11mm fullmetaljacket
6/24/2015 5:40:39 PM
fuck all of you pieces of shit that use guns
7/1/2015 10:28:15 PM
7/2/2015 12:18:20 AM
is there a such thing as a "chit chat edition" anymore? Chit Chat is not The Soap Box #2
7/2/2015 12:20:51 AM
^^ oh so you're against any gun control whatsoever. OK.
7/2/2015 12:44:21 AM
is that a strawman or a logical fallacy or a false equivalency, synapse? i personally don't resort to nullifying a post by simply posting some philosophy/debate industry term like you and others like to do rather than address the content of the posts, but I see you're not above using themtell me, does throwing out terms like logical fallacy make you feel better about your own fear and lack of understanding of firearms? ibt"i have shot guns a bunch, i just want more laws"[Edited on July 2, 2015 at 2:46 AM. Reason : ]
7/2/2015 2:32:46 AM
imo we need to work on enforcing the laws we have before debating new ones. big one that just came up, why did background check not show his felony charge when dylann roof bought that .45
7/2/2015 5:29:08 AM
7/2/2015 10:29:55 AM
i control my guns well i think. they've not even harmed a single animal... just some steel an a few hundred sheets of paper.
7/2/2015 10:53:39 AM
The gubment can control them better.Mandatory exchange of guns for knifes. If you want to kill, do it on a personal level, face to face, hand to hand. [Edited on July 2, 2015 at 10:58 AM. Reason : ,]
7/2/2015 10:57:43 AM
yep...and criminals will totally abide by that...TOTALLY!
7/2/2015 11:55:27 AM
I'd care more about the restriction of body armor.If you want to regulate stopping power, you need to regulate juggernaut too, noobs.
7/2/2015 12:15:26 PM
7/2/2015 12:19:06 PM
Came across an interesting article on Market Watch about gun violence.Top states per capita (1-10): Alaska, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Montana, Arkansas, Wyoming, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Tennessee.Not surprisingly, the overall violent crime rate of these states were all in the top quartile with the exception of Montana.
7/2/2015 2:08:10 PM
You must mean top *gun ownership* states per capita
7/2/2015 2:25:10 PM
No, gun deaths per 100,000 people..Just found it interesting because of the idea thrown out often that less restrictions somehow has correlation with less violence (Chicago and Detroit often cited). Obviously I believe the crime and gun violence is more directly affected by socioeconomic forces..[Edited on July 2, 2015 at 2:34 PM. Reason : Typo]
7/2/2015 2:27:19 PM
So top gun death states. Ok.[Edited on July 2, 2015 at 2:36 PM. Reason : ^ agreed]
7/2/2015 2:31:46 PM
7/2/2015 3:07:19 PM
its not a terrible response; driving is not a perfect analogy because there is no constitutional amendment ensuring the right to drive
7/2/2015 5:53:51 PM
That doesn't make my argument any less valid though. Sensible restrictions on deadly instruments isn't that far fetched. My take on the response was similar to Synapse's, in that it sounds like he's advocating unfettered access to firearms.Remember, the constitution isn't a perfect document and just because there's a vague amendment written over 200 years ago doesn't mean that we don't have the power or right to regulate firearms. We've already created restrictions to gun ownership in this country that most people agree with so its not outlandish to think we should have the same respect for gun ownership that we do for cars & trucks.
7/2/2015 6:45:20 PM
7/2/2015 7:06:11 PM
I'm not sure what you're quoting there, seeing as I never implied it wasn't.As someone who sits in the middle on this issue its frustrating to see so many straw man arguments against sensible gun laws.My argument was that we place sensible hurdles to on owning or operating dangerous machines/instruments, we should have the same in place for guns, which are designed with the primary purpose of causing great harm.However it seems like the most vocal 2nd amendment supporters want to split the discussion into those who want to strip guns out of the hands of owners versus those who want complete and unrestricted access to all firearms.However, a lot of people just want to feel safe in their home. Not from the imagined thugs, but from their crazy tin-foil hat, chemtrail spouting neighbor, who owns several guns with enough ammunition to kill an entire police force twice over.The counterpoint to my argument was what transpired above, in which it seems like users are implying that guns are untouchable since they are mentioned in the constitution, when in fact we already have several restrictions on ownership that have been upheld by SCOTUS and do not infringe on rights. There's a reason I can't go to Walmart and purchase a bomb, or a fully automatic rifle, or own military grade weaponry. Why can't we use that framework to create sensible ownerships laws? Is it really that much of an infringement to say you should have to prove yourself capable of owning a high powered rifle in the same way you have to to drive a Prius?
7/2/2015 7:23:38 PM
7/2/2015 7:35:29 PM
I was speaking broadly, not specifically to gun laws or even the 2A.Regarding gun control, a lot of the problem is the rightful mistrust the pro-gun side has of the anti-gun crowd. There's an unwillingness to give an inch in many cases. Sure, there are the rabid, fringe loonies who nobody will ever placate, but you don't have to reach them. You have to reach people like me, who are generally relatively moderate and objectively consider both sides, even if we lean in one direction...and I don't trust the gun control crowd any further than I could throw them.On a more concrete level, what sort of "sensible ownership laws" do you propose? The other issue we have is that there isn't a whole lot more to do that would neither be too much of an infringement nor simply ineffective.Trust me, I'd love to do something that would help, primarily for the obvious reason of public safety, but also because I cringe for the prospects of preserving the ability to continue to legally exercise my own rights every time some shithead or idiot uses a gun inappropriately. There just isn't much to do that would actually do any good. Maybe some incremental progress in reporting disqualifying data to NICS...and/or I guess you could do a sort of watered-down "universal background check" law that would not require at least de facto registration, but then it wouldn't do much good, so fuck it.
7/2/2015 7:41:06 PM
7/2/2015 7:57:00 PM
7/2/2015 8:52:00 PM
7/2/2015 9:02:18 PM
That still doesn't answer my question though.Having a registry is so off the table but I have never understood why. If its illegal, why was it made illegal?Why is it that I can look up a whole bunch of tax information on my neighbor, but the government is not able to use methods of tracking guns like they do so many other non-killy things?
7/2/2015 9:09:03 PM
because gun owners are overwhelmingly opposed to it and as soon as legislators start talking about it, the gun owners show up en masse and those legislators lose their jobs.
7/2/2015 9:22:18 PM
Registration, explicit or de facto, is a non-starter. It's not even remotely politically viable, or up for any sort of discussion. That probably neuters any sort of universal background checks (the "gun show loophole", in "anti" terms, has very little to do with gun shows, where most sales are subject to background checks, and it isn't because anyone is opposed to background checks, per se. I think we'd all mostly like that if it came without an unacceptable cost. It's to avoid having a gun registry, because we have no trust that it wouldn't be used at some point for confiscation, harassment, or other nefarious or undesirable purposes. It is a privacy issue.)I don't personally have much problem with proficiency testing (although I'd point out that vehicle and gun restrictions are not totally analogous, for multiple reasons). I've seen plenty of people with guns who have no fucking idea what they're doing...but they mostly don't hurt anything. They mostly don't know what they're doing, because their guns mostly sit unloaded, untouched, unfired, in the attic or closet or somewhere. I think that concealed carry classes should require MUCH greater proficiency in both handling and shooting; they are primarily legal classes with a very low standard of proficiency...but I want that not because we have a problem: CCP holders are by far a negligible contributor to gun violence and accidents. I just would support that to make sure it stays that way. Widespread support for CC hinges upon the data being overwhelmingly on our side. In fact, shitty firearms handling is a pretty small part of the problem altogether. I mean, I've known a Marine killed by his friend's totally piss-poor pistol handling...and a friend's dad who shot himself in the leg cleaning his 1911...and there are firearms accidents with kids, I know...it does happen, but the number of lives we'd save with a proficiency exam every 5-10 years would be awfully, awfully small. It's a very small % of shootings anyway, and of those, how many do you screen out with such a test? Prob only a few.I do think teaching proper gun safety might help a little bit. The left has little appetite for teaching kids about guns, though. Improve the culture of KEEP YOUR STORED SAFELY, kinda like we've made it socially unacceptable to drink and drive. That might help a little at a pretty low cost ($ or otherwise). Still a tiny, incremental improvement.Mental health care, and reporting psychological red flags to NICS, may be the greatest opportunity, practically and politically, but that's a balancing act too--both in terms of preserving civil liberties/privacy, and in practical terms of not discouraging people from seeking help, which would defeat the purpose and then some. It's also still not as big of a factor as most people think: it's just the only place left where we can do any meaningful good whatsoever:Jeffrey W. Swanson, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Duke University School of Medicine and lead author of the article in Annals of Epidemiology was quoted in the UCLA Newsroom saying ”but even if schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression were cured, our society’s problem of violence would diminish by only about 4 percent.”http://www.forbes.com/sites/toddessig/2014/06/28/the-myth-of-mental-illness-and-gun-violence/The main thing I'm getting at is that the anti-gun crowd likes to conveniently view the pro-gun crowd as totally unreasonable, unenlightened, and sometimes even paranoid/yokel/sociopathic. Sure, there is that element, and they're fucking loud, but a LOT of the issue is what I'm getting at here: Great, I want to help on this issue too, but there isn't a lot of room to do anything that will actually help. Don't forget who knows these issues and has spent time thinking about them. I'll give you a hint, it's generally not the anti-gun crowd. Most are well intentioned, but nearly without exception, they just don't understand the guns and the legal process surrounding them all that thoroughly. Things that seem like good ideas at a casual look are either fatally flawed or fatally poorly implemented (or usually both). The YouTube videos of elected officials saying totally asinine things about laws they wrote that they don't understand at all may be funny, but they are evidence of why we can't have nice things.The key to solving gun violence has little to do with guns (and that's to include barring crazy people from having guns) and much to do with violence and what fuels it. I would argue that criminal justice and prison reform, and a dramatic shift in our approach to drugs, would be the things that would actually move the needle.Economic socialization might help, too, but that medicine would be worse than the disease by far, and it's not even remotely political viable even if it were desirable.[Edited on July 2, 2015 at 9:27 PM. Reason : ]
7/2/2015 9:25:37 PM
If we treated them like cars and drivers licenses, could I then carry in NY, CA, and HI? Those states seem to think that a violation of states rights. Could I carry on an airplane and to public arenas, or even the state fair grounds?
7/2/2015 9:39:53 PM
...or could you do anyfuckingthing you wanted with any gun you wanted on private property?at any rate, that's all beside the point. that's not really what anyone is seriously debating.[Edited on July 2, 2015 at 10:23 PM. Reason : ]
7/2/2015 10:23:26 PM
The gun ship has left the station and has achieved terminal velocity. No amount of legislation will fix our gun problem.
7/2/2015 10:34:56 PM
^^^ Thank you, that definitely helped clear my confusion.
7/2/2015 10:48:34 PM
7/2/2015 11:03:32 PM
7/3/2015 12:21:25 AM
7/3/2015 1:00:01 AM
like what? can't yell fire in a public place or yell bomb on an airplane or make death threats against people? that's not a shit ton.
7/3/2015 1:01:39 AM
I need guns to protect my family from Obamas Government.
7/3/2015 1:04:35 AM
7/3/2015 10:29:55 AM
I've noticed that conservatives become liberal as soon as gun control comes up.
7/3/2015 2:36:08 PM
Less government restrictions = liberal, according to BJ ITT
7/3/2015 2:47:26 PM
Everyone should have guns == liberal.Dumbass
7/3/2015 2:52:23 PM
Who has said that everyone should have guns?
7/3/2015 3:11:04 PM
7/25/2015 11:52:21 PM