Gun Supporting Americans First Time See | Jim Jefferies - Gun Control (Part 1)

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @grievesy83
    @grievesy83 Před 2 lety +507

    “We need guns for self defence in America. We have dangerous animals!”
    Me: laughs in Australian.

    • @shelleyroberts4196
      @shelleyroberts4196 Před 2 lety +28

      I was thinking the exact same thing 😂

    • @jacquelineallison3878
      @jacquelineallison3878 Před rokem +30

      Yeah he got dangerous animals come to Australia mate we'll show you dangerous animals

    • @simonwinwood
      @simonwinwood Před rokem +4

      @@jacquelineallison3878 brilliant hahahaha

    • @Civilmonkey1
      @Civilmonkey1 Před rokem +9

      This boy is technically cheesecake in australia

    • @paulpalmer4385
      @paulpalmer4385 Před rokem

      It's called "bear country" Not "bear and some gun totin' goof" country If you hunt, Fine. Shoot the critter, skin it, butcher it, Cook it up with some yummy Freedom Fries and a nice Chianti. Show us the leftovers. Don't bother stuffing its head an hanging it on the wall at the Elk's Hall-"Benevolent and Protective" my ass!

  • @berniemargolis4288
    @berniemargolis4288 Před 2 lety +265

    As a veteran, let me just say that there are many fellow veterans who shouldn't be anywhere near a school room with a gun. There's a reason that active duty soldiers have to store their personal weapons in the armory, and when they want to use them they have to check them out and return them when they've served whatever purpose they've checked them out for. Even during live deployments, there were arduous regulations surrounding weapon use. As a former member of a light infantry unit, I distinctly remember manning a guard post in the middle east under the following conditions:
    1. My rifle had an empty magazine.
    2. All the ammunition was kept in a sealed box whose seal was only to be broken if a threat refused to heed verbal warnings.
    3. Once I broke the seal on the box and loaded my rifle I had to once again verbally confront the threat to give them another chance to back away.
    4. I was finally allowed to fire a warning shot, and I'd better have a good reason for doing so because the platoon leaders were obligated to count all the ammunition in the box after every guard shift to verify that every single bullet was still there, and their chain of command was going to come down on them like a ton of bricks if they couldn't account for any discrepancies.
    5. If the threat is still present after all that, then we're finally allowed to fire at will.
    Was I upset about all that? Not really, because while only a small portion of the people I served with were absolutely nuts, it just takes one guy with an assault rifle to bring hell down on the rest of us. After our deployment was extended for several months due to the escalation of conflicts in the region, I spoke to several soldiers who flat out said that it's a good thing the ammunition was locked up because they would have gone on a murder spree otherwise. When I laughed and said, "Yeah, good one," they replied that they were being absolutely serious. I wish I was lying.
    People have this impression that training someone in the use of weapons somehow makes them safer weapon users. While the military teaches rudimentary gun safety (about five minutes worth of explanations on how you should double check that your weapon isn't loaded when you're cleaning it, how you should keep the safety on at all times when not firing it, and how you should remove your clip and attempt to fire your weapon into a barrel of sand when coming off the firing range just to be sure the chamber is empty), weapon training does nothing whatsoever to address mental health issues. A crazy dude with training is more dangerous than an untrained crazy dude.
    It's ironic that these trained soldiers who are perceived to be more qualified to bear arms are subject to far more regulation and restriction regarding weapons use than any civlian would ever be. We need to think about why that is.
    Also, most of the "homeless veterans" you see on the streets aren't actual veterans. The few who are tend to be the guys with PTSD who shouldn't be anywhere near a school. Either that, or they're physically disabled in a manner that makes them unqualified to serve as guards. Veterans actually get decent benefits upon exiting the service, including tuition assistance and job counseling. Veterans who are sound in mind and body don't wind up homeless. I'm not saying that we shouldn't help them out, but I am saying that assigning them to guard school rooms isn't doing anyone any favors.
    Finally, while the idea of upping the pay for security guards sounds great, I guarantee there's going to be a huge outcry whenever we try to raise taxes to pay for those wage increases.

    • @td090
      @td090 Před 2 lety +2

      What rifles had clips when we were in the middle East?

    • @bensy010
      @bensy010 Před 2 lety

      Very interesting

    • @StanZbornak
      @StanZbornak Před 2 lety +10

      This is the first time I have ever learned something interesting from an anecdote in a CZcams comment. Seriously, thanks for sharing.

    • @MaffeyZilog
      @MaffeyZilog Před 2 lety +7

      You do realise that you don't have to raise taxes to pay a proper wage and the notion of austerity is completely fictitious to keep the mega-rich in a position to tell those they exploit that ultimately there won't ever be any kind of pay equity?
      Because, although multi-billionaires don't pay tax, have vast profit margins, use of-shore accounts and tax havens for their own money, they have convinced the lowest earners that there just isn't any money anywhere and every time it looks like you receive a bonus of some kind, someone else in the system automatically takes it back from you in some form.
      All to keep people in their place and saying things like "the pay rises will have to be met with higher taxes for everyone else!"

    • @johannesheinsohn6956
      @johannesheinsohn6956 Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks a lot. Your descriptions does a lot of sense to me and shed light on my former experiences and observations securing an US army base in Germany as a german trained soldier. I was kind of puzzled to see the barrels of sand with a small opening to point the rifle in to unload it. We never had that anywhere, but it makes a lot of sense to me.
      The differences in gun training and gun handling are too many to tell ´em all here. I had to train for weeks handling/disassembling/assembling my assault rifle, before I got to shoot my first shot with it. When we changed the model, same thing again. In contrast to the US, German soldiers on watch anywhere (also in Germany) have fully loaded assault rifles and pistols on them. But they are well trained and follow strict procedures, so no worry.

  • @preannobastardi2111
    @preannobastardi2111 Před rokem +58

    What you said at the beginning, that many people would get hurt if someone wanted to take away their guns, is the best example of why they shouldn't have those guns at all.

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Chairman Mao would be proud, comrade.

    • @adriekeur7429
      @adriekeur7429 Před 3 měsíci +3

      This reaction says it all. 100% on point. That's why they shouldn't have guns in the first place. Protection against wild animals is the only logical reason to have a rifle in the rural/nature parts of the US. Besides that there is NO reason at all, except: "I like guns". Simple.

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 3 měsíci

      @@adriekeur7429 shut up bootlicker

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@adriekeur7429 tell ur government overlords to lay down their arms first then maybe we can talk

    • @adriekeur7429
      @adriekeur7429 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@jerry42023 Sorry dude, I live in a normal country with a normal government (Europe) we don't need guns (and accidentally) don't have guns violence. Figure that.

  • @seppingtondestamina9398
    @seppingtondestamina9398 Před 2 lety +162

    "We got bears, we got wolves..."
    In the middle of e.g New York? That's a bollocks excuse and you all know it. Jeffries' "Fuck you I like guns!" comment is 100% accurate.

    • @robertomugabe11
      @robertomugabe11 Před rokem

      i know right? this fat virgin nerd thinks we are all dumb and he is the only intelligent person in the world. there are wild animals only in his country? like roaming around outside his house?

  • @jameshughes5722
    @jameshughes5722 Před 2 lety +250

    The idea of giving a vet with PTSD a gun and putting them in a school is baffling.

    • @lalathedonna5223
      @lalathedonna5223 Před 2 lety +11

      That is exactly the reason class 3 weapons shouldn't be available to buy at the pawn shop either.

    • @SvEd76
      @SvEd76 Před 2 lety +4

      He said in the video that it has to be ensured that the vet is *not* suffering from ptsd.

    • @proxis9980
      @proxis9980 Před 2 lety

      @@SvEd76 ah so how many vets that are not suffering from ptsd are homeless and jobless ? :D my bet is on

    • @SvEd76
      @SvEd76 Před 2 lety

      @@proxis9980 exactly!

    • @jblev736
      @jblev736 Před 2 lety +6

      ** correction: vet with PTSD and no social support system or proper healthcare

  • @Codex7777
    @Codex7777 Před 2 lety +677

    It's blatantly obvious that if schools need armed security, then something has gone seriously wrong. No other developed nation even needs to consider such an extreme measure and it is an extreme measure. The fact that there are more mass shootings, in the US, than there are days in a year and that the US has more gun deaths each year than the whole of Europe, by quite some margin, are also little clues that something is seriously wrong. This needs a more comprehensive answer than extra mental health checks...

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      Batalan Mass Shooting, Madrid Bombing, the Nice Truck Massacre... security and protection of State? All your arguments rely on others with guns to provide for your own safety. Europe and Commonwealth Countries introduced Firearm laws in the 20's not to prevent crime to address fears of Communist revolutionaries. All you're doing is handing the responsibility of your safety to others. What do police carry? Guns. Why? Because laws only work with the ability to impose them, via force, real or implied.
      Do laws protect you? Nope... they simply provide consequences for those who break them and authorises violence in their enforcement. You simply pay others to keep you morals and hands clean.. otherwise why have armed police.

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      @@LittleVboh just look at mass killings... you confuse intent with methods and worst still believe that police will respond and protect you? All these mass killings show is that relying on the State to protect you is delusional... if laws work how'd they happen? Ban guns... like drugs... prohibition? Still...guess you can record tragedy then pontificate over the bodies of the dead? No help... just a bystander... great ethics...

    • @LittleVboh
      @LittleVboh Před 2 lety +29

      @@jessmarks2214 Jess Marks I understand how this is upsetting because the thought of a nation without firearms may seem surreal for the US. I get it.
      I would urge you to - at least - look at this situation from an economical viewpoint.
      Firearms are affordable, because they are legal. Legality of firearms enables for mass production, distribution and maintenance of firearms for the public in general. The black market with unregistered firearms will always exist.
      It is now a matter of reducing the possibility to get a gun. Unregistered firearms are not that expensive and legally firearms aren't that unavailable as well.
      If you ban firearms in the US, I mean make them illegal (not gun laws), the production, distribution and so on would decline abruptly and you would see a spike in prices. The possibility to get a gun would get lower and lower with time. That would mean a decline in mass shootings and violence with firearms.
      Our police is always on edge, because the possibility of random people in the street, suspicious people or whatever owning a gun is very high.
      I believe in the US government and that we can change the nation to a place where you can walk outside and live inside without the risk of getting shot.
      This has been tested in Australia, Europe, China and Japan. We will always have criminals in the world, but when you enable them an easy way to achieve dangerous weapons that were meant to protect, then you have to give up a dangerous form of weapon and leave that to the executive part of our government. It is by the people for the people after all. We don't live in a dictatorship, otherwise the government would have banned weapons for the public a long time ago and you couldn't express any opinion publicly.

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      @@LittleVboh actually you dont get it... Gun control is the tool of the Tyrant.. Joseph Stalin "we don't allow people ideas, why would we allow guns"... The greatest crimes against humanity have been perpetrated by governments against their own citizens... Europe and Commonwealth countries are servile

    • @LittleVboh
      @LittleVboh Před 2 lety +1

      @@jessmarks2214 we don't live in 16th/17th century anymore. Europeans grew up by trusting their democracy and their government after WW2. Why can't the USA grow up?
      The USA is considered a 3rd world place to live. There is always fear of gun violence.

  • @fantastischfish
    @fantastischfish Před 5 měsíci +10

    Americans defending guns just have no idea how ridiculous that sounds to the rest of the world.

  • @Thunderstruck773
    @Thunderstruck773 Před 5 měsíci +12

    I’m in Canada we gave gun control and lots if bears including polar bears. Gun control doesn’t mean no guns

  • @gordo262
    @gordo262 Před 2 lety +121

    If you're living in a country, where schools need armed protection something is very wrong.

    • @rangerrecon
      @rangerrecon Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, something is wrong, but it isn't firearm ownership.

    • @obamama4632
      @obamama4632 Před 2 lety

      @@rangerrecon it’s the fact that crazy people are walking around.

    • @jamesm9995
      @jamesm9995 Před rokem

      @@obamama4632every country has crazy people

    • @jamesm9995
      @jamesm9995 Před rokem +4

      @@rangerreconhow wrong can you possibly be

    • @rangerrecon
      @rangerrecon Před rokem +1

      @@jamesm9995 If I was then this would have ben an issue all along. We've had firearm ownership since we were a country. We had kids that used to take guns to high school to go hunting afterwards (or before). We used to be able to buy a gun at a hardware store instantly - no background checks, no waiting period, etc. We had guns. What we didn't have was school shootings, driveby shootings, etc. Stop blaming guns and figure out what the real problem is.

  • @SalisburyKarateClub
    @SalisburyKarateClub Před 2 lety +475

    Here in Australia we have gun control. My kids never had to learn how to avoid getting shot, I never had to worry about my kids getting shot. I have never been afraid of getting shot. And we have mental health issues here. I sometimes leave my backdoor open when it's hot at night. That's freedom.

    • @matwatson7947
      @matwatson7947 Před 2 lety +14

      The problem is that if the US introduced Australia/UK gun control there would be massive outrage about US "rights". The vast percentage of people that own wouldn't.
      There would be far less gun deaths but we will gloss over that....

    • @anserbauer309
      @anserbauer309 Před 2 lety +30

      @@matwatson7947 Interesting that they squeal like stuck pigs over the _second_ half of the second amendment, but completely ignore the first half where it it mandates a _well REGULATED militia being necessary to the security of a free State..._ Also failing to note that they _type_ of arms being carried can also be regulated, since this is not prohibited under the amendment.

    • @SlayerO013
      @SlayerO013 Před 2 lety

      @@anserbauer309 What's even more interesting is idiots that don't have the foggiest fucking clue about how the word "regulated" was even used 200+ years ago and also think that a militia whose reason to exist is to stand against a tyrannical government is to be fully "regulated (modern usage)" by potentially that same fucking government.
      "We are here to stop you tyrant!"
      "Go fuck yourself!!!"
      "Sir, yes sir!"
      "That means get out!"
      "Yes sir!
      Sorry sir!
      Bye sir!"
      Stellar logic!

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 Před 2 lety +24

      @@anserbauer309 It seems Americans don't want to progress their constitution to meet with current standards. The Constitution has and always should be a living document that is molded and updated to suit the needs of the country. This was intended all along by the founding fathers. I bet if they came along today and say that the 2nd amendment hadn't been... well amended, they'd be horrified when they what sort of weapons people possess. Damn, these days on person has more fire power than a whole block of people back in the 1790s. I agree 100% with your last point, guns can be regulated according to the 2nd amendment as it doesn't infringe on you being able to own a gun.

    • @BlackQuillFiend
      @BlackQuillFiend Před 2 lety +9

      @@anserbauer309 "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." I have to be honest, as a Belgian i speak Dutch Fench and English, but i have trouble understanding it. Even after translating it to Dutch, my native language. I understand the words but the construction of this statement makes it hard to fully understand. Does it mean that the country needs an army AND/OR the right to bar arms? I guess it is both. OR does it mean people have to able to form a well regulated militia themselves?
      Anyway, you are correct : it does not say anything about the type of arms. Handguns for self protection and hunting rifles for in bear country and that is it, why need more or bigger?

  • @noahgarcia3586
    @noahgarcia3586 Před 2 lety +47

    My favorite part was every time you paused it and made an argument, his next joke absolutely decimated your argument 😂 happened at least three times, gotta love it

    • @ricklorimer9984
      @ricklorimer9984 Před rokem

      The guy's a complete knobhead.

    • @EricHarris-xd1rv
      @EricHarris-xd1rv Před rokem +6

      He was happy to laugh about it and say ‘he called me out’.
      This guy obviously has some common sense and is intelligent enough to listen to someone with a different point of view.

    • @mypillowguy445
      @mypillowguy445 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@EricHarris-xd1rvBut not intelligent enough to change his stance.

    • @bookclub5021
      @bookclub5021 Před 5 měsíci

      It happened twice lol the 'for protection' thing and then again with the 'keep them in a safe'.

  • @meganlawson4575
    @meganlawson4575 Před 2 lety +17

    He destroyed every one of your arguments 30secs after you made it. 😂

  • @NotUnymous
    @NotUnymous Před 2 lety +86

    Two quick things:
    -The gun is only helping the one who draws first. And thats in most cases the aggressor.
    - Violence cant be prescreened. Even more so in a country with no free health- and careinsurence and lot of drug problems.

  • @Codex7777
    @Codex7777 Před 2 lety +145

    The main argument for owning a gun is, 'other people have guns'. The answer to this is not 'more guns'. The solution is to start reducing the number of guns, until the self-defence argument becomes redundant.

    • @lencooke944
      @lencooke944 Před 2 lety +7

      100%

    • @BlackQuillFiend
      @BlackQuillFiend Před 2 lety +2

      Absolutely right, how could more guns ever be the solution? Less guns and more restrictions to own guns is the only way to go, it is just common sense. But it will never happen in the USA as long as they have the NRA, they need their profit, they need to keep selling tons of guns so they can lobby(bribe) the politicians. USA need politicians that represent the people instead of big companies/organisations.

    • @Snaakie83
      @Snaakie83 Před 2 lety

      That's why Russia is currently able to brutally level Ukraine.
      6000+ atomic weapons...that's why.

    • @christopherbrown6049
      @christopherbrown6049 Před 2 lety +2

      Exactly

    • @colinrattray816
      @colinrattray816 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Snaakie83 what do you mean, I don’t understand?

  • @Frazpas
    @Frazpas Před 2 lety +6

    The deeper issue is Americans are unable to be honest about this issue. It is called cognitive dissonance.

  • @obnoxiousbluebird6634
    @obnoxiousbluebird6634 Před 2 lety +81

    I had to laugh, telling an Aussie about living with dangerous animals! Except in America you are not likely to wake up with a grizzly bear curled up at the end of your bed, like Aussies have done with snakes!
    Also hunters and farmers have guns and our police are armed, and even recreational shooters can own a gun. A lot of people I've spoken to actually had always thought we had an outright gun ban in Aus, when it's only assault rifles etc.
    I have a mate who hunts wild boar which are a menace and aggressive as hell, and owns 3 shotguns. There's a gun culture here, it's just a more "pragmatic" culture without the recreational or "general protection", like Americans.
    Our gun culture is more hunters/cullers, and farmers to keep roo numbers down and use around the property...or most of them anyway.
    The laws here definitely are very strict but almost nobody feels resentful about it, as most of us agree, just like Americans are so steeped in their gun culture that ripping it from them with a total ban would be literally asking someone to immediately stop overnight something they've always known!

    • @grievesy83
      @grievesy83 Před rokem +2

      Great comment. I own several firearms for hunting purposes as well as the odd clay target at the local club. Getting my licence was a long pain in the neck & the storage requirements are very strict. I fully support these hurdles. They’re a very, very good thing.
      If you need a semi-auto for hunting, then you’re a crap shot; go practice. And before anyone takes me to task on it, yes I have used used semi-auto & full auto assault rifles as well as pistols. I served in the Army and that’s where those kinds of weapons should stay. Semi-auto rapid fire is for suppression, not marksmanship. You don’t need to suppress a platoon of rabbits with direct fire.

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 5 měsíci

      When seconds count, police are minutes away.

  • @abigail1st
    @abigail1st Před 2 lety +265

    It’s so difficult for you to appreciate life without guns because you live in the US....that’s not your fault, you have been conditioned to view the world around you as a risky/dangerous/untrustworthy place. It never occurs to people in the U.K. to worry about guns....until you have lived in a country that doesn’t idolise guns and gun ownership you will never fully understand.

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 Před 2 lety

      well said, America has become some sort of open day on shooting up schools, what on earth is in the water in Texas...🤷🤦🤦

    • @seanwood82
      @seanwood82 Před 2 lety +1

      I wouldn't say never happens in uk depends which part you're from

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 Před 2 lety +24

      @@seanwood82 ... virtually never , possibly once in a blue moon ...mostly knife crime and even that's 127 times less than just Chicago ..which has seen over 1000 homicides alone in 2021 which is more than in the UK for the entire 20th and 21st centuries in gun and knife crime...

    • @helenwood8482
      @helenwood8482 Před 2 lety +8

      @@seanwood82 It really doesn't.

    • @helenwood8482
      @helenwood8482 Před 2 lety +16

      Completely agree with this. Americans need to come to the UK and experience a life without fear. American women have told me every woman is afraid to walk in a town at night. I am not. Nobody I know is. I can see why American women would be, but in the UK, I feel completely safe.

  • @111oooo
    @111oooo Před 2 lety +77

    You don't need an AR-15 to protect yourself against a bear. In Canada we have bears too and rifles but not those "big guns".

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      That that's fair if that was a law in affect I know alot of people would have issues but personally I don't even want a ar15 in my house so I wouldn't care. But I'd like to beable to have a glock or a shotgun just incase I ever need it

    • @Lightningrod75
      @Lightningrod75 Před 2 lety +17

      C'mon, man. American bears probably have an AR themselves. Fight fire with fire.

    • @ak99uk
      @ak99uk Před 2 lety +25

      @@Lightningrod75 They do have the right to bear arms....

    • @alextaws6657
      @alextaws6657 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ak99uk 🤣

    • @BlackQuillFiend
      @BlackQuillFiend Před 2 lety +3

      Good point! Why would anyone need anything bigger than a hunting rifle?

  • @TerryWalkerFrissonArt
    @TerryWalkerFrissonArt Před 2 lety +4

    The schools in the US can't even afford books/paper/pencils, how on earth will they afford armed guards.

  • @musicguy1987
    @musicguy1987 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Canadian here from small town "bear country". No one has a gun to protect themselves from animals. Insane take.

  • @davidbell864
    @davidbell864 Před 2 lety +316

    Dude, you're a lovely guy. I have watched a lot of your reaction videos and liked them a lot. And I truly appreciate your willingness to take a lot of the points Jim Jefferies makes. I think you're absolutely 100% wrong on the right to own guns of course.. I mean the whole concept of gun ownership in the States is just totally bonkers. But we are all entitled to own opinions. I've been to America, and loved it. But heck, I thank God I don't live there. With the utmost respect Dude, I wouldn't want to live in a country where people have your opinions on guns.

  • @TitanSummers
    @TitanSummers Před 2 lety +121

    You can own a gun in Australia but there a LOT of restrictions. Both health checks and Background checks also you need a reason like a farmer or a hunter.

    • @trixyalston1904
      @trixyalston1904 Před 2 lety +12

      In Australia need a place 2 Shooter the gun which can also be a gun club also to get a Shooters licence you had to have had no criminal convictions in the last 10 years and no Automatics it also takes the best part of a year to get a Shooters licence and another 3 months to get the gun

    • @sheriashley7692
      @sheriashley7692 Před 2 lety +1

      Aussie here. Americans that love their guns they don’t understand why there should be gun control bcos their culture worships their “right” to own guns. What about the rights of people to live?? People murdered with guns have a right to live but NO you took away their rights!! Those that love their guns worship death over life. It’s a sick way to live.

    • @NZFarmboy80
      @NZFarmboy80 Před 2 lety +5

      Same here in NZ, my brother is a cop and can’t get his gun license due to having depression in the past

    • @aussiejed1
      @aussiejed1 Před 2 lety +6

      And certain types of guns are completely banned.

    • @karlmay5306
      @karlmay5306 Před 2 lety +9

      Also family members have the ability to veto your weapons license application on grounds of antisocial traits and risk to people close to the applicant. Your wife or kids can apply to prevent you from owning a gun.

  • @uluruh1527
    @uluruh1527 Před 9 měsíci +4

    We Europeans are laughing at you: No drinking beer in public until 21, no boobs on TV, but buying an assault rifle at 18... and a 100 times higher gun death rate...

  • @JustWickedSwede
    @JustWickedSwede Před 6 měsíci +3

    American: "We got very fucking dangerous animals."
    ... while watching an australian argue against the need for guns.

  • @christophstahl8169
    @christophstahl8169 Před 2 lety +59

    Just one question: Have you ever wondered WHY in other countries, like australia, the uk, germany, france, canada, finland, austria, norway, ..., why those countries don't feel the need they need to protect themselves? Maybe the need for a gun for protection directly correlates to the potential amount of weapons around you. People in other countries love their guns, I know people who love their guns, I know people in gun clubs, I know hunters. I have never ever heard of someone getting a gun for protection. But hey that's in germany.
    One other thing. There are about 58,000 grizzly bears in the us and at least 390,000,000 guns in circulation in the us. I think you got that covered.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +1

      Did they ever have our situation though and thought how most Americans think. The answer Is no so why does it matter what yall did you never had this exact situation. Sure we can use certain aspects but as a whole we are in a unique situation

    • @kilianshatwell1027
      @kilianshatwell1027 Před 2 lety +22

      @@DudeSaysThings what situation are you talking about exactly?

    • @gloryglory5688
      @gloryglory5688 Před 2 lety

      @@DudeSaysThings unique situation? What? You’re all fat & stupid? 😂

    • @Shyress
      @Shyress Před 2 lety +8

      @@kilianshatwell1027 Seeing as he didnt reply, none I guess. Not surprising to be honest.

    • @dupersuper1938
      @dupersuper1938 Před 2 lety +6

      @@DudeSaysThings As a Canadian, I can happily say I've never ever thought how most Americans think. That's precisely why we don't "have this exact situation".

  • @DaveWhoa
    @DaveWhoa Před 2 lety +89

    you dont need an AR-15 for a bear though! our farmers in Australia still have access to all the firearms they need to protect their property from feral animals. It's just about COMMON SENSE gun control laws - not "taking away all your guns" :)
    ps. you said "I think all schools should have security" ... then there is something fundamentally wrong in America, because no other countries need security in schools

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +2

      Tell me this. Wouldn't you want to know for sure where your kids go everyday has good protection. Take away school shootings for a second. How is that a bad thing to know where ur kid spends hours almost every day is a protected secure location. I don't plain on having kids personally just not something I want. But if I had a accident you bet ur ass I'd be guarding that place with my life any day I could with or without school shootings

    • @DaveWhoa
      @DaveWhoa Před 2 lety +57

      @@DudeSaysThings we dont NEED to worry though because school shootings just ARENT A THING here mate. So no - we don't need to worry about something we don't need to worry about - sadly it's a uniquely American problem due to your gun culture

    • @DaveWhoa
      @DaveWhoa Před 2 lety +1

      there has been ZERO school shootings in Australia's history.

    • @DaveWhoa
      @DaveWhoa Před 2 lety +27

      we've also had NO mass shootings since we got rid of most guns in 1996, whereas America has a mass shooting every 12.9 hours (2021 data). You have a problem that we simply don't have to worry about here.

    • @MarcelaElviraTimis
      @MarcelaElviraTimis Před 2 lety +7

      @@DudeSaysThings there ARE places where a baton wielding guard CAN help in places where guns are illegal. Oh, i was born in a town where brown bears at dumpsters has been a thing for decades... you don't need machine guns to deal with them, though, kids in my old neighbourhood would watch mama bears and their cubs from a safe distance.

  • @DAWNSIE1961
    @DAWNSIE1961 Před 2 lety +3

    Canada has bears too. I have them in my yard regularly. I have zero guns and I'm doing just fine. Fear breeds fear.

  • @haraldisdead
    @haraldisdead Před 2 lety +2

    He said "dude, we have grizzly bears, we have BLACKKK...---"
    Me: 😬😬
    "...bears."
    Me: 😮‍💨😮‍💨

  • @richardgoddard37
    @richardgoddard37 Před 2 lety +59

    I've had the pleasure of seeing Jim live twice. He's extremely dark, extremely clever, and extremely funny.

    • @rickb.4168
      @rickb.4168 Před 2 lety +2

      I remember seeing him way back at the comedy store in Manchester, didn’t like him (think he was pissed) love him now though.

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      As an Aussie... think Jim is total wanker... we alotta jim jeffries here. No idea or facts.. just sanctimonious dickheads dribbling shit.

    • @skapunker21
      @skapunker21 Před rokem +1

      I've seen him 4 times in nashville. and every time is spectacular.

  • @coot1925
    @coot1925 Před 2 lety +85

    I think it's really sad that america didn't do what the rest of the world did and change the laws over time as the country developed. You are talking sense when you say that people should be screened before they can own a gun. In the UK we are allowed guns including an Uzi, but the screening is brutal. they contact your employer, interview your family and your doctor. They interview you in your house and make sure you have a proper gun safe. You have to have a really good reason to want a gun. The average person doesn't even think about being shot over here, so people don't buy guns for protection unless you're a criminal, in which case it won't be a registered firearm anyway. It's horrible that Americans don't feel safe walking down the street or even being in their home. I fear america is too far gone to rescue itself and the problem is getting worse every day. Good luck my friend. ✌️♥️🇬🇧

    • @jonathanparry7824
      @jonathanparry7824 Před 2 lety +2

      It depends where you are in the u.k - where i live you need 2 character witnesses and they ask your doctor about past mental illness but as long as you have no previous convictions and they think your sound of mind from a home interview and you have the safe etc then it’s very likely you will be granted a certificate

    • @alanmacification
      @alanmacification Před 2 lety +2

      This interpretation of the 2nd Ammendment had only been around since 2008. It's the so-called militia-of-one interpretation. In the 1980s-90s it was the right to form a citizens militia, thus all the crazy militias of that era. Before that it was interpreted to mean an individual State's right to form a militia.
      However, it clearly states in various articles of the Constitution that only Congress has the power to call out the militia and only Congress can arm the militia.

    • @coot1925
      @coot1925 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jonathanparry7824 and that's how it should be mate.

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 5 měsíci

      1776 biatch

  • @dickdancingbear
    @dickdancingbear Před 2 lety +3

    A life lived in fear is no life at all.

  • @dazed1nyc
    @dazed1nyc Před rokem +2

    This dude pausing to make a rebuttal all thr while i know whats to come and Jim is about to address it has just been an absolute delight 😂

  • @froggy187888
    @froggy187888 Před 2 lety +81

    😂😂 I've never seen someone put there foot in their mouth so many times in under 10mins. 🤣 It was nearly every time you paused it. Brilliant 😂😂😂 I must say it takes a real man to make fun of their own faults and I think there is more pride in that. Well done m8 👏👏👏

  • @chwilhogyn
    @chwilhogyn Před 2 lety +21

    The Port Arthur victim's families gave the Australian authorities and the media the right to publish photos of the massacred bodies to show the horrors!!

    • @calipidgious
      @calipidgious Před 2 lety

      I've said after every school shooting since Sandy Hook that if we Americans had to look at the shredded bodies of children slaughtered in their classrooms, we would have gun control right quick.

    • @gloryglory5688
      @gloryglory5688 Před 2 lety

      Bullshit

  • @ell8228
    @ell8228 Před měsícem +1

    In Australia, the country folk do have guns. So they do protect themselves

  • @aliwaugh5033
    @aliwaugh5033 Před 2 lety +2

    I would never send my child to a school that had security guards. What a horrible environment for kids. What a warped idea. I am an Aussie.

  • @whatwhatinthewhat4400
    @whatwhatinthewhat4400 Před 2 lety +24

    I like how DudeSaysThings makes a point, literally 2 secs before the video explains why that point doesnt make sense :D

  • @johnwilson5743
    @johnwilson5743 Před 2 lety +26

    Mate, you don't seem to understand. Australia (and New Zealand and Britain) didn't ban all guns: just the military style assault rifle types. Yes, hunting rifles are fine. As are shotguns. BUT ya don't need a 50 calibre machine gun to take hunting! Or machine pistols. These are designed and intended for War. eg Military use.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +1

      And you don't seem to understand I don't want army guns man. Lol seriously I have no needs for a ak47 other then it's fun to shoot and I'd like to experience that. As far as actually owning one bro I don't need that lol give me a glock or a shotgun and I'm good

    • @hyenaloaf1858
      @hyenaloaf1858 Před 2 lety +1

      @mcchickenz a glock is not a high accuracy gun, nor a weapon of war. It's a point-and-shoot basic handgun with the ergonomics of a brick.

    • @hyenaloaf1858
      @hyenaloaf1858 Před 2 lety

      @mcchickenz so all guns should be impossible to use with any degree of efficiency to be legal?

    • @hyenaloaf1858
      @hyenaloaf1858 Před 2 lety

      @mcchickenz and why no 9mm? I'm more of a 45acp guy myself, but why do you want to ban one of the most basic self-defense cartridges?

  • @dupersuper1938
    @dupersuper1938 Před 2 lety +2

    He doesn't seem like a bad guy, but he laughs so gleefully as his country's children are slaughtered...

  • @jtlathe
    @jtlathe Před 2 lety +2

    This guy hasn't spent anytime anywhere near the outdoors. Don't worry about bears.

  • @shayneramsay1388
    @shayneramsay1388 Před 2 lety +67

    With being Australian Australia's gun control was really the result of 2 things happening, first was the shooting in Dunblane Scotland(where kids were killed) and the second was Port Arthur in Tasmania(where 30 odd people were killed many of them tourists), both happened in a fairly close time frame of each other so the Australian government at the time issued the gun ban and the gun buyback scheme to stop mass shootings from happening, the government worked out the plans and within 12 weeks the voting was approved and implemented.

    • @cloverite
      @cloverite Před 2 lety

      In the U.K. we had the Hungerford Massacre followed by Dunblane and that was enough. Gun crime in the U.K. exists but it seems to be between rival drug gangs, and frankly, if they want to harm each other, fair enough.

    • @davidmalarkey1302
      @davidmalarkey1302 Před 2 lety +9

      America is the only country on earth where mass shootings happen

    • @suzettewilliams1758
      @suzettewilliams1758 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davidmalarkey1302 Agreed and on a daily basis.

    • @neilcaldwell8313
      @neilcaldwell8313 Před 2 lety +7

      @@davidmalarkey1302 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Norway_attacks Its not just the United States, but its the frequency that sets the US apart from the rest of the world - that and the fact that each time it happens much is said - but nothing actually happens to try and prevent the next one.

    • @naumche1
      @naumche1 Před 2 lety +2

      If the US did a gun buyback, they’d go broke! 😆
      I recently told my 14 year old niece about the Port Arthur massacre. She was shocked as she had never heard about it before and didn’t know the changes that were made as a result.

  • @chrisellis4400
    @chrisellis4400 Před 2 lety +55

    I disagree with your stance almost 100%. But I really appreciate that you are tackling this subject honestly and in good faith.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +11

      I respect that bro seriously. It's alright to disagree I'd still be cool with you if we met. Big up wish more people thought like you did

    • @lencooke944
      @lencooke944 Před 2 lety +2

      Only almost 100%? I would be interested in what you agree with Shayne Ramsay's stance.
      Perhaps you could enlighten us on what your perception of the Australian response was, and why it couldn't work in the USA?

  • @BradTiplady-os5qr
    @BradTiplady-os5qr Před 5 měsíci

    Mate I just stumbled on your video today after watching Jim Jeffries Gun Control skit years ago and agreeing with it.
    I am an Australian, my Dad had his rifles taken from him during the buy-back.
    Yes our Government paid us to hand in our guns and actually paid more than what they were worth!
    Plot twist: I am a gun owner. In Australia. I have a rifle cabinet full of them, legally.
    We are still allowed guns but getting a semi auto, a pump action, a pistol and anything auto is extremely difficult.
    But I could register for and buy another bolt action and pick it up in I think the 3 week wait period.
    So my opinion is coming from an Aussie who lived through our gun reforms, agrees with them completely, and has a cabinet full of rifles.
    I think your commentary was perfect.
    You were understanding, you accepted both sides, you didn’t take it personally and quite frankly your ideas on gun control and Veteran security guards is genius.
    Well done mate- you are one intelligent guy.

  • @tealsquare
    @tealsquare Před 2 lety +2

    You have Mountain Lions? What do we have in Africa then? 🤣

  • @rickb.4168
    @rickb.4168 Před 2 lety +8

    They have bears and wolves in Europe as well. they don't walk around with Armalites.

    • @UltraCasualPenguin
      @UltraCasualPenguin Před 2 lety +1

      In Finland bears and snakes fear humans more than humans fear them.
      Easiest way to avoid getting attacked by mother bear or snake is by not sneaking in forest, make noise.
      But nothing will be able to save you from western capercaillie.

    • @rickb.4168
      @rickb.4168 Před 2 lety

      @@UltraCasualPenguin beast of a bird

  • @alanbyrne2297
    @alanbyrne2297 Před 2 lety +7

    A PTSD veteran on campus with an automatic weapon. What could possibly go wrong.

  • @kageakuma3009
    @kageakuma3009 Před 2 lety +15

    I'm a supporter of gun control, but not a full out ban. Universal background checks, a nationwide gun registry, training and education, and limited access to assault weapons.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +2

      id support that to gun control isnt what im fighting its banning and taking guns form innocent people as long as that dont happen im fine

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      @@DudeSaysThings from experience, the failure of the state is transposed on to the citizen... Australia introduced extreme gun laws to reduce violent crime and suicide... result? Zero reduction in either, but a slight change in the methods... The greatest mass murders in History? Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot... all big fans of gun control, but starved, imprisoned, murdered and destroyed the indigenous culture, economy and stole ancestral lands for their own profit.

    • @Moralatheist101
      @Moralatheist101 Před 2 lety +1

      Mental health evaluation, too.

    • @djjazzyjeff1232
      @djjazzyjeff1232 Před 2 lety +1

      No national gun registry it totally defeats the purpose of 2A.

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Před 2 lety

      Why do you have to be so potty mouthed?

  • @stephengregory296
    @stephengregory296 Před 2 lety +1

    I personally don't give a rat's rear end what anyone says, but there's no reason for any civilian to have an assault rifle and they should all be banned.

  • @rickb.4168
    @rickb.4168 Před 2 lety +16

    So you want schools with little kids in, to have good fencing, metal detectors, secure doors and armed guards! does that remind you in any way of another type of Government building? you just need the search lights and watch towers.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +2

      Schools here already feed prison food why not lol. Seriously though I'm just thinking realistically theres way to many guns around to actually get rid of them way to many people want guns to give them up. At the end of the day a secure place doesn't need to be like a prison but atleast a secure entrance to ensure no weapons are brought isn't a bad thing

    • @rickb.4168
      @rickb.4168 Před 2 lety +4

      @@DudeSaysThings agree on the food! Your right (sadly) America has gone past the point of no return. Your death rate will just on keep increasing. Very sad.

  • @edwinhof2090
    @edwinhof2090 Před 2 lety +14

    In what kind of country you want to live? Is it normal that schools need to be protected by armed veterans? Maybe bullet free vests and helmets for the children are the answer? So happy that my children didn't have to endure this craziness in Europe. School was a place to learn and play without fear.

  • @KoPilotFlys
    @KoPilotFlys Před 7 měsíci +1

    I got a gun to protect my family, my wife and five kids. I then got rid of the gun to protect my four children.
    Edit: This was a joke by the way.

  • @livingart2576
    @livingart2576 Před 2 lety +1

    There is no easy solution to the gun debate of America. Unfortunately many Americans “need” a gun to defend against, um guns. 🤷‍♂️

  • @stevehartley7504
    @stevehartley7504 Před 2 lety +12

    If they can screen veterans to make sure they're sane why can't they do it for the average American! The US government won't do it because the NRA lobbies for it not to happen!

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      Exactly though again I'm not saying don't change shit I'm just saying don't go taking ppls guns

    • @illusionalquestions
      @illusionalquestions Před 2 lety

      @DudeSaysThings Is any politician actually advocating the herculean task of going door to door and taking peoples guns? Or is that just a right wing scare-mongering talking point that you have picked up from uneducated conservatives. Having that said, if your neighbour has been proven to be an unmedicated, sociopath, who has severe bipolar and suffers from alcohol induced hallucinations, that also owns 12 AR-15s - wouldn't you want the government to step in and "take their guns"?
      Sounds like you want sensible gun control measures, but you're hanging onto a defensive quote that doesn't actually exist and is created purely by the NRA to scare you into buying more guns. I think it's time for you to use logical thought-based narratives and shoot that "they are gonna take our guns" line in the head!

    • @eg568
      @eg568 Před 2 lety

      @@DudeSaysThings Nobody saying it. But some people guns will be taken from them if those laws become reality in the US. It'll apply not only to those who actually dangerous, but to those who will refuse to prove they are not.
      "To keep this type of gun you should get through special training". - "No, I had it X years before." (gun taken away) "No, it's too expensive for me" (gun taken away) etc.

    • @UltraCasualPenguin
      @UltraCasualPenguin Před 2 lety

      @@DudeSaysThings But you have to remember that even criminals once were "good guy with gun".

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před 2 lety

      I would say money in politics in the US is the #1 issue I would solve if I could.

  • @davidhuett3579
    @davidhuett3579 Před 2 lety +11

    Mental health screening is only effective when you have people who are ALREADY suffering from mental health issues.
    ANY 'normal' person .. is quite capable of reaching a threshold where they can break. There are MANY situations where people take action on the spur of the moment. If a firearm is handy, the situation can become far more deadly.
    Sure .. a knife or an axe can kill people ... but how many 'mass' killings have you heard about involving those weapons?
    An 'assault' weapon is designed to kill many people quickly and efficiently!!

    • @SuperEdge67
      @SuperEdge67 Před 2 lety +1

      Mental health screening in a country with an appalling healthcare system. 🤣😂🤣.

  • @Evelyn208
    @Evelyn208 Před 3 měsíci

    I appreciate you not getting overly offended and laughing at the jokes that are meant to be laughed at. No matter your views I do enjoy seeing the respect both sides of it.

  • @stuartspencer2161
    @stuartspencer2161 Před 2 lety +15

    As an Australian, I have always seen the difference in our attitudes being related to how our countries were formed. Australia gained independence via political means, and the US fought for it's independence, and unity. Firearms are ingrained more into the culture there.
    With that said, firearms are not banned here. They are just heavily restricted and licensed. If you are in regional Australia, you can own a shotgun or rifle, as the reality is, you need it for various reasons - hunting, defending your livestock from predators, etc. In the cities though, you can be licensed for a firearm, but can only use it at a range, or if someone's farm etc. (NOTE: could be a bit wrong on this, not fully up to date).
    The US does need to do something though to curtail the amount of shootings there. It's not a simple solution, but at the end of the day should be that there should only be responsible gun owners, and they should only be used for responsible purposes.

    • @dorkwell
      @dorkwell Před 2 lety

      Fellow Australian here. Last year I went for the first time to a firing range, really enjoyed it (as a "sport"/challenge). So I looked up laws about ownership with thoughts of maybe joining a club. From what I remember, even if you have an armed intruder and just point your gun at them, you can go to prison.
      I can't say I'm entirely happy about that, I would like the option to be able to defend myself in a worst case scenario. But the key really is in the middle somewhere. It should be immensely difficult to get a gun, but still possible if you can really prove yourself (probably impossible in itself).

    • @grievesy83
      @grievesy83 Před rokem

      I have a Cat B longarm licence (so that’s little rifles, big rifles, & shotguns). You’re pretty much bang-on correct about using them. There are other use-cases, but you’re correct.

    • @grievesy83
      @grievesy83 Před rokem +1

      @@dorkwell I own multiple firearms and also served in the Aus army. I can assure you that firearms are utterly useless for armed intruder self protection, for exactly the reasons that Jim describes. If there’s an armed intruder in your house, you’re not making your way to the gun safe. And also, a longarm (rifle or shotgun) is a massive liability in an indoors environment - professionals use much shorter barrelled carbines and such for indoor operations - not to mention your just as likely to shoot a family member in that highly charged and confusing situation. Even simulated battles during my army training were discombobulating; it would be 100 times worse in my own house, with an ill-suited weapon that’ll get stuck in a hallway, and my family’s lives on the line.
      I’m professionally trained and even for me it would be MEGA impractical and dangerous to use a firearm for home protection.

    • @IamPINKIEDaniels
      @IamPINKIEDaniels Před 10 měsíci +1

      Australia first gained independence from England authority in the eureka stockade which definitely included guns

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 5 měsíci

      Criminals don't obey laws.

  • @teejai5291
    @teejai5291 Před 2 lety +8

    I take your point about protection from dangerous animals, but in reality what percentage of the US population are at risk of coming into contact with a dangerous wild animal?

  • @black4pienus
    @black4pienus Před rokem +1

    The problem with doing something when 'a kids showing all the signs' is that you'll get an answer like: "We can't do anything if no crime has been committed." Or they put them on meds that make them worse before they get better.

  • @roslynjonsson2383
    @roslynjonsson2383 Před 2 lety +1

    56yr old, West Aussie woman who lived in Beardstown Illinois 2001/02.....Your mind set and attitude to guns, is EXACTLY why I moved back to Aus. You American's have become completely numb to what you're actually saying - yeah, we can put veterans as security at schools.....ARE YOU KIDDING ME????? NO child going to, or in school should ever need to worry about a gunman, PERIOD!!!!......Your attitudes towards guns SUX, and until you all realise that the guns MUST go, then you're a lost society. NO gun is EVER worth more than the life of a child EVER.....The ONLY American's that need a gun are land owners with livestock, or land owners living in cat or bear country, and those should ONLY be specific guns. NO civilian needs, or has any excuse for owning an assault weapon, YOU'RE NOT at war.. If you want to go dear hunting, then hire a damn gun when needed, but you DON 'T need any guns in suburbia or suburban homes. You American's have become warmongering, blood thirsty and have lost their way. You USED to be a progressive, well respected country, and considered the leader of the western free world, not anymore though. America used to be No 1 on the "most democratic countries in the world" list (google it for yourself), well it's now at No 19, and for very good reason. Having a drivers licence, having a pilots licence, owning guns, are ALL privileges NOT rights. Your 2nd amendment shouldn't even exist, because the forefathers ONLY wrote that, so each state could form a militia to fight against a tyrannical government, and was never intended to be used for private citizens to possess guns in their homes, and that's a fact

  • @Bazk01
    @Bazk01 Před 2 lety +10

    Your first point of wild animals. I would assume that is where hunting rifles and shotguns come in as more useful, over a pistol or assault weapon.
    Your second point was if you had a gun you could kill a guy with a knife. Why, because of the ease with which a gun let you kill someone without a gun? What if the guy had a gun? What if he's more skilled with it?
    Fella with a knife can be a master with a blade but still has to come within arms reach of you, deal with you and then go after someone else. (Same for a guy with a rock or a bat.)
    Guy with a pistol and no training can empty it into a crowd.
    Guy with a rifle and no training can set up like the Vegas shooter. It's all about the ease with which they kill multiple people.
    As for guy with a gun taking out a bad guy with a gun - latest info is that over 20 police men balked at taking on one guy with two assault weapons. It's US law that the Police don't have to put themselves in harms way to protect a citizen if they don't want to. (Be that running into a burning building, jumping into the water after someone or going into a building after an armed suspect with hostages.) Look it up.
    You can have guns in the UK - we have strict controls - but we don't have mass shootings. We still have nutters with knifes and knife crime - but you don't have the time to kill 19 people with a knife or a rock before people or the police dog pile you.
    80% of people in the US agree on tight controls - it's the 20% who don't care about anyone other than themselves or a pay check from the NRA that are stopping you. Which doesn't sound like a democracy to me.
    Try doing a video on British or European gun laws - No ones stopping you owning a gun if you can show why you need them, or can show you are an enthusiast who can be responsible with them. You also have to show training, usage and track ammo used, pass a medical check and background check and have regular inspections of them to ensure they are properly maintained and secure.

    • @heritagehorsedrawncarriage1069
      @heritagehorsedrawncarriage1069 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly the point re the attacker having a gun. The more people who have guns, the more likely you expect someone who might threaten you to use one. It's the cold war nuclear proliferation idea on a smaller basis

  • @mral8145
    @mral8145 Před 2 lety +9

    Very interesting reaction. However, I dont think vets protecting schools would work as a good advertisement for students to join the armed forces. “Join the army, put your life at risk and come back to no home or support. Don’t worry though, you can get a poorly paid job to monitor a school and possibly get shot at again”. It doesn’t have the same ring as “join the navy, see the world” 😉😂

  • @stevenknill2179
    @stevenknill2179 Před 2 lety +1

    The U.S is the only country I have visited and had a gun pointed at me!

  • @michaelmacdonell4834
    @michaelmacdonell4834 Před 2 lety +1

    Americans need guns because other Americans have guns.
    I think I see the problem.

  • @bobbyshaftowenttosea5410
    @bobbyshaftowenttosea5410 Před 2 lety +6

    The UKs desperate for guns - the Geordies are running amok , the clay pigeons would breed like crazy and the haggis are stripping the Highlands bare
    And shotgun weddings have always been a northern tradition.

    • @ianleslie2326
      @ianleslie2326 Před 2 lety

      F'n well said! Lol. Forgot about the haggis,shot all them here 😜👍🇦🇺

  • @heffatheanimal2200
    @heffatheanimal2200 Před 2 lety +6

    In Australia we do still have guns. There are gun shops (very few) and gun clubs with shooting ranges (again, very few). What changed in 1996 was heavy restrictions on what guns you can have (no auto or semi auto, no pump action, etc) and heavy regulation on storage, ownership and licensing. People in isolated rural areas and farms often have a bolt action rifle or a single action shotgun, fully licensed and securely stored.

  • @SW-ng2kh
    @SW-ng2kh Před 2 měsíci +1

    Yeah, we got bears in Canada….i don’t have a gun and last check we aren’t all dying in the woods.

  • @ceejaygunn9440
    @ceejaygunn9440 Před rokem

    In Australia, healthcare is a right, owning a gun is a privilege.
    In America, owning a gun is a right, healthcare is a privilege.
    Something is wrong here

  • @TheNeonParadox
    @TheNeonParadox Před 2 lety +28

    Hey, man. At least you had a sense of humor about it. I can think of a couple other CZcamsrs who seemed to forget they were watching a comedy show while reacting to this. I'm a gun owner, but I agree with pretty much everything he's saying. Even in my super liberal state there was hardly any screening for me to own one legally. I don't pretend to have the answers, though. Either way, Jim is fkn hilarious.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety +4

      I don't have the answers either man. I'm just a random dude and honestly this whole subject is way above myself and probably 99.999% of the people commenting on either sides pay grade.
      I just know either them trying to forcefully take guns wouldn't end well them trying to outlaw guns would end well. So my logic is instead of trying to ban guns let's but intense screening on who gets them and try to fix the things that are causing these issue in America so less people want to harm each other in the first place

    • @alextaws6657
      @alextaws6657 Před 2 lety +4

      @@DudeSaysThings I am totally anti-gun, but I agree with your assessment. And I don't think the subject is above your head, not at all. It may be that many people in the comments have thought about the subject longer and have researched statistics and such, but this is something that concerns you directly as a citizen and your opinion on the matter is absolutely valid. The important thing in such discussions is, I think, that you are willing to hear the arguments and really think about them honestly and not just brush them aside (like many, many, many people on the news do).
      And thank you for showing me another perspective: I haven't really though about the practical implementation of gun restrictions and what that would cause. I can imagine that some people would risk a civil war about that.

    • @leighb7052
      @leighb7052 Před 2 lety +9

      @@DudeSaysThings I think you biggest issue is this notion that somebody is "going to take your guns". In Australia, nobody took our guns, the govt offered to buy them back, no questions asked. They didn't come into our houses and take them. We voluntarily handed them in, because we were so appalled by what happened.

  • @jjrod2988
    @jjrod2988 Před 2 lety +7

    This has been one the best reactions from a pro gun person, simply because you were actually able to take his words to heart and understand this was ultimately a comedy routine, with a sprinkle of truth to it, like most comedy is nowadays

  • @davecheffie5706
    @davecheffie5706 Před 2 lety +1

    Guess what, in Australia, we have a lot of dangerous animals too, we still don't need guns...

  • @riffgroove
    @riffgroove Před 3 měsíci

    The whole "I need a gun for protection" argument utterly collapses when you realize that out of every criminal instance where a gun was used, in only 4% of those cases was the weapon fired in self-defense.

  • @theaussieguy3371
    @theaussieguy3371 Před 2 lety +5

    Seriously dude guns make people need guns it's a self porrpetuating concept

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      That's true but guess what we already have them if you took away guns form all the people who willingly give up guns who odds are wouldn't have been a issue anyway. The people with bad intentions still have guns. Then we have alot of gun owners who have guns for those peope who wouldn't willingly give them up without a fight hence why I fear banning guns would cause a actual war. I agree the USA needs to get its shit together but banning guns isn't the answer my friend

  • @eddhardy1054
    @eddhardy1054 Před 2 lety +11

    4:10...Fairplay mate but during you life time how many Grizzly Bears have you run into...& of this multitude how many have you discharged a firearm at? While we don't have the bears & the cougars we do have Great White & Greenland sharks swimming off our shores and I can travel fairly easily to places in Europe where there are still wolves & bears roaming around. Now my solution to them isn't to arm myself with a fuck-ton of spearsguns, hunting rifles, pistols & various other methods of dealing death. Instead I just...take care & follow local instructions 🤔

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      Personally not alot but I also don't live in areas with them

    • @nancyw.4515
      @nancyw.4515 Před 2 lety +11

      As a European, who has hiked in bear country (US and Canada), i have bearspray, which is actually saver, more deterrend and better for the animal. Also your (and a lot of americans) reasoning that it is for your defence against bad people with guns can't continue. Because you are all "running in circles". Forever. The idea that you find it normal that schools need protection just blows my mind. This idea that you can find every bad or crazy person through screening is unrealistic. And even a person that is mentally stable at the time of purchase, can become a threat later on. Is it so difficult to understand that the only difference between the USA and the rest of the western world are the vast amount of guns in regular households. We have bad people, we have mentally unstable people (who also don't always get treatment or too late), we have schools, we have all you have, except easy access to guns. And you will say: our culture is different. Yes,but people can change, a culture can change. It needs to change to survive. It's worth it. Kids lifes are worth it.

  • @keithhealing1115
    @keithhealing1115 Před 2 lety

    The amount of mental gymnastics you have to go through in order to stop children being shot is quite incredible. Nowhere else has this problem. Nowhere.

  • @julesmarwell8023
    @julesmarwell8023 Před 5 měsíci +1

    GOOD for you to chat about your horrible incident. I think Australia is a gentler society than the usa. Thank God. But crime still happens. You stay safe cousin

  • @rocinante4609
    @rocinante4609 Před 2 lety +16

    Jim Jeffries is making great points here. He's making fun of America's obsession with guns knowing they will likely never change. LOL!

  • @stephenhodgson3506
    @stephenhodgson3506 Před 2 lety +8

    While your argument about dangerous wild animals may have some credit. Many of the wild animals are ambush predators and they are very good at it. They will stalk you very carefully as they get closer and closer before they attack. The animals that you do see are often those you come across by chance which will only attack if they see you as a danger to them or their young. In reality unless you had been around many of these animals on a regular basis your immediate reaction would not be your gun but flight. If by some chance you did get a shot off then you had better kill the beast in one go because as any animal expert will tell you the most dangerous wild animal is a wounded wild animal. Many who do live in these isolated areas actually say you are better of with something like bear spray than a gun and that they only use guns to scare the animals away from their livestock.
    An interesting fact from the FBI they state that 85% of all the guns in the hands of criminals were obtained by the criminals as a result of them been stolen from citizens who obtained them legally.

  • @TheStormyClouds
    @TheStormyClouds Před 2 lety +3

    This has to be the most hilarious reactions to this I've seen. Just seeing you bring up a possible solution, unpause, then Jim immediately responding to that, causing you to burst out laughing is the funniest thing ever.

  • @jeremykothe2847
    @jeremykothe2847 Před rokem

    Respect for the rational take on gun "control" vs "ban". I direct you to my comment that *NO* country "bans" guns. It just never happens. What happens is "control".

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před rokem

      and gun control is needed i just think it should be done in away where people who already have guns who are mentally sound can keep there guns i support screening and stronger laws on how they should be kept i even wish schools had education where they teach kids about guns how they are not toys how they should be respected but not feared im not anti gun control i just don't think how the US should do is is exactly like how Australia or the UK did it

  • @pringleton
    @pringleton Před 2 lety +8

    I appreciate your honest reaction, and that you can accept another opinion. Personally think USA is too far gone but better gun control as a start!

  • @alitn588
    @alitn588 Před 2 lety +3

    Every excuses you brought up he debunk it !!😂😂

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      I'd diss agree but ok lok

    • @alitn588
      @alitn588 Před 2 lety

      @@DudeSaysThings not every but few !
      Anyway, it was funny .👍😉

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      Respect back to you my g. Again I don't expect you or anyone else to agree with me.

  • @chrisskaw1597
    @chrisskaw1597 Před 3 měsíci

    America doesn't want to fund the department of education as it is... how much more will it be to fund "well paid veterans" to work in those schools? As a USMC infantry vet, several of the people I served with 100% should not handle firearms near a civilian population.

  • @petervenkman69
    @petervenkman69 Před 2 lety +5

    Contrary to popular belief, you can get guns in the UK... in the countryside they are quite common., there is a Gun Shop 10 minutes walk from where I live. What we have is good gun control, and restrictions on types of weapons allowed... it makes a huge difference... part 2 will answer some of the big arguments that people make why it wouldn't work in the US.

  • @whatwhatinthewhat4400
    @whatwhatinthewhat4400 Před 2 lety +4

    has literally any country banned guns? Like in Australia, the UK etc sure some types of guns might be banned, but you can still buy guns.
    Like I have been to rifle clubs as a teen and adult. I know people who do the clay pigeon stuff, and target shooting for competitions.
    It is always gun control as far as I am aware, it is never an outright ban of guns.

    • @whatwhatinthewhat4400
      @whatwhatinthewhat4400 Před 2 lety

      @mcchickenz unless I am mistaken, even Singapore allows guns, but they just have strict gun controls. Like self defence isn’t a valid reason and the police control licensing etc and I think maybe it needs to be stored at a gun club.

  • @TheCookycooks
    @TheCookycooks Před rokem

    Australia hasn’t completely banned guns we just have strict gun laws

  • @toxxik4933
    @toxxik4933 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm in America, these bears and wolves he mentions are very rarely an issue for any of us. Idk why he made it sound like we're just fighting off grizzlies on our way to work

  • @maximillianderembourg4887

    You want to arm homeless veterans and put them in schools?
    I volunteer for Salvation Army feeding homeless . Do YOU spend ANY real TIME around homeless people?
    1/3 of them are homeless DUE TO mental illness. Not my opinion, that’s day 1 Salvation Army volunteer training. If only 10% of your screenings fail (good luck with that, people are the most complex mechanisms of all) hundreds of thousands of unstable armed people will be among our children everyday. Kind of exactly what you want to prevent.
    Unfortunately, veterans are far MORE likely to be suffering from PTSD, and those symptoms like alcoholism HIDE from screening because they present unpredictability.

  • @AnonEyeMouse
    @AnonEyeMouse Před 2 lety +5

    The majority of veterans on the streets are there BECAUSE they have PTSD or similar. Screening with invalidate most of them. (Another issue that America gets defensive over: health care. No one should be homeless. Those who are homeless due to health conditions shouldn't be. Healthcare should be paid through faxes and homeless people should have access to emergency accommodation and crisis support workers).
    Ask any gun owner and they will tell you they are a responsible gun owner. It's the wrong question. Ask them if they know an irresponsible gun owner. Every one knows an uncle Bobby who likes to shoot at critters on his back fence or sleeps with a loaded .44 under his pillow. The question is how do we keep uncle Bobby away from guns, especially when his ex wife is posting pics of her new husband and step kids on face book and Bobby is six cans deep on a crate of natty lite.

  • @sa2591-p5d
    @sa2591-p5d Před 8 měsíci

    Being attacked on the street is a very traumatic event. I’ve been attacked myself, and also been held up when I was working at a convenience store and it was harrowing. Having said that the most intimidating experience I’ve ever had was in Dallas waiting for a taxi, it was late and some guy decides the taxi query was too long and walked to the front and pushed in front to grab cab. When I pointed out that it wasn’t his cab, he reached for his concealed pistol and pointed it in my face explaining that it was his cab. That was scary than being held up at gun point… the gun was inches away from my face and I had no doubt that dude would shoot me. I don’t think concealed carry is the answer…

  • @howardchambers9679
    @howardchambers9679 Před 2 lety +1

    All those dangerous wild animals in New York and the other big cities. Must be terrifying

  • @4x4maximus
    @4x4maximus Před 2 lety +4

    G'day mate, it's so refreshing to hear an American agree with gun control, it's devastating as an Australian to hear about schools being shot up almost weekly over there and from experience of our gun control system how easy it is to fix. And its the common misconception Australia doesn't have guns, we do, we actually have e more guns now then before 1996 massacre. Yes at the start they had the buy back amnesty, bit that was to destroy all guns in Australia to start from scratch with the new system of licences and registration of guns. And yes we still have automatics like AR15s! You have different category licences and the guns fall Into set categories. I myself have a CAT A, B, C and H and I currently own a ruger American .22WMR, CZ 515 tactical .22WMR, Adler 12g shotgun, Warwick 308 Semi Auto (Australian manufacturered rifle) and a glock 9mm.
    Gun control works! And isn't a bann on guns!
    It exactly like owning a car, you have to have a license and that car must be registered and insured. (In Australia you must be a gun club member and attended 4 times a year to retain license and that club membership is also your public liability insurence)

    • @jerry42023
      @jerry42023 Před 5 měsíci

      Keep licking those boots, comrade.

  • @padraigpearse1551
    @padraigpearse1551 Před 2 lety +8

    As a gun owning Irishman it's very clear that something needs to change in the US.

  • @MaryIBEW
    @MaryIBEW Před 2 lety +1

    You do not need a assaults rifle for a bear.

  • @naroe2001
    @naroe2001 Před 2 lety +1

    You can still get guns in Australia, its just highly regulated and screened, and absolutely no Military grade weapons.

    • @911clutch
      @911clutch Před 2 lety

      It’s true. Military grade is cheap trash. If I have jumped through hoops for my D class licence i am buying far better than ‘military grade’

  • @chasecolgan1696
    @chasecolgan1696 Před 2 lety +3

    My opinion on gun ownership/control/safety, is relatively simple.
    For the arguement of home defence, you don't need anything that fires more them once (so you don't need semi/full auto rifles) bolt/pump action rifles and shotguns are more then enough for animals and burglars, if you can't hit your target with one bullet, don't shoot, simple. I come from a family who are hunters and woodsman and have been so for generations leading all the way back to our European ancestors AND our Native American ancestors.
    If the sale along distribution of semi/full auto guns was outlawed, I don't think anybody would lose anything in terms of gun rights, at the very least, it'd make sure that the casualties FROM shootings would be drastically less.

  • @briantayler1230
    @briantayler1230 Před 2 lety +9

    Here is a really strange thing. In Australia, my local high school has a police officer permanently based. Crime and violence in Brisbane Australia are pretty low and guns are not a problem and yet we can have a police officer on duty. There are more firearms in Australia today than existed in 1998. It is the type of firearm that has changed. A farmer or hunter can easily get the job done with a rimfire bolt action rifle or shotgun limited to holding five shells, they do not need some crappy worn-out milserp that can throw a round 3000 metres.

    • @tchilds1077
      @tchilds1077 Před 2 lety +1

      I call b.s. …. Name the school.

    • @briantayler1230
      @briantayler1230 Před 2 lety

      @@tchilds1077 Strathpine State High School. Both my children went there.

  • @christinecoombs3536
    @christinecoombs3536 Před rokem

    Not only was there a massive reduction in mass shootings, but also homicides and suicides. I also personally know of 2 children that were accidentally killed by guns kept by adults ( eg.their parents ) when I was a child in Australia in the 60’s.

  • @danielwragh7735
    @danielwragh7735 Před 3 měsíci +1

    respect! you laugh even though you may disagree . thats how we should be

  • @stevenbeech7310
    @stevenbeech7310 Před 2 lety +10

    Dude you're getting a tough time in these comments and it's really not your fault, you're a product of your environment and circumstances. You only know what you know and what you've seen so it's not surprising that you think the way you do.
    On the flip side I'm 46, I'm from the UK. I (sort of) remember when the Dunblane massacre happened here and the aftermath and it was awful. I've never owned, fired or even held a gun in my life. I've never felt the need. I know people who have but it's not for me. I've also never been robbed or mugged or any of my family been the victim of a serious crime but in no way would I ever want a gun in or near my house. The idea that you at 19 feels like they want to own guns, learn martial arts, own big scary dogs so you feel safer is tragic. I feel so bad for you. But it's not just you, your whole nation (more or less) feels the same. I don't have any answers but at some point you have to look at other countries and wonder why are they like that and we're like this? It's far more complex than a CZcams comment can explain.
    Stay safe boss

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      Lol I think its funny the people are so mad about my thoughts honestly it's made my day laughing at these angry people.
      But I really have nothing against the people we been raised in different places seen different things like that one story ive told yall is 1 of many stories i have like ive had a crazy fkin life even compared to most Americans but just over all we had different lives so of course we dont think the same.
      I just laugh at the people who genuinely get angry people like you who might disagree but your mad so its different I respect your views because just like me ur a product of ur surroundings. If I was born and raised in the UK with no guns I'd probably think like you to.
      You gotta keep in mind ive been raised around guns shot guns really didn't care about guns until that situation happened but yeah just as strange as it for you hearing I don't fear guns is how I feel when I hear people ducking for cover at the sound
      I don't claim to have the answers either I just know realistically people wouldn't give up guns so we need a different solution.
      Again though don't feel bad for me I'm honestly laughing at these angry people. Part of me wants to make another video and actually go say some outlandish stuff with it to a point where its beyond what i actual think like start saying everyone should have bombs and grenade launchers lol just really mess with people's heads I don't actually think that's smart but omg the comments would be unreal. I'm not going to because It's just not worth it but I'm tempted.

    • @MinqApoc
      @MinqApoc Před 2 lety +9

      @@DudeSaysThings You're wrong about something. We're not angry at you. We pity you. We feel sorry for you and your whole country. The rampant insecurity and fear you all seem to feel. It's saddening.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      lol people who disagree aren't who im talking there's alot of angry people to disagreeing doesn't mean anger ive just seen alot of angry people along with alot of cool people who see things different

  • @simonlockyear4653
    @simonlockyear4653 Před 2 lety +6

    You argue the point and defend owning guns its quite laughable and pathetic crime in the US stems from the lack of jobs, opportunities, housing etc. That's where things should be sorted and will stop attacks for money. Allowing someone to be shot just for being on someone else's property shows how little your government thinks about the lives of the people.

    • @DudeSaysThings
      @DudeSaysThings  Před 2 lety

      Then you proven my point. You just admitted the issue is the people not the guns. As far as being shot for being on someone's land that depends. If ur braking in someone's house and get shot I don't feel bad. If ur cutting through the front unfenced yard trying to take a short cut that's different it's all situational

    • @simonlockyear4653
      @simonlockyear4653 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DudeSaysThings but guns don't shoot themselves they need people. A smoker can't smoke if they can't get cigarettes. The rest of the world especially in Europe know there are millions of things they know they need and want ever before they think urm I want a gun. I've been clay pigeon shooting and whilst I enjoyed it I didn't think wow I need to own a gun.

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      @@simonlockyear4653 great.. respect your opinion... just do force it on others? Gun ownership is a choice... either legally or illegally.. ban them? Like drugs, alcohol, vehicles... so a person misuses them and cause harm to others.. so no one should have access or use them?

    • @simonlockyear4653
      @simonlockyear4653 Před 2 lety

      @@jessmarks2214 Your argument fails when every other Social Democracy bans all or most guns and makes getting hold of one very difficult and expensive. The last thing people think about is "oh I must own a gun" or " I feel unsafe" it actually makes you feel safer, all you need for proof is check out all the CZcams vids of Americans living abroad.

    • @jessmarks2214
      @jessmarks2214 Před 2 lety

      @@simonlockyear4653 actually it doesnt... look at Australian news sights at the moment... multiple shooting involving criminal hits.. our murder rate is on the rise as is suicide despite this being a justification for stricter laws... also explain how Police can provide protection and security when the nearest police station is a 4-12hrs drive and phone reception is non-existent?