10/21/2005 10:06:11 AM
http://tinyurl.com/
10/21/2005 10:09:41 AM
good.in the wake of the big tobacco thing, i agree with the spirit of this bill. it is the first step in making americans take some responsibility for themselves and their actions.i would like to see more of the same including alcohol mfrs and video game companies.
10/21/2005 10:25:35 AM
^exactly
10/21/2005 10:27:35 AM
^^ agreed.
10/21/2005 10:39:48 AM
Glad to see one more type of frivolous lawsuit banned.
10/21/2005 10:45:04 AM
^^ i agree with your agreement
10/21/2005 11:10:22 AM
I agree with your agreement with the agreement
10/21/2005 11:14:32 AM
10/21/2005 11:31:09 AM
cars can kill peopleso can kitchen knivesso can baseball bats.guns aren't made, specifically, "to kill people." Well, some of them are, adn some aren't. Computers can be used to download illegal materials and kiddie porn. You can't sue the person who manufactured something because it was used ilegally unless it was INTENTIONALLY made to be used that way. As much as I'm sure gun makers aren't always the bastion of human rights, I doubt they're sitting in their offices going "YES, ANOTHER GUN MURDER! WE RULE!"
10/21/2005 11:38:57 AM
personally, i am responsible enough to own an apache attack helicopter. and they ARE specifically designed to kill people.^^ what you're saying is that because something CAN be used to kill people, it shouldn't be on the market.sweet merciful crap, lop off my hands because they can be used to choke someone.
10/21/2005 11:47:22 AM
10/21/2005 11:48:24 AM
guns are specifically made to kill things what you kill is your decision and your responsibility
10/21/2005 11:53:29 AM
i like to kill paper targets myselfwith extreme prejudice
10/21/2005 11:56:00 AM
10/21/2005 11:57:10 AM
no, i agree with what you're saying.i'm just adding that that's what i do with mine.
10/21/2005 11:58:44 AM
10/21/2005 12:19:45 PM
If only we could have done away with frivolous lawsuits specifically. There are so many other products that cannot be sold on the market because of these lawsuits. We not only need to worry about losing products we already enjoy but products we cannot have because the lawsuit would be inevitable. At the car dealership, the salesman explained all the crap they are going through because of the introduction of batteries in the hybrid cars and how much risk they face by simply selling them. All they need is someone to get burned by battery acid after an accident and they are probably going to be forced to recall them all.
10/21/2005 12:42:39 PM
Sounds like the automotive company either hasnt taken adequate safety precautions to protect against acid burns, or they havent made their customers aware of the risks of operating a hybrid vehicle.
10/21/2005 1:55:14 PM
10/21/2005 1:58:57 PM
I wonder how much this bill costed.
10/21/2005 2:02:33 PM
The real question is "how much will it cost to get the rest of the legal system fixed?"
10/21/2005 2:10:58 PM
Gun manufacturers make grips so fingerprints won't be found on a gun. Can they be accessories to a crime?
10/21/2005 9:46:00 PM
the glove industry needs to go down for it to
10/21/2005 10:02:53 PM
Maybe our justicial system should enforce the gun laws on the books and prosecute those who misuse firearms to the full extent of the law. I realize some people dislike firearms, some fear them, some see no need for them, etc., but it doesn't make sense to me to hold a manufacturer responsible for their product being used illegally. Other than to push an agenda of course. If they produce a faulty product then obviously they should be held accountable.
10/21/2005 10:25:51 PM
10/22/2005 12:00:10 AM
Haha this thread backfired.
10/22/2005 9:38:13 AM
"fingerprints" cause corrosionits not a crime to want a gun that stays looking nice
10/22/2005 9:43:22 AM
^ Beat me to it. As I heard it, the "not leaving finger prints for the cops" was a secondary ability as well. Gun makers were long seeking ways to prevent their guns from corroding, this stuff does it. Besides, they still leave finger prints on Everything else: bullets, slide, car door, etc. etc.
10/22/2005 10:01:32 AM
Aren't criminals now smart enough to know to not leave finger prints behind anyway?
10/22/2005 12:13:55 PM
10/22/2005 12:50:48 PM
how about steel manufacturers who knowingly supply the makers of these guns marketed for people killing?
10/22/2005 1:46:15 PM
not to mention the miners who extract the iron oreor the people (or descendants of the people) who sold the land to be mined for iron ore which was turned into steel which was made into a gun which killed someoneor engineers and gunsmiths. well, to start with, it ought to be illegal to be a gunsmith. engineering institutions such as NCSU shouldn't be innocent in this whole mess either, since they train engineers who could quite possibly design a gun out of the steel which was made out of iron that was mined out of the ground that someone sold to a mining operation some years ago.alternatively, i have an idea. is it so asinine to put the blame squarely on the shoulders of the person who pulled the trigger in an irresponsible and/or illegal manner?a gun is just a tool. it is fundamentally the same as a hammer or knife.
10/22/2005 2:31:39 PM
This is a good bill and should definitely be extended to other industries. Its about time that American's stop trying to blame everyone but themselves for their actions.
10/22/2005 2:36:32 PM
10/22/2005 7:36:20 PM
Lets all fear inanimate objects.
10/23/2005 2:33:32 PM
Um, If you bought a gun retail for the finger print thing so that you could use it in a crime, wouldnt it be pretty easy to trace the weapon back to you?
10/23/2005 4:51:27 PM
10/24/2005 12:13:07 AM
This one will need to see some judicial review before it's brought to fruition.I am wary of any law that attempts to curtail "frivolous" (or "activist," if you will) lawsuits, because the definition of "frivolous" tends to mean "any."In general, if a lawsuit is truly "frivolous," then a judge will throw it out. As far as I am aware, judges are not paid by the lawsuit, so that is a reasonable assumption.Furthermore, lawsuits are generally too specific to warrant "blanket" coverage as in this law. The decision on whether a lawsuit is indeed "frivolous" should be based on the merits of the case, in court, where the facts are properly heard.I generally think people do have the right to air their grievances in court, and "reverse activism" -- making blanket statements about what kinds of lawsuits have merit -- is simply a bad approach. If a company is _truly_ liable, then they should be held as such, in a court of law, and they should pay an equitable amount for their culpability. Period.And there _are_ instances in which a gun manufacturer should be held liable -- for example, if a hypothetical gun manufacturer marketed the gun as "great for killing people!" There is precedent for this kind of lawsuit in the P2P cases, and it is entirely equitable.In general I don't think the Congress can come up with a "litmus test" for a "valid lawsuit" because it's just going to be too gray, and the courts will just be bogged down with wrangling over liability limitation concerns. Which is pointless -- after all, the whole idea behind such a bill is to curtail the court's decision-making in the matter.
10/24/2005 12:26:16 AM
i find it hard to envision a reasonable scenario in which a gun manufacturer should be held liable. the example you gave would never happen in a million years, and neither would anything else, because the last thing the gun manufacturers want to do is be more of a political lightning rod than they already are.what's far more likely is the kind of political activism/Robin Hoodism/set aside common legal sense in favor of our own agena-ism that we've seen in, for example, suits against Big Tobacco.i have more faith that no gun manufacturer would do something that they should truly be held liable for (because that would be suicide) than i have faith that no judge would allow his own political agenda to trump his obligation to properly exercise his authority, especially on such a hot-button political issue.
10/24/2005 1:05:35 AM
^Gun manufacturers face far more than political pressure. They are also under pressure in the marketplace, and they have to differentiate themselves. So I rather disagree that my example was wholly unrealistic -- it was hyperbolic, though. I am not prepared to imagine the whole spectrum of marketing ploys a gun manufacturer might use; if I were, I'd hope to make money as a consultant rather than posting here. I'm just saying: there is such a thing as aiding and abetting a crime, even if you're a corporation. And businesses are often forced to make difficult choices about when to risk political prosecution, or death in the competitive marketplace.And more so, I just don't think the U.S. Congress is the proper venue for stopping the kind of "activism" you're talking about. In fact, I think that it's fundamentally stupid for them to do so. Because the people who will interpret this law, are the judges they're trying to stop.The ability to file a lawsuit _is_ a civil liberty, so I am just not willing to swallow whole the idea that the Congress should limit it for the sake of an agenda.If we want to stop unethical judges, the place to do so is in choosing and monitoring the judiciary itself.
10/24/2005 1:15:55 AM
10/24/2005 8:10:33 AM
10/24/2005 8:26:31 AM
Judges also used to be able to reprimand lawyers which presented frivalis cases... The good old days I guess...
10/24/2005 9:50:02 AM
^^I don't think I "forgot" that at all -- in fact I addressed it in my very post.Smoker4:
10/24/2005 7:29:45 PM
Smoker4--If I buy a gun and then shoot and kill someone, do you think that, in general, the gun company should also be liable? A gun does have legitimate uses and guns, unlike most P2P, are not marketed with a "great for killing people" tagline.[Edited on October 24, 2005 at 8:02 PM. Reason : I understand what you're saying, but I want to see where you stand on guns specifically.]
10/24/2005 8:02:03 PM
Why not let the courts decide which cases are frivolous?
10/24/2005 11:33:53 PM
why did they used to make us trade and grade each other's tests in elementary school?not to mention the fact that i find it VERY hard to envision a scenario where a lawsuit against a gun manufacturer because a gun was used to shoot someone wouldn't be frivolous.
10/25/2005 1:50:36 AM
i thought it was so the teachers could save time
10/25/2005 1:54:14 AM