SmarterthanYou
rebel
right, no possible way to abuse THAT, is there?Sounds like a good place to start.
right, no possible way to abuse THAT, is there?Sounds like a good place to start.
right, no possible way to abuse THAT, is there?
let's pass any law, see how it works, then fix whatever it breaks? you realize the potential danger in that, don't you?Sure there is. But it's still worth considering - and trying.
Should a paranoid schizophrenic with a history of volatile behaviour be allowed to have guns?
I don't think anyone has proven that he was legally "allowed to have" a gun. He certainly did obtain a gun, and I am sure the details will all come out in his trial. But to leap to the conclusion that this guy was some kook who exploited the law to do this, is just unreasonable. As has been pointed out, if he couldn't have obtained a gun, he seemed to have a keen knowledge on how to make explosives, he booby-trapped his apartment. Should we make whatever crude materials he used illegal to obtain without a note from your psychiatrist as well?
irrelevant. you anti gunners and liberals like to focus on potentiality, at least until it no longer suits you.His use of the other crude materals did not result in anyones death.
let's pass any law, see how it works, then fix whatever it breaks? you realize the potential danger in that, don't you?
You mean instead of the trans vaginal ultrasound? That would probably be easier, you can sleep through the therapy session
we also have plenty of data and evidence that suggests you can't tell the difference between a dealer and a private seller at a gun show, so what makes you think this is a good step in the 'right' direction?We're not talking about *any* law. We have plenty of data and evidence with which to see that what presently exists regarding gun rights is failing miserably. Expecting perfection is stupid - you and your 'rights' haven't ensured that, that much is obvious. So let's try for 'better'.
we also have plenty of data and evidence that suggests you can't tell the difference between a dealer and a private seller at a gun show, so what makes you think this is a good step in the 'right' direction?
lets take a look at some historyGee...let me think....the fact that whack jobs' gun 'rights' facilitate movie-theater shoot-ups?
lets take a look at some history
1) no guns signs at theaters........that didn't work
2) requiring licenses to carry guns......that didn't work
3) laws against killing people........that didn't work
4) laws against discharging a firearm in public.......that didn't work
5) background checks on all FFL purchases to deny prohibited persons from acquring guns........that didn't work
so now you want to federalize a database, require all states to implement it, so that anyone who has been involuntarily committed (ripe for abuse by anti gun politicians and police) is denied their 2nd Amendment rights? and you think that the benefits outweigh the harm caused by this?
so how do you go about correcting the inevitable abuses that occur?I think it's time to start implementing something like that, yes.
His use of the other crude materals did not result in anyones death.
so how do you go about correcting the inevitable abuses that occur?
you are the one proposing this law, so it would be up to you to figure out the fixes. we need to see what you have in mind. see, if I come up with fixes, then I now have to run against opposition from the likes of you who prefer unarmed people over armed people. so fix what you've broken.Well it's much easier to correct the mistake of not giving a gun to a stable person than it is to correct the damage done by giving a gun to an unstable person. So go ahead and sort that one out in your head and see what you come up with. It's doable. You just don't want to do it.
I may get some opposition from some of my allies but this is common sense to me. An approach to solve this would be making previous mental illness and/or institunalization due to mental illness a part of the instantaneous background checks. Some may holler about someone's right to privacy but the effort to keep weapons out of the hands of the mentally ill (just like criminals) trumps privacy, IMO. But then I wasn't against ALL of the Patriot Act.
Well it's much easier to correct the mistake of not giving a gun to a stable person than it is to correct the damage done by giving a gun to an unstable person.
Ah, the voice of reason!
you are the one proposing this law, so it would be up to you to figure out the fixes. we need to see what you have in mind. see, if I come up with fixes, then I now have to run against opposition from the likes of you who prefer unarmed people over armed people. so fix what you've broken.