Yeah guys, why limit the right to bear dangerous weapons when we could instead limit freedom of the press? Clearly the latter is less vital to our society.
12/17/2012 2:24:16 PM
12/17/2012 2:25:47 PM
perhaps we should limit the freedom of the press to print only. the internet is just too fast.
12/17/2012 2:26:43 PM
^^Or how about make all guns stab you in the hand so you only use them when you absolutely need to. [Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:28 PM. Reason : ^^]
12/17/2012 2:27:40 PM
12/17/2012 2:28:12 PM
yes, you have to be a raging boner
12/17/2012 2:29:23 PM
12/17/2012 2:29:29 PM
the fact is a lot of americans love to shoot for sport. they spend billions on it. guns ain't going anywhere. we need to find a compromise.
12/17/2012 2:30:23 PM
12/17/2012 2:30:35 PM
12/17/2012 2:33:29 PM
I've done nothing BUT support gun control. And there was no sarcasm in my edit. Myself and NRR and a handful of others have proposed several ideas. Those I can recall come from experience with firearms, most more than myself. [Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:35 PM. Reason : giving your post benefit of doubt.][Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:36 PM. Reason : yall niggas postin in a fast thread]
12/17/2012 2:33:56 PM
^^you shoud log on under McDanger and agree with yourself ittto the people you manage to fool, it makes the retarded points you make at least a little stronger.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:34 PM. Reason : .]
12/17/2012 2:34:19 PM
the fact is a lot of americans love to shoot for sport. they spend billions on it. they also like to have the option of defending themselves with guns. they spend billions on it as well. guns ain't going anywhere. we need to find a compromise.
12/17/2012 2:35:29 PM
Because apparently it needs to be stated explictly, I very much support gun control
12/17/2012 2:37:19 PM
Use the system above for sport-shooting, and limit self-defense purchases to pistols, shotguns, and (non-semiautomatic) rifles.
12/17/2012 2:38:59 PM
Now there's a reasonable solution. I don't agree with it necessarily, but it's not idiotic like a lot of crap I've heard already. We should make a list.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:41 PM. Reason : damn]
12/17/2012 2:41:17 PM
Before you say that read again, because between those two proposals is a total ban on non-pistol semiautomatics.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:42 PM. Reason : .]
12/17/2012 2:42:49 PM
Why are you so opposed to semi-automatics?
12/17/2012 2:44:32 PM
Again, I said it was a reasonable solution, but I don't agree with it. "Reasonable" in that I can understand the logic behind it, even if I believe it to be misguided. Just because I don't agree doesn't mean I'm not willing to listen...that's how compromises are born. I would take what you said and implement it. Those wishing to permanently possess semi-auto rifles with larger-capacity magazines must pass an appropriately-rigorous safety, aptitude, skills, mental and responsibility evaluation. [Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:48 PM. Reason : asdf]
12/17/2012 2:45:27 PM
12/17/2012 2:47:30 PM
12/17/2012 2:51:19 PM
I don't think most of this will help anything significantly, as I've said I don't think the primary problem is with engineered pieces of metal and plastic. I'm just trying to appease the push for gun control while still maintaining second amendment rights. But it would serve to somewhat reduce availability of the more devastating weapons over time to kids like this that yanked them from his unstable motherFTR: I make no distinction between sport/hunting/SD for any firearm. Certainly most are designed with one or the other in mind, but all can be used unilaterally. I'm only concerned with a qualitative assessment of firepower, which could get quantitative...designate some power (in true power terms, i.e. tissue energy deposition over time) vs. lethality threshold that requires licensure[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:02 PM. Reason : asdfas]
12/17/2012 2:52:56 PM
it should make some sense. when we accept convoluted bullshit regulations, we end up with AWB '94.honestly, if all we got out of this was another AWB, i'd chalk it up as a win for the NRA. i don't mount bayonets, i don't care about a flash hider, and my beard gets caught in my adjustable stock, so i'm thinking about taking it off. i've got enough 20 and 30 round mags to last me. i'd have to pay a little more for >10 rd mags for eventual purchases like an M1 carbine and a Glock 19, but that's a small price to pay.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:57 PM. Reason : asdf]
12/17/2012 2:53:57 PM
I think the point is to radically change the idea of gun ownership. Instead of just having guns around that you can use both for sport and for home defense we would separate the two and more heavily regulate which are licensed for which purpose.I'm not certain this is a problem that can be fixed with legislation anyway. I think it's something that has to organically change over many generations given how enshrined guns (and violence) are in American culture.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 2:56 PM. Reason : .]
12/17/2012 2:55:54 PM
^exactly, to the latter point anyway.
12/17/2012 2:57:38 PM
My proposals:- Start a massive government buy-back program for long guns and hand guns, fund it with taxes for gun manufacturers who sell in the US- Require registration of all handguns - Better define the AOW category of the NFA, extend it to include high capacity magazines for long guns and maybe some other things. Provide some kind of permitting process to better allow private citizens to purchase some of these controlled weapons and leave the barrier where its at for others. Essentially make a two-tier system and not just call some people dealers and let them have whatever.- Increase the penalty for unsecured firearms drastically- Increase the penalty for failing to report a lost or stolen firearm- Increase base purchase permitting requirements at the federal level for state programs, allow states to have requirements above and beyond so long as they do not run contrary to 2nd Amendment case-law
12/17/2012 3:00:51 PM
12/17/2012 3:02:33 PM
that distinction seems to be based on the false assumption that a self defense weapon is more deadly than a hunting weapon
12/17/2012 3:03:59 PM
12/17/2012 3:06:51 PM
i could probably settle for dtownral's proposal, with the exception of the buy-back. that tax would just be passed-through to the consumer. guns are already taxed enough.
12/17/2012 3:07:58 PM
purpose designation is not gonna be a useful avenue unless you're a county official looking to bring in more licensing revenue
12/17/2012 3:08:20 PM
^^ Okay, well pay for it with existing gun taxes then. The point is to reduce the circulation of guns, we have to lower the number of guns. In Australia a gun buy-back program destroyed 650,000 guns, about 1/5th of the guns in circulation. Their National Firearms Agreement cut homicide rates 59% and firearm suicide rates 74% in 20 years. <- ignore this part [Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:20 PM. Reason : EDIT]
12/17/2012 3:17:33 PM
overall homicide rate or firearm homicide rate?[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:19 PM. Reason : not sure why suicide is relevant here. if someone wants out, let them out.][Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:20 PM. Reason : iirc, australia had a mandatory semi-auto turn-in, right?]
12/17/2012 3:18:44 PM
If I edit my post and delete that statistic can we avoid the argument you are trying to establish and focus on the point I made instead?Fore NeuseRiverRathttp://www.hsph.harvard.edu/research/hicrc/files/bulletins_australia_spring_2011.pdf
12/17/2012 3:19:48 PM
no, we can't, because if they reduced the number of firearms and saw no discernable reduction in homicide rate, then it proves that guns aren't the problem (or weren't the problem for australia).if you don't have the data for overall homicide rate, that's fine, too.
12/17/2012 3:22:27 PM
12/17/2012 3:25:34 PM
12/17/2012 3:26:15 PM
as a bit of a collector, i'd hate to see all those guns chopped up. just recently a woman turned in a $30k war bring-back that belongs in a museum for (iirc) a $50 gift card. why not just let these charity buy-back events take care of it. if we require all sales to go through an FFL, then we're gonna effectively have a national gun registration anyway.gun clubs actually collect junk guns and turn them in at those events and use the money to put on youth firearm safety and marksmanship events.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:32 PM. Reason : asdf]
12/17/2012 3:31:04 PM
so then don't sell your guns backthis is the advantage of the program, instead of banning things you provide an incentive to influence behavior to reduce the numbers.
12/17/2012 3:32:44 PM
The CA buy-back going on now gives $200 per firearm, NQA1.) You're delusional if you think I'm gonna sell any of my quality weapons for that little 1a) I would certainly sell back my busted 12ga, worth only ~$150 in working order 2.) Where is the money for this coming from? 3.) I support a buy-back program, I think it will certainly help eliminate a bunch of loose ends just waiting to be stolen during home break-ins 4.) See 1. No-one is going to sell their AR-15 for a fraction of what it's worth
12/17/2012 3:33:08 PM
gun advocates with nice guns are not the target, its a voluntary program
12/17/2012 3:34:03 PM
but those are guns i could eventually add to my collection. to many of us, they are irreplaceable pieces of american history. as much as some would hate to admit it, firearms have, for better or worse, molded this country into what it is today.
12/17/2012 3:34:28 PM
Yeah I get it, my post was really more chit-chat style in intentIf even one life is saved...
12/17/2012 3:34:57 PM
there is no reason why youre gun group couldn't have a big buy-back charity vent to filter through what people are turning in, or have FFL accept guns for the program. the program should not be limited to these activities though.
12/17/2012 3:35:44 PM
so, if a gun club held an event and only destroyed the firearms that were beyond repair, what would happen to all the other ones? do they then get registered?
12/17/2012 3:37:37 PM
exactly
12/17/2012 3:39:28 PM
12/17/2012 3:41:27 PM
seems like a reasonable trade-off. gun club holds a silent auction for members. the money goes back to the next buy-back. i could handle that.i really really like str8foolish's proposal of a well-regulated militia. i would be tempted to submit to registration if we're allowed to maintain a militia with some serious firepower.but let it be known that i do not believe any of these would reduce homicide rates. i would just rather do this than arbitrarily ban scary stuff.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:47 PM. Reason : afasdf]
12/17/2012 3:45:28 PM
We spent a lot of time breaking up militias in the 90's, we don't need to encourage it again. It may start out as nice people who enjoy guns, but it turns into neo-nazis and anarchists and domestic terrorist groups, etc.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:52 PM. Reason : ^did you read the link I posted, the provided some evidence. Its secondary to this discussion though]
12/17/2012 3:51:01 PM
so some folks say the 2nd Amendment doesn't protect an individual rightothers say that it doesn't allow for militiasit's gotta be either or both, right?man, i don't wanna be a dick, but unless that link shows that australia's confiscation reduced overall homicide rates, then it doesn't prove anything.[Edited on December 17, 2012 at 3:59 PM. Reason : asdf]
12/17/2012 3:53:05 PM