Because ALL Black People Look Alike?

HockeyBeard

Well-Known Member
Dunno I was just giving my two cents about Alaska since I lived there recently
While my demographic inference was off base, I still believe being heavily armed, and the proliferation of weapons on the streets gives the justification to assume that every kid they roll up on is armed. Without that, they would have to produce an actual reasonable fear for acting with force.
 

whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
What do guns do when left laying around? Do they randomly go off?
You know very well that that guns left laying around increases the chances of an accident or the gun being used against the owner.

I'm very pro gun but us gun owners need to take responsibility and safely own and use them. No reason a gun not to be secured.

My guns are locked up and when not carrying my pistol it goes in a lock box that a bracelet, biometric or combination can open in a matter of a second.

I have driveway and motion sensors. That allows more than enough time to reach my firearm.

Guns laying around are how a two year old end up shooting the owner.

You know why? Because if its not secured there is no way to garuntee something like that not happening. There's just not. So come off it and secure your guns.

Maybe be a little proactive about it before someone decides to do it for us.
 
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whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
This was two years ago and there never was a case against us. As I said previously they did arrest my husband for a small amount of pot he had in his office but those charges were almost dropped immediately when we got my brother in law involved who is an International attorney and has worked for the CIA and FBI. They did however hurt my husband when they slammed him up against the door and his head hit a deadbolt he sustained permanent injury from that and we are settling with the Attorney General's office on that. I don't know I think you're wrong about Internet safety and IP addresses at the time we'd lived on a very busy Street in a big neighborhood and everybody either had AT&T or Time Warner Cable and when your internet went out you could gain access to your neighbors internet not on all of them but about an eighth of them you could, our youngest daughter showed me and she didn't do anything special other than click on somebody's IP name and address which of course I told her not to do ever again but she showed me that it was possible so I think a lot of people are vulnerable
I'm not wrong. Take the time to setup your router right and it will take serious skills to hack it. 128 bit encryption is no joke.

Its only as strong as your password. Like I said, 19 random letter, numbers and symbols and the average Joe is not going to hack it.

Now use the name of your dog or important dates make it easy.

Make sure it is wpa2 and not an older wep protected router. Change the ssid name to something besides the name that came with it and make a strong password. 19 or more characters is almost impossible to crack.

Look for a router that has stealth so people can't see it when searching for a network.

Enable router firewall.

I'm sorry it happened but with a few simple steps it could've been avoided.

I noticed you never denied the FDD thing.

Do you make these stories up for your female persona or are they real stories from your or someone you know lives?
 

HockeyBeard

Well-Known Member
Who the hell are you?
Just a guy who thinks that one of the biggest issues that cause police to kill at the rate they do, is the proliferation of guns. Looking at police killings in other countries without lax gun laws, the numbers are laughable. We kill more people in a week than they do in a year.
 

Blunted 4 lyfe

Well-Known Member
This was two years ago and there never was a case against us. As I said previously they did arrest my husband for a small amount of pot he had in his office but those charges were almost dropped immediately when we got my brother in law involved who is an International attorney and has worked for the CIA and FBI. They did however hurt my husband when they slammed him up against the door and his head hit a deadbolt he sustained permanent injury from that and we are settling with the Attorney General's office on that. I don't know I think you're wrong about Internet safety and IP addresses at the time we'd lived on a very busy Street in a big neighborhood and everybody either had AT&T or Time Warner Cable and when your internet went out you could gain access to your neighbors internet not on all of them but about an eighth of them you could, our youngest daughter showed me and she didn't do anything special other than click on somebody's IP name and address which of course I told her not to do ever again but she showed me that it was possible so I think a lot of people are vulnerable
Use WPA2-AES 128 encryption and use a 26-36 character (password) encryption random numbers, letters and symbols. Once logged on to your network, shut off broadcast and your IP address and network name will be blind to anyone not in your network. Connect a CAT5 wire from your computer to your router log into your router using 192.168.1.1 > enter must use the address bar. Once in go to advance settings and toggle off "broadcasting" that's it...remember your router password.

Use a linksys router with dual band by Cisco. Don't use cable company router they suck and use weak security buy your own router $120-150 and make sure you update the firmware even out of the box. Log into router>advance settings>update firmware. You can find instructions on YouTube. You're actually renting their (cable co) bs router every month for that you might as well get your own stronger router.

B4L
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
Just a guy who thinks that one of the biggest issues that cause police to kill at the rate they do, is the proliferation of guns. Looking at police killings in other countries without lax gun laws, the numbers are laughable. We kill more people in a week than they do in a year.
When you say proliferation of guns, are you referring to the militarisation of police or private ownership by private citizens?

Because private gun ownership is at an all time high and violent crime is at a 25 year low.

I agree that some steps should be taken to prevent retards getting guns, but responsible private gun ownership is statistically not a negative thing.
 

HockeyBeard

Well-Known Member
When you say proliferation of guns, are you referring to the militarisation of police or private ownership by private citizens?

Because private gun ownership is at an all time high and violent crime is at a 25 year low.

I agree that some steps should be taken to prevent retards getting guns, but responsible private gun ownership is statistically not a negative thing.
I don't necessarily disagree. I'm not a gun control advocate. However, it's impossible, as a conscious observer, to not notice how police in other countries handle their citizens. Have you seen the video of the US cops watching UK cops handle violent threats? I'm not as much addressing the gun crime, as I am making the case that because gun ownership is so high, police assume most are armed and treat every person they approach as if their life is in danger. Policing from a position of fear, which is leading to a lot of these really really ugly incidents. Especially when you wrap up the gangster culture and throw that in the mix, along with the militarization of police, you get an Us vs Them mentality that begins to surface.
 

Blunted 4 lyfe

Well-Known Member
I'm not wrong. Take the time to setup your router right and it will take serious skills to hack it. 128 bit encryption is no joke.

Its only as strong as your password. Like I said, 19 random letter, numbers and symbols and the average Joe is not going to hack it.

Now use the name of your dog or important dates make it easy.

Make sure it is wpa2 and not an older wep protected router. Change the ssid name to something besides the name that came with it and make a strong password. 19 or more characters is almost impossible to crack.

Look for a router that has stealth so people can't see it when searching for a network.

Enable router firewall.

I'm sorry it happened but with a few simple steps it could've been avoided.

I noticed you never denied the FDD thing.

Do you make these stories up for your female persona or are they real stories from your or someone you know lives?
You're 100% correct if folks took the time to safeguard their routers you wouldn't have so many folks getting hacked.

You would be surprised at how many open networks there are in my community. I do all my banking and pay bills for the last 15 years online and never worry about being hacked it all boils down to protecting your router and making it a ghost only you can "see" but get the latest security patches with a firmware update.

B4L
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
I'm not wrong. Take the time to setup your router right and it will take serious skills to hack it. 128 bit encryption is no joke.

Its only as strong as your password. Like I said, 19 random letter, numbers and symbols and the average Joe is not going to hack it.

Now use the name of your dog or important dates make it easy.

Make sure it is wpa2 and not an older wep protected router. Change the ssid name to something besides the name that came with it and make a strong password. 19 or more characters is almost impossible to crack.

Look for a router that has stealth so people can't see it when searching for a network.

Enable router firewall.

I'm sorry it happened but with a few simple steps it could've been avoided.

I noticed you never denied the FDD thing.

Do you make these stories up for your female persona or are they real stories from your or someone you know lives?

The guns are not bad and do not misbehave when left laying around. It is other people that are the issue, not the guns. They would happily sit forever on a desktop and do absolutely nothing.
 
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