Jason Fried wrote this on Jan 03 There are16 comments.
Josh03 Jan 13
Simple and brilliant. Very cool contrast.
Paul Mansour03 Jan 13
Define assault rifle. How does it differ from any other rifle?
William Ghelfi03 Jan 13
Basically sucks on a webview from flipboard for iPad… :-/
Dave B03 Jan 13
my eye balls hurt.
Dave C03 Jan 13
my balls hurt.
Amazing Rando03 Jan 13
I filled them all out! Yay!
daniel03 Jan 13
Are you happy at your current work place?
Problem is that some of these aren’t yes/no. How should you answer this if you don’t currently have a job?
Michael03 Jan 13
Is the point to determine how many questions the average person will answer before they give up? Or how bored you are?
Ryan03 Jan 13
@Paul Mansour,
The common definition (accurate or not) is guns you don’t use for hunting, or guns that shoot many bullets in a short amount of time. A reasonable definition.
John03 Jan 13
How do you define “many bullets” and “short amount of time?” Semi-automatic weapons (including almost all pistols) can be fired quite rapidly by repeatedly squeezing the trigger. How would you legally distinguish between a handgun and an AR-15?
Jonathan04 Jan 13
An assault rifle is a gun that is fully automatic. Sometimes confused with “assault weapon” which is really just a made up term that is talking about semi-attomatic rifles.
We don’t need an assault weapons ban. What we need is mandatory gun background checks, perhaps cross checked with mental health records, maybe a tier system (not everyone needs a semi-attomatic gun, and if you do, you should have to go through more of a process such as training, and other classes where you learn about the weapon/how to lock it up/store it safely, etc. The NRA conflated the conversation by making it a you are pro second amendment, or you are in favor of banning guns. There is middle ground and I’m sick of the partisan rhetoric. We need to get rid of things like Stand Your Ground laws because they just give people a pass to kill black people. The NRA isn’t a fair representation of gun owner’s thoughts on policy. For god’s sake they try to get rid of background checks on guns, and pushed a stupid law in Florida that said that pediatricians and other doctor’s couldn’t ask patients how they care for their guns and if they store them safely away from children.
Quick correction on the definition of assault rifle, I was mixing a few things up. Assault rifle is a broad term that refer to guns with an intermediate cartridge and a detachable magazine (Could be fully automatic or semi,). Now an assault weapon, is a political term that means semi-attomatic firearm.
The AWB was ineffective because most crime is committed with handguns. I jumped the gun (no pun intended) because I wanted to right my second paragraph and rushed through the first too fast. Sorry for the confusion, haha.
Davy04 Jan 13
Jason – interesting start to my day – for no reason other than it got the brain going a bit. I’m fascinated by the fact the only thing really commented on was the guns question – I’m from Belfast, in the UK we aren’t allowed guns unless they are for hunting or farming (shotguns generally) or else if specific individuals are at risk from terrorism, in which case they are allowed a personal protection weapon (handguns only). An assault rifle or any form of automatic or semi-automatic weapon should be reserved for the security forces. Imagine if the same rules applied in the US – what would you actually need a gun for if that was the case?
Arik Jones04 Jan 13
Just a simple, fun poll. No need to make mountains out of pebbles.
Michael08 Jan 13
Fun, thanks.
Maarten08 Jan 13
So 37signals is creating a new blogging service. Am I right?
This discussion is closed.
About Jason Fried
Jason co-founded 37signals back in 1999. He also co-authored REWORK, the New York Times bestselling book on running a "right-sized" business. Co-founded, co-authored... Can he do anything on his own?
Jason Fried wrote this on Jan 03 There are 16 comments.
Josh 03 Jan 13
Simple and brilliant. Very cool contrast.
Paul Mansour 03 Jan 13
Define assault rifle. How does it differ from any other rifle?
William Ghelfi 03 Jan 13
Basically sucks on a webview from flipboard for iPad… :-/
Dave B 03 Jan 13
my eye balls hurt.
Dave C 03 Jan 13
my balls hurt.
Amazing Rando 03 Jan 13
I filled them all out! Yay!
daniel 03 Jan 13
Are you happy at your current work place?
Problem is that some of these aren’t yes/no. How should you answer this if you don’t currently have a job?
Michael 03 Jan 13
Is the point to determine how many questions the average person will answer before they give up? Or how bored you are?
Ryan 03 Jan 13
@Paul Mansour, The common definition (accurate or not) is guns you don’t use for hunting, or guns that shoot many bullets in a short amount of time. A reasonable definition.
John 03 Jan 13
How do you define “many bullets” and “short amount of time?” Semi-automatic weapons (including almost all pistols) can be fired quite rapidly by repeatedly squeezing the trigger. How would you legally distinguish between a handgun and an AR-15?
Jonathan 04 Jan 13
An assault rifle is a gun that is fully automatic. Sometimes confused with “assault weapon” which is really just a made up term that is talking about semi-attomatic rifles.
We don’t need an assault weapons ban. What we need is mandatory gun background checks, perhaps cross checked with mental health records, maybe a tier system (not everyone needs a semi-attomatic gun, and if you do, you should have to go through more of a process such as training, and other classes where you learn about the weapon/how to lock it up/store it safely, etc. The NRA conflated the conversation by making it a you are pro second amendment, or you are in favor of banning guns. There is middle ground and I’m sick of the partisan rhetoric. We need to get rid of things like Stand Your Ground laws because they just give people a pass to kill black people. The NRA isn’t a fair representation of gun owner’s thoughts on policy. For god’s sake they try to get rid of background checks on guns, and pushed a stupid law in Florida that said that pediatricians and other doctor’s couldn’t ask patients how they care for their guns and if they store them safely away from children.
/rant
Related/interesting links:
http://www.npr.org/2011/05/07/136063523/florida-bill-could-muzzle-doctors-on-gun-safety
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/13/michigan-gun-bill-nra-background-checks_n_2295413.html
http://econweb.tamu.edu/mhoekstra/castle_doctrine.pdf
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/09/the-secret-history-of-guns/308608/
Jonathan 04 Jan 13
Quick correction on the definition of assault rifle, I was mixing a few things up. Assault rifle is a broad term that refer to guns with an intermediate cartridge and a detachable magazine (Could be fully automatic or semi,). Now an assault weapon, is a political term that means semi-attomatic firearm.
The AWB was ineffective because most crime is committed with handguns. I jumped the gun (no pun intended) because I wanted to right my second paragraph and rushed through the first too fast. Sorry for the confusion, haha.
Davy 04 Jan 13
Jason – interesting start to my day – for no reason other than it got the brain going a bit. I’m fascinated by the fact the only thing really commented on was the guns question – I’m from Belfast, in the UK we aren’t allowed guns unless they are for hunting or farming (shotguns generally) or else if specific individuals are at risk from terrorism, in which case they are allowed a personal protection weapon (handguns only). An assault rifle or any form of automatic or semi-automatic weapon should be reserved for the security forces. Imagine if the same rules applied in the US – what would you actually need a gun for if that was the case?
Arik Jones 04 Jan 13
Just a simple, fun poll. No need to make mountains out of pebbles.
Michael 08 Jan 13
Fun, thanks.
Maarten 08 Jan 13
So 37signals is creating a new blogging service. Am I right?
This discussion is closed.