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From Backwoods Home Magazine: 2nd Amendment, the Bill of Rights...long read, but worth it


ZoEd

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It doesn't I'm just providing pushback against invoking the divine in legislative matters, I know there are some variants of Christianity that present the Constitution as sacred writ...I do not.

You're questioning the very foundation of the country. The thing that while not sacred is supposedly the ideals we send our countrymen to DIE to uphold and that many died to create. It's not sacred but its the next best thing, and it certainly rises well above "legislative matters".

---------- Post added January-17th-2013 at 08:04 PM ----------

You're asking me to cry about some people not being able to take target practice in exchange for crazies not being able to get their hands on these guns?

So we just ban guns as mass murderers move down the list and find new favorites? Do we ban every rifle of that caliber? All the black and scary looking ones? Are Saiga 223's ok?

I think it might be easier to simply ban/restrict high capacity magazines so that suddenly the AR15, and whatever other rifle a sicko gets his hands on, can't take out so many people so easily. Gun manufacturers are just going to make different rifles to get around any specific rifle ban.

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You're questioning the very foundation of the country.

......and? Remember, I'm not a patriot.

The thing that while not sacred is supposedly the ideals we send our countrymen to DIE to uphold and that many died to create.

That's part of my concern.

It's not sacred but its the next best thing, and it certainly rises well above "legislative matters".

It is the foundation of our laws to be sure, and as such it is important law, but it is law not sacred and if it is not sacred then it should not be treated as if it is sacred, i.e. inerrant or infallible.

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I know a TON of people who own the Bushmaster AR15, they are recreational shooters who like to target practice with them and compete in tactical type competitions where rapid reloading and engaging multiple targets in real world scenarios. How is banning assult rifles from folks like this, many of which are either prior law enforcement or military, preventing "mass killings?

My point is and up to this point it's went totally unaddressed by the pro ban supporters, how will these restrictions and bans be enforced, applied and prosecuted? The INTENT is to prevent someone from going into theater and simply mowing people down with "assault" rifles with high capacity magazines but will it stop there? What's next? Do you have any idea how easy it is to convert some of these semi-automatic weapons to full auto? Do you have any idea how easy it is for just about anyone to modify a weapon to hold more rounds? Will it stop there? Define assault rifle. Anyone?

Most of us will say M16, AR's, AK's and anything fully automatic and by God I can see that. BUT, how will the legislation define "assault" rifles. That's the area of contention for the not so crazy gun nuts out there. We've seen how the gov't conducts business on a regular basis and it's oozing with corruption and greed. Someone said the gun lobbyists are paying off the politicians! Well no ****! So are the pharmacutical and oil companies, banks and every other special interest group that has to money to do so! Lol, really? Only the "gun lobbyists" are shady.

Some peoples children.

Exactly. The minute someone who has experience or owns guns considered for ban - actually gives alternatives for what they are used for rather than the infinitesimal percent that are used in harming people- those owners are labeled such well thought out insults as "selfish".

I always thought the goal of the government was to protect minority viewpoints...particularly when those view points - those of law abiding citizens have valid points and are often operating with more rational facts than those whose exposure to firearms and their ownership process is limited or nonexistent.

I live in CT. My mother has taught in the Newton School System (albeit at a different elementary school), what happened is horrific- and tragic. CT also has some of the tougher regulations on gun ownership in the country...and it remains as usual that if the person involved had followed the laws...this wouldn't have happened.

Executive orders for placebo like actions to quell the majority are a dangerous precedent- and that hardly makes me a doomsdayer or even on a more superficial level selfish. The assault rifle designation is vague enough and broad enough to be expanded almost at will once the road has been started down. We continue to pass legislation in this country (and these last 10 years or so - alarmingly bypassing the Congress to do so) with a vision that isn't much more than continually slowing down for the slowest members of our herd....and punishing the vast, vast, vast majority of responsible law abiding people.

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You're asking me to cry about some people not being able to take target practice in exchange for crazies not being able to get their hands on these guns?

The point is, to you and Bang, the VAST majority of people who own these types of firearms don't own them to commit mass murder. They're not "gun crazed" maniacs sitting in a dark room quietly plotting a revolt on our gov't either. It's conveinient that you two continue to demonize the weapons while completely ingnoring the real problem, the types of bat **** crazy people our society has created that carry out mass shootings. The sooner you can wrap your head around the fact these men were hell bent on getting attention or killing themselves in a "grand" way to get as much of it as possible. Take away the assault rifles, they'll find another way, a couple .45's with multiple mag's, shotguns with buckshot, the gun isn't the problem and if you keep believing that you're oblivious to what's going on in the real world.

Our young adults are growing up with no fear of reprecussions, immeresed in first shooter type games that desensitizes them to violence while diminishing their perception of the value of human life. They're ill prepared to the real world because of societies "it's okay, nice try Johnny, here's a trophy" way of thinking that when they find out it's not okay to be mediocre and they're not as tough as their alter ego on Call of Duty they decide to say **** it, I'm going to show these mother ****ers just how tough I am!

Tighten the loopholes, I have no reason to be concerned about being denied I'm a law abiding citizen. Make me wait an extra week, I'm fine with that. But banning weapons so you can pat yourself on the back for doing something while completely ignoring the cause of the problem to begin with? That's a GREAT idea! Let's perpetuate the problem! Blame the gun, not the idiot using it! BRILLIANT!

So, let me get this right, my son picks up a stick and smacks his sister upside the head with it. I cut down all the trees in my yard while completing ignoring my sons behavior because it was the stick that caused the damage to her skull, not my son who hit her with it. Makes complete since! Better yet, it's my gravel driveway, MULTIPLE opportunities to do more damage with all of them stones, he picks up a handful and PELTS her in the head! "Honey, we're going to have to pave the driveway, our son hit his sister in the head with a handful or rocks, we can't have all of them rocks our there where he can get his hands on them". Hmm, makes perfect sense! I think I get it now!

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No kidding.

the vast majority of them want to enforce current laws.

and then they vote for crooked politicians and corrupt organizations who hide legislation in other bills designed to cripple law enforcement's ability to do it.

They sure know what's best.

~Bang

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I always seems to me like the goalposts move a lot in these discussions.

If you suggest any gun control, it is presumed that you want to take away all Second Amendment rights and you don't care about the Constitution or you don't understand it.

If you get past that, the problem suddenly is that any law would be too complicated to implement.

If you get past that, the problem suddenly is that you have to definitively prove that your law will absolutely 100 percent prevent the exact incident that the person is talking about, otherwise it is just a "feel good" political measure.

If you get past that then you get slogans like "if you disarm the law abiding citizens then only criminals will have guns" (even though no one here is talking about disarming the law abiding citizens) or "why aren't we outlawing rocks?"

If you get past that, then you get "why aren't we addressing all other social issues first?"

And so on. It's really frustrating. A hell of a lot of people die every year from guns in this country. We have building codes, we register and require testing and licenses for drivers, we have reasonable limits on our free speech, etc. But when it comes to lethal weaponry, the most obviously dangerous thing there is, suddenly no government control or oversight is possible and the subject is politically taboo. It really is crazy.

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I always seems to me like the goalposts move a lot in these discussions.

If you suggest any gun control, it is presumed that you want to take away all Second Amendment rights and you don't care about the Constitution or you don't understand it.

If you get past that, the problem suddenly is that any law would be too complicated to implement.

If you get past that, the problem suddenly is that you have to definitively prove that your law will absolutely 100 percent prevent the exact incident that the person is talking about, otherwise it is just a "feel good" political measure.

If you get past that then you get slogans like "if you disarm the law abiding citizens then only criminals will have guns" (even though no one here is talking about disarming the law abiding citizens) or "why aren't we outlawing rocks?"

If you get past that, then you get "why aren't we addressing all other social issues first?"

And so on. It's really frustrating. A hell of a lot of people die every year from guns in this country. We have building codes, we register and require testing and licenses for drivers, we have reasonable limits on our free speech, etc. But when it comes to lethal weaponry, the most obviously dangerous thing there is, suddenly no government control or oversight is possible and the subject is politically taboo. It really is crazy.

It's all of these codes, licenses, requirements, regulations, red tape and hoop jumping that has people doubting the govt's ability to go about this the right damn way! Do you have any idea the amount of ridiculous bull**** I went through to get the power turned on to the house I bought? Given a list of documents, make the 30 min drive, oops! You need this, you have to go to this office and come back. You do that and guess what, oops! You forgot this and now you have to do that and oh by the way that's a $50 processing fee. So what happens is the intent is lost in the shuffle of the various agencies all choosing how to enforce or carry out the regulations and in the end it's all about money anyways so people just say **** it and circumvent the system because of the endless amount of paperwork, money and frustration.

Can you imagine an agency like the DMV being in charge of registration, licensing and enforcement? Holy ****! Some pissed off fat ***** will turn you away after a 6 hour wait because you signed in blue ink, not black!

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It doesn't I'm just providing pushback against invoking the divine in legislative matters, I know there are some variants of Christianity that present the Constitution as sacred writ...I do not.
It is the foundation of our laws to be sure, and as such it is important law, but it is law not sacred and if it is not sacred then it should not be treated as if it is sacred, i.e. inerrant or infallible.

I think I see your angle now. I got caught up in defending the Bill of Rights earlier and I missed your point entirely. At first I thought you had issue with the idea of God-given rights, but I think I see your point as something more subtle now.

Your point seems to be that our laws are not God's laws, and therefore they are fallible. On this point I would agree entirely.

I do think there is an important question of human rights here. I think people have certain rights. We used to think of these rights as God-given, but I do not feel it is necessarily theistic. We could perhaps substitute something like natural rights. I hope we would all agree that we have certain inalienable rights, and these we have merely by the virtue of being human, and not by some decree from the state. It is actually a very sticky question as to exactly what these rights are and where they come from, metaphysically speaking, but I think we should begin with the assumption of inalienable human rights.

Now we might debate what these right are, whether for instance we really do have a right to bear arms, or a right to privacy, or a right to property, but I would be very weary of somebody saying we have no rights. Certain human rights seem beyond debate, we all know what a human rights violation is, and we know this has nothing to do with the laws of the state, but is instead a fundamental moral issue.

Of course the Bill of Rights is not infallible (I, for one, worry about many rights I think we have that are nor listed, like the right to food and shelter, which is the point I was originally trying to make, but in hindsight I maybe should have saved it for another thread), but I think the idea of basic and inalienable human rights is essential. The Bill of Rights at least gives the people some leverage against the state in case their human rights are violated, and as such is something we should highly value and take very seriously.

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Can you imagine an agency like the DMV being in charge of registration, licensing and enforcement? Holy ****! Some pissed off fat ***** will turn you away after a 6 hour wait because you signed in blue ink, not black!

I have worked in the car business for 20 years. Everything is taxed, everything is registered. I have spent 1000% more time in lines at the DMV than ZoEd and everybody he knows, combined, exponentially. The implication that state employees are incompetent and obese, by nature, is ridiculous. The folks at my local DMV care more and work harder than any military recruiter, salesman goofball I've ever met. Stop hating on state employees!

Compared to the USAF, the DMV is a legend of efficiency.

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I thought the strongest argument made in the article was that of natural rights. The idea that everything we want to do under the sun is our right to do, unless it is specificaly limited or denied by law.

No one has ever wrote a law telling you how often you are allowed to breathe in a minute or how many push ups you can do, but we have decided we can limit how fast you can drive on a road... even though the right to travel is mostly unhindered. You can go wherever you want as long as it doesn't invade someone else's property rights (or you're on parole),

So, on the question of natural rights, we can ask... does man the animal have the right to defend himself against predator, prey, and threat? Sure, we say. Can he defend himself using tools at hand or must he use only his hands, feet and teeth? No, in a fight for life pick up that stick, throw that stone, sharpen that steel, invent fire if ya have to.

Well, what about guns? Can we use guns... Sure. No, wait! We've limited that. By passed decree we've declared that the use of guns have to be well regulated. So, we've decided we're allowed to regulate them. Maybe that means that only adults can use them sort of like alcohol. Maybe it means we have to register them like other tools we use, like cars. Maybe we need to pass a class or at least a test to operate them, again like cars. Or perhaps, it's there's that word militia which means there has to be more than one and there has to be a responsible supervising agent in the community.

So, we see in the Bill of Rights and in the very next Founding Father breath, the Militia Act, what was intended for the use of guns. The founding fathers certainly didn't forget what they agreed to between adopting the Second Ammendment and the passage of the Militia Act. They weren't dumb or absent minded. It's we who have twisted and contorted and tweedled to try to shape the writings into what we selfishly want.

But, if you want to go by what the founding fathers wanted... they were fairly clear... they wanted arms well-regulated for use in a militia (and to be solely used by draftable adults)

---------- Post added January-18th-2013 at 07:52 AM ----------

The point is, to you and Bang, the VAST majority of people who own these types of firearms don't own them to commit mass murder. They're not "gun crazed" maniacs sitting in a dark room quietly plotting a revolt on our gov't either.

Take that line of thinking and apply it to alcohol, marijuana, tobacco, and even cocaine. Yet, we restrict them by age or entirely despite the fact that the vast number of teens who drink at parties aren't planning to drive drunk and kill someone. Laws like drinking laws or gun laws are written to protect us against the worst situation. Likewise, the vast majority of adults who drink beer do not drive drunk. Should we then abolish drunk driving laws or age limits because it stigmitizes alcohol.

Most gun owners are responsible (even the ones who allow their guns to be stolen by the irresponsible) that doesn't mean we shouldn't try to provide reasonable precautions against a very real danger and only a fool would argue that guns could not present very real danger. And that, you and most conservatives are not.

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I think I see your angle now. I got caught up in defending the Bill of Rights earlier and I missed your point entirely. At first I thought you had issue with the idea of God-given rights, but I think I see your point as something more subtle now.

Your point seems to be that our laws are not God's laws, and therefore they are fallible. On this point I would agree entirely.

Now you're tracking with me. :D

I do think there is an important question of human rights here. I think people have certain rights. We used to think of these rights as God-given, but I do not feel it is necessarily theistic. We could perhaps substitute something like natural rights. I hope we would all agree that we have certain inalienable rights, and these we have merely by the virtue of being human, and not by some decree from the state. It is actually a very sticky question as to exactly what these rights are and where they come from, metaphysically speaking, but I think we should begin with the assumption of inalienable human rights.

With you all the way here, and you're right trying to decide which of these rights are the God given ones and as such unalienable is tricky indeed, for instance the right to private property as something that can be owned seems to run counter to the jubilee laws which every 40 years was to return land property to the family line it was originally given to by the divine.

Of course the Bill of Rights is not infallible (I, for one, worry about many rights I think we have that are nor listed, like the right to food and shelter, which is the point I was originally trying to make, but in hindsight I maybe should have saved it for another thread), but I think the idea of basic and inalienable human rights is essential. The Bill of Rights at least gives the people some leverage against the state in case their human rights are violated, and as such is something we should highly value and take very seriously.

Agreed.

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The point is, to you and Bang, the VAST majority of people who own these types of firearms don't own them to commit mass murder. They're not "gun crazed" maniacs sitting in a dark room quietly plotting a revolt on our gov't either. It's conveinient that you two continue to demonize the weapons while completely ingnoring the real problem, the types of bat **** crazy people our society has created that carry out mass shootings. The sooner you can wrap your head around the fact these men were hell bent on getting attention or killing themselves in a "grand" way to get as much of it as possible. Take away the assault rifles, they'll find another way, a couple .45's with multiple mag's, shotguns with buckshot, the gun isn't the problem and if you keep believing that you're oblivious to what's going on in the real world.

Our young adults are growing up with no fear of reprecussions, immeresed in first shooter type games that desensitizes them to violence while diminishing their perception of the value of human life. They're ill prepared to the real world because of societies "it's okay, nice try Johnny, here's a trophy" way of thinking that when they find out it's not okay to be mediocre and they're not as tough as their alter ego on Call of Duty they decide to say **** it, I'm going to show these mother ****ers just how tough I am!

Tighten the loopholes, I have no reason to be concerned about being denied I'm a law abiding citizen. Make me wait an extra week, I'm fine with that. But banning weapons so you can pat yourself on the back for doing something while completely ignoring the cause of the problem to begin with? That's a GREAT idea! Let's perpetuate the problem! Blame the gun, not the idiot using it! BRILLIANT!

So, let me get this right, my son picks up a stick and smacks his sister upside the head with it. I cut down all the trees in my yard while completing ignoring my sons behavior because it was the stick that caused the damage to her skull, not my son who hit her with it. Makes complete since! Better yet, it's my gravel driveway, MULTIPLE opportunities to do more damage with all of them stones, he picks up a handful and PELTS her in the head! "Honey, we're going to have to pave the driveway, our son hit his sister in the head with a handful or rocks, we can't have all of them rocks our there where he can get his hands on them". Hmm, makes perfect sense! I think I get it now!

Who is ignoring mental health in this country? When some people tried to get healthcare to all, which would include poor people with mental health defects, they were ridiculed as socialists and communists.

But what exactly do you think should be done to address mental health in tis country? Don't just say we need to address. Tell me what that means.

And the point I was making is that your "right" to take target practice with whatever ridiculous firearm ou can dream of is minutiae compared to the problem of bad people getting these guns.

As far as video games.... So you think someone's first amendment rights should be restricted so your second amendment rights are not?

And the stick analogy is so false its not even funny. Guns shoot bullets which do a lot more damage than a stick. That's the problem. Guns are an inherently dangerous it's, just like a knife, that can do huge damage in the wrong persons hands.

---------- Post added January-18th-2013 at 08:29 AM ----------

It's all of these codes, licenses, requirements, regulations, red tape and hoop jumping that has people doubting the govt's ability to go about this the right damn way! Do you have any idea the amount of ridiculous bull**** I went through to get the power turned on to the house I bought? Given a list of documents, make the 30 min drive, oops! You need this, you have to go to this office and come back. You do that and guess what, oops! You forgot this and now you have to do that and oh by the way that's a $50 processing fee. So what happens is the intent is lost in the shuffle of the various agencies all choosing how to enforce or carry out the regulations and in the end it's all about money anyways so people just say **** it and circumvent the system because of the endless amount of paperwork, money and frustration.

Can you imagine an agency like the DMV being in charge of registration, licensing and enforcement? Holy ****! Some pissed off fat ***** will turn you away after a 6 hour wait because you signed in blue ink, not black!

Yet, if ou want to drive you wait in line and get your license. Same thing will happen for guns.

Predicto is exactly right. We are talking about sensible measures. Saying you shouldn't be able to shoot a hundred bullets in five seconds is not a burden on ou. It will prevent mentally ill and other "bad guys" as the NRA calls them from getting guns though.

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I have worked in the car business for 20 years. Everything is taxed, everything is registered. I have spent 1000% more time in lines at the DMV than ZoEd and everybody he knows, combined, exponentially. The implication that state employees are incompetent and obese, by nature, is ridiculous. The folks at my local DMV care more and work harder than any military recruiter, salesman goofball I've ever met. Stop hating on state employees!

Compared to the USAF, the DMV is a legend of efficiency.

So what you're saying is stereotypes are ok as long as they don't hit close to home? Because there's plenty of stereotypes being thrown around in here CONSTANTLY! So maybe the DMV you do business with us an anomaly, kudos for you! Just like the crazy ****s using assault weapons to commit mass murder are an anomaly.

Just like your attempt to bolster being a subject matter expert on DMV employees due to your personal experience, I will counter your bull**** observation with my experience with DMV's in 7 different states from up and down the east coast, the south and NV. The vast majority are a bunch of power tripping *******s who get off on pushing people around. Again, that's my experience; then again I don't live in the perfect world many of you live in.

You NEVER heard me EVER claim the USAF was efficient, holy ****! Talk about ridiculous red tape and idiotic rules. Whew!

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Just pointing out that if you fail as a recruiter it is basically over for you in the military. (when i worked in the Hoffman buildings 3rd floor Recruiter(outside personnel) and Retention(keeping those in the Army) it is cut throat.

Though i love it when Mboyd784 dismisses a stereotype by giving 2 additional stereotypes.

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You see, many people "collect" weapons, not to revolt against the union or even protect themselves, but because they collect guns. It's a hobby, like people who, lets say collect hammers. Which if you've watched the news caused more deaths than guns.

How do you figure hammers cause more deaths than guns?

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Who is ignoring mental health in this country? When some people tried to get healthcare to all, which would include poor people with mental health defects, they were ridiculed as socialists and communists.

But what exactly do you think should be done to address mental health in tis country? Don't just say we need to address. Tell me what that means.

And the point I was making is that your "right" to take target practice with whatever ridiculous firearm ou can dream of is minutiae compared to the problem of bad people getting these guns.

As far as video games.... So you think someone's first amendment rights should be restricted so your second amendment rights are not?

And the stick analogy is so false its not even funny. Guns shoot bullets which do a lot more damage than a stick. That's the problem. Guns are an inherently dangerous it's, just like a knife, that can do huge damage in the wrong persons hands.

---------- Post added January-18th-2013 at 08:29 AM ----------

Yet, if ou want to drive you wait in line and get your license. Same thing will happen for guns.

Predicto is exactly right. We are talking about sensible measures. Saying you shouldn't be able to shoot a hundred bullets in five seconds is not a burden on ou. It will prevent mentally ill and other "bad guys" as the NRA calls them from getting guns though.

Education! Counseling! A shift in this country in the process in which we teach and prepare our kids for the future. You know, it's not ok to allow your 5 year old to play first person shooter games, take to see a movie like Django or let them sit in their rooms for hours, even days at a time engulfed in fantastical worlds playing video games. The values in this country have eroded severely and you could ban every gun ever made and it's not going to "fix" anything. Demonizing the assault weapon is a token gesture to gain political favor and nothing else. You don't "understand" how anyone needs to have an AR15, hey, that's your right and opinion. I don't understand why anyone wouldn't want to if they could afford it. There's always going to be bat **** crazy people who do horrible things and there is no easy solution but from my 23 years of experience in the military, solutions to problems fueled by knee jerk reactions for the purpose of APPEARING like something is being done never has and never will solve anything.

Tougher restrictions, more thorough background checks and better enforcements; man I'm all for it. Banning a weapon for ALL because you or somebody else thinks finds it inconceivable for me to NEED one; sorry, I call bull****.

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If you get past that then you get slogans like "if you disarm the law abiding citizens then only criminals will have guns" (even though no one here is talking about disarming the law abiding citizens) or "why aren't we outlawing rocks?"

We did this in the UK after a mass shooting at a school back in the late 90's. Its now just about impossible to legally own a rifle or handgun in the UK. There are of course still thousands of weapons in circulation mainly in the hands of criminals. What happens is that these criminals use these weapons to shoot other criminals. We have a much much lower murder rate by use of handguns/rifles in the UK than compared to the US adjusted for population and most of these deaths are criminal on criminal shootings.

Armed robbery is VERY rare in the UK and armed robbery of domestic property even rarer - when it happens it tends to be large scale bank robbery or business permises like large jewellers. The police in the UK are not routinely armed, individual citizens are absolutely not armed (at least with guns) so criminals dont feel the need to go around armed to the teeth when they commit robbery I guess.

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So maybe the DMV you do business with us an anomaly, kudos for you! Just like the crazy ****s using assault weapons to commit mass murder are an anomaly. !

yes,, both can be quite inconvenient.

if there's one thing I hate more than waiting in line to get my tags renewed, it's being murdered while i'm shopping.

It's like a whole day off work.. other victims are so rude.. everyone is complaining, people thoughtlessly bleed all over the place, all the screaming...

It just sucks.

~Bang

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Education! Counseling! A shift in this country in the process in which we teach and prepare our kids for the future. You know, it's not ok to allow your 5 year old to play first person shooter games, take to see a movie like Django or let them sit in their rooms for hours, even days at a time engulfed in fantastical worlds playing video games. The values in this country have eroded severely and you could ban every gun ever made and it's not going to "fix" anything. Demonizing the assault weapon is a token gesture to gain political favor and nothing else. You don't "understand" how anyone needs to have an AR15, hey, that's your right and opinion. I don't understand why anyone wouldn't want to if they could afford it. There's always going to be bat **** crazy people who do horrible things and there is no easy solution but from my 23 years of experience in the military, solutions to problems fueled by knee jerk reactions for the purpose of APPEARING like something is being done never has and never will solve anything.

Tougher restrictions, more thorough background checks and better enforcements; man I'm all for it. Banning a weapon for ALL because you or somebody else thinks finds it inconceivable for me to NEED one; sorry, I call bull****.

We do all those things now. You are just full of bull**** and rhetoric now. Video games and movies have ratings and warnings. Guns don't.

But still admit that you want to limit people's first amendment rights in favor of your preferred second amendment rights. Then admit that you are proposing more government education and investment in children when ou probably voted for the guy who wants to get rid of the department of education.

I thinkim done now. You think you're going to convince people that your extreme view that ANY regulation of guns is terrible, but we aren't going to be convinced. And you are going to refuse to break from anything other than, I should be able to buy any gun I want regardless of what other people do with those guns.

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Education! Counseling! A shift in this country in the process in which we teach and prepare our kids for the future. You know, it's not ok to allow your 5 year old to play first person shooter games, take to see a movie like Django or let them sit in their rooms for hours, even days at a time engulfed in fantastical worlds playing video games. The values in this country have eroded severely and you could ban every gun ever made and it's not going to "fix" anything. Demonizing the assault weapon is a token gesture to gain political favor and nothing else. You don't "understand" how anyone needs to have an AR15, hey, that's your right and opinion. I don't understand why anyone wouldn't want to if they could afford it. There's always going to be bat **** crazy people who do horrible things and there is no easy solution but from my 23 years of experience in the military, solutions to problems fueled by knee jerk reactions for the purpose of APPEARING like something is being done never has and never will solve anything.

Tougher restrictions, more thorough background checks and better enforcements; man I'm all for it. Banning a weapon for ALL because you or somebody else thinks finds it inconceivable for me to NEED one; sorry, I call bull****.

So that's the solution, education? Don't we have sex ed in schools that teach teens safe sex and the repercussions of having sex at a young age? Does that stop teen pregnancy?

To act like guns aren't a problem is just plain crazy.

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So that's the solution, education? Don't we have sex ed in schools that teach teens safe sex and the repercussions of having sex at a young age? Does that stop teen pregnancy?

To act like guns aren't a problem is just plain crazy.

Hence the term "gun nuts" ;)

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"Shall not be infringed"

Just saying. This is not a debate about your car. You are not using booze to resist oppression and tyranny.

To the guy asking about hammers, blunt force trauma is what I believe to be the number one cause of death in homicides in the US. (Don't quote me, I didn't double check that)

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To the guy asking about hammers, blunt force trauma is what I believe to be the number one cause of death in homicides in the US. (Don't quote me, I didn't double check that)

Nope - homicides (not deaths, homicides) by firearm in 2009 - 9203. Homicides by blunt instrument 623. Next highest after firearms was knives at 1836.

http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0310.pdf

I did find some stats for 2011 when I looked at this before and from memory in 2011 there were over 12,000 homicides by firearm. In the UK if you adjust for population in 2011 we had between 200 and 300 homicides from firearm.

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"Shall not be infringed"

Just saying. This is not a debate about your car. You are not using booze to resist oppression and tyranny.

To the guy asking about hammers, blunt force trauma is what I believe to be the number one cause of death in homicides in the US. (Don't quote me, I didn't double check that)

From the SC case District of Columbia v. Heller:

Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited. It is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose: For example, concealed weapons prohibitions have been upheld under the Amendment or state analogues. The Court’s opinion should not be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms. Miller's holding that the sorts of weapons protected are those "in common use at the time" finds support in the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of dangerous and unusual weapons

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