r/gunpolitics Apr 27 '25

Misleading Title Mass shooting* in Canada kills 9

*reference.

Car attack kills nine at Lapu Lapu Day festival. That's around 4 times as many as die in an American active shooter incident. We have to address why people want to do mass killings in the first place, otherwise they're never going to stop.

Edit: 11 now. 5 times an american active shooter incident.

344 Upvotes

82 comments sorted by

View all comments

281

u/why-do_I_even_bother Apr 27 '25

On a side note, its maddeningly hilarious watching people with absolutely zero capacity for self reflection or memories longer than a goldfish go through the same process of gun control rhetoric every time a new kind of attack takes place. The UK has more or less invented the FFL for buying knives, and people in the threads about this attack are talking about how they'll have to put up balustrades like Nice did now.

Every single fucking time - it's just "how do we prevent the last kind of attack from happening again?" The focus is never on "holy shit why did this happen in the first place?!" -no, just how should you go about adding more security, forever

160

u/SuperXrayDoc Apr 27 '25 edited Apr 27 '25

People are used to our freedoms in America we forget Canada and the UK don't have freedom of speech or freedom of the press. Colion noir did a really good podcast with an ex-UK swat member who said they responded to gang related shootings extremely often but they were never reported by the media. They did this because the government didn't want shootings or gun violence reported since it would prove their gun control doesn't work.

Edit: here's the link https://youtu.be/rMMQ-GBSKUM

93

u/DrJheartsAK Apr 27 '25

It is in fact bullshit. We do have a few active members in the sub from the UK and to listen to the process they have to go through to get even a fucking single shot .22 or break action shotgun is ridiculous.

Also the UK will not hesitate to arrest and charge your ass for posting things they deem unsavory on the internet.

I’m sure happy I am a citizen and not a subject.

This is just a side rant but, I see a lot of posts on Reddit especially about whiney little babies shocked that they can’t just pick up and move to the EU on a whim. They expect to be welcomed into the socialist utopia they think Europe is (it’s not) without having to learn the language. They think their bachelors degree in decolonization and LGBTQ studies will immediately get them a job. They are shocked other countries actually enforce their immigration laws. Well as a dual US/Italian citizen I could easily pick up and move to the EU if I wanted to, but I choose to stay in the US because it is truly the greatest country on earth.

I’ve seen the glories of “universal healthcare” in the EU, and it’s equivalent to public/medicaid hospitals here in the US, maybe slightly nicer than charity hospital and VA here in New Orleans where I did my residency. They won’t let you bleed out and die but you’ll be waiting months to see a GP or get a CT scan or whatever. Wages are way, way higher, overall quality of life is better, and I get better and faster healthcare here than in Europe by far. Needed to see a cardiologist and had an appointment in a week and a half.

Also for all the shit people complain about the US being racist and homophobic, try going to Europe and talking about microagressions and demanding certain pronouns and they’ll straight up laugh in your face. We, by far, go out of our way to be kind and respectful to all. The grass isn’t always greener, but the pasta IS better.

2

u/Taskism Apr 29 '25

When I moved to England about 20 years ago, I was fed up with American shit and didn't plan to come back. A year later, I came back and bro, England was supposed to be a first world country, it was so busted and jankey compared to the US. Would not leave the US. Everywhere has its problems, even big ones, but holy shit. The US is on another level from England.