Posted on Jun 6, 2022
This is how handguns and assault weapons affect the human body
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Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 5
MSG Roy Cheever
Naw. At this point, most people know better and the ones who don’t pay as much attention. Well, even they are getting seeing how this working.
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Yes keep telling everybody! All this hate and coaxing and encouraging people on the edge to do more wrong and harm. The summer riots in 2020, the release of those arrested almost immediately, so they could rejoin the riots. Oh yeah protests with Billions of dollars in damage and many lives. And then all the George Soros backed A G’s in the blue cities. That “no bail” (even after several arrests) put criminals who police arrested right back on the steet to offend again.
No, this is all a deflection from all the disasters Biden, Palouse and Schumer have caused. Oh yea and it’s all Putins fault again. And abortions.
I think most people know better than the same propaganda you keep posting Chip.
No, this is all a deflection from all the disasters Biden, Palouse and Schumer have caused. Oh yea and it’s all Putins fault again. And abortions.
I think most people know better than the same propaganda you keep posting Chip.
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SGM (Join to see)
MSG Roy Cheever how quickly people forget about the government condoning, permitting, and encouraging rioting. Sorry, but I need rapid-fire, quick reloading, and fatal ballistics to protect against swarms of angry attackers who come to my neighborhood.
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MSG Roy Cheever
Indeed! Like Joe say’s them fully semi automatic high power 9mm ones!?!?SGM (Join to see) ahahaha
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."The impact on those who surround victims of gun violence
Families. Witnesses. Frontline workers.
The effect of a shooting can reverberate throughout a community, something Drs. Brown, Sakran and Savitsky have experienced firsthand in their decades-long careers.
"It's hard to have to go into those waiting rooms, and to talk to those moms and dads, and to realize that what I'm about to do — when we're not able to save a patient — is deliver the worst news that any parents or loved one could hear," Sakran said. "It's the worst part of my job."
Continual support of those families is essential, he said.
Sakran referenced the trauma faced by witnesses, such as Miah Cerrillo, an 11-year-old who survived the Uvalde, Texas school shooting by smearing herself in her classmate's blood to play dead.
The doctors have also had to grapple with the impact treating trauma has had on themselves.
"It can be desensitizing," Brown said. "I think because we're trying to protect ourselves from the emotional toll, and the moral injury that's associated with treating patients every day is very difficult.
"I think we all try to remember that it's a human being that we're taking care of. And just in doing so, that hurts us too," he said.
An important part of the job is finding ways to offset the bad, Savitsky said.
"You need to make a conscious effort to find balance in your life, find other ways of restoring yourself to a good place mentally to allow you to just come in and be a very positive force and be empathetic and provide the compassion and care that every one of these patients requires, because it is hard seeing a lot the pain and suffering over the years and not have it just affect you as a person," he said.
But, the pride that comes with saving lives is immeasurable.
"When you see a lifetime saved, it's an amazing reward to see somebody bounce back and begin anew with a second chance," Brown said."...
..."The impact on those who surround victims of gun violence
Families. Witnesses. Frontline workers.
The effect of a shooting can reverberate throughout a community, something Drs. Brown, Sakran and Savitsky have experienced firsthand in their decades-long careers.
"It's hard to have to go into those waiting rooms, and to talk to those moms and dads, and to realize that what I'm about to do — when we're not able to save a patient — is deliver the worst news that any parents or loved one could hear," Sakran said. "It's the worst part of my job."
Continual support of those families is essential, he said.
Sakran referenced the trauma faced by witnesses, such as Miah Cerrillo, an 11-year-old who survived the Uvalde, Texas school shooting by smearing herself in her classmate's blood to play dead.
The doctors have also had to grapple with the impact treating trauma has had on themselves.
"It can be desensitizing," Brown said. "I think because we're trying to protect ourselves from the emotional toll, and the moral injury that's associated with treating patients every day is very difficult.
"I think we all try to remember that it's a human being that we're taking care of. And just in doing so, that hurts us too," he said.
An important part of the job is finding ways to offset the bad, Savitsky said.
"You need to make a conscious effort to find balance in your life, find other ways of restoring yourself to a good place mentally to allow you to just come in and be a very positive force and be empathetic and provide the compassion and care that every one of these patients requires, because it is hard seeing a lot the pain and suffering over the years and not have it just affect you as a person," he said.
But, the pride that comes with saving lives is immeasurable.
"When you see a lifetime saved, it's an amazing reward to see somebody bounce back and begin anew with a second chance," Brown said."...
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