Chas_P, on 2022-June-06, 05:17, said:
Actually the helicopter in that video (N65AL) is registered to a guy in Lanesboro, MN.....hardly a "red" state.
After45 years in Maryland I still sometimes think of myself as a Minnesotan, so I would like to think that a guy from Minnesota that is shooting pigs from a helicopter has been thoroughly trained both in flying a helicopter and in the responsible use of such a weapon. Actually I would like to think that there is one guy flying the helicopter, another guy shooting the pigs. I'll take it as a given that the pigs needed to be shot, I grew up in the city where such issues didn't arise. I have not watched the video and I think I will skip it.
the point for many of us, perhaps all of us, is that we are not claiming that all guns, every single one anywhere, should be rounded up and destroyed. We are not even claiming that for assault rifles. We acknowledge that weaponry can have legitimate uses (again I will not venture into whether shooting pigs is one of those legitimate uses). We are saying that there needs to be far more regulation. People will quarrel, people will get upset, maybe get very upset, I guess people will have pig trouble, and far more often than not guns make the situation worse, not better. When guns must be used, turn the matter over to those who are trained and licensed. Even in the present environment, it is almost always possible to do this, and with greater regulation, this would become more true. We who think this way will maybe differ on some details, but basically the idea is to change the law in such a way that picking up a gun to solve a problem, for most people, would be unthinkable. Call the police. Call a lawyer. Call a licensed pig shooter. In short, don't think of yourself as Bat Masterson. Let the professionally trained handle the problem.
And the professionally trained are not always so well-trained? Yeah. It's another thing to work on. No one says it's simple.