Author Topic: I would do something, not just run. Would you?  (Read 8356 times)

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #125 on: August 01, 2008, 10:42:50 AM »
It's fine.  Let these vile creatures kill each other.  Humans are disgusting creatures and deserve all they get

Kwon

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #126 on: August 01, 2008, 01:45:00 PM »
I just want to know one thing, what was his reasoning for the attack.

What went through his mind. What caused the Meltdown.
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Tombo

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #127 on: August 02, 2008, 06:45:02 PM »
getbig.com

Brixtonbulldog

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #128 on: August 02, 2008, 07:06:37 PM »
240

Despite all the other crap that has come out of you, based on what you've said in this thread I think the world would be better off with 10,000 more people like you in it.

Check into Florida law and see if they have a peace officer program.  Another armed citizen with arrest power is one more upholder of the constitution.

Canada might have less crime but when something as horrible as this does happen there's no one around to end it.  Tragedy.

Purple Aki

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #129 on: August 03, 2008, 01:53:34 AM »
240

Despite all the other crap that has come out of you, based on what you've said in this thread I think the world would be better off with 10,000 more people like you in it.

Check into Florida law and see if they have a peace officer program.  Another armed citizen with arrest power is one more upholder of the constitution.

Canada might have less crime but when something as horrible as this does happen there's no one around to end it.  Tragedy.

Agreed, a lot of the world's problems could be ended quickly by just flying in 240 armed with a sharpened HB.

spinnis

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #130 on: August 03, 2008, 03:20:06 AM »
I just want to know one thing, what was his reasoning for the attack.

What went through his mind. What caused the Meltdown.

The man didnīt like sleeping teenagers thatīs for sure..

dr.chimps

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #131 on: August 03, 2008, 05:12:27 AM »
240

Despite all the other crap that has come out of you, based on what you've said in this thread I think the world would be better off with 10,000 more people like you in it.

Check into Florida law and see if they have a peace officer program.  Another armed citizen with arrest power is one more upholder of the constitution.

Canada might have less crime but when something as horrible as this does happen there's no one around to end it.  Tragedy.
It is a tragic event, not tragedy, and this event is a statistical anomaly that probably could have not been prevented without turning Canada into some Orwellian nightmare.   

Brixtonbulldog

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #132 on: August 03, 2008, 07:37:47 AM »
It is a tragic event, not tragedy, and this event is a statistical anomaly that probably could have not been prevented without turning Canada into some Orwellian nightmare.   

Since when is armed citizenry able to defend itself an orwellian nightmare?

Sharma

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #133 on: August 03, 2008, 07:40:17 AM »
Western Democracy is so civilized. The perfect, advanced society ::)

dr.chimps

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #134 on: August 03, 2008, 08:03:11 AM »
Since when is armed citizenry able to defend itself an orwellian nightmare?
Because an armed citizenry does not come without any other bells and whistles that circumscribe either basic human rights or civil rights. In any case, someone who is a mentally 'off' and both determined and strategic in their methods (as well as unexpected in timing) will probably not be stopped. I could walk out my door and find someone to knife to death without much trouble of immediate retaliation (*shiver*). See what I mean?  :-X

Dreadlord

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #135 on: August 03, 2008, 08:26:17 AM »
Western Democracy is so civilized. The perfect, advanced society ::)

Its a society that muslims flock to. Practically all of the sheiks in the middle east have adopted western ways while only paying lip service to muslim crap. All of them travel to europe and the US and enjoy a civilized lifestyle. They even have western consultants tell them how to run their businesses.

Saudi royals begged the US not to remove their troops after the removal of saddam. Muslim lands are being taken over and they are being converted to western ways. The muslim kids living in the west have abandoned their archaic bullshit and are now entering a civilized phase. Muslim girls refuse to be slaves and are defying their fathers and marrying westerners. This is now a growing trend in europe. The fanatics are slowly dying and that pisses them off.

 

flagadajones

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #136 on: August 03, 2008, 09:06:02 AM »
if someone had been carying a gun and shot the crazy lemonface, this very same person would have been the one thrown in jail.


Canadian cops shot dead two crazy morons threatening people with knives in manitoba last week, first tasered them then had to shot em dead because of the ineficience of the tazers; they re both under investigation by their own colleagues and are subject to be judged and fired...


Welcome to a socialist world; north america is more and more becoming like europe.

Kwon

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #137 on: August 03, 2008, 11:01:22 AM »
The man didnīt like sleeping teenagers thatīs for sure..

LOL! There must be something else triggering this reaction.
Q

Butterbean

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #138 on: August 03, 2008, 01:47:57 PM »
Police tape: Canada bus killer ate victim's flesh

By CHARMAINE NORONHA, Associated Press Writer
Sat Aug 2, 7:43 PM ET
(www.news.yahoo.com)


TORONTO - A police officer at the scene of a grisly beheading on a Canadian bus reported seeing the attacker hacking off pieces of the victim's body and eating them, according to a police tape leaked on the Internet Saturday.
 
In the tape of radio transmissions, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer refers to the attacker as "Badger" and says he is armed with a knife and scissors and is "defiling the body at the front of the bus as we speak."

On the tape, which lasts about 80 seconds, officers continue to detail the attacker's movements until one reports, "Badger's at the back of the bus, hacking off pieces and eating it."

The RCMP described the tapes as "operational police communications and, as such, are not meant for public consumption." Police said permission had not been given to use the radio transmission, which was posted on LiveLeak.com and picked up by other Web sites.

Officers were responding to a desolate stretch of the TransCanada Highway about 12 miles from Portage La Prairie, Manitoba, after the bloody attack late Wednesday on the bus traveling from Edmonton, Alberta to Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Vince Weiguang Li, 40, faces second-degree murder charges for the murder of a 22-year-old man, who friends and family identified as Tim McLean. Police have not confirmed the victim's identity.

Passengers said they had just reboarded the bus following a break when the suspect — for no apparent reason — stabbed the man sitting next to him dozens of times as passengers fled in horror. He then severed the man's head, displayed it and began hacking at the body.

Li's employer said in an interview Saturday that he was shocked to learn that his "model employee" had been accused of the grisly attack. Vincent Augert, an independent contractor who distributes newspapers in Edmonton, said that Li was one of his most reliable carriers.

"He was very punctual and always cleanly dressed," he told The Associated Press. "He was a very nice, polite guy. We would've had no reason to let him go before all this happened."

Augert said Li had worked for him since last July and caused no problems.

"I had no odd suspicions about him at all," said Augert.

Augert said that Li called him two weeks ago to say he needed a day or two off to go to Winnipeg for a job interview at the end of July. He said Li called him back and left a message with the dates, but never followed up after that.

"That was unusual for him not to call back and then when he didn't show up for work on Tuesday we got worried," said Augert, who said it was sometimes difficult to understand Li because he spoke quickly and had a strong Chinese accent.

Augert said he called Li's cell phone on Thursday and his wife answered. She told him that she hadn't heard from Li, who had told her he had to leave for a few days because of a family emergency.

Li, who shuffled into a courtroom Friday in Portage la Prairie with his head bowed and feet shackled, appeared before the court without a lawyer. He did not reply when the judge asked him whether he was going to get a lawyer, and only nodded slightly when asked whether he was exercising his right not to speak. He was not required to enter a plea.

The prosecutor asked for a psychiatric assessment, but the judge said he wanted to give Li a chance to meet with his lawyer. Li's next court appearance is scheduled for Tuesday. The RCMP said Li has no known criminal record.

McLean's family spoke publicly Saturday for the first time since the brutal attack.

"He was a little guy with a heart bigger than you could know," McLean's uncle, Alex McLean, told reporters in a prepared statement from the family.

"Tim spent his life traveling and meeting new people and always saw the good in everyone. He had the most infectious giggle. You could hear him laughing a mile away," said Alex McLean.

"It didn't matter what kind of a day you were having, because when you heard him laugh, you couldn't help but join in."

William Caron, 23, said McLean was quiet, though he liked to socialize with friends. He was small — about 5-foot-4 and 130 pounds — and tended to stay away from a fight, Caron said.

"All the time I've known Tim, he's never been the type of guy to get into a fight with. He always kept to himself when there's strangers around," Caron said.

The killing has spawned a vast online community, with tens of thousands showing support for McLean's family and expressing disgust for the attack.

One of the many groups on the social networking site Facebook has accumulated over 40,000 members with more than 2,000 wall posts.

"It's something right out of a horror movie," said Sheena in Edmonton.

R

Brixtonbulldog

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Re: I would do something, not just run. Would you?
« Reply #139 on: August 03, 2008, 05:38:55 PM »
Because an armed citizenry does not come without any other bells and whistles that circumscribe either basic human rights or civil rights. In any case, someone who is a mentally 'off' and both determined and strategic in their methods (as well as unexpected in timing) will probably not be stopped. I could walk out my door and find someone to knife to death without much trouble of immediate retaliation (*shiver*). See what I mean?  :-X

In some instances you may be correct.  Many incidents, however, can be and are averted with armed citizenry.  The chances of someone pulling out a .40 S&W and double-tapping Li before the fourth or fifth stab (and possibly saving that young mans life) are infinitely greater than in a society where right-to-carry is forbidden.