Fight breaks out over game of Monopoly, gunfire ensues

in news •  2 years ago 

I haven't played Monopoly in quite some time but I do recall getting into a huff when I was a kid when I would lose, which was most of the time. I look back fondly on the game but also see it not so much as a game of strategy but instead a game of chance.

The people in Oklahoma that decided to start an all out brawl which later resulted in shots fired felt differently and unfortunately, they were adults.


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This happened on Thanksgiving weekend of all times and was near Tulsa, Oklahoma. Having never been to Oklahoma I do not know what their gun laws are like but I would imagine since it is a very conservative state, that the gun laws are pretty relaxed. More relaxed than John Ronald Dewayne Armstrong was after the game of Monopoly (combined with heavy drinking of course) turned violent.

According to other family members the shouting turned into a physical fight and then later John pulled a handgun on his step-father and step-sister, who were apparently also playing the famous board game.

Now, while this is a crazy story... why am I featuring it on my channel where I normally talk about how irresponsible the media is in reporting the news? It is because this story wouldn't have gained any traction if it wasn't for the fact that the usual suspects in the media can turn it into a gun control issue. Newsweek is where I first discovered this story and if you bother to read it (I encourage you not to) you will find that they spend very little time talking about the actual incident but instead spend 2/3 of the article focusing on aspects of "gun control" that need to be improved. Basically it is a political piece that wasn't at all concerned about the people involved but instead was using it, as the media does, to try to further some sort of political agenda.

One thing that they don't like to mention in the headlines was that even though a shot was fired intentionally into the ground, no one was injured and it was that shot that actually ended the fracas.


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Another funny aspect about this apparently rage-inducing yet still one of the most popular tabletop games of all time is that a survey was one done where it was shown that nearly half of all American households have banned Monopoly from being played during "game nights" or other family gatherings because of the fights that the game causes.

I always felt like Monopoly depended largely on who was lucky enough to land on certain properties on their first time around the board. I also always thought that Boardwalk and Park Place were overrated as properties and the higher priced properties that are just before them are the real gold mines. I don't really know. I don't think I have ever played a game of Monopoly to completion because it is pretty easy to determine relatively early on who is going to win.

Why play rage-inducing games with family members when you can just go online and play literally anything and get chewed out by a teenager for not being good enough at it?


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It's worse than Uno I see

I know you are into Twitter so I'll regale you of some Tweets where the creators or UNO were clarifying the rules in a Twitter exchange and you'd think they would know the rules better than anyone. The players arguing with Uno were getting very heated and even threatened the owners of the game because "they are wrong!"

Ahhh, Thanksgiving, always bringing people together, especially family…lol.

Plus, I think most of the media has a pandemic sized case of hoplophobia (Fear of Firearms). They seem to think that firearms walk, talk and shoot by themselves.

And Hollywood doesn't help. They recklessly portray firearm incompetence regularly. They break the following rules all the time:

  • Trigger discipline .
    -- (keeping your finger off the trigger until you're ready to fire).
  • Keep the weapon pointed down range.
    -- Keep the weapon pointed in a safe direction, don't point it at anything you don't want to kill.
  • Impulse control
    -- De-escalation techniques, and if you have to shoot, check your targets, check your background). Hollywood is always shooting up everything, because they always go to the gun first, and there's an incredible amount of collateral damage for effect. And Hollywood is filled with hoplophobes…they hate guns, but they love profiting from gun violence…lol.

The accidental discharges that I have seen, most of the time, it had to do with people resting their finger on the trigger when holding it.

Anyway, that said, I love Monopoly!

Hollywood is always shooting up everything

I was watching a rather silly movie from the 90's a few days ago and the police were shooting indiscriminately into a crowd with the hopes of hitting someone who wasn't even a dangerous fugitive. Of course they didn't actually hit anyone because it was rated PG but still... that is not how these situations would be handled ever.

I've never heard of hoplophobia... that's a good one!