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Active shooter in San Bernardino right now

I'm not worried about things outta my control. After every horrible event, we've carried on. Gotta keep doing the same. Killing more bad guys would help, though.....and profiling would be a good start. It should start in the White House.
 
I fully expect the terror attacks to become much more frequent & much more destructive.... Our leaders are completely & utterly clueless about what is coming. Or are they?


It is a clear & present threat that we must deal with right now.
 
WE can't deal with it. Nobody in government will correct or stop the calculated decisions being made by the leftist powers that be. So, unless somebody wants to step-up and start a domestic conflict with a picked-out group of people....ya better arm yourself and live with it.
 
you think that article is true??
if so,lol,we got a lot of pigs in america.
that general really did what it took tho...thanks for the share

I don't know. They said Snopes couldn't disprove it. I'm sure even if it were true, there would be too many obstacles to doing it today because of one special interest group or another.
 
Every gun show I've been to has the forms at every booth to be filled out. As far as Joe Common walking in with a gun and Jack Noname buys it as a private deal, that happens everywhere, not just at gun shows. They keep harping on gun shows. Gun shows aren't the problem.

Thank you i stand corrected

- - - Updated - - -

Sorry if i pissed any of you off… I think were all fed up and disgusted.
 
We are not only fed up and disgusted we are being killed in our hearts and minds by this.
The enemy is taking a big toll.
 
Read the Bible... there is NO fix for this. We are now left vs. right white vs. black Christian vs. Muslim communist vs democratic...No longer just human for human.. Sad but true. I think car sites should talk cars but that is just me. I am sure there are plenty of sites to discuss this type of matter...
 
People are "talking" about this all over this Great Country....and in every restaurant, barber shop, office water cooler....etc........ & we should.

we are at war & "they" want us dead.
What do Islamist terrorists want? put our heads in the sand...& pretend that, Islam is an innocent bystander in today's terrorism.

BTW; I still like MOPARS & God Bless America.
 
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OK, what exactly is the definition of terrorism?

I'm not trying to be an *** here, but if the guys that did the Boston bombing were called Fred & Simon Wilson rather than whatever their names were, Would it have been considered terrorism?

What if the shooters in San Bernardindo were Rick and Ethel Sterling, rather than whatever their names are, would it still be considered a terrorist attack?

Is terrorism defined by religion? Of course not, but guess who the terrorists are? Your examples certainly qualify; but would be unlikely in the real world, since 99.97% of terrorist acts around the world are caused by Muslims.

Look at this link and you tell me...

http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/

On the left margin, you'll find the total number of Islamic terror attacks since 9/11/2001. You'll also find a running tally of the attacks over the past week, and the past month. You keep believing what you believe.
 
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Liberals turn San Bernardino into partisan feast

Jonah Goldberg Saturday, December 05, 2015



Dear New York Daily News,

You’re doing it wrong.

Long before the blood was mopped up, before police issued the all-clear, before the motives of the shooters were known and the names of the dead were released, before you had any idea how the murderers in San Bernardino obtained their guns — or their bombs — you knew exactly what this story had to be about: gun control.

In this, of course, you weren’t alone. Countless media outlets and pundits lunged for their security blankets. Even 24 hours after the slaughter, CNN and MSNBC were still making this all about gun control, as best they could. President Obama, who always slow-walks any admission that Islamic terrorism is involved in an Islamic terrorist attack, once again leapt into the breach to make this about gun control, even as bullets were still flying.

And to be fair, everybody on both sides of the aisle is susceptible to the social-media-fueled compulsion to chime in before the facts are known. I’ve done it. You’ve done it. We’ve all done it. We all try to resist the race to be wrong first, but sometimes we fall short.

And sometimes journalists get so caught up in the groupthink frenzy on Twitter that we fail to realize how things seem outside our own echo chambers. And that, I suspect, is where you went wrong.

On Wednesday, even as the atrocity unfolded, thousands — perhaps millions — of people offered their “thoughts and prayers” to the victims and their families.

A handful of smug liberal ghouls, hungry to turn the shooting into a partisan feast, decided that the Republican politicians offering their thoughts and prayers were liars. The Washington Post’s Gene Weingarten declared on Twitter: “Dear ‘thoughts and prayers’ people: Please shut up and slink away. You are the problem, and everyone knows it.”

Everyone?

Igor Volsky of Think Progress spent the evening insinuating that any Republican offering thoughts and prayers was bought off by the National Rifle Association.

And you got caught up in this frenzy of sneering sanctimony and condescension. So you ran the front-page headline “God Isn’t Fixing This,” alongside statements from House Speaker Paul Ryan and various Republican presidential hopefuls offering their prayers.

The supposed news story attached to the cover began, “Prayers aren’t working.” It then celebrated Democratic presidential candidates who “called for stricter gun laws” while deriding Republicans for merely “preaching about prayer.”

I’m sure you thought this was all so terribly clever.

Wrong. It was disgusting and sophomoric — and journalistically dubious. You literally had no idea whether the gun-control policies you prefer would have prevented this attack. Such laws clearly wouldn’t have prevented the numerous pipe bombs the attackers had prepared. You had no clue if this was a jihadist attack, which would diminish the relevance of gun control. (Paris has very strict gun laws. As does California, by the way — and even stricter pipe bomb laws.)

GOP hopefuls weren’t “preaching about prayer.” They were offering their prayers (just like President Obama did the next day). If this had been an earthquake, would you reject prayers while survivors were still being plucked from the rubble? Would you denounce anyone who refrained from touting their preferred building code legislation?

It is no great insight to point out that prayerful statements can be platitudinous. So what? Most of us aren’t really expecting a serious answer when we greet someone with “How are you?”

Just because good manners can be trite doesn’t mean they’re not good manners.

Good manners are a sign of respect. And offering one’s prayers to those suffering is a far more meaningful sign of respect than saying “How are you?”

More important: For some people — a great many people, in fact — those prayers were sincere. You would be among the first to denounce a Republican for questioning the religious sincerity of, say, President Obama. But you preen in self-congratulation disparaging the faith of politicians simply because they disagree with you. Worse, you make it less likely they will listen to your arguments. So what was the point? To get high-fives from people who already agree with you? How courageous.

We hear so much editorializing these days about the coarsening of our culture and the excesses of political polarization. I think that’s overdone. But you should probably hold off joining that conversation for a while, given that you politicized respectful prayers for the dead just to score some cheap points.
 
"The Met Police have said they are treating the attack as a ‘terrorist incident’."

They get it!
 
If you can go back and ask the victims of the San Bernardino or Paris shootings or any other shootings "what is the one thing you would have taken with you this day?" I'm sure almost all of them would say a firearm.. it is our natural right and protected by the US constitution.
 
Liberals turn San Bernardino into partisan feast

Jonah Goldberg Saturday, December 05, 2015



Dear New York Daily News,

You’re doing it wrong.

Long before the blood was mopped up, before police issued the all-clear, before the motives of the shooters were known and the names of the dead were released, before you had any idea how the murderers in San Bernardino obtained their guns — or their bombs — you knew exactly what this story had to be about: gun control.

In this, of course, you weren’t alone. Countless media outlets and pundits lunged for their security blankets. Even 24 hours after the slaughter, CNN and MSNBC were still making this all about gun control, as best they could. President Obama, who always slow-walks any admission that Islamic terrorism is involved in an Islamic terrorist attack, once again leapt into the breach to make this about gun control, even as bullets were still flying.

And to be fair, everybody on both sides of the aisle is susceptible to the social-media-fueled compulsion to chime in before the facts are known. I’ve done it. You’ve done it. We’ve all done it. We all try to resist the race to be wrong first, but sometimes we fall short.

And sometimes journalists get so caught up in the groupthink frenzy on Twitter that we fail to realize how things seem outside our own echo chambers. And that, I suspect, is where you went wrong.

On Wednesday, even as the atrocity unfolded, thousands — perhaps millions — of people offered their “thoughts and prayers” to the victims and their families.

A handful of smug liberal ghouls, hungry to turn the shooting into a partisan feast, decided that the Republican politicians offering their thoughts and prayers were liars. The Washington Post’s Gene Weingarten declared on Twitter: “Dear ‘thoughts and prayers’ people: Please shut up and slink away. You are the problem, and everyone knows it.”

Everyone?

Igor Volsky of Think Progress spent the evening insinuating that any Republican offering thoughts and prayers was bought off by the National Rifle Association.

And you got caught up in this frenzy of sneering sanctimony and condescension. So you ran the front-page headline “God Isn’t Fixing This,” alongside statements from House Speaker Paul Ryan and various Republican presidential hopefuls offering their prayers.

The supposed news story attached to the cover began, “Prayers aren’t working.” It then celebrated Democratic presidential candidates who “called for stricter gun laws” while deriding Republicans for merely “preaching about prayer.”

I’m sure you thought this was all so terribly clever.

Wrong. It was disgusting and sophomoric — and journalistically dubious. You literally had no idea whether the gun-control policies you prefer would have prevented this attack. Such laws clearly wouldn’t have prevented the numerous pipe bombs the attackers had prepared. You had no clue if this was a jihadist attack, which would diminish the relevance of gun control. (Paris has very strict gun laws. As does California, by the way — and even stricter pipe bomb laws.)

GOP hopefuls weren’t “preaching about prayer.” They were offering their prayers (just like President Obama did the next day). If this had been an earthquake, would you reject prayers while survivors were still being plucked from the rubble? Would you denounce anyone who refrained from touting their preferred building code legislation?

It is no great insight to point out that prayerful statements can be platitudinous. So what? Most of us aren’t really expecting a serious answer when we greet someone with “How are you?”

Just because good manners can be trite doesn’t mean they’re not good manners.

Good manners are a sign of respect. And offering one’s prayers to those suffering is a far more meaningful sign of respect than saying “How are you?”

More important: For some people — a great many people, in fact — those prayers were sincere. You would be among the first to denounce a Republican for questioning the religious sincerity of, say, President Obama. But you preen in self-congratulation disparaging the faith of politicians simply because they disagree with you. Worse, you make it less likely they will listen to your arguments. So what was the point? To get high-fives from people who already agree with you? How courageous.

We hear so much editorializing these days about the coarsening of our culture and the excesses of political polarization. I think that’s overdone. But you should probably hold off joining that conversation for a while, given that you politicized respectful prayers for the dead just to score some cheap points.

http://www.nationalreview.com/corne...purchases-san-berardino?target=author&tid=897
 
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