn't stop what happened there.
lowlydog wrote:mirage wrote:lowlydog wrote:We are 100% responsible for our actions, not 50% or 75% or 99%, but 100%.
Is a person having an epileptic fit "responsible" for his actions? Or a person in fever? What about a person with a brain trauma causing all sorts of delusions? Where do we draw the line?
You are 100% responsible for your own actions(karma).
There are however different types of karma, where you draw the line is entirely up to you.
There is karma that is like drawing a line in the water, passes away very quickly.
There is karma that is like drawing a line in the sand, takes some time but passes away.
There is karma that is like chiseling a line on a rock, takes years and years(many lifetimes) to pass away.
mirage wrote:I find it problematic to speak about "responsibility" in this context. The word reminds me of Christian concepts of free will, where your choices are not predetermined, and not random, but just happen somehow in some way for which you are fully "responsible".
Our actions are conditioned by previous actions. Previous actions are conditioned by actions before them, ad nauseam. Which part is "up to me"? Who is "me" anyway?
I understand that a notion of something like that may be benefical in regards to oneself, even if it ultimately an illusion, in the same way as a substantial self. But when in concerns other people? No, absolutely no way. When a person acts wrongly, he is basically ill. What he needs is some form of treatment. This is what Buddhism is about for me.
Originally I was responding to your words: "what you are suggesting is duality; that the cause of this behavior is caused by another being. This is not the teachings of the Buddha. We are 100% responsible for our actions"
Ok, so what if mental disease is caused by spirits? Other diseases are caused by germs. Same thing. Our karma causes both of these things to happen. That doesn't mean that spirits or germs do not exist.
Tom wrote:The idea too that there is nothing much we can do and pandora's box has been opened is both defeatist and simply not true - other countries have shown that introducing gun control measures as a sane response to mass shootings can work (see Australia)…
- my brother owns 70 (don't ask me why, I don't have a clue). And as long as the Second Amendment (misinterpreted as it is) and the National Rifle Association are in existence, real gun control is off limits (politically, it's a death sentence) and the attitude is "I'll give you my gun when you pry (or take) it from my cold, dead hands" (NRA slogan - seriously). As long as the bad guys can get anything they want on the black market, from Saturday night specials and fully automatic weapons all the way to rocket launchers, scared citizens will demand the "right to protect" themselves. justsit wrote:Tom wrote:The idea too that there is nothing much we can do and pandora's box has been opened is both defeatist and simply not true - other countries have shown that introducing gun control measures as a sane response to mass shootings can work (see Australia)…
As I posted earlier today on Dhamma Wheel...
A compulsory buy back [or other gun control] would never fly here in the US. Many Americans love guns- my brother owns 70 (don't ask me why, I don't have a clue). And as long as the Second Amendment (misinterpreted as it is) and the National Rifle Association are in existence, real gun control is off limits (politically, it's a death sentence) and the attitude is "I'll give you my gun when you pry (or take) it from my cold, dead hands" (NRA slogan - seriously). As long as the bad guys can get anything they want on the black market, from Saturday night specials and fully automatic weapons all the way to rocket launchers, scared citizens will demand the "right to protect" themselves.
America is a land of fear and much hopelessness right now - efforts to remove what little sense of security many people have will be unsuccessful. Gun owners are well organized, vocal, and armed to the teeth. America was born in violence, has lived and glorified violence - and now the results are manifesting. We will reap what we've sown.
justsit wrote:Well, there ya go.
One girl wanted to know how to react to a shooter who takes aim at a classmate.
The Dalai Lama said acts of violence should be remembered, and then forgiveness should be extended to the perpetrators.
But if someone has a gun and is trying to kill you, he said, it would be reasonable to shoot back with your own gun. Not at the head, where a fatal wound might result. But at some other body part, such as a leg.
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource. ... =dalai15m0

Tom wrote:True the bad guys might have rocket launches but a personal arms race is not the answer and is no way to protect yourself!

lowlydog wrote:Tom wrote:True the bad guys might have rocket launches but a personal arms race is not the answer and is no way to protect yourself!
Don't worry Tom, we know the Americans have rocket launchers but us Canadians arn't starting an arms race to protect ourselves from them. We don't even think of them as bad guys just a little ignorant.
Tom wrote:Yes, I'd move North but its way too cold!

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