• LanguageIsCool@lemmy.world
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      They’re asking if he was on anti-depressants. Everyone else is a murderer, terrorist, what have you. When it’s one of theirs? Just a misguided kid on SSRIs.

      • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Tbf, it’s a common conspiracy theory that all of them (or at least a significant portion) are on SSRIs. I think it comes from a mix of

        A. Some of them were iirc, but I’m not sure who. It’s also possible it just was used as an excuse by a parent, or kid who didn’t die in their shooting.

        B. Simply just the fast part of the commercials that says “if you are experiencing suicidal or homicidal ideation while taking lexapro, talk to your doctor immediately…” and then people being people, that gets extrapolated into “the shooters are on SSRIs and this is why it happens.” People are searching for answers as to the underlying causes, on both sides of the “gun bad” and “gun good” debate, the same way some focus on “if we got rid of guns” those that know “well my gun doesn’t make me want to shoot up schools so it isn’t the guns” but have never taken SSRIs might be more apt to blame the thing they’re less familiar with, for instance.

        C. Afaik, it hasn’t actually been studied very well and actually could play a role in at least some of the incidents, but we don’t “know.” First of all, I think HIPAA presents some challenges in studying this, as I think even prisoners have the right to medical privacy. And on top of that I wouldn’t be surprised to learn Big Pharma’s lobbyists are hard at work making sure this is not well studied to the best of their ability, it’s kinda just their MO to the degree I’d be surprised if they weren’t doing that. Our pharma lobby is just as bad as tobacco about that, if not worse.

        Personally, I’d actually like to see this possible link or lack thereof studied in depth myself, if for no other reason than to quell the conspiracy theory, or if a link is found then maybe we can do something about that, I think only good can come from at least just studying it.

        The few studies that I have seen actually suggest there may actually be a link, but I don’t know exactly how rigorous those were or if it’s enough to indicate causation rather than simply correlation, and it’s not specific to active shooters but simply “violent crime” (of which shootings are obviously one, but it could be “increased risk of simple assault, but not murder” without narrowing it down, who knows.

        https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4570770/

        With age and sex stratification, there was a significant association between SSRIs and violent crime convictions for males aged 15 to 24 y (HR = 1.40, 95% CI 1.13–1.73, p = 0.002) and females aged 15 to 24 y (HR = 1.75, 95% CI 1.08–2.84, p = 0.023). However, there were no significant associations in those aged 25 y or older.

        Seems to suggest to me that at the ages these (typically male) shooters usually are, there actually may be a significant enough percentage to suggest a possible causation? I’d still like to see it studied further though, especially if it can be a study specifically regarding active shooter incidents, and also I’d like to know if “was taking them and stopped” plays a role over “is taking them currently” or vice versa. I think it’s at least worth a look, especially considering this study itself concludes:

        The increased risk we found in young people needs validation in other studies.

      • mke@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Contrast with keying a car and being labeled a terrorist. By scratching a cybertruck, you become an enemy of the state—something a republican school shooter could never dream of.

    • Denjin@lemmings.world
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      He once made a tweet that vaguely criticised a Conservative figure. wOkE aGeNdA KiLLs AgAIn

  • Formfiller@lemmy.world
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    Young white men are being indoctrinated with 24/7 propaganda telling them they are the real victims

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          I’m sorry, I try to keep my media intake low, but what is being said that makes these white men feel like victims? Or, portraying them as the victim?

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            Are you really fully unaware of incels, the manosphere, and the alt-right pipeline? This shit is all over social media.

            There’s a strong encouragement for men to fall into this “redpill” philosophy that casts everyone who doesn’t look like them, especially anyone who ends up on the less-privileged end of any measure of intersectional privilege, as an aggressor attempting to steal their place in society and “replace” them.

            Have you heard anyone complaining about how you can’t make jokes anymore or can’t compliment women anymore? They’re echoing a hallucination of white male oppression by queer feminist socialists. In response they elected Trump and spend their days rumbling around in their massive coal-rolling pickup trucks that have never seen a speck of dirt or a heavier load than a few groceries or maybe a couch.

            • TootTootComingThru@lemmy.world
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              What’s the point of bringing this weird, condescending Reddit energy to what seems to be a genuine question?

              Not everyone lives on the internet, not everyone knows what an incel is, or who Andrew Tate is or what a manosphere is. Why not just answer the question normally? Holy fucking moly.

              In response they elected Trump

              Young incel type white guys did? I thought most of them didn’t even bother to turn up. Look fuck the extremisation of the yutes through social media, it’s genuinely awful and will likely have long lasting effects but we can’t put the blame on them for all the ails in the world without recognizing that a lot of different segments of our population are fucking up right now and are in some small part contributing to more people being alienated from the left. You have to at least admit that it’s a little ironic to say that they’re imagining everything while also seemingly putting electing Trump solely on them. It’s ultimately counter productive in the long run.

            • Letsdothisagain@lemmy.world
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              It’s weird… cuz, even if there is a bias against white men, its still white men that rule the most of the world and have all the money, and run the major corporations. But white men feel like they’re getting replaced?

              On the other hand, America has always been a mix, but always had a strong foundation of white men, and it does feel like that base might be changing. Something is changing

              Edit: it’s flabbergasting that a reply like this gets down votes

            • Letsdothisagain@lemmy.world
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              You can’t classify all of America as a “racist shithole”, it is just too big. We kinda have most of the spectrum. There are many towns and cities that are very welcoming, but there is the opposite as well. And some states compared to others are very different in their tolerance levels. (Real quick, Texas is bigger than most countries, i.e. Japan, Germany, the UK., etc.)

              But no, I live in a very diverse area, and in my area, at least, there are very few racist assholes. I traveled quite a bit around the states, for over 15 years, and I have seen many types of people. Many types of racist. But they are a very small minority. The shittiest minority groups are the loudest. That’s why they can be loudest, because they are the shittiest. It’s weird, but that’s how it works.

              You know what other tiny group of the population is super loud? Like, you can’t stop hearing about them/from them? It’s the transsexuals. They are the loudest, most in your face… anyway.

              Honestly, you sound like a little judgemental twat.

            • Letsdothisagain@lemmy.world
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              Your first reaction is to insult and write someone off? I think you sound like the problem. And an asshole.

              • multifariace@lemmy.world
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                Even if you were a troll, your questions are worth asking. All the reactionary downvoting and accusations are because you made them have to think about their position so they get defensive and echo their aggregated hate. I wonder if they also espouse the lack of empathy of the other party. Imagine the hypocrisy.

  • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    This state was literally concocted so slavers could violently enforce their disgusting privilege.

    This kid is a real american. This is what fascism is.

  • Cocopanda@futurology.today
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    They were saying he was an illegal all over MAGAtard social media. Until the facts came out. Then they started deleting in mass to cover up their lies.

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            No I understand what en masse means. I just don’t subscribe to your inflexible interpretation.

            Language is a tool for communication. It’s for the masses, not something to be gate kept or preserved by the priests of lingual orthodoxy. If the words you use convey the intended meaning to the listener, then the wording is adequate.

            If everyone’s use of language was as rigid as the people insisting we can only use the phrases as they existed when they were imported to an English court by a Norman conqueror a thousand years ago, then we’d all still be communicating by banging rocks together and grunting. The English language evolves every day. It’s alive.

            • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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              Ok but the argument is that it might not “convey the intended meaning to the listener” because ‘in mass’ can mean multiple things in English, whereas in French ‘en masse’ specifically means ‘as a group’. It’s not a linguistic purity thing it’s literally just to prevent misinterpretation.

              edit: You can’t say “English is an evolving language” and then ignore the evolution in the phrase being carried over in the first place. If there was no reason for it then we’d still just be using the English term or, “banging rocks together and grunting” as you put it.

              • StJohnMcCrae@slrpnk.net
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                Nobody here misinterpreted it except the purists who did it intentionally to troll, show off and talk down to people.

    • TheOakTree@lemm.ee
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      Not gonna lie I thought your username was Copaganda at first.

      No, I do not have dyslexia lol

  • Camelbeard@lemmy.world
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    I was recently thinking it’s says a lot about a culture, where kids shoot up schools regularly, but immigrants getting a terrible treatment never seem to shoot up an ICE office or other government building.

    • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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      People in US culture want to think this is a product of white christian men getting hurt and isolated to the point that the poor innocent souls wander into committing a school shooting.

      The negative mental health is only part of the equation and isn’t even critical to it, what IS critical is teaching christian white men that they have the inherent right given who they are to commit violence and nobody else does.

      This is why you see that “incongruity”.

    • huppakee@lemm.eeOP
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      I think both are part of the same culture to be honest, they are just in very different positions both pushed to an extreme situation (the kids shooting up schools and the government officials threating immigrants like crap). Personally I believe you get what you give and this is the result of a society that is getting what it has been giving (or not giving, really). Really sad situation where a lot of people get way less than they deserve (the parents of the killed kids, the children of the deported families etc)

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      It wasn’t as bad as some (2 dead, 6 injured).

      He originally started with a shotgun but it jammed without firing a shot. He grabbed a pistol from his vehicle and fired into the bystanders.

      Police were on scene quickly (FSU is always crawling with plain clothes officers and unmarked cars) and shot and wounded the shooter.

      • Katana314@lemmy.world
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        Oh, what a fucked up world we live in that we see a school shooting as “not so bad, all things considered”…

          • idunnololz@lemmy.world
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            There is a really fucked up silver lining to this which is every nation not the USA can point to the USA whenever someone wants to loosen gun regulations. In a twisted way the US might be helping other nations by being such a “good” (bad) example.

          • huppakee@lemm.eeOP
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            Politicians around the word: we need to ban guns and assault rifles.

            US policy makers: we need to tell the good guys they need to buy carry a gun.

            • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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              Also US policy makers: We refuse to do anything about the low wages, crushing debt, inaccessible health care (physical and mental), and other problems I can’t even think of right now.

            • CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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              Plenty of countries have lots of guns. Virtually none of them have any significant number of mass terror shootings, even the ones with otherwise high rates of gun violence.

              America is built different.

              • huppakee@lemm.eeOP
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                The rethoric of the people in power seems different, but I don"t know enough of other countries with lots of guns.

      • Obinice@lemmy.world
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        If that happened in my country it would be huge news and all anyone in the country would talk about for weeks.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        That pistol he grabbed from the vehicle…

        …was his Mom’s old service pistol.

        His Mom was a school resource officer and later deputized into the Leon County Sheriffs.

        https://www.newsweek.com/fsu-shooter-leon-county-deputy-phoenix-jessica-ikner-2061301

        In a news conference hours after the first reports of the active shooting were announced, Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeil identified the suspect.

        “The shooter is 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner … and he is the son of a Leon County sheriff’s deputy,” McNeil said.

        According to Revell during the news conference, Jessica Ikner [the shooter’s mother] is a school resource officer in Leon County. The county sheriff’s office website lists her as a “middle schools deputy.”

        Deputy Ikner was awarded law enforcement employee of the month in March 2024, the sheriff’s office posted on Facebook.

        [The Shooter] was “a long-standing member” of the Leon County Sheriff’s Office Youth Advisory Council, McNeil said during the news conference.

        “He has been steep in the Leon County Sheriff’s Office Family,” McNeil said, adding that it is “not a surprise” that Ikner had access to weapons.

        (apologies for possibly paywalled link, try internet archive if its blocked for you)

        https://www.forbes.com/sites/conormurray/2025/04/18/florida-state-university-shooting-what-we-know-about-the-suspect/

        Phoenix Ikner, a 20-year-old son of a sheriff’s deputy whom police accuse of using his mother’s gun, is in police custody after being identified as a suspect in a shooting on Florida State University’s campus Thursday, which killed two people and injured at least six others.

        https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/local/2025/04/18/fsu-shooting-phoenix-ikener-fired-guns-deputy-mother-jessica-ikner/83159241007/

        Jessica Ikner, a beloved Raa Middle School student resource deputy, was the 2023 law enforcement officer of the year with the Leon County Sheriff’s Office.

        She also practiced shooting with her stepson, Phoenix, at a firing range, but “not in an official capacity,” according to LCSO.

        Yeah so this guy was trained to shoot by his armed-with-a-firearm, middle school guard / county deputy mom, and he then took his mom’s service pistol to shoot up his own school/uni.

        I can’t find more details on the shotgun, but it could also be the case that that is or was a service weapon as well… but that is barely informed speculation on my part, I just know that a lot of US cops also have a shotgun in their cruiser.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          The headline is using ‘was’ as a weasel word.

          They know it’ll be click bait because it will be read as:

          “The weapon used is a weapon that is the service weapon of a deputy”, and not:

          “At one point, in the past, the weapon used was a service weapon but isn’t any longer”.

          Him using a service weapon implies that there was a lapse of security on his mother’s part. That’s why it’s being mentioned in the way that it is because, if it were true, it would be outrageous.

          The fact that an adult Florida man was able to access privately owned firearms isn’t news. But making it seem scandalous by implying that he killed people with a weapon issued as the service weapon of an active duty cop gets clicks.

          The shotgun story is based on first hand accounts that I’ve heard from the FSU students that I work with. I’m obviously just a random Internet person, so don’t believe it until you see other sources.

      • CobblerScholar@lemmy.world
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        Local law enforcement was having a training session very close by. That and the fact the shooter was the son of a Sherrif deputy are the reasons you could hear them blowing themselves over their fast response the whole time. Not that the fucker was putting up all the red flags for fucking years while being heavily involved in local law enforcement and constantly around guns.

        • Jaysyn@lemmy.world
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          Not that the fucker was putting up all the red flags for fucking years while being heavily involved in local law enforcement and constantly around guns.

          There is a reason DeSantis & the fascists in the Florida legislature are about to get rid of the red flag laws.

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        FSU is always crawling with plain clothes officers and unmarked cars

        Wait what the fuck?

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          I’ve seen a full on homeless man, with dreadlocks and scruffy blanket (urban Ghillie suit) sitting outside of a Waffle House. The local clubs were letting out and there were gunshots in the parking lot.

          Dude stood up and radioed in shots fired and pulled an AR from the bag he was sitting on.

          Tons of unmarked cars around campus with lights mounted in the grill and illegally tinted windows.

          It’s a heavy security presence that you wouldn’t notice unless you were around it a lot.

      • TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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        “We need Jesus in schools!”

        No joke, I’ve heard people say that exact thing in response. That taking God out of schools is what started all this, so if there was more prayer in school, we wouldn’t have shootings.

        Yeah, because nobody does mass shootings in religious places.

      • bob_lemon@feddit.org
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        The poor kid was clearly driven insane by the wokeness surrounding them. Better ban pronouns.

  • SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world
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    And his mom is a police officer.

    And he used one of her unsecured guns.

    In a system where we want to discourage this we need to hold the parents accountable.

    I think a life sentence for each life her son took is fair, for her and her son.

    • stopdropandprole@lemmy.world
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      irresponsible gun owning parents, who literally put firearms into the hands of their homicidal children, need to be held accountable for these tragedies.

      dozens of mass shootings in recent years, especially school shootings, were absolutely preventable. if only these fucking lazy stupid ass adults would stop fetishizing guns for 2 seconds, long enough to store their weapons securely like a sane responsible person. or they could, idk, maybe steer their mentally disturbed crotch goblin towards a more pro-social, harmless activity?

      firearm ownership is a responsibility too few take seriously.

      • GeeDubHayduke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        No. We’ve been having too many random fires lately. The obvious answer is MORE FLAMETHROWERS! Yeah! That’ll fix all the fires!

          • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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            This is kind of a bad example because, rhetoric aside, in various situations you can fight fire with fire and in fact it’s the best way to do it. I.e. controlled burns of areas subject to wildfires are used to lessen the amount of tinder lying around the place that could later go up in an uncontrolled manner. You can also put out an oil well fire by blowing the flame out with dynamite.

            So to stretch the analogy further, maybe we ought to start focusing on what (who) ought to be controlled burned.

            • BreadOven@lemmy.world
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              Very good points. I didn’t know about the oil dynamite thing. Interesting. My previous comment was also slightly sarcastic. Just going along with the post I was responding to haha.

              That last sentence though, agreed. (I’m also not an American, so there’s less guns where I’m from).

            • huppakee@lemm.eeOP
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              The analogy of controllably burning the right people seems an effective way to restore the democratic order (although it could also be used to tighten the fascist grip I guess).

              Maybe more dynamite actually is the way. Ukraine uses IEDs in mailboxes to take down important people in Moscow for example.

              Not a fan of Luigi’s violent means, but maybe we (or actually they since I’m also not American) have start fighting fire with fire.

    • cabillaud@lemmy.world
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      Why not life sentences for grand parents too? Uncles and aunts? Doctors, teachers…

      • baggachipz@sh.itjust.works
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        If a gun owner’s gun is used in a murder, the owner should be charged with second-degree murder, full stop. When you own a gun, it is your responsibility to keep and secure it properly. I don’t care if it’s stolen or whatever, that gun is ultimately the responsibility of the owner. That’s the social contract when acquiring a device whose sole purpose is to kill.

        • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          I think stolen is too far as long as the gun owner acts responsibly following the theft and reports it to the police but otherwise, I completely agree. Owning a gun should come with personal accountability for that gun.

          • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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            If the gun owner did not properly secure the weapon, and this led to theft, they should definitively be held responsible. In some areas in the US, when you steal a car, you get a free firearms collection with it.

            • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Guy I grew up with had his truck broken into outside a hotel a couple years ago. They stole a bunch of his tools from the cab and tool box in the bed but left a pistol that was sitting on his passenger seat, another one that was sitting on the case of his diagnostics tool that was sitting on top of his center console, which they stole, along with the ammo and a rifle he had in the toolbox in the bed of his truck. I agree storing shit like that is irresponsible and should also be met with consequences, although some establishments you can’t take a gun into so having it cleared and in a locked gun case in the vehicle I believe to be a reasonable measure. Only reason I can imagine they left all his guns and ammo behind is that there must be more significant charges and/or investigative resources that go into a situation where firearms are involved where he lives.

              • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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                In my country, burglers usually avoid stealing weapons. If you break in and steal some money or jewelry, your case comes into the pile with the others. If you steal firearms on top of it, your case is put on the top of the stack with a bunch more people assigned to it.

                But your case just proves it: American gun owners are rather neglient when it comes to securing their weapons. Most likely because the both the training and requirements as well as the question on responsibility is basically just not there.

                In some countries, if you own a firearm and it gets stolen or lost, or someone else takes it, you simply lose your licence or ownership permit.

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      I want to stress that it has absolutely nothing, I repeat, nothing at all to do with gun “culture” and easy access to guns.

      Nothing at all. Promise!

      /s

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        Unfortunately I think it runs deeper than guns being around. As people point out, nearly every house in Switzerland has a gun, but they have little gun violence.

        Though you’re right that America’s loose gun culture makes the underlying problem ten times worse.

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          2 days ago

          Yes culture is a big part I think too, and the availability, can you just go up to a stand at a gun expo and buy a gun in Switzerland? I don’t think so right?

          • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            No. That gun is government issued, and you are responsible for its secure storage. It it not for playing around, and you don’t get any ammo with it. The ammo will be distributed in case the country needs to be defended.

            • Valmond@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              That makes the whole idea that “there are lots of guns in Switzerland, but no shootings” worthless if you can’t buy bullets.

        • ColonelPanic@lemmy.ml
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          2 days ago

          nearly every house in Switzerland has a gun, but they have little gun violence.

          Totally different situation because most of these guns are from reservists in the army which are stored without ammo. So they are literally unusable unless you happen to get ammo for it.

          • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            And they are held responsible for the weapon. And they leave it in a secure storage until they need it for training or to defend the country.

      • hank_the_tank66@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        The Onion should copy the White House and just start scribbling through the mass shooting article headline they repost each time with red crayon.