http://www.masslive.com/news/index....ts_bill_would_requi.html#incart_most-comments
another way to gouge the American people.
Well most home owners policies will require extra insurance if want a certain type of dog, especially those prone to biting. So this isn't a stretch.
The difference is that owning a home w/ a dog is not a constitutional right
Requiring insurance for a gun is equivalent to a poll tax.
Interferes with a constitutional amendment.
Ehh......
I won't totally disagree with your point, duly noted. But in response, requiring insurance I would argue doesn't interfere with the constitutional right. I would argue on this point that it would be a way to define the constitutional right further, which we have done in other circumstances. If the constitution is a living and breathing document, then it should be allowed to be shaped further.
Well most home owners policies will require extra insurance if want a certain type of dog, especially those prone to biting. So this isn't a stretch.
The difference is that owning a home w/ a dog is not a constitutional right
Requiring insurance for a gun is equivalent to a poll tax.
Interferes with a constitutional amendment.Ehh......
I won't totally disagree with your point, duly noted. But in response, requiring insurance I would argue doesn't interfere with the constitutional right. I would argue on this point that it would be a way to define the constitutional right further, which we have done in other circumstances. If the constitution is a living and breathing document, then it should be allowed to be shaped further.
its actually I think illegal to make a legal right financial not viable for a majority of the population
Ehh......
I won't totally disagree with your point, duly noted. But in response, requiring insurance I would argue doesn't interfere with the constitutional right. I would argue on this point that it would be a way to define the constitutional right further, which we have done in other circumstances. If the constitution is a living and breathing document, then it should be allowed to be shaped further.
Well most home owners policies will require extra insurance if want a certain type of dog, especially those prone to biting. So this isn't a stretch.
Accidental death policies will more than likely start at $10M and up.
If the death is justified, no payout even in a civil suit.
Either the cost of the policy to a policy holder will be outrageous - in essentially depriving one of the 2nd Amendment rights or the policy holder will go under with a couple of claims against them.
In Mass, figure maybe 1% would register for insurance.
Assume that the population of Mass is 6M.
1% of that is 60K. 120M/100K
Statistics have Mass having 5 deaths per 100K population - 30 per year
$300M in claims then per year.
That requires insurance coverage by the registered owners w/ insurance of $5000 per year.
I would not expect so.Is there any existing insurance that covers a persons actions if that person purposely commits a crime?
Wouldn't requiring insurance take guns out of the hands of poor people? Isn't that the real point behind this? They would still have the right to bear arms, they just won't be able to afford it.
Unlike owning a car, the right to bear arms is enshrined in the Constitution.Hardly like a poll tax.
For starters, the act of voting does have any danger in causing the death of people.
Unlike owning a car, the right to bear arms is enshrined in the Constitution.
You have to repeal the 2A before you can start knee-capping gun owners.
Good luck with that.
I would love to repeal the 2nd. But you are still allowed to regulate guns under the 2nd.
Let me ask you this: do you believe in unfettered access to abortion or do you want there to be restrictions on the practice?
Unfettered, and hopefully we can advance medicine to the point where it would be much less invasive to perform.I would love to repeal the 2nd. But you are still allowed to regulate guns under the 2nd.
Let me ask you this: do you believe in unfettered access to abortion or do you want there to be restrictions on the practice?