Tragedy - Obama blames the NRA

DesertRam

Director
Staff member
Another school shooting, this time in Oregon, claims one life. What a tragedy.

Obama wastes no time calling for stricter laws and blaming the NRA.

CNN Story

Originally Posted By: CNNObama:
...
'Levels of gun violence off the charts'
Speaking in Washington, President Barack Obama said the nation should be ashamed of its inability to get tougher gun restrictions through Congress in the aftermath of mass shootings that he said have become commonplace in America.
"Our levels of gun violence are off the charts. There's no advanced, developed country on Earth that would put up with this," he said in response to a question about gun violence.
Most members of Congress are "terrified" of the National Rifle Association, the President said, adding that nothing will change until public opinion demands it.
"The country has to do some soul searching about this. This is becoming the norm, and we take it for granted, in ways that as a parent are terrifying to me," Obama said.
...
 
Well.. it's not really off the charts if you think about it.

If 10,000 people die from gun related violence per year, there should be more than one story a day if you think about it... Oh, and that includes suicides

I also read that 75,000 people a year die from getting Prescription drug reactions, where the recipient shouldn’t have been given that particular drug. This means that for every one person that gets shot, there should be 7.5 stories about people getting miss dosed and dies to because of it. Last time I checked AZblaster hasn’t posted any of those stories..
Just Saying.
 
Your Dr. is 1900% more of a hazard for killing you than gun violence. Gun homocides are 49% lower than 20 yrs ago. But those are non stories.
 
Quote:Speaking in Washington, President Barack Obama said the nation should be ashamed of its inability to get tougher gun restrictions through Congress in the aftermath of mass shootings that he said have become commonplace in America.


This one isn't a mass shooting to begin with. Must be at least three deaths to reach "mass shooting" status, and murder-suicide don't cut that.

Quote:He identified the student killed as 14-year-old Emilio Hoffman, a freshman.

Anderson met with the student's parents Tuesday afternoon and "they want you to know that Emilio was a great kid and he was loved by all," he said.


Emilio may well have been a great kid, but obviously he was not loved by the shooter! Treyvon Martin's parents said the same thing, then reports started falling through the cracks about his suspensions at school, and how he should have gone to jail for those, and his drug habits, etc. etc. etc.

And, why is it that police "believe they know who the shooter is." If no one at the school can identify him, he's probably not a student there. So what's up there?
 
Originally Posted By: jumprightinitYour Dr. is 1900% more of a hazard for killing you than gun violence. Gun homocides are 49% lower than 20 yrs ago. But those are non stories.

Yep, it's on the drop and there are fewer gun violance incidents, but the media is focused on the ones that are happening.
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/380...arles-c-w-cooke

I just wish they would not report the shooters names and focus on the victims, and it's about time to start talking about taking money from welfare (those that can work) and moving it toward Mental Health In patient institutions and start putting people that are in need of help in places where they don't hurt others. How many of these incidients have to be commited by the people that are just not stable before we do something?

The evidence is also in.. Gun free zomes don't work. They are magnets, for violent unstable people that want attention and mass distruction. If you take away the guns, it's just going to happen with a knife. That happened last year in China.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2633714/Chinese-man-attacks-students-knife-injures-8.html
 
Originally Posted By: Infidel 762Just another soft target in a gun free zone... Also I thought this act was committed with a shotgun?


Latest reports are identifying the shooter as a 15 year old, carrying a "military style rifle" or "AR 15 style rifle" and a 9mm semi-automatic handgun.

Quote:No link found between gunman and student shot dead in Oregon high school attack, police say


Published June 11, 2014 | FoxNews.com


Investigators looking for a motive in a fatal high school shooting near Portland, Oregon say they have not yet been able to find a link between the gunman and the student he killed.

Chief Scott Anderson of the Troutdale Police Department said Jared Michael Padgett, 15, rode a school bus to Reynolds High School in Troutdale on Tuesday and gunned down freshman Emilio Hoffman inside a gym locker room.

Padgett, who was also a freshman at the school, got off the bus carrying a guitar case and a duffel bag, according to Anderson. When he arrived at the school, he entered the locker room where he murdered Hoffman with an AR-15 style rifle, Anderson said Wednesday.

Teacher Todd Risler then encountered Padgett and was grazed by a bullet to the hip as he was fleeing the area. While bloodied from the wound, Risler ran to the school’s front office and notified administrators of a gunman, which prompted a school-wide lockdown.

Padgett left the locker room and exchanged gunfire with responding officers before he entered a bathroom and killed himself with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Anderson said.

Authorities say Padgett was also found with a semi-automatic handgun, a large knife, and 9 loaded magazines with the capability of carrying several hundred rounds. He was wearing a non-ballistic vest and a multi-sport helmet with a camouflage design.

“I cannot emphasize enough the role of Mr. Risler and responding officers played in saving many, many lives yesterday,” Anderson said.

Police say the guns found on Padgett were taken from his family’s home.

Meanwhile, the school plans to hold a candlelight vigil for Hoffman on June 17, Reynolds School District Superintendent Linda Florence said Wednesday.

A girl who used to be Hoffman's girlfriend said he was "a good kid" and a "down-to-earth guy."

"He was very caring, he loved to joke around," said Savannah Venegas, 16.

Hoffman lived with his mother and had an older brother and two younger sisters, both in elementary school, Venegas said.

Anderson said he spoke with Hoffman's family, saying they had a difficult road ahead and sought privacy.

Hoffman didn't have enemies and "didn't stir up trouble," Venegas said.

"They wouldn't have just picked him," she said. "It had to be, just, random."

The teacher, Todd Rispler, had injuries that weren't life-threatening, and he was treated at the scene. Rispler is a 50-year-old physical education instructor and former track coach.

About 2,800 students attend the school, located in a quiet tourist town of 15,000 near the Columbia River, about 16 miles east of downtown Portland.

On Tuesday evening, teens on skateboards and others accompanied by their parents joined Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber at a prayer vigil at a church about 5 miles from the shooting scene.

"I'm here for him, for Emilio," 15-year-old Jose Medel told The Oregonian. Medel is a freshman who said he played soccer for several years with Hoffman.

Doug Daoust, the mayor of Troutdale, told Fox News Tuesday that SWAT teams evacuated classrooms from the school one at a time. TV news broadcasts showed students being escorted away from the school with their hands on their heads, The Associated Press reports.

Parents reunited with students at the Fred Meyer supermarket in Wood Village. A reporter from The Oregonian, who was at the supermarket, tweeted that employees brought out water and cookies for parents.

Mandy Johnson said her daughter called from a friend's phone.

"I thank God that she's safe," said Johnson, who has three younger children. "I don't want to send my kids to school anymore."

The Oregon violence came less than a week after a gunman opened fire on a college campus in neighboring Washington state, killing a 19-year-old man and wounding two others.

The Tuesday shooting was the first fatal school shooting in Oregon since May 1998 when 15-year-old Kip Kinkel killed two students and wounded 25 others at Thurston High School in Springfield near Eugene. He killed his parents prior to the attack and is serving an 111-year prison sentence.

On Tuesday, a mournful President Obama conceded he was ashamed as an American and terrified as a parent that the United States can't find it in its soul to put a stop to rampant shooting sprees. Barring a fundamental shift in public opinion, Obama said, "it will not change."

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/06/11/police-respond-to-report-shooting-at-oregon-high-school/
 
He Says No Advanced Developed Country On Earth Would Put Up With This. That's True Assuming He's Talking About Himself And His Move Towards Dictatorship/Communism
 
Here we go again... Exanded Background Checks, Expanded Background Checks... When are these morons going to figure out that a background check is NOT going to stop a 15 year old from shooting anyone, because he can't buy the damm gun to begin with!!
angry.gif




Quote:Oregon high school shooting likely to heighten debate over gun control in state

Beth Nakamura | June 10, 2014 at 2:24 PM, updated June 11, 2014 at 11:27 AM


Oregon's continuing debate over gun control will almost certainly intensify following Tuesday's shootings at Reynolds High School in Troutdale.

"When it hits home like this we can't let it go on," said state Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, the Legislature's most ardent supporter of new restrictions on guns. "We lost another child today."

Oregon legislators have bitterly fought over gun issues over the last two years following the mass shootings at Newtown, Connecticut, and the Clackamas Town Center in suburban Portland.

Opponents of additional gun restrictions have bottled up bills calling for stricter criminal background checks for gun purchasers. Attempts to find middle ground by focusing on keeping firearms out of the hands of those with mental illness have foundered.

House Judiciary Chairman Jeff Barker, D-Aloha, and a critic of gun control, agreed that Tuesday's shootings would put additional pressure on legislators to deal with the issue.

"I want to do something that is effective," said Barker. "For most of the people involved in these shootings, a background check wouldn't keep them from doing what they did."

Burdick and other supporters of requiring background checks on a wider range of private sales argue that such laws do make a difference. They cite studies showing lower rates of gun violence in states with more comprehensive gun regulations.


Oregon high school shooting at Reynolds high east of Portland

View full size

TROUTDALE, OREGON - June 10, 2014 - Family and friends of Reynolds High School students are reunited with them after a deadly shooting at the school. Faith Cathcart/The Oregonian

Several polls have shown strong support in Oregon for expanding background checks and for reducing access to guns by those who are mentally ill. A poll taken for The Oregonian six weeks after the Newtown and Clackamas shootings also found that a relatively narrow majority of Oregonians supported restrictions on the size of gun magazines and on military-style, semi-automatic rifles. In addition, Oregonians favored, 52 percent to 40 percent, prohibiting concealed handgun licensees from carrying guns into school.

Despite such polling, opponents of gun control, aided by the powerful National Rifle Association, have been more ardent in their opposition. Barker noted that he received 1,600 emails in one day opposing a 2013 bill that proposed several new restrictions. The measure immediately died without a hearing.

In the last two years, however, gun-control advocates have stepped up their organizing efforts around the country, including in Oregon.

"We are calling for people to become single-issue voters" in support of new gun regulations, said Kylie Menagh-Johnson, a Portlander who is a regional manager for Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.

The group, formed after the Newtown shootings, now has chapters in every state and recently joined an organization, Everytown for Gun Safety, financed by former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Reynolds school shooting incites gun control debate: Take 3 For Politics

In our latest Take 3 for Politics video, Yuxing Zheng and Jeff Mapes talk about how it didn't take long for the reaction to the Reynolds High School shooting to turn political. Supporters of additional gun regulations quickly urged Congress and the state Legislature to pass legislation calling for tougher background checks. Check out what this could mean in the fall elections and in the next session of the Legislature.

Family members of the two victims of the Clackamas mall shootings formed a group called Gun Owners for Responsible Ownership and have frequently testified at the Legislature.

"It's almost like reliving that day again," said Jenna Yuille, the daughter of Cindy Yuille, one of the Clackamas shooting victims. She said she and her stepfather, Robert Yuille, and Paul Kemp, the brother-in-law of Steve Forsythe, also killed at the mall, believe that expanded background checks would be a good first step. She said the group also wants laws making gun owners liable if they don't safely store their guns.

Menagh-Johnson said she also works in Washington and Nevada, two states that had nationally publicized shootings within the last week.

Two police officers and another man were gunned down in Las Vegas on Monday by a couple professing strident anti-government sentiments. One student at Seattle Pacific University was killed and another injured by a gunman prosecutors say was inspired by other mass shootings.

Menagh-Jonson said the events, tragic as they were, have spurred activists to take action. One political test will come this year in Washington, she noted, when voters will decide whether to toughen that state's law on background checks.

State Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas, said he's had a number of conversations with both supporters and opponents of gun control to try to find solutions everyone can agree on.

But he said lawmakers have found it hard to get a handle on the mental health system and find money to improve it. He said he's also run into the same problem trying to go after people who try to buy a gun and fail the background check because they have something like a felony in their background.

"Nobody's got any money to prosecute these people," he said.

Two Oregon Democrats in Congress were also quick to call for action at the national level following the Reynolds shooting.

U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, whose district includes the high school, said on Twitter:

"Another shooting. I always hope tragedy will inspire action. Simple common sense steps make difference. Start w/universal background checks."

"As these deadly events increase in frequency, it is unconscionable for us to sit by and do nothing," said U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici of Washington County. "Expanded background checks and expanded access to mental health care could help prevent these terrifying incidents."

Several gun-rights supporters criticized quick calls for action, saying that lawmakers shouldn't be politicizing the tragedy. "You have no facts and you jump in to take advantage of a tragedy for cheap political points," said Jeff Reynolds, the Multnomah County Republican chairman, responding to Blumenauer in a Twitter message.

-- Jeff Mapes

http://www.oregonlive.com/mapes/index.ssf/2014/06/oregon_high_school_shooting_li.html
 
Back
Top