Black student stabs white classmate in the face at Atlanta high school, screams 'white b*tch'

If the nation wasn't as flooded with guns as it is, they wouldn't be so easy to obtain.
Gun Ownership in America:1973 to 2021


1765648201837.png
From 1985 to 2021, the percentage of Americans who reported personally owning a gun dropped 20 percent.n During this period, personal gun ownership hit its peak in 1985, when 30.5 percent of Americans reportedpersonally owning a gun. By 2021, this number had dropped six percentage points to 24.5 percent.


So u see dipshit more households had guns in 1973 1980 and everyone got um with no background check
 
Last edited:
Guns were way more easy to get in the '70s and '80s no background computer checks etc
There were nowhere near as many of them in the 70's.

The same reason why they're easier to get nowadays.

People steal them from idiots who are too lazy and irresponsible to lock them up.
 
There were nowhere near as many of them in the 70's.

The same reason why they're easier to get nowadays.

People steal them from idiots who are too lazy and irresponsible to lock them up.
more households in the 70s and 80s had guns in them....more households percent wise to steal them from

1765660870200.png
 
Gun Ownership in America:1973 to 2021


View attachment 67799
From 1985 to 2021, the percentage of Americans who reported personally owning a gun dropped 20 percent.n During this period, personal gun ownership hit its peak in 1985, when 30.5 percent of Americans reportedpersonally owning a gun. By 2021, this number had dropped six percentage points to 24.5 percent.


So u see dipshit more households had guns in 1973 1980 and everyone got um with no background check

The US population today is 131,568,547 higher than it was in 1973.

In 1973 there were 211,908,788 people in the US vs 343,477,345 today.

48.7% of 211,908,788 = 103,199,579 guns in US households in 1973

35.2% of 343,477,345 = 120,904,021 guns in US households in 2023.

Meaning there has been an increase of 17,704,442 guns in US households since 1973.

You should learn how to do simple 'rithmuhtik, dipshit.

Also, gun theft from home and car break ins and gun store burglaries was nowhere near as prevalent as they are today, which equates to thugs and criminals having a far easier time getting guns and for much cheaper than people who buy them in stores and pass background checks do.
 
The US population today is 131,568,547 higher than it was in 1973.

In 1973 there were 211,908,788 people in the US vs 343,477,345 today.

48.7% of 211,908,788 = 103,199,579 guns in US households in 1973

35.2% of 343,477,345 = 120,904,021 guns in US households in 2023.

Meaning there has been an increase of 17,704,442 guns in US households since 1973.

You should learn how to do simple 'rithmuhtik, dipshit.

Also, gun theft from home and car break ins and gun store burglaries was nowhere near as prevalent as they are today, which equates to thugs and criminals having a far easier time getting guns and for much cheaper than people who buy them in stores and pass background checks do.
per Capita more households had guns in 1980

The early 1980s marked a peak in the percentage of households with firearms, hitting around 45-50%, before falling to roughly one-third by the 2000s, notes The New York Times and this National Academies report.


And everyone of them bought with no background check
 
per Capita more households had guns in 1980

The early 1980s marked a peak in the percentage of households with firearms, hitting around 45-50%, before falling to roughly one-third by the 2000s, notes The New York Times and this National Academies report.


And everyone of them bought with no background check

And today in 2025, more people are buying them for next to nothing after they've been stolen out of cars and homes during burglaries or home invasions or car jackings or smash and grab gun store and pawn shop robberies etc, etc, etc.

And all with no background checks.

But all of that is neither here nor there vis-a-vis the original topic.
 
Gun Ownership in America:1973 to 2021


View attachment 67799
From 1985 to 2021, the percentage of Americans who reported personally owning a gun dropped 20 percent.n During this period, personal gun ownership hit its peak in 1985, when 30.5 percent of Americans reportedpersonally owning a gun. By 2021, this number had dropped six percentage points to 24.5 percent.


So u see dipshit more households had guns in 1973 1980 and everyone got um with no background check
And there are more people now as the population has grown, comparing percentages from the 70's till today is meaningless
 
Not a claim...A FACT! They are the most violent people in America by a wide margin
I don't wish to splash you with cold water, but there is a fundamental logic error in your argument. You are treating a correlation as a causation, leading you to erroneously use an undefined antecedent. Who are "they"? If you say "blacks", you are guilty of claiming "blackness" as a causation (totally false) for violence, i.e. there are "black" people who are not violent, hence being "black" did not cause them to be violent.

You can't validly claim that blacks are the most violent people in America when blacks are some of the most peaceful people in America ... as well.

It is my humble recommendation that you stick with the prevalence of violence among those with a dark skin color, and leave "culture" open to possibly explaining the prevalence of violence instead of the conclusory claim that one's skin color causes violence.
 
Not a solution because it doesn't [fully treat the perp like a victim] or [grant absolute supremacy to] a minority of society.

Your so-called "solution" just reinforces the left"s [resolve to brand everyone who is not in lock-step with our mindless thought-collective as] vindictive, hate-mongering racists.
FTFY.
 
Never said I have one, but the problem can be discussed and ideas debated in a serious, thoughtful manner.

You guys just seem to want to see more blacks thrown in jail and prison.

"You guys?"
Bullshit. Ethnicity is meaningless to me.
The leftist judges are letting violent criminals out of jail to commit more crimes. I haven't seen you bitch about that.
 
Pretty funny, what’s this, the third thread on the same incident?

As I noted on one of the other thread, there are over twenty thousand high schools in America, do the MAGA’s think this was the only high school in America that recently experienced a violent incident

Getting desperate over there in Trumplandia looking for deflections off their Messiah’s fuck ups
What 'fuck ups'? You mean the deranged left's version where everything Trump does is a catastrophe because it owns the libs? I'm racking my brain for Trump's biggest 'fuck up' this term, you know, actual ones that betray America First, jack up pain for real Americans, or sell us out like Biden's sabotage squad. So far? nothing.

The man's dropped over 220 executive orders since January, torching woke garbage, slamming borders shut, designating cartels as terrorists, yanking gender insanity from federal policy, drilling like mad, and setting up DOGE to gut the swamp. Every move? Pure gold for putting Americans first. Energy booming, illegals getting booted, no new endless wars, it's the mandate in action.

Trump's batting a thousand on promises that matter.

Meanwhile, Biden's term? A nonstop parade of intentional gut-punches: Day 1 killing Keystone and pausing drilling (energy prices through the roof, begging OPEC), flinging borders open (millions pouring in, fentanyl floods, crime spikes), that tranny EO letting dudes crush girls in sports and invade locker rooms, exploding inflation from 1.7% to 9.1% by printing trillions and killing supply chains. Hundreds of moves designed to punish working Americans, tank our independence, and tear the country apart for globalist vibes.Trump this term? Zero real fuck ups I can name that hurt us. Biden? I could fill books with the deliberate destruction.

Oh, I thought I'd throw in this nice little list of early actions to open up that border as soon as he could. I wonder how many murderers were let in on the first day? Well, we have no way of knowing. Below is the answer to me asking Grok for the border policy changes in Biden's early days:

  • Halted border wall construction: A proclamation paused all building within seven days, redirected funds away, and ended the national emergency Trump used to fund it. No more 'big beautiful wall' – just gaps and virtue signals.
  • 100-day deportation moratorium: DHS memo paused most interior removals (later partially blocked by courts, but the signal was sent loud and clear: come on in, consequences optional).
  • Suspended 'Remain in Mexico' (Migrant Protection Protocols): DHS halted new enrollments starting January 21, ending the policy that forced non-Mexican asylum seekers to wait south of the border for hearings. Result? Asylum shoppers flooded in to file claims directly on US soil.
  • Preserved and fortified DACA: Memo strengthened protections for Dreamers, blocking any rollback.
  • Lifted the Muslim/Africa travel bans: Not directly border-related, but part of the broader 'welcome mat' vibe.
'Fuck ups'?? Hundreds in the first month. Give me your list of Trump 'fuck ups'
 
Back
Top