Yesterday's Mass Shooting.

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
being able to identify a person who is invading your privacy, and committing criminal trespass doesn't occur to you? first go to is getting murdered?
You live in a dark mind...
I didn't say I disagree with the law I just choose not to live under it and I'm getting out of the hobby. Drone pilots get Karened regularly and some people are just plain nuts when they see a drone. I think it would be a good idea to block the pilot's location from regular people, but not the cops, regular people can still ID the drone and pilot. In Canada you don't need to worry about someone hunting you down and murdering you, but in America people are shot for ringing doorbells and pulling into driveways. If someone is flying above your house, they are probably legal and if you shoot a drone down, it is serious shit with the FAA. You can simply point your cellphone get the ID and gather evidence at the same time, then call the cops, if the law was broken and the app will tell you what the law is. So, publicizing the location of the pilot serves no useful purpose, everything you need is on the phone already and the cops or the FAA will be by. If the drone is unregistered and the pilot unlicensed, then you have a different matter. Drones under 250 grams don't need a license and I'm not sure about ID in the sky for them, they might have to be registered though, not sure how it works down there.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I didn't say I disagree with the law I just choose not to live under it and I'm getting out of the hobby. Drone pilots get Karened regularly and some people are just plain nuts when they see a drone. I think it would be a good idea to block the pilot's location from regular people, but not the cops, regular people can still ID the drone and pilot. In Canada you don't need to worry about someone hunting you down and murdering you, but in America people are shot for ringing doorbells and pulling into driveways. If someone is flying above your house, they are probably legal and if you shoot a drone down, it is serious shit with the FAA. You can simply point your cellphone get the ID and gather evidence at the same time, then call the cops, if the law was broken and the app will tell you what the law is. So, publicizing the location of the pilot serves no useful purpose, everything you need is on the phone already and the cops or the FAA will be by. If the drone is unregistered and the pilot unlicensed, then you have a different matter. Drones under 250 grams don't need a license and I'm not sure about ID in the sky for them, they might have to be registered though, not sure how it works down there.
i ignore drones, unless they seem to be spending time over my property...i have not shot one down yet, but the second i see one loitering over my property, or "inspecting" anything, i will, and then i'll go stomp the remains into a pile of shit, and throw it in the street in front of my house.
They are irrelevant to me, like birds, until i suspect they're being used for privacy invasion, then they fucking die.
If i can see who is operating one, i'm not going to seek them out, but i am going to let them know i destroyed their drone, and will destroy any more that they send...and i do know who you are, so talk some shit, motherfucker...
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
i ignore drones, unless they seem to be spending time over my property...i have not shot one down yet, but the second i see one loitering over my property, or "inspecting" anything, i will, and then i'll go stomp the remains into a pile of shit, and throw it in the street in front of my house.
They are irrelevant to me, like birds, until i suspect they're being used for privacy invasion, then they fucking die.
If i can see who is operating one, i'm not going to seek them out, but i am going to let them know i destroyed their drone, and will destroy any more that they send...and i do know who you are, so talk some shit, motherfucker...
Hopefully it won't be the city's drone, used for various inspection purposes, or worse a police drone! FPV drones don't observe much, too busy flying and moving fast, the perverts use Mavics, video drones are used to peek in windows. Those are the ones who will hover over your house, but it could be the local real estate agent getting a property shot next door. Best to ID it before shooting, these things are very useful for many things and governments and cops are big fans.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Hopefully it won't be the city's drone, used for various inspection purposes, or worse a police drone! FPV drones don't observe much, too busy flying and moving fast, the perverts use Mavics, video drones are used to peek in windows. Those are the ones who will hover over your house, but it could be the local real estate agent getting a property shot next door. Best to ID it before shooting, these things are very useful for many things and governments and cops are big fans.
The city doesn't use drones, and the police wouldn't be flying by my window randomly...If i see one loitering on my property of looking at anything too closely, it's getting shot down, the cops can come claim the wreckage, and explain wtf they were doing on my property with no warrant.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The city doesn't use drones, and the police wouldn't be flying by my window randomly...If i see one loitering on my property of looking at anything too closely, it's getting shot down, the cops can come claim the wreckage, and explain wtf they were doing on my property with no warrant.
A lot of places use them, the city, the cops, state governments too and they are the camera type like a Mavic. I'm not sure what the rules are there, but you must be a minimum of 150 feet above a structure and no closer than 150 feet from the side of one or a person. Flying over people is a bad ideal for several reasons, like this one. The props were unbalanced causing a lot of vibration and shitty video, and it shook the battery connection lose. The Runcam2 had a separate battery and kept recording. I bought a prop balancer and used small pieces of tape to balance the props properly, I bought these 7" props online and they were not balanced!


Allen Point Incident Slow Motion Analysis
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
A lot of places use them, the city, the cops, state governments too and they are the camera type like a Mavic. I'm not sure what the rules are there, but you must be a minimum of 150 feet above a structure and no closer than 150 feet from the side of one or a person. Flying over people is a bad ideal for several reasons, like this one. The props were unbalanced causing a lot of vibration and shitty video, and it shook the battery connection lose. The Runcam2 had a separate battery and kept recording. I bought a prop balancer and used small pieces of tape to balance the props properly, I bought these 7" props online and they were not balanced!


Allen Point Incident Slow Motion Analysis
that is actually your video?
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Religious faux watcher magat
It's the broader narrative that foxnews presents, crime is high in big cities because of black people, but it doesn't happen in "real America", in fact red state murder rates are much higher than most cities. The statistics they use ignore populations of less than 250K and make it look like crime is higher in big cities. It is pounded home constantly. There was a picture of two black panthers outside a voting place and fox news presented it hundreds of times a week during election season. Just before election season it will caravan season as the horde of brown people slowly make their way north like an invading army followed by fox. They probably got their gas and travel money from an agent of foxnews, think something like that is below them?
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
He shot a man in the back and wounded a little girl in the face because the little girl went into his yard to retrieve a basketball. They were all Black, so stand your ground laws won't apply.

not every mass shooter is an older white man...unfortunately, insanity inflicts itself on all kinds of people, and you will never know who, until it's too late.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
not every mass shooter is an older white man...unfortunately, insanity inflicts itself on all kinds of people, and you will never know who, until it's too late.
Yeah, mental illness seems to me to be a cop out.

Don't all of these people who just go off and shoot people for no good reason seem touched in the head? And yet, until the moment they pull the gun and shoot, they were able to contain themselves. So, no. They were able to distinguish between right and wrong until then. They chose to use that gun. Mental illness plea should be rejected.

However, Black men scare white men, which seems to be the threshold for invoking Stand Your Ground as a defense. In fact, if anybody say they were scared in SYG state, they seem to do just fine in court. It doesn't work between Black men and I doubt the 6 YO girl would pass the credibility test to a jury but if the man had been white, maybe it would. Of course, I'm being sarcastic. This all pisses me off. This society is far too lenient when it comes to assigning a license to kill to gun owners who claim self defense.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Yeah, mental illness seems to me to be a cop out.

Don't all of these people who just go off and shoot people for no good reason seem touched in the head? And yet, until the moment they pull the gun and shoot, they were able to contain themselves. So, no. They were able to distinguish between right and wrong until then. They chose to use that gun. Mental illness plea should be rejected.

However, Black men scare white men, which seems to be the threshold for invoking Stand Your Ground as a defense. In fact, if anybody say they were scared in SYG state, they seem to do just fine in court. It doesn't work between Black men and I doubt the 6 YO girl would pass the credibility test to a jury but if the man had been white, maybe it would. Of course, I'm being sarcastic. This all pisses me off. This society is far too lenient when it comes to assigning a license to kill to gun owners who claim self defense.
I'm a habitually angry person...I have a minuscule amount of patience, and i have a gun...In 57 years, i have managed to NOT shoot anyone...Because, contrary to the beliefs of some, I AM sane...
Whether it is acceptable as a legal defense or not, being able to rationalize attempted murder for a minor annoyance makes you fucking crazy.
Having the desire to kill a bunch of school children qualifies you, as far as i'm concerned, and so does shooting someone through a door or from your porch, with no attempt at all to find out why they are there...
If you prefer to say that they are just fucking evil, bad people, that works...evil, crazy, bad....it all means the same thing...
 

Polly Wog

Well-Known Member
I have relatives that would do the same thing. At our Easter celebration one of my sister-in-laws use the jigaboo word. My son said I've never heard such a racist thing. They are Evangelical Christians and trumpkins. It's the way they were raised. Most of Adams county Ohio is that way.
 

Polly Wog

Well-Known Member
I'm an old man now. But if I had two girls trying to get in my car when I was younger the last thing I would do is pull a gun on them. I'd ask them where they'd like to go.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Vanderbilt psychiatrist on rash of shootings: 'People are trained to see other people as threats'

1,373 views Apr 20, 2023 #Gunreform #Guns #MSNBC
Dr. Jonathan Metzl, Professor of Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University, joins Ana Cabrera to talk about the climate surrounding a series of recent mass shootings, and why harmless everyday mistakes have led to knee-jerk reactions to pull the trigger. Dr. Metzl dives into the consequences of an increasingly armed society and how laws like ‘stand your ground’ negatively affect human behavior.
 
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