Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 1, 2018

Waching daily Jan 5 2018

LetterSchool Learn handwriting D'Nealian 1-20 numbers for toddlers 1 to 20 Fun Song for children

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COME SCELGO DELLE CUFFIE DA GAMING ECONOMICHE? (RECENSIONE ITEK TAURUS H322) - Duration: 16:37.

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Games for Kids Learn Colors with Talking Tom Gold Run. Funny Cat.Kids Video iGame Kids Cartoons - Duration: 7:27.

Games for Kids Learn Colors with Talking Tom Gold Run. Funny Cat.Kids Video iGame Kids Cartoons

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Mega-Erfolg mit Mami-Parodie: Sarah Fresh rappt auf YouTube! - Duration: 1:47.

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Navjagrati संक्षिप्त शब्द चिन्ह from book HINDI SHORTHAND ऋषि प्रणाली PAGE NO. 149, 154 - Duration: 3:32.

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For more infomation >> Navjagrati संक्षिप्त शब्द चिन्ह from book HINDI SHORTHAND ऋषि प्रणाली PAGE NO. 149, 154 - Duration: 3:32.

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Xem Tử Vi Tuổi Giáp Tý Nam Mệnh Năm 2018 - Sinh Năm 1984 - Duration: 10:07.

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《竹田車站》BGM:蕭煌奇 - 爸仔囝【歌詞 Lyrics】繁體/简体 - Duration: 4:34.

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Golden Globes: Remember My Name | Lights, Camera, Fashion - Duration: 1:21.

A new year and a new awards season means some new faces on

the red carpet. We've rounded up the

top five names you need to know before watching the Golden Globes.

Timothee Chalamet. You might recognize him from the TV show

Homeland, but it's his performance in Call Me By Your Name

that got him nominated for Best Actor in a Drama.

Greta Gerwig is a name you should get used to hearing for the next few months.

Her directorial debut in Lady Bird is getting

high praise from critics and audiences alike.

I am so excited for Hong Chau. I love seeing an Asian woman

nominated for Best Supporting Actress.

How about 28-year-old British actor Daniel Kaluuya?

Oh, he's British? Oh yes, he's British. Prior to his nomination,

Daniel as pretty much an unknown. Uh, Kick Ass 2?!

Yeah, like everyone saw Kick Ass 2.

Finally, we have Katherine Langford, who plays Hannah in the series 13 Reasons Why.

Other than a few short films, Katherine is a star on the rise.

Share your need to know names in the comments.

And if you share this video with the hashtag #GlobesBridgeside,

we'll be picking one lucky person to win a special prize.

GoBridgeside.

For more infomation >> Golden Globes: Remember My Name | Lights, Camera, Fashion - Duration: 1:21.

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Cost-emotiveness, a change in the trend of dining consumption - Duration: 4:40.

Cost-emotiveness not cost-effectiveness.

When it comes to dining a quick, affordable bite just won't cut it anymore.

In other words, hearty meals that warm you up in more ways than one.

Won Jung-hwan sheds light on this trend.

(KOREAN)

"It is not just because I am single and living alone,... it is something that I will always

miss."

(KOREAN)

"When I used to live with my family, I thought that it was something always prepared by my

mother three times a day,... but now, since I am living alone, it is difficult to prepare

it for myself."

The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs has recently announced the keywords

that will lead dining trends in 2018.

After surveying over 3-thousand people and analyzing consumption behavior, the ministry

said the top keyword was 'cost-emotiveness'.

The word encompasses how visual design, restaurant atmosphere, and home-made recipes all add

value to the dining experience.

This restaurant in Seoul has been trying to attract customers through 'cost-emotiveness'.

(KOREAN)

"Considering the recent trend is dining out alone or eating in a small group, we wanted

people to come anytime and enjoy a full-hearted home-style cooked meal."

(STANDUP)

"Everybody makes home-made meals differently, depending on the day, available ingredients,

and number of people eating,… but they often consist of rice, soup, and a couple of side

dishes - a humble, but warm-hearted meal."

According to the owner, the number of restaurants that try to appeal to customers' sense of

nostalgia is increasing, and home-cooking style meals, prepared with care and love,

can really hit the spot.

(KOREAN)

"I live alone near this place, and I visit here often because the food is delicious and

most importantly, it feels similar to eating at home."

When people think of home-made meals, words like 'family' and 'nostalgia' spring to mind.

And that nostalgia is often a memory of childhood meals cooked by a loving parent.

But with more and more people eating fast and generic food, and Korea's food culture

becoming more global and diverse, home-made meals have become harder to find.

So now, many companies in the food industry are targeting consumers who are tired of mass-produced

instant foods, and who crave home-made meals, ... or rather are missing their family.

But surprisingly, this trend is being led by the younger generation.

(KOREAN)

"In some ways, the digital generation, those who ate the most instant food, are recalling

a lot of their family memories, and they are changing their appetite to more home-cooked

healthy meals."

Zipbanchan laboratory prepares more than 100 home-made side dishes everyday for all its

customers across the nation.

It produces meals following simple steps, first washing the meat and raw vegetables,

then moving the ingredients to the next place where they are cooked, before being stored

and sent out to customers.

But despite this approach seeming like a production line, according to the CEO, the most important

factor when preparing these foods is 'love'.

(KOREAN)

"We are trying to provide a homemade meal to customers so that everyone feels loved,

that is why we pick fresh ingredients by ourselves and deliver right to our customers' doors."

The craving for these home-made foods comes from the desire to eat humble and warm side

dishes rather than fast food or instant food.

One regular customer explained why they eat such food.

(KOREAN)

"Actually, since I have been living alone for a while, I don't usually prepare a variety

of side dishes.

But every time I order these homemade-like meals it feels like my mom prepared them for

our family."

As the variety and availability of cheap instant food is increasing, the number of people cooking

at home is on the decline.

But while dining out on instant or processed food can satisfy our hunger, it might lack

the warmth we feel when enjoying a home-cooked meal - this is what we mean by 'cost-emotiveness'.

(STANDUP)

"With people leading faster, busier lives, fast food may seem like a good fit for those

on a tight schedule,… but sometimes it's better to slow down and enjoy life a bit…

by having a warm and filling home-made meal with loved ones.

Won Jung-hwan, Arirang News."

For more infomation >> Cost-emotiveness, a change in the trend of dining consumption - Duration: 4:40.

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Latest Mobiles At Low Price || Best Budget Mobiles || Omfut Tech - Duration: 3:23.

Latest Mobiles At Low Pric

Best Budget Mobiles

Omfut tech

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Free Thoughts, Ep. 220: Guns and Mass Shootings (with David B. Kopel) - Duration: 51:29.

Trevor Burrus: Welcome to Free Thoughts.

I'm Trevor Burrus.

Joining me today is David Kopel, Associate Policy Analyst at the Cato Institute, Research

Director at the Independence Institute, and Adjunct Professor of advanced constitutional

law at University of Denver Sturm College of Law, which is my alma mater, and he was

my professor.

Welcome to Free Thoughts, David.

David Kopel: Thank you very much.

You've done quite well post-law school.

Trevor Burrus: Well, thank you.

And you got [00:00:30] me into firearms to begin with.

When I was your research assistant, I wasn't terribly interested in firearms.

I was a libertarian, but I don't own guns, I'm not big into guns myself ... But it's

a very interesting topic, and of course, it's much in the news over the last year with mass

shootings, so are there more mass shootings than ever before?

David Kopel: If you're talking about what the public commonly calls mass shootings,

these horrific crimes like in Las Vegas or Sutherland Springs, Texas ... [00:01:00] There

are several per year, and so, looking at a trend is a little difficult, but the answer

is probably yes, compared to say, 20 years ago.

Trevor Burrus: And these would be ... There's mass shootings, which the FBI can call four

or more in a single incident or a single act, versus spree killings, which is different.

So, sometimes those numbers are misleading if you hear them from Mother Jones or something.

David Kopel: Well, and the gun ban activists have their own idiosyncratic definition of

mass shootings, [00:01:30] for which there is no formal, official definition.

So, they would call a lot of ordinary gun crime a mass shooting.

Like, let's say there's a liquor story robbery, and the robber shoots two people who work

at the store and two patrons, and then ... So, four people are injured, nobody's killed.

They would call that a mass shooting.

That's ... I think fits in the broad category of overall, general gun crime.

That overall, general gun crime is down [00:02:00] massively compared to the early 1990's.

The gun homicide rate has fallen by over half, and the gun violence victimization rate is

down by about 70 percent over the past 25 years, so there's been a tremendous amount

of progress in reducing gun crime in the United States.

Trevor Burrus: Well, you said something interesting there.

You said "gun ban advocates," and I imagine people listening to this, who aren't very

familiar with gun rights might think that that was a little bit overstating your case.

[00:02:30] They're people who want gun control.

Is it fair to call them "gun ban advocates?"

David Kopel: It depends.

I think it's fair to call Michael Bloomberg a gun ban advocate, and he's the sugar daddy

of what is the 900-pound gorilla of the anti-gun movement in this country.

I mean, it's taken over the issue from all of the traditional groups, which had somewhat

more of a base.

But you know?

They've got there one funder, and he's got lots of billionaire friends.

Bloomberg filed [00:03:00] a brief in the US Supreme Court in the Heller case saying

that individual Americans have no Second Amendment rights at all.

He, as mayor of New York City, used registration lists to confiscate guns.

He's said over and over that people who own guns are ... He said if you own a gun and

you have children in your home, you're stupid.

And he has, at every opportunity, endorsed all kinds of ban legislation.

Trevor Burrus: Now, in terms of the make- [00:03:30] up of the gun control side, I think

a lot of them think rifles are okay, and shotguns are okay.

They might wanna ban other things, but some of them might be of the sort that they think

that a good, just society would have no guns in private hands.

What do you think the make-up is on that in terms of ... When you interact with gun control

advocates, do you think a lot of them are actually just hiding the fact that they would

rather ban guns entirely?

David Kopel: I mean, one data point was ... I talked to a guy who [00:04:00] had been very

closely involved in what's now called the Brady Campaign.

Before that, it was called Handgun Control Incorporated.

Before that, it was the National Coalition to Control Handguns.

And that organization, when it started out in the 1970's, was very expressly for a handgun

ban, and it would also say long guns are not the problem.

The book written by their then-president said that point, "Well, we've got no interest in

that issue."

Obviously that [00:04:30] changed, and so much so that, as this guy explained, he wanted

the group to run an ad showing some hunter guy out in the field, carrying a shotgun,

out bird-hunting, or something like that, looking very wholesome.

And the ad would say, "This guy is not the problem," which I would agree with.

And the Brady Campaign, by that point, was so anti-gun in its ethos that [00:05:00] they

couldn't bring themselves even to do that.

Trevor Burrus: Interesting.

Getting back to mass shootings, we described how it wasn't a large portion of the homicide,

and the homicide rate is going down, but if they have ... These spree killings have kind

of increased, and it's hard to say a trend, but these are getting a little bit upsetting.

People are starting to look at their phone and say, "Not again."

David Kopel: Right.

I certainly feel that way.

Trevor Burrus: Well, absolutely.

But is it ... I mean, no one's championing it, but is it a little bit ridiculous when

the rest of the world looks at us [00:05:30] and says, "We did something about this."

In Dunblane, Scotland, there was a mass killing, and they went after guns ... And in Port Arthur,

Australia, there was a mass shooting, and they did something about it.

And just, consistently, we don't do anything about this.

People are just saying, "Oh, another SSDD, another mass shooting."

Is that okay for us to sort of react so nonchalantly to these horrible acts of violence?

David Kopel: Oh, I don't think it's a nonchalant reaction at all.

I think it's a very ... People are very concerned, and they think seriously about what can be

done, but when you have advocates [00:06:00] who say, "Oh ..." What the United Kingdom

did, or what Australia did ... They confiscated guns.

They used ... They had guns on registration lists, and then they did massive confiscation.

In Australia, they confiscated 20 or 25 percent of the total gun supply, and then they did

future rounds of confiscation for more guns.

So, when you have Americans like Hillary Clinton or lots of others who say, "Oh, look at Australia.

They showed the right way to go."

Well, yeah.

They're telling you they are gun-banners.

They're not only ... They don't [00:06:30] wanna only ban future sales.

They wanna confiscate guns from existing people.

Now, if you tried an Australia-style gun confiscation in the United States, you'd be confiscating

about 60 million guns.

That is unrealistic.

It is, in fact, dangerous to law enforcement to force them to do something like that, and

it would make all the problems we've had in the past of things ... When you try to prohibit

things against the popular [00:07:00] will ... Alcohol prohibition, the war on marijuana

users, all those things ... Those would be small-scale compared to the social trouble

we would get by trying to follow that UK or Australia gun-ban system.

And by the way, on a per capita basis, lots of countries have more mass shootings and

fatalities than the United States.

And of course, there's also this thing where only some things count as a mass shooting.

So, if the narco trafficantes [00:07:30] in Mexico murder 12 people, that doesn't count,

I suppose, for two reasons.

One is some people don't count killings by organized criminals as a mass shooting.

And secondly, there's this bigoted view that the only comparables for the United States

are western Europe and Japan, and you can't ever think about other countries, like our

neighbor to the south, which has incredibly repressive gun laws and a much more serious

[00:08:00] firearms crime problem than the United States.

And that's true broadly.

The United States has a lower homicide rate than the world average.

Trevor Burrus: Now, if we look at the tools of mass shooters though, and we see ... For

example, in Las Vegas, the amount of guns he had there, he used his thing called a bump

stock, which I'll ask you more about in a second to make rapid-fire faster ... But it's

just a bunch of weapons of war that he ... A lot of stuff hasn't come out about where he

purchased these and how, but couldn't [00:08:30] we at least say, "Hey, you shouldn't be able

to buy five assault weapons at a time.

That probably indicates something about what you might be doing."

I mean, it might make a marginal effect, but isn't that something we should be doing?

David Kopel: Well, you can look at our ... We have a comparable on this, which is since

1968, anytime somebody buys two or more handguns within a week, local law enforcement and the

Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives [00:09:00] get notified of

that purchase.

And that's sure moved a lot of paperwork around, but I think you'd be hard-pressed to find

anybody who'd say that has helped us prevent crimes or do anything.

Yes, if you're a gun collector, you go the gun collector's show that weekend, and maybe

you ... You know, you might buy seven guns, hand guns then.

That doesn't mean you're gonna use 'em for nefarious purposes.

So, if the system isn't really producing much of value on handguns, [00:09:30] it's hard

to see why extending it to long guns would have benefits.

Trevor Burrus: Well, assault weapons are used in most of these mass shootings, correct?

David Kopel: Assault weapons is a bogus term invented by the gun-ban lobbies, and has no

meaningful, standard definition.

I can tell you what an assault rifle is as defined by the United States government's

Defense Intelligence Agency.

An assault rifle is something that is of the type that was invented by the German military

and started to be used in 1943, [00:10:00] and similar, the Avtomat Kalashnikova rifles,

AK-47, Avtomat Kalashnikova 1947 rifle is one of those.

And that is a medium-sized rifle that can fire either one shot at a time, semi-automatically,

or it can fire automatically, like a machine gun.

That's what a genuine assault rifle is.

Militaries [00:10:30] all over the world use assault rifles.

The guns that are falsely labeled as so-called assault weapons in the United States are not

that.

You won't find one of them that is used by any military anywhere in the world.

These are normal guns that fire one shot at a time, and they get demonized because they

can be.

As a strategy memo written by ... Josh Sugarmann, one of the leading thinkers of gun prohibition

wrote in 1987, "The public [00:11:00] would be confused, because they would ..." When

we talk about these assault weapons, as he calls them, the public will say, "Oh, it looks

like a machine gun, so it must be a machine gun," and that confusion has persisted ever

since.

The disinformation against normal guns that, because they have ... For example, their stock

is made of black polymer rather than brown walnut ... That is supposedly a military gun.

Trevor Burrus: Well, that seems a little bit nit-picky.

You look at the pictures of the arsenal in Las Vegas, or the pictures [00:11:30] of these

guns used in a lot of these crimes.

They're not squirrel rifles, they're not hunting rifles, they're not shotguns ... They look

like what are military ... I mean, why are normal people allowed to even own that?

David Kopel: They certainly are hunting rifles.

They are ... Their most common caliber is 223, which is not powerful enough for game

larger than a deer, but they are quite commonly used for hunting, for target-shooting, for

very high-end target competitions, [00:12:00] and for home defense because in that caliber

of 223, which is relatively small, lightweight, relatively less re-coil, easier to control

... Especially people who maybe don't have that much upper body strength find them to

be a good rifle for home defense.

They're very versatile.

Trevor Burrus: So, you mentioned machine guns, and the machine gun, fully-automatic function

of an assault rifle.

It ... Since you seem to sort of say, "These aren't unique," but ... So, would [00:12:30]

machine guns ... Should we make those legal?

David Kopel: Well, -

Trevor Burrus: First of all, what is the legal status of machine guns for listeners who don't

know?

David Kopel: Machine guns were invented in 1884.

Well, I take ... Automatics were invented in 1884.

The machine gun, if you wanna be really technical, has a different definition, cause that would

go back to Gatling guns and predecessors like that.

But what federal law is concerned about is an automatic where, by pressing [00:13:00]

the trigger once, that's all that you have to do and ammunition will fire continuously.

That was invented, again, in 1884.

By federal law, it's called a machine gun, which is not exactly correct, but -

Trevor Burrus: That's how it is.

David Kopel: It is what it is.

So, in 1934 ... And machine guns, having been invented, were extremely expensive.

And obviously, they're not only expensive in themselves.

Also, [00:13:30] the amount of ammunition you use is real expensive.

So, they never really caught on with the general public.

Obviously, they had military utility.

You know?

If you're in a very horrific way, for example, and in the trench warfare for World War I

... And even when the Thompson submachine gun was invented, and that was brought to

the market in the 1920's, and -

Trevor Burrus: The Al Capone gun.

David Kopel: Exactly.

Well, it never really caught on with the general public.

I mean, some [00:14:00] people got it, but it was much more popular with gangsters than

with regular folks.

And so, in 1934, Congress enacted a tax and registration system for automatics, what I'll

call as machine guns.

And that has been in place ever since.

In 1986, as an amendment to the Firearms Owners' Protection Act, which was a comprehensive

revision of federal gun laws, the [00:14:30] manufacturer of new machine guns for non-government

people was prohibited after May 19, 1986.

So today, in 37 states, you can understate law and in conjunction with federal law, you

can lawfully own a machine gun, but it'll be one that was made before May 19, 1986.

And you'll not only pay the 200-dollar federal tax on it, it'll take months to go through

the paperwork to do it.

And obviously, the gun itself is probably 6,000 [00:15:00] dollars or more in price.

Trevor Burrus: So, it's hard to get a machine gun.

You can go to gun ranges and shoot them cause they pay a lot to shoot them and things like

this, and -

David Kopel: Right.

Trevor Burrus: It would be bad though ... Correct me if I'm wrong, but if these mass shooters

had machine guns, and we don't have any machine guns in society, and we were able to get rid

of them over a long period of time, or make them very difficult to attain ... I mean,

it ... So, if the Aurora shooter had a machine gun, that would've been worse [00:15:30] I

think.

And we're both from Colorado.

David Kopel: Yeah.

Trevor Burrus: So, you know Columbine ...

David Kopel: Yeah.

Trevor Burrus: So, why don't we do that with all guns?

Why don't we go ... I mean, it'll take a long time.

There are 300 million guns.

Why don't start with the National Firearms Act with a tax, with a transfer, with a registry,

move into things, make 'em so they're very rare, and then make a dent in this problem?

David Kopel: For guns, in general, you're talking about.

Trevor Burrus: Yeah.

Particularly, dangerous guns.

David Kopel: Well, all guns are dangerous.

They ain't toys, and even a single-shot 22-caliber gun [00:16:00] can kill somebody.

So, just as a NRA-certified safety instructor, it's important -

Trevor Burrus: But you'd rather have a single-shot 22, if that was all mass shooter had available

to 'em.

David Kopel: Yes.

So, the trade-off is ... What Congress decided with machine guns was, "Well, on the one hand,

we see them used in things like the St. Valentine's Day massacre and by gangsters, and on the

other hand, we don't really see a lot of law-abiding folks having fun with them mat the target

[00:16:30] range, or using 'em for protection, or whatever."

So, that trade-off was fairly ... I should point out, there are tens of thousands or

more machine gun hobbyists, who enjoy their hobby and comply with the National Firearms

Act, and have fun at a target range with it, and don't cause anybody any problems.

And in fact, none of the ... Almost never are the machine guns that have been lawfully

possessed ... [00:17:00] Pursuant of the National Firearms Act, they have essentially no involvement

in crime.

You do sometimes have stolen machine guns from a military armory or things like that

that might be used by, say, a drug gang.

Firearms save lives when they're in the right hands, and firearms in the wrong hands are

very dangerous to the general public.

So, sensible gun laws recognize both sides, and this is what the way the [00:17:30] gun-ban

movement is really sort of a flat-Earth society.

In terms of the empirical facts about guns, is they just insist that as ... Shannon Watts,

the head of Michael Bloomberg's Moms Demand group, says that a good guy with a gun never

stops a crime, which is crazy, cause you can read about it in the newspapers every day.

Maybe not every single newspaper ... Every issue of every newspaper around the country,

but if you certainly follow [00:18:00] national news, it happens frequently.

And of course, Steven Williford saved dozens of lives with his AR-15 in the Sutherland

Springs crime.

But more generally, firearms are used, according to social science including recent reports

by the ... A report a few years ago by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,

which did a summary of the issue ... And it said, "You know?

We don't really know," and there's a range of estimates, but [00:18:30] the low end would

put defensive gun uses in this country at tens of thousands per year.

The higher end of the estimate would get into well over a million.

And you can ... Some people, like the National Opinion Research Center, when it looked into

it, said, "Well, really probably ... The correct answer, we think, is probably somewhere in

between."

So, it's at hundreds of thousands of defensive gun uses annually in this country.

Now, most of them, without a shot being fired.

[00:19:00] Usually the display of the gun is a sufficient deterrent for the criminal

to decide it's time to leave work early that day, and that ends the situation.

So, you have really huge contributions to public safety by guns in the right hands,

and I've talked to plenty of people who tell me how their lives were saved because they

had a gun at the right time.

And others who ... They would've been raped, or assaulted, or otherwise really horribly

victimized, but they [00:19:30] saved themselves cause they had a gun.

In fact, Cato's ... Former Cato guy, Tom Palmer, who was one of the plaintiffs in the case

that eventually became District of Columbia versus Heller, was with a friend who ... In

California ... The friend was gay, and a bunch of thugs came up to them intending to do some

gay bashing, and Palmer had his handgun, showed it, and that was [00:20:00] the end of the

gay bashing, and all the gay-bashers decided it was time to go watch Clockwork Orange again

or something else.

Trevor Burrus: Now, when it comes to this level of defensive gun uses as we call it,

isn't it the case that these crimes are being committed because people have guns?

And the criminals have guns, and so, saying that the solution to this is to pour more

guns into the situation and to let people defend themselves with guns, as opposed to

go back [00:20:30] and try to take the guns away from the criminals ... That seems to

be more sensible than just pouring more gasoline on the fire.

David Kopel: Well, you can do both, and putting guns in law-abiding hands aren't gasoline

on the fire.

They're fire extinguishers in that regard.

You know?

I mean, I agree there are people who think that guns cause crime, that ... This is a

common trope of the gun-ban movement.

That, if you have a gun in the house, and you're a normal person, that [00:21:00] you

are at risk of flying into some rage ... You were happily married for 30 years, and then

you got a gun, and then one day, your wife burned the chicken dinner, and then you shoot

her.

Cause guns cause people ... I mean, they'll literally say things like this.

That guns cause people to go crazy or to lose self-control.

Again, that's the opposite of what the social science says.

People who use guns for crimes are not people who were law- [00:21:30] abiding and then

turned into a criminal.

They were criminals beforehand.

Now, guns can certainly facilitate a crime, and it depends on the situation.

You know?

O.J. Simpson didn't need a gun to murder his ex-wife, cause he's a big, strong guy.

On the other hand, say a scrawny 14-year-old probably couldn't hold up a liquor store or

a convenience store if he only had a knife, or at least it would be harder for that criminal

to do so.

So, certainly there are times when [00:22:00] a gun -

Trevor Burrus: That more than facilitates ... That could actually cause it.

I mean, there might be someone who says, "I wouldn't rob except for a gun."

I mean, right?

David Kopel: Yeah.

Trevor Burrus: "If you gave me a knife, I wouldn't rob.

But if you gave me a gun, I would rob."

David Kopel: That's right.

That might ... He's criminal in his mind already, but he doesn't see an opportunity unless he

has the firearm, because this is the thing about guns is, everything that makes them

usable and superior [00:22:30] to other arms for self-defense also makes them usable for

offense, particularly the ability to project force at a distance.

And as something that equalizes the disparity between people of different strengths or numbers.

So, a woman in a parking garage who's say, 50 years old and surrounded by four thugs

... A handgun's the only thing, as a practical matter, that's gonna equalize that [00:23:00]

disparity in force between them.

So, by the way, if you get rid of all guns, that's a great deal for the four thugs cause

they ... You can go back to the rule of the strong, like we had in the middle ages, and

whoever's the biggest, and toughest, and meanest will be able to dominate everybody else.

So, that would ... Women, and elderly, and other people who aren't big and tough will

be the ones victimized probably more in that scenario.

Trevor Burrus: But ultimately, it would be better ... Even if there was the same level

of crime with ... Let's [00:23:30] push a button and make guns disappear from everyone,

victims, criminals, maybe even the government.

And then, let's say that the level of crime would be the same, which I'm not sure would

be, but let's say it would be.

But we've converted every gun attack into a knife attack.

That would be better, correct?

I mean, that would be a better ... It'd be less lethal.

David Kopel: You hypothesis is that we keep the level of crime constant.

I think it would increase the level of home invasion burglaries.

One of the studies we ... Another thing that's pretty clear from the social [00:24:00] science,

and this is presented in my Supreme Court amicus brief for a large coalition of law

enforcement organizations in the Heller case was study, after study, after study of both

burglars who were in prison and even one study that managed to interview burglars in St.

Louis who were out of prison and were active, successful, professional burglars.

Is ... The biggest part of their working day is observing the place they're targeting and

trying really hard to make sure there's nobody [00:24:30] home when they go in, because if

they do, there's a high risk of getting shot.

That is a ... A burglar's risk of getting shot is about equal to a burglar's risk of

going to prison.

If you figure one is a deterrent, then probably the other equally-sized risk is also a deterrent.

The Centers for Disease Control, in the mid-1950's, and they're not known as one of the top pro-gun

organizations out there, did a national study that estimated guns [00:25:00] are used defensively

against burglars in the United States about 600,000 times a year.

And again, the large majority of scenarios are not a shot being fired.

It's just eh display of the gun.

The distinctive sound of a pump-action shotgun being racked to load the round makes the burglar

decide to leave the scene.

You can contrast that with what goes on in Australia after they did their ban on defensive

gun ownership.

And England, and the Netherlands, and Ireland, and lots [00:25:30] and lots of other places

where burglars deliberately come into occupied homes, and do so with impunity.

And they do so because the occupied home is better for the burglar because you've got

purses and wallets at home, where you can take cash, which has ... You don't have to

sell at a discount the way you do with other goods that you're fencing on the black market.

And we know they ... Not the majority, but a significant minority of home [00:26:00]

invasion burglaries when the occupants are present, leads to assault against the occupants.

So, when you increase home invasion burglaries, when you ... If you keep the number of burglaries

constant, but you move more of them to becoming home invasions, you will be significantly

raising the assault rate in the United States.

Trevor Burrus: Well, you can defend yourself with other things too.

In my hypothetical, taking guns away, you can defend yourself with ... You could have

home security, you can have a machete, you can have a big dog ... [00:26:30] I mean,

it's -

David Kopel: Yeah.

Okay, great.

Trevor Burrus: Should we be comparing guns to big dogs?

I mean, other forms of security, if we made all guns disappear ... So, now the criminals

just have knives, but we have big dogs ... I mean, other ways of protecting [crosstalk

00:26:42] ourselves -

David Kopel: I've had a big dog, and she would certainly leap up to joyfully greet the burglar.

Trevor Burrus: Put bars on your window, then.

David Kopel: Well, I didn't train my big dog to be a man-killing machine.

You can't train dogs to do that.

That [00:27:00] they will ... Yes, when you say, "Attack," and they will go at it, and

they'll do something.

They have very good genetic skills to do, which is just rip somebody's throat out and

then try to kill 'em.

Now, you tell me that we're gonna be safer when, instead of the gun, which sits in its

safe or the bedside drawer completely inert and has no will of it's own, and will never

get up and walk around and attack somebody on it's own ... We wanna have people saying,

"Well, instead of a gun for defense, you should [00:27:30] have dogs that are trained to attack

and kill strangers."

I don't ... I think -

Trevor Burrus: Well, I mean, there's a variety of home security options available.

I take your point on dogs, but you can get a security system, right?

You can -

David Kopel: [crosstalk 00:27:42] Oh yeah.

You can get a security system, and the security system will, when the burglar comes in, automatically

notify somebody in Northfield, Minnesota or some place, and then, the people in Northfield,

Minnesota will call the police, and then the police will send somebody with a gun [00:28:00]

to see.

Trevor Burrus: But a trained person.

David Kopel: People who ... You can do training on your own.

Trevor Burrus: But isn't it really hard for an individual person to actually use a gun

defensively - I mean, are they gonna freak out?

The guns will be taken from them by the criminal and used against ... I mean, cops go through

a police academy, basically almost military-style training, and a normal person with a gun does

not go through that.

So, I've heard that criminals are more likely to take a gun from someone and use it against

them if they use it defensively.

David Kopel: Well, if you're still hearing that, you should just trust [00:28:30] whoever

you're hearing it from because Gary Kleck, a professor at Florida State University School

of Criminology ... His book on gun data point-blank won the American Society of Criminology's

award for the best criminology book in a three-year period.

And Kleck studied the data on that, which comes mainly from the National Crime Victimization

Survey, conducted by the Census Bureau and the Department of Justice.

And they [00:29:00] found that the data showed the take-aways are extremely rare, well under

one percent of defensive gun uses.

And in fact, take-aways from the criminal actually happen more often than take-aways

from the defender.

But they met ... Of course you're right, I represent law enforcement all the time in

the courts.

And of course, law enforcement on the whole, is better trained in firearms than the average

citizen.

So, [00:29:30] you can look at that ... One of the ... Guy form Wisconsin tried to murder

the republicans at baseball practice this summer.

The heroic DC capital police officer ... She shot the criminal at a pretty long range with

a handgun.

That was a very impressive shot.

She was really good, and presumably, well-trained.

And I would bet ... It wouldn't surprise [00:30:00] me if she was one of those officers who, besides

doing the mandatory training, spends a lot of optional time in skills practice.

For a home invasion, you're not in that kind of complicated or difficult-shot scenario.

The vast majority of defensive gun uses are at a distance of ten feet or less, so ... And

you're also not in a situation where ... Well, okay.

Police officer going into, say, a home he's never been into before [00:30:30] where there's

a domestic violence call to 911.

He goes in, he doesn't know who's there, who's the good guy, who's the bad guy, how those

alliances might shift ... That's a very complicated situation for which it's really important

to have a lot of good training and not just with the firearms side of that.

But in contrast, when you're defending yourself against two guys who just kicked down your

front door, it's fairly clear who the good guys are and who the bad guys are, and of

the necessity [00:31:00] for the immediate use of defensive course.

Trevor Burrus: But if you have a gun in your house ... We were talking about the dog analogy.

But if you have a gun in your house and ... Most guns are not gonna be used defensively, I

would imagine.

David Kopel: I've never used my fire extinguisher defensively either.

I have fire extinguishers all over the house, and the house has never caught on fire.

Trevor Burrus: But isn't having a gun in the house, doing that even just more dangerous

because of accidents, because of its ability to be taken by your children ... I mean, [00:31:30]

we hear all the time that it is more likely to hurt someone you love, or you, or be used

in a suicide or something than to stop a crime.

David Kopel: Well, it depends on how the gun is stored.

You know?

If you happen to live in a home with a violent alcoholic who's got a criminal record, then

probably bringing a gun into the house and leaving it accessible to that guy may well

be raising the risks.

On the other hand, if you leave that guy [00:32:00] and move out on your own, and get a gun in

your own home in case he comes over and decides he wants to kill you now that you've left,

you're much safer having that firearm for defense.

The issue of children and accidents is something that has been very successfully addressed

by education and safe storage practices, which definitely vary from family to family based

on the circumstances.

You know?

The number of fatal gun accidents in this [00:32:30] country per capita since the early

1970's has fallen by 88 percent overall.

And for children, that is ages zero to 14, it's fallen by 92 percent.

And that's come at a time when we've just about doubled the number of guns in this country.

So, rising gun ownership, more exposure to guns, as they say in the literature, has been

consistent with dramatically falling accident rates.

Trevor Burrus: But we also have pretty concentrated [00:33:00] gun ownership.

I mean, if we doubled the gun ownership and also ... Most people own multiple guns, correct?

It's less than half the households in America own guns, or about half.

David Kopel: Pretty ... About ... Yeah, it depends on the surveys, and it also depends

on, as you said, on households.

If dad owns four guns, then is mom a gun-owner too?

If she has access to 'em and uses 'em sometimes, maybe.

So, when you're trying to count gun-owners, that's the [00:33:30] complexity.

But depending on the surveys, you get about a third to a half of American households owning

guns, and of course, they're probably ... That may be an underestimate since there are plenty

of gun owners who are not really interested in self-disclosing to a stranger on the telephone.

Trevor Burrus: So, we have gun deaths, we have violence in America ... It doesn't look

like it does in western Europe.

There are a lot of guns here.

There are fewer guns in other countries.

[00:34:00] And everyone keeps saying ... People on the gun-rights side keep saying, "Guns

are not the problem," when that seems to be the obvious difference here between -

David Kopel: Well, sure.

Sure.

Yeah, you're right.

It's not like western Europe, and thank God.

And that's ... One of the reasons it's not is because we have guns in this country.

Trevor Burrus: Well, why is it ... Why are we ... Are we more violent here?

David Kopel: No.

We're ... Over the law ... Over the historical term, we're considerably less violent.

Try being a Jewish guy walking around Paris, Berlin with a [00:34:30] yarlmuke.

Try being a woman wearing a short skirt in Gothenburg, Scotland.

I'm sorry.

Gothenburg, Sweden.

There are a rising amount of gang, impunity, groups of thugs who go around freely attacking

Jews, women, and others in western Europe.

And the governments of western Europe tell you, "Oh, well you can't have a gun to protect

yourself [00:35:00] in that kind of situation.

And by the way, if you criticize the people who are doing this, then we'll persecute you

for hate speech or ... Cause you're supposedly prejudiced cause you don't like gangs of immigrant

criminals beating people up.

Or sometimes, not immigrants, sometimes children of previous immigrants ...

And the ... Let's look at the last 70 years of homicide in western [00:35:30] Europe.

Because they had gun control stemming from their historic distrust of the people, which

is why this country was founded on different principles ... Because they had gun control,

for example, when the Nazis came into France and Belgium and took it over, they were able

to confiscate all the weapons because there were registration lists of guns.

And so, the Nazis vacuumed up everything they could.

In eastern Europe, after Operation Barbarossa started [00:36:00] on June 22, 1941, and Germany

invaded eastern Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, Belarus, all of which were, at the

time, puppet colonies of Stalin, and then of course, they went into Russia itself ... In

that first year, a million people died in mass shootings.

The Germans sent around the Einsatzgruppen, just a few thousand specially-trained killers

to [00:36:30] go from small town to small town and, one town at a time, march the Jews

and the gypsies, also known as the Roma ... Marched the Jews and the Roma out of town, line 'em

up, shoot 'em all, move onto the next town.

So, we had a million people killed in mass shootings in Europe in this -

Trevor Burrus: Seems like a really strange definition of mass shooting.

David Kopel: Well, when you're shooting a bunch of people at once, I'd call that a mass

shooting.

This [crosstalk 00:36:56] wasn't warfare.

This was not the Soviet tanks [00:37:00] against the Russian tanks against the German tanks.

When you have 12 people who use guns to murder 300 people, I'll call that a mass shooting.

Trevor Burrus: But it's the government.

I mean, it's the Nazis -

David Kopel: Well, yeah.

Trevor Burrus: It seems like ... To use a black swan event in world history, like Nazi

Germany, which is arguably the craziest thing that's ever happened interesting he history

of the world, that seems kind of a strange justification for -

David Kopel: Well, okay.

First of all, [00:37:30] genocide isn't a black swan event in this world.

You've ... It happened in Rwanda with machetes under the Bill Clinton administration.

Sort of the foundational genocide for the 20th century was what the Turks did to the

Armenians during World War I.

And by the way, I've written for National Review online among others.

To the extent that Armenians, in that situation, were able to get guns for defense, they significantly

saved lives.

And so did the Jews [00:38:00] in eastern Poland where it's more marshy and forested,

in France in the resistance ... To the extent that Jews were able to get a hold of guns,

they were able to save a significant amount of lives.

And genocide certainly didn't end when Hitler died.

It's continued under Communist regimes globally.

I'm not sure what Robert Mugabe did in Zimbabwe counts as genocide, but it certainly counts

as mass murder.

Professor R.J.

Rummel, [00:38:30] at the University of Hawaii did a book in the early 1990's estimating

the numbers of deaths by government in this past century, and this was just up to the

early 90's.

And he isn't counting warfare, and nor was he counting warfare in which, instead of the

soldiers being killed, maybe bombing a town cause there's a military base there, but you

kill a lot of civilians too.

He wasn't counting those.

He was only counting the intentional murders by governments.

And it's [00:39:00] about a hundred million, perhaps more, over the course of the century.

So, mass murder by government has never been more common than it has been in the last century.

Trevor Burrus: Well, it seems to make sense to have a different theory of gun ownership

that varies based on the quality of your government.

I mean, that would ... I think even gun control advocates would say, "Yes.

If you live in a very dangerous place, and you have a very dangerous government, I am

all for [00:39:30] gun ownership."

But if you have a stable, western democracy where you can call the police, and you don't

have to resort to your own sort of self-help methods, it's a very different question.

David Kopel: Well, it's an arrogant, historically, thing to assume that because your government's

pretty nice at one time that it's gonna be so great in the future.

Germany, in 1900, was one of the most tolerant countries in the world for Jews.

It had a well-functioning democracy and a free press.

And [00:40:00] so, did you need guns to resist the government in Germany in 1930?

Absolutely not.

But by the time you did, when Hitler took over in 1933, it was a little late to say,

"Oh, well, Mr. Hitler, now that you're a Jew-hating fanatic and setting up a totalitarian dictatorship,

at this point we think we'd like to apply for some permits to own guns."

It's too late at that point, and if the guns are registered, you can bet that the government

will vacuum 'em up from anybody with the slightest [00:40:30] suspicion of being a free thinker

or not subservient to the totalitarian boot.

And it was the German government ... The Nazi government actually didn't even need to change

its gun laws until 1938.

They found the Weimar Republic's gun registration and licensing laws were quite sufficient to

take guns away from the Jews, the socialists, people who believed in democracy, and limit

gun ownership solely to people who were [00:41:00] trusted to be subservient tools of the party.

Trevor Burrus: So, we have a gun violence problem in America.

We have mass shootings, which might be going up in ... One could happen between when this

episode comes out, and like I said, a lot of people would just be like, "Well, it's

another one."

Are we just saying, "Throw your hands up in the air, and there's nothing we can do about

this."

We can't make people wait or even try something out, a waiting period, or extended background

checks, or better [00:41:30] sharing of information, minimal health.

Are we just saying that there's nothing we can do to stop these people from getting guns,

and we just have to say, "Well, that's how America works."

David Kopel: No, there are lots of things we can do, and we should be doing them.

And we might've started doing 'em sooner if so much of the political air supply wasn't

being sucked up by the gun-ban lobby, which is something that gets a lot of political

attention, and a lot of media attention, and distracts from things that [00:42:00] are

a lot more boring.

For example, talking in DC, or probably anywhere in this country about the level of funding

for probation and parole services, and how many cases an average probation or parole

officer has to work.

And then, if they do wanna revoke parole for somebody for bad behavior, is there the jail

capacity to take them, or do they have to keep saying, "Well, it's too bad you did that,

and you really should get revoked, [00:42:30] but there's no room at the jail, which is

at 137 percent of capacity already.

So, we're not gonna do anything about that."

Secondly, in terms of mass shootings, not all, but a very large number of mass shooters

have severe mental health problems.

And in fact, the mass shootings issue sort of detracts from the much larger issue of

homicide in general.

About a fifth of people in state [00:43:00] prisons for homicide convictions have serious

mental health problems, and people who have mental health problems in this country often

don't get the help they need.

And one thing is important to say.

There are studies that go back and forth about whether people with mental illness, broadly

defined, are more likely to commit crimes or not.

And there's a lot of good evidence that [00:43:30] comes down somewhat on the not side, but even

the people who would advocate for that would say, "Yes, that is true in general."

But at an extreme end, when you've got serious schizophrenia, there really is a much-increased

risk for homicide.

Now, most people with serious schizophrenia don't commit homicide, not even close.

In fact, the biggest crime problem related to mental health is people with mental illness

are much more likely to be victimized [00:44:00] by crime.

So, when you're helping people with mental illnesses, you're really preventing crime

in a lot of ways, not necessarily the person's dangerous, but they might be able to be more

situationally aware, and so not get victimized.

But at the mass shooting level, you've got a lot of mental illness.

This country now has the same number of mental health treatment beds per capita [00:44:30]

as we did in 1850.

This is a terrible shortage, and it's one of the things the government should be spending

more on, and be more active in, in providing this kind of social safety net.

One of my friends from grade school later developed ... Carolyn Dobbins, she wrote a

book, "What a Life Can Be."

She got sever schizo-affective disorder, and she's doing fine.

She's [00:45:00] actually a ... She got a degree in psychology and is a practicing psychologist,

but she's had things in her life where she's said, "I know I'm going downhill.

I'm de-compressing," is the official term.

"I'm not psychotic yet, but I've been there before, and I know I'm on the way."

And she walks into a mental health facility and they say, "Sorry, you're not crazy enough

yet.

Come back in a few days."

Well, Carolyn's very non-violent person who [00:45:30] would never hurt anyone, so it

was ... Getting turned away like that was bad for her, but it didn't create any risk

of crime to society.

But there's other cases where it can.

And if we were more proactive in helping people who want treatment, that would be a tremendous

change we could make in this country to increase safety, both for the people who need the treatment

and for everyone else.

Trevor Burrus: But in terms of banning something like ... We were talking about some of the

tools of mass shooters, bump stocks ... Does that ... [00:46:00] Is that okay to ban a

bump stock?

David Kopel: Well, I just testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee this morning,

and said that something that makes a normal gun fire as fast as a machine gun should be

regulated like a machine gun, and I don't think that would violate the Second Amendment,

at least as construed by the Supreme Court in the Heller case, which more or less said

machine guns aren't a part of the Second Amendment right.

Bump stocks [00:46:30] are sort of novelty gimmicks that have been used by guys who just

wanna go to the shooting range and have fun shooting off a bunch of rounds fast, and ... You

know?

It's kind of an expensive waste of ammo in my thrifty view of things, but it's a harmless

activity.

And the Las Vegas crime was the first time the bump stock was ever used in a crime as

far as I know, but the potential is now there.

We know that [00:47:00] mass killers tend to study each other's techniques carefully

and copy them.

So, I think it would legitimate to regulate bump stocks at the same level as machine guns,

which means it's something you can possess, but there's this months-long federal registration

and tax process to go through, and you gotta submit fingerprints ... It's a big thing.

And so, yeah.

That ...

[00:47:30] And on the other hand, bump stocks don't have defensive utility.

They degrade the accuracy of a firearm, which would make it less-suitable for self-defense,

and certainly ... I don't think there's any state in the country that would allow hunting

with that.

I mean, you can't hunt with machine guns, in general.

So, presumably, you can't hunt with things that fire at the same rate as machine guns.

Trevor Burrus: What frustrates you most about the gun debate?

David Kopel: Well, it's sort of like the weather.

It's not the hate, it's the stupidity.

At least that's [00:48:00] part of it, is some of the media and some elected officials

are just so willfully ignorant of things.

I mean, you can obviously have policy differences, but when people think that things like the

Colt semi-automatic rifle that was brought to market in 1964 is a machine gun, that is

just actually not true.

And when people say, "Oh, you're more likely to have your gun taken away [00:48:30] than

to be able to use if for successful self-defense," I suppose that was kind of a bigoted thing

to say in 1962, but it might've matched somebody's intuition, and there wasn't any research on

that really.

But now that there is, when a lot of things have been settled, it's disappointing to see

how many things that have been factually disproven keep coming back.

I'd [00:49:00] say it's also disappointing to see how politically polarized things have

gotten.

I mean, one of the things that Michael Bloomberg and cohorts have been very successful at doing

is radicalizing the democratic party on this issue.

Sort of like the state that it got into around 1994, when I was voting for the Clinton gun

ban and then, since then, after losing a bunch of elections on the gun issue, they decided,

"Well maybe [00:49:30] it's okay for people to be moderate on this and still be members

of the party."

And now, it's gotten to be more extremist.

I mean, we have the problem of political polarization obviously on lots of other issues, but this

is certainly one of them.

In Congress, there's lots of ways where you can do reasonable things, but the problem

is so often the overreaching that goes on.

So I mean, Senator Feinstein's bill doesn't just ban bump stocks.

It has a very ... [00:50:00] Everything ... A provision that says, "Anything that functions

to accelerate the rate of fire of a semi-automatic firearm, which is just about all the gunsmithing

work you can do, like replacing one trigger with a better trigger that operates more smoothly.

And therefore, it takes one point one second to move the trigger instead of one point two

seconds.

Trevor Burrus: What about [crosstalk 00:50:23] firing a revolver?

Like, a Western?

Would that qualify, or does it have to be some sort of technical apparatus?

David Kopel: Well, it's [00:50:30] gotta be some physical thing, at least in this current

draft.

It can't be just actually knowing how to shoot a gun.

Guns in the right hands make the user, and the public as a whole, safer.

Guns in the wrong hands make things more dangerous for innocent people.

A sensible gun policy recognizes both of these truths, and the laws that are constitutional

and appropriate are the ones that attempt to disarm [00:51:00] dangerous people while

respecting, and ideally even enhancing the possession and caring of arms by law-abiding,

good persons.

Trevor Burrus: Thanks for listening.

This episode of Free Thoughts was produced by Tess Terrible and Evan Banks.

To learn more, visit us on the web at www.libertarianism.org.

For more infomation >> Free Thoughts, Ep. 220: Guns and Mass Shootings (with David B. Kopel) - Duration: 51:29.

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[FMV] Unfinished Story ( ゆとやま || YutoYama) - Duration: 3:10.

I remember talking in the halls

And we were scolded together

I don't know why even when we were being punished

I found it fun

After that day

We always

Stuck together like the Astro twins

You were me and I was you

You cried so much on the day before graduation

You held it in firmly since you're a guy

We couldn't say what we wanted

Just like that hot summer, goodbye

The label 'friend' is a

Label that I got to hate

The feelings that I've hidden

Still remains as a painful memory

The heartbreaking story that can't be defined by photos

A heartbreaking story

I'm sorry, summer

Now, goodbye

What do I say

We didn't have to play no games

I should've took that chance, I should've asked for you to stay

And it gets me down the unsaid words that still remain

The story ended without even starting

Your song on the last day of the school festival

The flickering summer sea

Our feelings that were precious because we were together

Like the deepening night sky, goodbye

The label 'friend' is a

Label that I got to hate

The feelings that I've hidden

Still remains as a painful memory

The photos that can't define our relationship

A heartbreaking story

I'm sorry, summer

Now, goodbye

Baby oh no oh oh

I'm sorry that this is a monologue

Oh, actually, I love you

If only our long-time hidden secrets were revealed

I would hold you in my arms

The label 'friend' is a

Label that I got to hate

The feelings that I've hidden

Still remains as a painful memory (Still remains as my painful memory)

The photos that can't define our relationship (Our relationship)

A heartbreaking story

I'm sorry, summer

Now, goodbye (Now, goodbye)

The label 'friend' is a (Now, goodbye)

Label that I got to hate (Now, goodbye)

A heartbreaking story (Label)

I'm sorry, summer (Label)

Now, goodbye

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