Well it certainly wouldn't hurt to have the option.
1/31/2011 9:22:10 PM
1/31/2011 9:32:23 PM
You stated that they "favor smaller, more maneuverable and concealable weapons". If that were true then they would prefer revolvers to semiautomatics, they would only prefer semiautomatics if they wanted more firepower. But I'd say you are right in that this is all irrelevant to whether or not criminals would find uses for more powerful weapons if we made them legal, which seems obvious.
1/31/2011 11:19:16 PM
its false that revolvers are any smaller or more maneuverable than semi-automatic handguns. they both come in many shapes and sizes.
1/31/2011 11:37:52 PM
ok mr pedantic, how is this "revolvers are smaller than semiautomatics on average"
1/31/2011 11:50:24 PM
I don't really think that's accurate, either.and since you mention "more powerful", most of the more powerful handgun rounds are generally found in revolvers (not without exception, but on average).and evil, scary "assault rifles" are generally not very powerful, relative to sporting weapons.[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 11:55 PM. Reason : ]
1/31/2011 11:53:01 PM
Most criminals are poor and cannot afford an assault rifle, shotgun or god forbid a solid caliber handgun (9mm, .40, .45). Restrictions on the above weapons only hurt those who want to legally possess this weapons. The majority of illegal street guns are going to be ,.22 .25, .32.
2/1/2011 12:32:20 AM
2/1/2011 1:17:36 AM
2/1/2011 7:15:16 AM
^^you're worse than our current politicians. let's just say fuck the constitution and make up laws based on some idiot's flawed whims and make sure big government has complete control over its citizens.
2/1/2011 7:18:05 AM
You must not have read my initial post in this thread.
2/1/2011 9:41:45 AM
2/1/2011 10:14:28 AM
I don't understand why it's gun right advocates who are expected to make the case for allowing carry on campus. The responsibility should be on those who want to limit the right to make the case that supports why limiting that right is reasonable. I've never seen anyone do that.
2/1/2011 10:46:38 AM
2/1/2011 12:14:40 PM
Seems to depend on who you ask and when. I would have guess without any research on 9mm as well, but it does appear to vary:UPA says in 1985 it was .38 revolvers, and in 1990 it was 9mm pistolsVA says .38 from 89-91Hawaii says 9mm from 88-92CA says 9mm in 93 with .22 coming in at a very close secondBATF says .38 in 2000PLU says .38 in 99BATF says 9mm in undated interviewhttp://answers.google.com/answers/threadview/id/236976.htmlInterestingly, in relation to earlier discussion, according to the BJS, of criminals incarcerated, only 2% carried a "military-style semiautomatic gun". Unfortunately, all their links to the data appear to be broken:http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/guns.cfmUnfortunately, there don't appear to be any good studies since the early 80's and 90's and that will skew results given that semiautomatic handguns really started catching on around that time.[Edited on February 1, 2011 at 1:21 PM. Reason : asdf]
2/1/2011 1:02:52 PM
if they don't recover the gun or shell casings, are police forensics actually able to distinguish between a 9mm, 357, or 38 special?
2/1/2011 1:45:14 PM
2/1/2011 1:46:12 PM
Then post those articles; I didn't pull some statistics out of my ass by saying that, I have first hand knowledge. While it might not be a good national representation of the caliber of handgun used in violent crime, it certainly is valid. Then again, most all statistics are skewed especially went it comes to homicide. For example, if you are shot with a weapon its either homicide or suicide; there is no in between. So if X shoots Y accidentally; its a homicide even no homicide charges are filled.
2/1/2011 1:58:13 PM
i have read something to the effect of lorcin .25s being the most common gun used in shootings. i don't remember the exact statistic, but i do remember that gun being named specifically
2/1/2011 2:09:27 PM
2/1/2011 2:12:27 PM
2/1/2011 4:05:34 PM
2/1/2011 5:24:11 PM
2/1/2011 5:41:42 PM
Kris makes himself look dumber saying that a police officer would have no experience in what weapons are commonly seen and used in crimes, at the same time trying to make it appear that whatever degree he has would add validity to any argument he may present.
2/1/2011 5:45:12 PM
2/1/2011 6:02:19 PM
2/1/2011 6:54:26 PM
2/1/2011 9:23:37 PM
doesn't get much cheaper than a hi-point 9mm
2/2/2011 6:26:47 PM
haha this thread has given me some good laughs... I'm just curious who in here is actually on the side of Kris, btw- not to argue any points here, it just seems like no one is backing him up or siding with him, yet he keeps pushing his side/agenda here.
2/3/2011 10:55:29 PM
I don't really need validation to have an opinion, it doesn't bother me if others do not share it. In general, people who oppose gun control have much more interest than those who support it. As I said in my OP, I don't care enough to spend any political capital on the subject, and if I were able to do anything, I would only outlaw handguns. Of course all of that goes for the real world, this is the internet, so ITT we have a good number of crazy libertarians who think people should be able to own their own tanks or nuclear weapons and gun nerds who want to own a bunch of assault rifles so they can jack off imagining they are rambo or some such nonsense, they are no different than the fat neckbearded mouthbreathers who collect swords and ninja stars. Fact is I don't really care that much about enlarging current gun control, it's not that bad the way it is, but people who pretend that gun control itself has a negative or zero effect are just plain wrong.
2/3/2011 11:10:31 PM
I know a lot of people posting in this thread, and I don't believe a single person here matches that description you just gave. Nice stereotyping generalization though....[Edited on February 4, 2011 at 1:58 AM. Reason : .]
2/4/2011 1:34:43 AM
^^sounds just like normal, liberal, anti-gun rhetoric. no real position, no real reasons, just "guns are bad", and a personal insult or 2.
2/4/2011 7:28:18 AM
2/4/2011 9:09:27 AM
You stated that anyone with a pro-gun ownership stance either:1) Wants everyone to be riding a tank/and or packing a tactical nuke.2) Wants fully automatic rifles because they imagine themselves as Rambo.Nope. Definitely no irrational and completely unfounded sweeping generalizations there.
2/4/2011 11:35:30 AM
I truly and sincerely cannot honestly believe that there is anyone who, whether or not they have the motivation to do so, believe that making handguns illegal would make anything better.Besides the fact that you would no longer be able to conceal carry (which, by the way, is done by nearly unanimously law-abiding citizens), as someone posted earlier, you're only hurting the people who aren't criminals.Jesus, how am I even getting sucked in to this against someone who said that gun laws must work, because laws against grenades work?
2/4/2011 12:10:33 PM
2/4/2011 1:04:03 PM
In NC we may be adding to the list of justifiable uses of force:http://www.ncleg.net/Sessions/2011/Bills/Senate/HTML/S34v1.html
2/20/2011 6:56:11 AM
That's not changing anything about what is justifiable use of force. That's a fairly common element of law called "castle doctrine", which we have been trying to get in NC for years. All it does is provide immunity from lawsuit in the case of a justified SD shooting. That is, in the current system, you can still be sued by the "victim" or their family if you shoot them in the act of a home invasion. Even justifiably shooting someone ends up costing a small fortune in legal fees either with the state, the criminal or their family, or both. If this amendment is added, you are immune so long as it was a determinably justifiable use of deadly force.
2/20/2011 8:39:59 AM
That is actually one of the most reasonable castle doctrines out there. The obnoxious ones are the ones that allow you to use deadly force even without a threat of violence against you/someone in your home. That, and the ones where you don't have a duty to retreat first.
2/20/2011 3:07:38 PM
You don't have a duty to retreat in that law, what states do you have a duty to retreat inside your home?
2/20/2011 5:17:08 PM
You're right about NC. It's actually in the section right before the one the one Supplanter posted.http://www.ncga.state.nc.us/enactedlegislation/statutes/html/bysection/chapter_14/gs_14-51.1.htmlAlso in reading that, I realized that NC actually does the provision which allows you to kill even when there isn't a threat of deadly force. All you need is the reasonable belief that the person is going to commit a felony.
2/20/2011 5:32:37 PM
http://www.wral.com/news/national_world/national/story/9143402/
2/20/2011 6:25:48 PM
^ from that story:
2/20/2011 8:17:06 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/02/19/1001335/nc-police-uncle-shot-niece-after.html
2/21/2011 4:45:24 AM
Any ideas?(that's a legitimate question...not trying to be a smartass)
2/21/2011 7:39:13 AM
The current system does require a remedial training course for CCW's, but unfortunately I don't know if anything besides not being a trigger-happy dumbass could have prevented the scenario above. That's in his own home, so there's no guarantee that he ever had any formal training.What happened there is gross negligence, and he should be prosecuted accordingly. One of the first things they teach you is to never shoot until you have identified your target and everything around them. I find it somewhat hard to believe that he would just open up on someone without even looking at them, but you never know. People do dumber stuff every day.
2/21/2011 10:01:38 AM
I think safety and maintenace training courses would be a good idea. Grant a once per year tax credit to citizens who take an accredited course. It would be optional, but you'd make the credit slightly higher than the raw costs of the course in order to create training businesses. Trainer applies for federal accredidation at own expense. They're willing to fork over the cash up front because they know once they have that accredidation they can get those sweet sweet consumer tax credit dollarbucks. All of it is optional so theres no violation of rights, but at the same time theres a pretty strong incentive to get people trained. And (correct me if Im wrong) I imagine many gun stores/ranges offer basic training classes already so its not like its gonna be some huge burden coming from outta nowhere. As far as restrictions go, im not sure I agree with banning ex-cons from ownership. They served their time. If they aren't rehabilitated then thats a problem with the prison system.[Edited on February 21, 2011 at 10:10 AM. Reason : a]
2/21/2011 10:09:59 AM
i mean if we're gonna start banning things because retards occasionally do dumb things, then I'd put sugar, cheese, and tobacco on the chopping block well before guns.
2/21/2011 10:12:19 AM
2/21/2011 7:02:57 PM
^From an article about the same incident:http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20110219/NEWS/302190032/1009/NEWS01/Sheriff-s-Office-Whittier-man-mistakenly-kills-niece
2/21/2011 9:15:47 PM