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crackpottery domestic violence imaginary backwards land MRA paranoia playing the victim violence

The Wisconsin spa shootings: A conspiracy theory

I’m not sure how many of you have been following the story of the recent spa shooting in Wisconsin, in which an (angry, controlling, abusive) estranged husband murdered his wife and two others at a spa where she worked, before turning the gun on himself.

Unfortunately, stories like this are far from uncommon – domestic violence often escalates when female victims break off relationships with abusive men. (While dumped women often stalk male exes, they are far less likely to resort to violence.) All those studies that MRAs like to cite about how domestic violence between men and women is somehow equal don’t take into account violence that happens after the relationship is brought to an end.

I was reading this article, about the heroic efforts of Zina Haughton, the murdered wife in the spa shootings, to convince her ex to spare the lives of others in the spa at the time, when I made the mistake of reading the comments, which had degenerated into a bizarre “debate” over gun control. The, er, highlight of the discussion was this bizarre conspiracy theory:

Apparently gun enthusiasts can be as paranoid, delusional and self-absorbed as any entitled asshole in the manosphere.

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CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

Do they teach conspiracy theories in schools now or something?

Kim
Kim
12 years ago

The fact that they never talk shows just how insidious the agency in charge of it is!

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
12 years ago

People kill people, but they do it more often and more efficiently with guns than with a brick of Velveeta.

The government covered up the St Velveeta’s Day Massacre, y’know.

::adjusts tinfoil hat::

Sgt Grumbles
Sgt Grumbles
12 years ago

Do they teach conspiracy theories in schools now or something?

You gotta teach the controversy, let the kids decide.

Tulgey Logger
Tulgey Logger
12 years ago

Personally, I’m all for the second amendment: if you want a gun, you can join a well-regulated militia and practice using a musket for the day the British drop by and demand to be stationed in your house and you know they’re gonna eat all of your brisket you just know it

As for legal gun rights as they now stand, I really wish all these allegedly vigilant gun owners would do something about the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex and make the U.S. government stop shitting on the rest of the planet. Right now, though, they only seem prepared to rise up and oppose the government’s tyranny if and when the government seems posed to move to take away their means to rise up and oppose the government’s tyranny; the rest of the tyranny, they let slide. Seems a bit useless and circular, frankly.

Kakanian
Kakanian
12 years ago

In a sense, the Gun Control Discussion is an extremely popular crutch that helps the public to quickly hobble past matters that would require some serious soul-searching otherwise.

thenatfantastic
12 years ago

@Kakanian

I agree. The question shouldn’t be about guns*, it should be ‘WHY the hell did this happen, and how do we prevent someone choosing to do this again?’. In this case the ‘why’ is obviously ‘because some evil doucheface thought he was entitled to be given another human being on a platter and couldn’t handle being told he wasn’t’. If he hadn’t had a gun, he’d have used something else – there was a case in the UK a couple of years ago where a woman was stabbed to death at work by an ex-boyfriend. Arguably gun control could have prevented the killing of the bystanders, but a better way to prevent all the deaths would be to teach these people they’re not entitled to fucktoy/maids. And, you know, believing people when they are concerned about a violent partner. The police’s role in not protecting this woman and her colleagues (and all the other people they don’t protect) needs to be strongly looked at.

(*For the record, I am firmly in the camp of those who live in countries with strong gun controls and can’t understand why people wouldn’t support that)

elodieunderglass
12 years ago

so my spousal unit is interested in target shooting? we had guns in the US
and in the UK guns are rigidly controlled and handguns are illegal and ohmygoodnesshowdoesitwork?!!?!eleventy
so do you know what
you can still practice target shooting
on account of it being a legitimate, social and enjoyable sport that you should practice with friends at a safe and well-designed range anyway.
there are also pheasant shoots and such for those rich people in tweedy jackets.

YOU CAN HAVE STILL HAVE FUN WITH YOUR GUNS IN PLACES WHERE THEY ARE CONTROLLED

teratomatastic
12 years ago

I read it as “The perpetrators are all pasties” and got really confused about nipple coverings passing anti-gun laws.

(first ever comment!)

blitzgal
12 years ago

I have a liberal co-worker who talks like this all the time. She claims the outing of Violentacrez is to get public support for government control and censorship of the internet. The Sikh shootings were conducted by the government to silence the truth about aliens (the temple leader’s son apparently is a filmmaker who has a project about aliens….and the government killed his father to silence him or something…). The US government caused the Japan earthquake with our HAARP weather weapon. It’s so bad I don’t even discuss these stories with her, because I know she’ll have some ridiculous conspiracy theory attached to this one, too.

I’m in favor of gun control. But I think there is still something else going on in our culture that leads to these mass shootings. There is a bizarre sense of angry, resentful entitlement, and the idea that violence is not only appropriate but is also justified to solve any issue.

Zina’s 20 year old daughter was at the spa and witnessed her mother’s murder. They leave behind a 13 year old daughter who is now an orphan. And for what? So this guy could say, “I win” before he killed himself? What a terrible monster he was.

pillowinhell
12 years ago

And closely related to this is the Spearheads take on TRO’s.

As far as that lot is concerned, well, we have one dude advocating for more violence so women don’t get the TRO in the first place, because her fear is real.

Price is advocating the idea that a womans fear for her life should have proof backing up that fear so the courts can be impartial. Also, the guy should have the right to defend himself in court. Which means that unless an aggressor has already attempted to take the victims life before and it can be proven that the aggressor wasn’t “provoked”, TRO’s will be practically non existant.

The rest seem to think that the TRO’s are the “provacation” that sets men off (and rightfully so as it denies them the ability to see the kids) and that until TRO’s are banished, this type of violence will increase. Essentially, they believe that its the governments fault that men are “being forced” to kill their former partners.

Freemage
Freemage
12 years ago

The conspiracy whackjob up above is obviously completely round the bend. That said, I tend to take a pragmatic view–and overall, the most common and reliable analysis of the data indicates that the truth is counter-intuitive: Altering gun laws does diddly to affecting crime rates. Complete ban? No effect. Permit concealed-carry? Still no effect. (Or at least, both effects are completely lost in the wash when you account for economic factors and the like.)

I’m not a libertarian–no “That which governs least governs best” attitude here. But I do tend to feel that where the government can do no good, it should do nothing at all. We’d be better off with focusing on improving the economy, better education (including a focus on teaching pro-diversity and equal rights positions as part of a broader ‘good citizenship’ curriculum) and so forth.

MorkaisChosen
MorkaisChosen
12 years ago

When you say crime rates, do you mean numbers of crimes committed? If so, that misses a significant point.

If a case of assault with a baseball bat which leaves someone in hospital for a week counts for as much crime rate as a lethal shooting, the version where the victim is badly injured but lives seems preferable to me.

princessbonbon
12 years ago

My problem with the lack of effective controls is what happened with the Fast and the Furious-the agent in charge did the best job he could but the weak and lax gun control laws basically made it completely pointless to even bother with investigating. And now his career is ruined because of the hysteria that the Right has over even the merest hint of stopping the bad guys from getting guns because somewhere, somehow someone who is “law abiding” will get their guns taken away by jack booted thugs.

A sitting congresswoman was nearly assassinated for heaven’s sake and even that did not stop the right wing from going ballistic at the idea that maybe their toys might need a little bit more scrutiny.

The lack of sense when it comes to guns is what really bothers me more than the actual guns themselves.

Freemage
Freemage
12 years ago

I’m talking ‘broken down by category’–so a murder is a murder, a non-lethal assault is a non-lethal assault, and so on. Outside of a few very showy instances, such as Columbine, the numbers really do seem to hold constant (and even those showy cases often happen in areas with strict gun laws).

Part of the reason for this is that guns are efficient, but only for certain types of violence. Consider the case of the Colorado theater massacre (another genuinely horrific event). As bad as it was, the guy could probably have killed MORE people just by using the money he spent on guns and ammo to rent a Hummer, and plowing into the round-the-block line waiting outside the theater before they started letting people in. Gun laws, for the most part, are pretty much security theater–they allow the authorities to be claiming to be “doing something”, even if nothing gets done. (See also: TSA.)

And I do want to stress that I’m not taking the opposite argument that the NRA types are fond of–there’s just as little evidence supporting the notion that lax gun laws reduce crime, either. It’s just a functional irrelevancy.

ShadetheDruid
ShadetheDruid
12 years ago

Because, clearly, strict gun laws requiring people to be licensed, have training (and sense), and keep their guns locked up would be pointless, just like requiring the same of drivers.

Wait, what?

talacaris
12 years ago

NWO has stated thar requiring drivers licenses is totalitarian, I think.

cloudiah
12 years ago

That Spearhead post on TROs + comments has shaken my faith in humanity. Those are some hateful people.

pillowinhell
12 years ago

Cloudia we stand in agreement. I think that if someone is genuinely frightened or harrassed a TRO is needed, if only to signal to police that more urgency is required if they get called. I don’t care if its the woman or the man, a victim of harrassment or potential violence needs help and a TRO is a very good way of advising the agressor that people are aware of the situation and that society does not approve of the behaviour.

aworldanonymous
12 years ago

@Unimaginative

Coming from a rural area myself, I get people having rifles, but I’m also very happy that we have gun control laws as strict as we do. Also I’m voting NDP in the next election, does this make me bad, I mean it probably means I’m wasting my vote unless I do the whole vote swap thingy that they did for this election, but does it make me bad?

pillowinhell
12 years ago

Aworld, you can’t possibly be bad for voting NDP. Just ignore the fact that I’m a demonic creature and focus on the fact that I’ve been voting NDP for several years now.

aworldanonymous
12 years ago

@pillowinhell

But I live in New Brunswick, apparently we’re a very conservative riding.

twomoogles
twomoogles
12 years ago

In an objective view, sure I can see why people should have guns when they want them. But then I look at how the countries *without* so many guns have fewer gun deaths and if you are a gunowner and that gun kills you, the most likely person it’s going to kill is you, not a ‘bad guy’ and…I just can’t support it. Sure it’s great to have a fantasy where someone invades your home and you defend it with a gun, but it’s pretty unlikely you’re going to be able to actually *do* that against a criminal who is prepared, maybe has guns themelf, and could also take yours. In which case if they *didn’t* have guns, the situation just got a whole lot mor deadly.

It’s true in that if someone wants to kill, they will, regardless of method. But guns make it much more likely to be able to do it *right away*. I dunno, man, I’m Canadian, I don’t think I’ve even *seen* an unholstered gun up close.

MorkaisChosen
MorkaisChosen
12 years ago

Someone invades my home, I can defend it with two objects: a stick and my local police force.

Probably also means the person in my home is less likely to have a gun, so there’s less danger of it all escalating, right?

Diogenes The Cynic
Diogenes The Cynic
12 years ago

@Mork

Whats the average police response time in your city?