^^ lol I don't think that means what you think it means.
4/20/2013 10:37:15 AM
^ No it pretty much means "the right of the people shall not be infringed" and "the people" would be the same "the people" referred to in the 1st, 4th, 9th, and 10th amendments. This is even more evident with only a cursory glance at both the contemporary meaning of the phrase "we'll regulated" at the time it was written (http://constitution.org/cons/wellregu.htm) and the history of the creation of the second amendment and its legal interpretation at the time (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution)
4/20/2013 12:09:33 PM
Well that goes against supreme court decisions and the opinion of the supreme court, but anyone is allowed to have their own opinion (just realize that your interpretation carries no weight)
4/20/2013 12:24:54 PM
Which decisions and interpretations? Do you mean this supreme court decision:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/District_of_Columbia_v._Heller
4/20/2013 1:57:46 PM
Background checks and other non arbitrary controls to not keep anyone from having that right, so no, none of those.in the courts obiter dicta they have said specifically that reasonable controls to not infringe on the right. that's the courts interpretation, which actually carries weight.
4/20/2013 2:07:43 PM
4/20/2013 2:27:12 PM
Also, why can't I publish in the paper that you have oral sex with large goats in a non-parodying way?
4/20/2013 2:47:28 PM
4/20/2013 3:35:35 PM
That's an impressive set of goalposts you've built.
4/20/2013 4:04:07 PM
that source was criticized by pro-gun people earlier in this thread for being a survey of only incarcerated people
4/20/2013 5:41:05 PM
aa 14-year west virginia boy is really standing up for his rights (rifles and silly haircuts)http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/04/23/dad-west-virginia-boy-arrested-over-nra-shirt-says-hell-fight-punishment/
4/23/2013 1:44:56 PM
4/23/2013 2:32:43 PM
4/23/2013 2:41:05 PM
Congrats, school system, you have zero chance of not losing this impending lawsuit.
4/23/2013 2:45:50 PM
4/23/2013 4:00:46 PM
^^I don't think you understand how this works. Zero chance? If there is any rational argument they could make, then they have a decent chance. There are a lot of free expression rules that don't apply, and also a lot of due process rules that don't apply, when it comes to the educational setting.(And to be clear, the facts presented in media articles are not nearly sufficient to decide who has the stronger legal argument. It's important to keep in mind that usually news articles only contain one very biased side of things.)[Edited on April 23, 2013 at 4:11 PM. Reason : sdf]
4/23/2013 4:07:49 PM
4/23/2013 4:23:33 PM
Ok, what does "ethnic makeup" have to do with gun control?basically, the same question, just using euphamisms this time.
4/23/2013 4:25:32 PM
Yeah, I don't get the whole "cultural makeup" = black people thing either, but maybe I missed it.
4/23/2013 5:17:57 PM
americans like guns.banning things that people like has never ever worked in all of history.there are 3 types of people for gun control in the us:1 idiots who think it will work2 people who just want to take stuff away from other people3 politicians who want to cash in on the emotional outcry from group 1 + votes from group 2 and don't want to do the things that actually prevent crime like combating poverty or increasing access to/quality of education. find+replace guns->drugs and the above remains true.[Edited on April 23, 2013 at 5:34 PM. Reason : a]
4/23/2013 5:34:21 PM
I think that the majority of gun-control advocates know that an all-out "ban" on guns is unreasonable and won't work.
4/23/2013 7:26:40 PM
4/23/2013 7:33:38 PM
4/23/2013 7:57:58 PM
4/23/2013 8:42:04 PM
4/23/2013 9:18:10 PM
4/23/2013 11:01:56 PM
There would still be dirty sluts and crooked bookies if those things were legal. It's interesting you have to cite that those things need "regulation" though...And there are safe ways to have prostitution, but there's not a safe way to have gun violence. The problem is that the current regulatory environment has too many loopholes, to the point where a large portion of gun crimes are committed with illegally acquired guns.But rather than looking at possible solutions to stop or thwart this illegal trafficking of guns, the NRA has somehow convinced politicians and some people that the best thing to do when faced with a problem that has solvable aspects without trampling rights, is to do nothing.
4/23/2013 11:18:15 PM
4/24/2013 12:04:24 AM
Yeah, they're a pretty weapon averse culture. It traces back hundreds of years, when common folks were not allowed to have weapons. But I think comparing Japan to the United States is probably not the best example. Australia, the U.K., and Canada are much more similar.
4/24/2013 6:40:52 AM
Agreed that Japan is a poor example; they've traditionally had extremely strict weapons controls through most of their history. I think their last big weapons sweep was in the 1600s when the newly established Shogunate mopped up excess swords and muskets.If we are to draw lessons and parallels, it would have to be the Canadians and Australians. They have both a more similar culture and better understanding of the sort of "vast wilderness" / "vast open space" that drives some of the rural thinking in the United States that I think people in urban / suburban sometime don't fully appreciate. Also have had a similar gun culture in the past.
4/24/2013 9:43:31 AM
4/24/2013 12:26:42 PM
4/24/2013 1:13:45 PM
4/24/2013 1:44:09 PM
I see this has escalated once again to equating all gun control measures with completely banning guns. Again, all the proposed legislation did was make it a little harder for a potentially dangerous person to buy a gun. That's it. It didn't infringe on the rights of any law abiding gun owner. No one, not even the President, has suggested it would stop an event like Newtown. If I want to buy a used a car, the transaction has to go through the DMV. I've yet to hear a single coherent argument why gun sales shouldn't be similarly regulated.
4/24/2013 2:56:22 PM
Technically, when you buy a used car, it does NOT go through the DMV. Getting a title to drive it on the roads goes through the DMV. That would be similar to what we currently have, where the Concealed carry permit allows you carry it around with you, except we already went farther with having a background check for pistol purchases.
4/24/2013 3:09:06 PM
Yeah.... no. That would only be similar if you needed a CCP to do anything other than stare at your shiny new gun while it sat on a shelf in your garage.
4/24/2013 3:26:42 PM
Yeah, I find it funny that the most common response is not to deal with the proposed changes, but to extrapolate the proposed changes further until they become gun confiscation plans or something more onerous, and then argue against those proposals.A mandatory background check and registration system for all new guns would not reduce the level of gun ownership for anyone currently allowed to own a gun. It wouldn't limit a single person, a single type of gun, or a single transfer of ownership. It would just force responsibility of purchasers. It also wouldn't eliminate current problems with all illegal gun sales...but over the next 10-20 years it would solve most of the problems.We have a lot of solutions that are implemented over the long haul. Some of the Social Security adjustments and reforms passed 15 years ago are just going into effect now.
4/24/2013 4:48:03 PM
4/24/2013 6:35:08 PM
take de facto registration out of the NICS processsimple as that
4/24/2013 6:55:22 PM
^That's not feasible and senseless to remove auditing capabilities from a computerized system. If they're keeping track of who is using the system and what purpose, to prevent abuse, it will always be possible to mine this for who may own a gun. This is inherent and valuable to computerizing any process. What other systems should an audit trail be removed from?And of all the things the 2nd amendment can be extrapolated for defending against, registration isn't one of them.
4/24/2013 7:00:58 PM
there's a federal law specifically outlawing registration[Edited on April 24, 2013 at 7:12 PM. Reason : just get the fucking make, model, and serial numbers off the forms. it's not difficult.][Edited on April 24, 2013 at 7:12 PM. Reason : fads]
4/24/2013 7:10:32 PM
4/24/2013 8:18:30 PM
^ they are putting the "nut" in "gun nut."It's more important to protect the facade of what they think is a defending freedom, than using technology in a sensible, non-intrusive way.
4/24/2013 9:30:23 PM
^^ homogeneous after they killed everyone who wasn't the same?^ it is intrusive.
4/24/2013 11:33:31 PM
Evidence? What I've said hasn't been tried...here's what we know, but I'm not advocating - taking away guns has worked. It worked in Australia, it worked in the U.K. But I'm NOT SAYING THAT WE SHOULD DO THAT, or that it will always work. I said register and hold people responsible for their guns and the sale of their guns. Then far fewer guns end up in the hands of the wrong people, because it's not worth the risk, and so many of the gun violence incidents decrease.No one has done that because any country that had enough support to do something like that just straight up banned guns, didn't bother with registration. But I will admit, we have a much stronger gun ownership right in the U.S. than anywhere else, and because of that I support the right to own guns. We are also an inherently much more violent culture than many others, and so I agree the need for guns as a prevention measure is much higher than most places. People in the U.S. are vindictive, violent, angry, and independent when compared to many other populations. We are not the passive collective. While other cultures may have a history of gun ownership, I think we are a unique culture in many ways.I can't point to registration solving the problem in other environments. I understand if you look to that as a reason why it should not be tried, but I think at the very least you should have to logically address why this solution WOULD NOT WORK to significantly reduce the incidence of gun violence. I only mentioned that solution because it logically addresses the issues that create gun violence. I am more than open to any other solution that addresses the same causes. Now, if you agree it WOULD WORK to reduce gun crime significantly, but say the cost or burden would be too high due to the Second Amendment rights, then that's a separate argument, and I would be happy to discuss that. As for the "it has happened time and time again argument," slippery slope arguments are bullshit. They are the product of a weak logical framework. We have laws, and limits, and as a society we are more than capable setting those boundaries and clearly establishing those lines. The only way we get a slippery slope progression is if society as a whole makes a giant shift. Gay marriage, civil rights, smoking indoors, these are the types of things where a crack in the door results in larger restrictions or expansions of rights. Argue the proposal being made. The only responses are (1) it wouldn't work, or (2) the cost would be too high. [and yes, i get this is a purely hypothetical proposal, because no one has the balls to address gun control in congress...the argument in my mind, though, is what works? and if you say this doesn't, then feel free to propose your own solution. but don;t just act like there is no way to improve the level of gun violence we have, because that's bullshit.][Edited on April 25, 2013 at 12:08 AM. Reason : dsf]
4/25/2013 12:04:58 AM
The only problem, is that it didn't work in the UK or Australia. The UK has a higher violent crime rate than the US. They just picked a different weapon. The crime rate was decreasing in the UK, and did not decrease at a faster rate once guns were confiscated. In Australia, the rate of home invasions and robberies increased after their registration/ confiscation.
4/25/2013 12:15:49 AM
4/25/2013 12:20:48 AM
Actually, they did work. They significantly reduced gun death and gun violence. Gun laws are not intended to be a panacea for all crimes. Even so, if we exchanged the death rate for a fivefold or tenfold increase in the other crimes rate, that may even be a legitimate discussion to have. How many assaults is a death worth? Clearly it's a tradeoff...but again, it goes back to my prior statement about what is an acceptable exchange.Presumably, you are saying (without saying it) that by eliminating guns in the hands of responsible citizens, they cannot protect themselves, and thus were victims of more crime in other countries...so what did I propose? Why, a solution to that issue - a solution that doesn't keep ANY GUNS out of the hands of law abiding citizens, but only makes it significantly more onerous for those who CLAIM to be responsible, but who actually aren't. Take a look at it above and tell me why it wouldn't work.You ignored my proposition entirely. If registration and responsibility were required, there would be no reduction in gun ownership. The only impact would be on those who sell guns to felons, let guns get into the hands of children, don't properly secure their guns, or don't report their guns stolen in a timely fashion.[Edited on April 25, 2013 at 12:32 AM. Reason : j]
4/25/2013 12:31:24 AM
4/25/2013 1:11:56 AM
lol, nice blog?
4/25/2013 7:42:32 AM