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Transportation United States News

Privately Owned Armored Trucks Raise Eyebrows After Dallas Attack 609

HughPickens.com writes: Manny Fernandez writes in the NY Times that the scores of military and police-style vans, trucks and cars offered for sale on Craigslist and eBay have raised concerns for some law enforcement officials, particularly after the Dallas attack on a police headquarters. Officials say the vehicles appear to be legal for the most part, so there is little they can do. Jeff Funicello, for example, is selling his black 1975 GMC armored truck on Craigslist. The body is armored, and the windows are bulletproof. It has sliding portholes to point rifles from and a sprinkler system inside. Long ago, it transported money, and it was once the target of a shootout in the 1980s. Of course, people have been driving reinforced cars long before the Dallas attack on a police headquarters. But the celebrities and executives who install bulletproof windows and other types of armor on their vehicles often do not want it noticed. Celebrity clients generally demand that the exteriors of their luxury armored vehicles look normal so they blend in. However those who buy and sell armored vans want people to look. And the popularity of apocalyptic movies and television shows has put a new twist and added a macabre cachet to such vehicles "This is America," says Funicello. "I should be able to have a howitzer or a bazooka if I want one. If I wanted to buy a fire truck, I could."
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Privately Owned Armored Trucks Raise Eyebrows After Dallas Attack

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  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @08:27AM (#49944011)

    who needs enemies when we have swat teams to "protect us" from shoplifters by destroying our homes. http://www.wnd.com/2015/06/swa... [wnd.com]

    so can you blame people for wanting to protect themselves?

    • You forgot to mention from the article that the shoplifter was armed and took a woman and child as hostage in a standoff with police. Although the property damages was extreme in the particular case, the SWAT team's response to the hostage situation wasn't. It's not the same as the police destroying a black neighborhood [rawstory.com] 30 years ago to evict people from a house.
      • You forgot to mention from the article that the shoplifter was armed and took a woman and child as hostage in a standoff with police. Although the property damages was extreme in the particular case, the SWAT team's response to the hostage situation wasn't.

        So, you're saying that the SWAT team pretty much destroyed a house that had HOSTAGES INSIDE???? And you think that's okay?

        • No. I was pointing out that it wasn't ordinary shoplifter that the SWAT team destroyed a building over. That and that hostages involved were key details that the OP left out. If you didn't bother to check out the link, and accepted the OP at face value, it's a different message. Too many people are willing to accept statements at face value without fact checking the statements.
  • Typical (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @08:29AM (#49944021)
    A pretty typical response. Focus on some trivial or unimportant aspect of a bad event, rather than face the fact that little can be done. Does anyone really believe that "doing something" about armored cars is going to prevent future attacks? The attacks will just take a different form. It is like saying "hammers raise eyebrows after person is attacked with a hammer" The least important and and least valuable aspect of that description is the hammer.
    • by TheCarp ( 96830 )

      Its really the old "Man bites dog" thing. If its not fantastic, its not news.

      Generally when it comes to this sort of thing, the importance of the issue is indirectly proportional to the geographic scope of the story. The incidents most likely to affect you will never make it past the local paper....because heart attacks, car accidents, and slips in the tub are not interesting.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If nothing can be done why are these kinds of attacks far more common in the US than in other developed nations? There are plenty of things that can be done, you just don't want to even consider doing them.

      You are correct though, this is a symptom, not the problem itself.

  • by kqc7011 ( 525426 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @08:35AM (#49944055)
    No one should own a bulldozer because it is almost a tank. Or cutting and welding equipment because you could armor a vehicle.
  • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @08:47AM (#49944143)

    I know ownership of weapons in America is a highly contentious topic so I fully expect to get modded down aggressively for this post. I want to try out the argument anyway. Please humour me.

    Let us imagine two different countries: Macroland and Microland. The governments of the two countries are mostly similar, with two notable exceptions.

    The government of Macroland punishes resistance to its rule heavily. It jails approximately 0.7% of its population. Its enforcement troops kill about 60 of its own people each month.

    The government of Microland is dramatically less aggressive. It jails only 0.1% of its population, but more importantly, it virtually never kills its own citizens no matter what they did or how strongly they resist the government's rule. It took Microland about a quarter of a century to kill as many people as Macroland did in just one month.

    Which country has the most oppressed people? Microland or Macroland?

    I think most reasonable people would say that the citizens of the country that kills them the most often are the most heavily oppressed. After all, what's the basic power that lies behind abusive government oppression? What's the basic mechanism governments use to remove people's freedoms? It's violence. The country that dishes out the most against its own people would seem to be the most oppressive.

    You have, of course, already figured out that the statistics given above are real [theguardian.com]. Macroland is the USA. Microland is (just for comparison) the United Kingdom.

    Americans have the US Constitution and it is a mighty document. The Constitution has always been a vital part of protecting the freedoms of ordinary Americans from overreach by government. Yet the Constitution is flawed in one terribly dramatic way. By allowing and even encouraging a heavily armed society, it fails to strike any blows for freedom - as police have always had and always will have better access to top grade weaponry and armour. The chances of ordinary US citizens successfully mounting an armed uprising against the government is zero. And yet it simultaneously gives those same police a cast iron excuse for arming themselves to the teeth, as they are expected to enforce the law against an exceptionally dangerous population.

    The result is that whilst Americans and British people have very little differences in their levels of freedom, they have enormous differences in their chances of being executed by their own governments ..... or by random mental patients.

    I am British and I would like to see the UK adopt a US-style constitution. But not if it included a copy of the second amendment. Real data from today's world seems to suggest it makes no real difference to freedom but does make the world a vastly more dangerous place.

    • by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @09:03AM (#49944255) Journal
      Citizens who are free to own weaponry should understand that particular freedom is also extended to other citizens around them.

      The price of that equation is that, eventually, some of those legal weapons wind up in the irresponsible hands of the extremely antisocial.

      If that is a trade-off the population can live with, then so be it. Each is free in a way of their choosing.

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @09:04AM (#49944263) Journal

      as police have always had and always will have better access to top grade weaponry and armour.

      I would argue this statement is false. When the 2nd amendment was drafted the hunting rifle in the hands of the average citizen was not especially inferior to that of the one in the hands of the local serif or for that matter the regular army soldier. Moreover the local serif and the soldier were no more able to defend themselves against said rifle than your average citizen was.

      As far as larger weapons like artillery was concerned at prior to the civil war my admittedly hasty study of the subject indicates there was not much in the way of law that prevented a citizen (other than cost) from purchasing a napoleon; which would have been a state of the art field piece. Certainly there were lots of wealthy planters and the like who could afford them.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @09:11AM (#49944331)

        as police have always had and always will have better access to top grade weaponry and armour.

        I would argue this statement is false. When the 2nd amendment was drafted the hunting rifle in the hands of the average citizen was not especially inferior to that of the one in the hands of the local serif or for that matter the regular army soldier. Moreover the local serif and the soldier were no more able to defend themselves against said rifle than your average citizen was.

        As far as larger weapons like artillery was concerned at prior to the civil war my admittedly hasty study of the subject indicates there was not much in the way of law that prevented a citizen (other than cost) from purchasing a napoleon; which would have been a state of the art field piece. Certainly there were lots of wealthy planters and the like who could afford them.

        Actually, the average hunter's rifle was probably more effective than what the local sheriff or soldier had, because a hunter quite possibly had an actual rifle while the soldier would have been issued a smoothbore musket. And heavy artillery was certainly owned by private individuals at least up through the Civil War as there are numerous instances of wealthy individuals using ther own funds to raise and equip militia units during times of conflict (if you had the money this was an easy way to get a commission at the start of the Civil War on either side as they were desperate for troops).

        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          It's still the same now. An enthusiast that buys his own weapon likely has a much better piece of equipment than someone that just has standard issue gear.

          There are even catalogs used by the troops for enhancing their own personal gear while on personal deployment.

          • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

            It's still the same now. An enthusiast that buys his own weapon likely has a much better piece of equipment than someone that just has standard issue gear.

            There are even catalogs used by the troops for enhancing their own personal gear while on personal deployment.

            I have close to 10 firearms myself, but I certainly don't have an M249, a 203, or kevlar with ceramic plates-all standard issue for military. An enthusiast might be better armed than your average patrolman who has a .40 pistol and a shotgun in his trunk, but the police still have easy access to surplus military light weapons and other weapons that are restricted to police use.

      • as police have always had and always will have better access to top grade weaponry and armour.

        I would argue this statement is false. When the 2nd amendment was drafted the hunting rifle in the hands of the average citizen was not especially inferior to that of the one in the hands of the local serif or for that matter the regular army soldier. Moreover the local serif and the soldier were no more able to defend themselves against said rifle than your average citizen was.

        Just so.

        Note that, to a certain ext

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by mwvdlee ( 775178 )

      The US constitution was written in a time where both citizens and government had access to roughly the same level of weaponry.
      There were no tanks, bombers or drones, there was no fast communication or transportation of armed forces.

      If one were to draft a new constitution in this day and age, you would look a bit silly for arguing a civil militia with handguns and old military surplus equipment could keep a well-armed government in check.

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @09:27AM (#49944457) Homepage

        The only people that would think such a thing is silly are people that are completly ignorant of military history. Even recent history is littered with examples of the biggest military machine on the planet (and it's cronies) having much more trouble with "inferior" forces than they should.

        "But you can't attack that tank with what you have."

        Spoken like someone that never actually had any sort of military training.

        • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @01:55PM (#49946995)

          Even recent history is littered with examples of the biggest military machine on the planet (and it's cronies) having much more trouble with "inferior" forces than they should.

          Define "trouble"? Recent history is littered with examples of the US military immediately and utterly crushing the armies and rebel groups in any country they invade. The rabble that remain and try to resist occupation cannot inflict any conventional military damage, which is why they resort of extreme tactics like suicide bombings. Tactics that don't work, but between soldiers, drones, warplanes, and NSA surveillance they have no better ideas that might work.

          Likewise, the chances of any US citizens successfully engaging in armed resistance against the US government is zero. Here's what would happen:

          1) If you decide to take your gun and resist oppression alone you will be gunned down within minutes or seconds, reported in the press as having mental health problems and everyone will have forgotten your name within a couple of days

          2) If you try to find other like minding people and raise a resistance group the FBI and/or NSA will learn of your plot before it happens, and you will be arrested before you have any chance to make real progress with your plan. You will be charged with domestic extremism, terrorism, or some variant thereof, and disappear for the rest of your adult life into a Supermax.

          In no situation does having a gun allow you to resist even very petty government corruption or abuse. You simply stand no chance at all, you will always lose. The only way to seriously change a government is through the ballot box, which is why every country except the USA doesn't pretend an armed populace has anything to do with freedom.

      • If one were to draft a new constitution in this day and age, you would look a bit silly for arguing a civil militia with handguns and old military surplus equipment could keep a well-armed government in check.

        Might want to read up on the Warsaw Uprising sometime. Amazing what even a small number of firearms in the hands of people desperate enough to fight an army can do....

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      There are a few things to keep in mind though. First, Canada has more guns per capita than the United States. Two, there are still places in the U.S. remote enough that a rifle and/or shotgun are still important survival tools and assistance is quite a way off even if you can call someone.

      Imagine being all alone in the U.K. surrounded by wilderness and the nearest help if something goes wrong is in France. Now you have an idea why people in the more remote parts of the U.S. believe they need a gun.

      There are

    • by pla ( 258480 )
      Which country has the most oppressed people? Microland or Macroland?

      You've left out a host of peripheral issues beyond body counts. "Living" means more than merely continuing to draw breath.

      Which country arrests people for finding a shotgun in their flowerbed and immediately turning it in, because that proves possession? Which country allows the police to hold citizens for 28 days (and non-citizens forever) without charge? Which country doesn't allow criticizing absurd religious beliefs? Which coun
      • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @10:24AM (#49944995) Journal

        (and non-citizens forever) without charge?

        Oh the USA, in gitmo, right? Or are you referring to something else?

        Which country has a 100% surveillance state as the expected norm

        The one that has the NSA slurping up everything they can find? Or is it the country where most of the press are strongly critical of what they all call the "snoopers charter" which the government is trying to get?

        I'll enjoy my freedom.

        Tell me, Mr Anderson, what use is your freedom if you're already dead?

  • and a bomb lifter.

    He collects weird stuff, I don't see a legal problem with it. His wife sure sees a problem with it, but that is another thing all together.

  • Sigh. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @09:49AM (#49944679) Homepage

    "I should be able to have a howitzer or a bazooka if I want one"

    And I should be able to not have such things next door to me.

    I'll continue to happily live at least one continent away from this kind of attitude, thanks.

    • Simple solution if you don't want one next door is for you to move. How would you feel about a neighbor owning a 10KW CO2 laser?
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      My neighbor has a howitzer. No problems. But I do check occasionally when I drive by that it's still pointed the other way.

  • Buy a Marauder (Score:4, Informative)

    by dlenmn ( 145080 ) on Friday June 19, 2015 @01:22PM (#49946671)

    In these uncertain times, you can't be too careful. We should all be driving armored vehicles, like the Marauder [wikipedia.org]. Top Gear did a wonderful review of the vehicle, showing how practical the Marauder is for normal city driving.

    Review part 1 [topgear.com]
    Review part 2 [topgear.com]

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