Swift wrote:You know what... I don't give a rat's tush about mass shootings in the US any longer (and yes, I live here). We didn't do squat after a bunch of little kids and teachers were slaughtered; why should I care about a bunch of Naval personnel. We have decided as a society that they are the acceptable collatoral damage to our obsession with the Second Ammendment.
geonuc wrote:Swift wrote:You know what... I don't give a rat's tush about mass shootings in the US any longer (and yes, I live here). We didn't do squat after a bunch of little kids and teachers were slaughtered; why should I care about a bunch of Naval personnel. We have decided as a society that they are the acceptable collatoral damage to our obsession with the Second Ammendment.
Sadly, it's not hard to join in on this sentiment.
SciFiFisher wrote:Welcome to the world of government contracting where no one will take responsibility because that wasn't in the contract.
geonuc wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:Welcome to the world of government contracting where no one will take responsibility because that wasn't in the contract.
Well, to be accurate, that's the case with just about every contractual relationship.
I don't know how far we can take the 'we should have known he was a nutcase' position with all these shootings. Maybe we should have, maybe it's just too big a task for the resources we devote to psychological screenings.
Better to control the guns. Or do both.
SciFiFisher wrote:
A reasonable background check, which all agencies are supposed to be doing, would have revealed this individuals arrest record. An arrest record that would have banned him from being hired by the contractor or to continue employment with the contractor. His access would have been taken away.
On August 7th Newport RI police reported to the Newport Naval Station that Alexis was acting in a psychotic manner because he had called them to report that people were beaming microwaves into his body to prevent him from sleeping. No one did anything with that report apparently. The Newport Naval Station is refusing to comment other than to refer people to the FBI.
There is no way you can prevent every situation or catch every person. But, there is no way anyone can say there weren't enough red flags for this one. What is the issue is that a man who should never have had a clearance to get on base did. And he managed to carry a shotgun onto the base and into what was supposed to be a secured area.
I suppose we could blame sequestration and all the budget cuts. Or, sure, let's blame poor gun regulation. That way we won't have to hold anyone accountable or look at the processes and systems that failed. Because if did that we might actually fix something.
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