I'm not sure I agree with this.I mean, 2nd Amendment advocates have done nothing but compromise on the issue of gun control,
I'm not sure I agree with this.I mean, 2nd Amendment advocates have done nothing but compromise on the issue of gun control,
What effect (quantitatively, but obviously roughly) would you expect a ban on gun sales to the public to have on the availability of guns to gangs?
Why should I care?
Not by me.Look through the last few pages or so and you'll see I've made every effort to engage with people respectfully on this issue and despite that, I was still met with insults and mockery.
I have acknowledged/mentioned this issue before... with no acknowledgment from you... look:Well it's kinda hard to have an actual discussion when I've tried and get no reciprocation from anyone else. Just look at the ghost gun point I made.
When I posted this, I was talking about a documentary I saw that discussed "ghost guns", something I had never heard of before then. Since that time I have taken ghost guns into account when formulating my positions on gun regulation.Last thing I need to mention while we're on this... I saw an informative documentary last night discussing counterfeit gun making, which seems to be a much bigger industry than I'd realized. I readily admit this creates a flaw in the way I imagined manufacturer liability working... I will have to think about how this affects my position a little more.![]()
Please say that you are joking/engaging in hyperbole about this. I know that this issue is important to you and you are frustrated about people's views on the topic,but... just please take this back, or confirm that this is tongue in cheekI know I would. Right now I'm a law abiding citizen, but ban guns and I'll become a criminal real quick. Not for the money though, I'd do it because I would want to do my part to sabotage gun control efforts and increase gun violence to make the gun control crowd look foolish.
Yeah yeah we get it, you didn't actually say the things you said right here.No, there isn't. In fact, that's one of the main criticisms of our law enforcement right now. When people do openly say the things that I'm saying, law enforcement doesn't do anything about it and then scratch their heads in puzzlement wondering "how could we have stopped this?" when some of the people saying these things actually make good on their threats.
I just want to know what the plan is for those who refuse to comply with a gun confiscation order? I mean, the gun control crowd talks about banning them like that's the only thing they need to do, but they forget that it doesn't matter what laws you get passed if you can't realistically enforce those laws. Just look at what happened in Connecticut after Sandy Hook. Connecticut passed a law that said anyone with an AR-15 had to have it registered by a certain date or it would be confiscated and the owner would be charged with a felony. The designated date came and went, and an estimated 20,000 to 100,000 AR-15 owners in the state refused to register their rifles. What did the state do about it? Nothing. No confiscations, no charges, no arrests. Gun owners in Connecticut basically dared the government to "come and take them" and the state government shied away from a potential showdown with their tails between their legs. And because of that, they now have a useless gun control law because the state has shown that they don't have the political will or backbone to enforce it.
And that's just one state we are talking about here. If one state can't even enforce a simple registration law, what makes anyone think a nationwide ban and confiscation would meet with any kind of success? So again I ask the gun control crowd: Assuming you finally get all the laws you want and the Supreme Court upholds them, how exactly do you plan on enforcing your gun control laws? You can't arrest gun owners because our prisons are overcrowded as it is. You can't freeze their assets and wait them out because the impact of cutting millions of people off from the economy would be absolutely disastrous for the entire country, not just gun owners. You can't send the police door-to-door because 1. there simply aren't enough even if you deployed every local, state, and federal law enforcement agent and 2. once a few thousand officers take two to the chest trying to confiscate guns, I guarantee they are going to either refuse to do further confiscations or walk off the job altogether. You can't use the military because using the military for law enforcement is a legal no-no. Even the National Guard can only be used for riot control. You can't hire mercenaries because that's also illegal both in US and international law. You can't shut down the gun manufacturers because there's the chance they will just move their business elsewhere and start refusing to supply our military and police with firearms and ammunition. They have plenty of other customers willing to buy their products elsewhere in the world.
So what's the plan? How do you enforce gun laws in the US in a way that doesn't cause some kind of civil strife/unrest? And if there is no easy or peaceful way to do it, then the gun control crowd has to ask themselves if they really think their peace of mind about gun violence is really worth the path that the government would have to go down in order to enforce the law.
Well, let's have society try to take some of your rights away and we'll see how "bonkers" you get.
I mean, 2nd Amendment advocates have done nothing but compromise on the issue of gun control, but the anti-gun crowd refuses to do the same. And since I know someone is going to try to lie and say 2nd Amendment advocates haven't compromised I'll list just a few compromises for you: The National Firearms Act of 1934, universal background checks for every purchase (something no other consumer good requires), allowing certain accessories to be banned, and countless state-level restrictions on the purchase, trading, storage, etc. of firearms. All those compromises and the anti-gun crowd just keeps taking more and more.
Because I didn't say their 1st Amendment rights should be taken away. I'm still waiting for someone to quote where I said that. I want the exact post with the exact wording. Keep in mind, I know you think this is going to be a softball that I'm tossing you, but it's not going to be the "gotcha!" moment you think it will. And just because I'm a bit paranoid, I even took a screenshot of the post already just in case a certain moderator that I know has a grudge with me tries to edit the post to make it look like I said something I didn't.
Well, you are free to quote the post where I said it. Come on man, I'd think you'd jump at the opportunity to shut me up. But just like the 1st Amendment thing, you keep saying I said something but can't quite seem to produce the post where I said it when I ask you to back up your claim.
I'm not sure I agree with this
"Defending my 2nd Amendment right includes intentionally depriving others of their right to life" is most definitely not what the constitution means. Jesus.
I have acknowledged/mentioned this issue before... with no acknowledgment from you... look:
Yeah yeah we get it, you didn't actually say the things you said right here.
When I posted this, I was talking about a documentary I saw that discussed "ghost guns", something I had never heard of before then. Since that time I have taken ghost guns into account when formulating my positions on gun regulation.
Please say that you are joking/engaging in hyperbole about this. I know that this issue is important to you and you are frustrated about people's views on the topic,but... just please take this back, or confirm that this is tongue in cheek. I'll leave it at that.
Nah, I won't be shooting anyone. I'm just going to help facilitate those who do want to shoot people though. If I don't get to have my rights, you don't get to have your peaceful society.
Like there aren't already gun cartels...So I take it you have never heard of moonshiners or drug cartels then? Make guns illegal and the legit gun makers today become the gun cartels of tomorrow.
It seems that the current emphasis is on distracted driving and figuring out how to deal with impaired driving as it relates to cannabis use, when that becomes legal.It was a few decades ago. There's a been a very long term and high visibility government campaign against it that has changed the culture, coupled with fairly universally accepted random roadside breath testing points with no right of refusal. I was shocked how laissez faire Canadians and Americans were about drink driving, given I'm accustomed to carefully counting my beers and mentally calculating BAC on nights out where I've driven.
BS, the NRA and people like you have fought every piece of gun legislation at every turn. Losing those fights can't be called compromise.That doesn't stop it from being true. Every piece of gun legislation that imposes any kind of restriction on gun ownership represents a compromise 2nd Amendment advocates have made.
Why should I care? Anti-gun people already think all gun owners are evil just for merely owning a gun so why not embrace it? Stanford Prison Experiment: people will start to act in accordance with how they are treated. Treat me like I'm evil, then I'm going to start being evil.
My point is that the ghost gun issue has been acknowledged/recognized by someone who tends to disagree with you on some of the overall gun regulation issues. Again, how ghost guns will be addressed should be part of the consideration on new gun regulation and enforcement. However, I don't accept the reasoning/implication that because ghost guns are a thing, that any new regulatory measures are pointless or impossible.I miss posts. It happens.
No Commodore. No, I'm not. If that's the hill you wanna die on, fine. "I'll leave it at that" was what I said, and what I meant.Or what? You gonna drop an anonymous tip to the FBI?
It's pretty easy to draw the parallels when "there is no reason for long pointy kitchen knives" is apparently, according to snopes, a real thing.
Should the Black Panther Party have been legally allowed to shoot and kill police on sight during the 60s under the 2nd Amendment? I certainly think so, they were a well-regulated militia that bore arms to defend their community against a tyrannical government. What do you think?
while publicly stating that you're making a secret indoor gun range?
Your right to take life doesn't supersede someone's right to not have their life taken.