northgajacket
Banned
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The number doesn't matter. Many Americans own more and aren't psychos. The intent of and actual use of them is what matters.
Sorry, I just have never understood the infatuation with having a bunch of guns.
The number doesn't matter. Many Americans own more and aren't psychos. The intent of and actual use of them is what matters.
Evil has always and will always exist in the world.....until the return of Christ anyway. But I don't want to derail with religious debate.
Sorry, I just have never understood the infatuation with having a bunch of guns.
The anti-profiling crowd is typically also the anti-gun crowd. We have a Republican socialized medicine, tax & spender in the White House that’s pro-America and anti-gun control. I think nationally we’re going to have a political short circuit.What's wrong with that?
I don't see a solution in our country since the subject of gun control has been debated and resolved, so far, through the ballot box. People seem to be voting that the freedom to own guns of almost any capability is worth the collateral damage of the deaths we see. I don't agree and don't own a gun. 90 people every day are shot in this country (60 are suicide attempts) so the impact of guns has been with us for a long time. The cynic in me says even if we were able to restrict guns effectively, people would resort to bombs or poison or something else.
I don't think many people look at is a freedom vs collateral damage any more than they look at cars as: Freedom to get where I need to go when I want to is worth 96 people per day dying in car accidents. I don't think that eliminating all legal guns in the US would be 100% effective in preventing shootings. I hasn't been 100% effective in Europe. Guns are simply tools. It isn't cynical to believe that if guns weren't available at all that people wouldn't use other tools to enact violence. Some tools, like bombs and poisons, could potentially be more effective and more deadly than guns.
Sorry, I just have never understood the infatuation with having a bunch of guns.
I know a few people with that many guns but they weren’t all acquired in one year and they aren’t all assault rifles which is what would raise the red flag for me.Still should raise a red flag. Nobody on earth needs that many guns.
I know a few people with that many guns but they weren’t all acquired in one year and they aren’t all assault rifles which is what would raise the red flag for me.
I know a few people with that many guns but they weren’t all acquired in one year and they aren’t all assault rifles which is what would raise the red flag for me.
Folks I know with that many guns have a mix of historically significant, antique and/or specialty edition guns...a "collection" not just a heap of assault rifles.
Automobile accidents kill more people per year than anything else so should they be banned also. 90% of them are caused by someone breaking the law ie speeding reckless driving dui texting. See that’s my point when we start banning things where do we stop.
Once the whole car thing was brought up, i figured this was gonna be said. cars are designed to bring people from one place to another. But you also have laws in place for who can get a license, continual testing for skills, mandatory training, mandatory registration and insurance as a way to mitigate risk, etc. Same things don't apply to guns. Which is weird to me because cars are designed to transport things, but guns are designed to well, kill things http://www.people-press.org/2013/03/12/why-own-a-gun-protection-is-now-top-reason/
Not a big fan of assault weapons either.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/mass-shootings-in-america/
http://www.slate.com/blogs/crime/20...many_assault_rifles_are_there_in_america.html
Despite being only ~1-3 % of all guns, they make up nearly 15-25% of all mass shooting weapon choices. As we learned at VT with handguns, if there is a will and way to store amunition, there is a way. But limiting access to something that doesnt really offer a lot of benefits (what can an assault rifle do that either a hunting rifle can't do power wise or a hand gun can do with portability?) I really can't think of a situation where having an assault rifle is neccesary
Anyway, growing up in chicago definiely seen the negatives of attempting to do gun regulation. And seen the positives of less regulation when I lived in Oklahoma and could go hunting on the regular (I prefer bow hunting). I think regulation should be done, but Americas past with it, especially the previous Clinton led AW Ban, makes me wonder what really would be the best route. Slippery slope logical fallacy aside, based off the 94 banning of assault weapons, i really don't understand the hesitation for regulation. More Americans (on both sides) want to have handguns available than any other time in american history. We will never go full on Australia just due to how ingrained gun culture is in America. Both sides want guns, just the democrats want to be able to see if there is a way to reduce it as doing nothing hasn't really been working.
Once the whole car thing was brought up, i figured this was gonna be said. cars are designed to bring people from one place to another. But you also have laws in place for who can get a license, continual testing for skills, mandatory training, mandatory registration and insurance as a way to mitigate risk, etc. Same things don't apply to guns. Which is weird to me because cars are designed to transport things, but guns are designed to well, kill things http://www.people-press.org/2013/03/12/why-own-a-gun-protection-is-now-top-reason/
Not a big fan of assault weapons either.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/mass-shootings-in-america/
http://www.slate.com/blogs/crime/20...many_assault_rifles_are_there_in_america.html
Despite being only ~1-3 % of all guns, they make up nearly 15-25% of all mass shooting weapon choices. As we learned at VT with handguns, if there is a will and way to store amunition, there is a way. But limiting access to something that doesnt really offer a lot of benefits (what can an assault rifle do that either a hunting rifle can't do power wise or a hand gun can do with portability?) I really can't think of a situation where having an assault rifle is neccesary
Anyway, growing up in chicago definiely seen the negatives of attempting to do gun regulation. And seen the positives of less regulation when I lived in Oklahoma and could go hunting on the regular (I prefer bow hunting). I think regulation should be done, but Americas past with it, especially the previous Clinton led AW Ban, makes me wonder what really would be the best route. Slippery slope logical fallacy aside, based off the 94 banning of assault weapons, i really don't understand the hesitation for regulation. More Americans (on both sides) want to have handguns available than any other time in american history. We will never go full on Australia just due to how ingrained gun culture is in America. Both sides want guns, just the democrats want to be able to see if there is a way to reduce it as doing nothing hasn't really been working.
As a side note driving a car is not listed in our bill of rights....possessing and carrying weapons is.
We can have a huge discussion on the "need" for semi-auto rifles, commonly referred to incorrectly by liberals as "assault weapons".
If multiple peeps break into my home, semi-autos are the best defense period. Does this happen a lot? Subjective. Does it happen? Absolutely.