-
02-09-2018, 09:12 AM
#281

Originally Posted by
LC Dawg
So you are saying that if Mark Keenum fights to keep concealed carry out of Davis Wade he needs to be fired?
If Keenum catches heat, it should be for us losing R1 status on his watch, not this imo
-
02-09-2018, 09:47 AM
#282
Here's a solution that State and Ole Miss admin is kicking around per an attorney friend of mine.
If this bill passes and both presidents hope it doesn't, they will lease the stadium on game day to a event operation company who will then put on the game. This will allow it to be a private event thus allowing the event production company to ban guns.
-
02-09-2018, 09:51 AM
#283

Originally Posted by
Interpolation_Dawg_EX
This only applies to enhanced carry license holders. Not every Tom, Dick, and Harry has one and/or can pass the requirements to obtain one. I'm on the fence, but for Sankey and the media to paint this as broad as they're trying is complete BS.
It's not that rigorous. Pay the money and take the class. You get it.
The media is not who is passing this call it whatever you want law.
-
02-09-2018, 09:53 AM
#284

Originally Posted by
Spiderman
I guarantee you you have been sitting by a bunch of people carrying in games. AGAIN, it has been allowed for years. If you are scared of licensed holders, you probably shouldn't leave your house.
You are comparing apples and oranges. Carrying a gun in the public is much different than allowing an armed individual who may have been drinking in the midst of 75k people in a confined space with limited exit points. The risk for the second scenario is obviously much higher.
To the person who said they trust their own skill more than security at the game: every security officer you see wearing a gun at the game is a certified law enforcement officer. That?s qualification 4 times a year and scenario training at least once a year. Plus a lot of mandatory gun retention and strategy training in between. They may not all look like Navy Seals but I guarantee you they can put a bullet where it?s supposed to go and, more importantly, know when not to fire and how to handle a crowded situation. If your training is on par with that then you are good to go.
But...if there is a situation in the stadium and you pull your gun and your not wearing the correct identifier I can pretty much guarnatee your day will end quickly and poorly. Guns in a stadium or arena is just a very bad idea.
-
02-09-2018, 09:54 AM
#285
On the idea that we should just strap it on and duke it out with the SEC/NCAA because we feel Mississippi law trumps them, we've tried that before. And lost. Big time. Larry Gillard. Lesson should've been learned, but some seem to be confusing their bravado with reality.
To those that claim "this doesn't change the law", you're engaging in intellectual dishonesty. We know about 2011. But 2011 did not re-codify premises law. You still may be limited by your voluntary purchase of a ticket/license. No one is forcing you to go to football games. If you don't want to agree to leave your pacifier at home, you don't have to buy a ticket. (Or "peacemaker" if you prefer). But the ticket that is offered to you for purchase carries with it conditions. One of which is that you may not bring a weapon into the stadium. This bill would eliminate the ability of the school to impose that condition on your purchase of the license.
If you refuse to acknowledge this distinction when making your argument, and insist on claiming "this doesn't change the law; it's already on the books", you're flat out lying just to serve your self-interest.
On your peacemaking abilities in a large crowd up to 65,000 and more, MSU, and the SEC, and just about every college campus, and high school, and professional team, and concert arena, and international sports arena, have decided that it prefers to leave the peacemaking to official security. Can the world be made perfectly safe? Of course not. But they've made that decision based not only on common sense, but on significant research and consultations with security experts the world over. Most seem to think that's a wise decision. If you don't, this is America. You have the option to stay the hell at home and let the rest of us keep enjoying SEC football.
-
02-09-2018, 10:34 AM
#286

Originally Posted by
WinningIsRelentless
Here's a solution that State and Ole Miss admin is kicking around per an attorney friend of mine.
If this bill passes and both presidents hope it doesn't, they will lease the stadium on game day to a event operation company who will then put on the game. This will allow it to be a private event thus allowing the event production company to ban guns.
Just to play devil?s advocate here, but here is one possible unintended consequence if they do that. An EC goes to the game and is unarmed due to this scenario. At 11:30pm he and his family are walking back to their vehicle parked on the other side of campus. On the way back in a poorly lit area they are assaulted and robbed at gun point and his wife is shot in the process. He may then be able to sue the university for not providing adequate security and denying himself the ability to defend himself and his family. And before you say that would never go anywhere remember a woman sued McDonalds because she spilled coffee on herself and got burned and she claimed they were negligent by not putting a warning on her cup.
-
02-09-2018, 11:06 AM
#287

Originally Posted by
WesternSkyDawg
On the idea that we should just strap it on and duke it out with the SEC/NCAA because we feel Mississippi law trumps them, we've tried that before. And lost. Big time. Larry Gillard. Lesson should've been learned, but some seem to be confusing their bravado with reality.
To those that claim "this doesn't change the law", you're engaging in intellectual dishonesty. We know about 2011. But 2011 did not re-codify premises law. You still may be limited by your voluntary purchase of a ticket/license. No one is forcing you to go to football games. If you don't want to agree to leave your pacifier at home, you don't have to buy a ticket. (Or "peacemaker" if you prefer). But the ticket that is offered to you for purchase carries with it conditions. One of which is that you may not bring a weapon into the stadium. This bill would eliminate the ability of the school to impose that condition on your purchase of the license.
If you refuse to acknowledge this distinction when making your argument, and insist on claiming "this doesn't change the law; it's already on the books", you're flat out lying just to serve your self-interest.
On your peacemaking abilities in a large crowd up to 65,000 and more, MSU, and the SEC, and just about every college campus, and high school, and professional team, and concert arena, and international sports arena, have decided that it prefers to leave the peacemaking to official security. Can the world be made perfectly safe? Of course not. But they've made that decision based not only on common sense, but on significant research and consultations with security experts the world over. Most seem to think that's a wise decision. If you don't, this is America. You have the option to stay the hell at home and let the rest of us keep enjoying SEC football.
Very good post
-
02-09-2018, 11:08 AM
#288

Originally Posted by
drunkernhelldawg
It's not that rigorous. Pay the money and take the class. You get it.
The media is not who is passing this call it whatever you want law.
Exactly
-
02-09-2018, 11:11 AM
#289

Originally Posted by
Coach007
No no. I get it. And gov is involved in who the president of MSU is.
As to them voting us out, they would have to have grounds.
What by law are we breaking?
Here is the PDF of the 2017/18 by laws. Where is it at?
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2017/0822...d%20Bylaws.pdf
I want to read them
We would be breaking league mandated security policies. It?s why we had to go to clear bags and have metal detectors at the Hump. We can?t just go our own way with this.
-
02-09-2018, 11:20 AM
#290
Member

Originally Posted by
starkvegasdawg34
And before you say that would never go anywhere remember a woman sued McDonalds because she spilled coffee on herself and got burned and she claimed they were negligent by not putting a warning on her cup.
I know people think the McDonalds lawsuit was frivolous but if you’ll forgive the website. It was the quickest one I could find.
Read this: https://www.treehugger.com/corporate...e-lawsuit.html
-
02-09-2018, 12:04 PM
#291

Originally Posted by
Liverpooldawg
Very good post
Large crowd was shot up not long ago... the guy didnt have anybody shooting back at him.
Nobody went to that concert thinking they were not safe.
-
02-09-2018, 12:05 PM
#292
Again... university of utah... over a decade of allowing it.
-
02-09-2018, 12:12 PM
#293

Originally Posted by
Coach007
Large crowd was shot up not long ago... the guy didnt have anybody shooting back at him.
Nobody went to that concert thinking they were not safe.
He also want standing in the middle of a crowd...
-
02-09-2018, 12:43 PM
#294

Originally Posted by
Coach007
Again... university of utah... over a decade of allowing it.
90% of the state is Mormon. They don't drink.
-
02-09-2018, 12:46 PM
#295

Originally Posted by
Coach007
Large crowd was shot up not long ago... the guy didnt have anybody shooting back at him.
Nobody went to that concert thinking they were not safe.
He was 1,000 feet away shooting from a hotel window. Your argument is equivalent to saying all planes should allow passengers to carry guns cause 9/11.
-
02-09-2018, 12:53 PM
#296

Originally Posted by
Coach007
Large crowd was shot up not long ago... the guy didnt have anybody shooting back at him.
Nobody went to that concert thinking they were not safe.
Tell me how you with your small concealed carry pistol would have been able to do anything about the Vegas sniper. This I have to hear. You must be Matt Dillon. Do you have to reload or do you just load on Sunday?
-
02-09-2018, 12:58 PM
#297

Originally Posted by
Coach007
Large crowd was shot up not long ago... the guy didnt have anybody shooting back at him.
Nobody went to that concert thinking they were not safe.
Ah, the random "good guy with a gun argument". In the case of a mass shooting, has the shooter ever been brought down by a random CC holder who was not a LEO?? I can't think of an instance where that happened. And since mass shootings happen almost daily, you would think that the some "good guy with a gun" would have gotten lucky enough to pop off a shot by now.
-
02-09-2018, 01:00 PM
#298

Originally Posted by
Liverpooldawg
Tell me how you with your small concealed carry pistol would have been able to do anything about the Vegas sniper. This I have to hear. You must be Matt Dillon. Do you have to reload or do you just load on Sunday?
One of the bands that was on stage ran to their RV, all of them had concealed carry pistols. They realized that the cops wouldn't know they weren't bad guys with the chaos going on so they left them in the RV. If you and another person start running around with guns then you don't know who the bad guy is. Unless you see them shoot someone and then you shoot them, who is to say another person doesn't shoot you because they saw you gun down the actual shooter. I don't care how much training you have to go through to get your permit, that situation would be extremely chaotic and even professionals would have a tough time.
-
02-09-2018, 01:05 PM
#299

Originally Posted by
Liverpooldawg
Tell me how you with your small concealed carry pistol would have been able to do anything about the Vegas sniper. This I have to hear. You must be Matt Dillon. Do you have to reload or do you just load on Sunday?
That's not the point. The point is and will remain that those people were not protected and their right to try was taken from them.
-
02-09-2018, 01:06 PM
#300

Originally Posted by
Tbonewannabe
One of the bands that was on stage ran to their RV, all of them had concealed carry pistols. They realized that the cops wouldn't know they weren't bad guys with the chaos going on so they left them in the RV. If you and another person start running around with guns then you don't know who the bad guy is. Unless you see them shoot someone and then you shoot them, who is to say another person doesn't shoot you because they saw you gun down the actual shooter. I don't care how much training you have to go through to get your permit, that situation would be extremely chaotic and even professionals would have a tough time.
I agree. In that situation anyone who pulled a gun on the concert floor would have almost certainly been gunned down by the police.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Disclaimer: Elitedawgs is a privately owned and operated forum that is managed by alumni of Mississippi State University. This website is in no way affiliated with the Mississippi State University, The Southeastern Conference (SEC) or the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The views and opinions expressed herein are strictly those of the post author and may not reflect the views of other members of this forum or elitedawgs.com. The interactive nature of the elitedawgs.com forums makes it impossible for elitedawgs.com to assume responsibility for any of the content posted at this site. Ideas, thoughts, suggestion, comments, opinions, advice and observations made by participants at elitedawgs.com are not endorsed by elitedawgs.com
Elitedawgs: A Mississippi State Fan Forum, Mississippi State Football, Mississippi State Basketball, Mississippi State Baseball, Mississippi State Athletics. Mississippi State message board.