He was handling a prop under controlled conditions, he had every expectation that it was safe, just as the people who told him to do it did, and those people got in front of the barrel.
This whole thread is a joke, I simply do not believe that you guys don’t understand this concept.
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It is and it isn’t. I’m vaccinated, have been basically living the normal life, mostly not masking but a bit lately with the new variants. But even still, my office is still closed; I go in and work anyways but I’m technically not supposed to. I kind of enjoy working from home though, so this hasn’t been an issue. The real problems stem from stores and resturants. Either they are closed, understaffed, or understocked.
Tons of cynicism. People care now because it’s front of mind, they see it on the news and realized something was happening and it doesn’t sit right with them. Should everyone had cared all along? Sure, obviously. But in case y’all haven’t noticed, the last four-eight-twelve years was a carnival where our national attention was stretched beyond our abilities to track more shit. Maybe this was on purpose, remember Hong Kong?
Some Libertarians are like OP, in fact, as someone who generally votes progressive lately, I feel like a Libertarian generally but just can’t side with the GOP in the current world. Still, it seems that most Libertarians in the media are really just closeted Republicans, somehow it all seems to wrap back around to full-throated Trump support.
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My thoughts here are that this is an interesting example of cognitive dissonance. I guess the core issue isn’t if we agree the lunatic shouldn’t have a gun, but rather the philosophical question as to _if_ an authority is qualified to make that decision. I wonder how far this goes, if Libertarians believe that the state shouldn’t regulate guns whatsoever, should the state allow them inside prisons? Should violent ex-cons get their gun rights back with their freedom?