michal1980
Diamond Member
- Mar 7, 2003
- 8,019
- 43
- 91
So what your saving is you found a place to save some federal $$$.
The idea is not to get rid of the second amendment but regulate it vigorously. Can't let idiots get guns.
+1
On a side note, NAC4EV should really rethink his choice of avatar, apparently.
"You want a gun?"
"Yes"
"Test complete; you're an idiot"
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The Second Amendment must go: We ban lawn darts. Its time to ban guns.
We are one nation, forever f*cked by the NRA and an outdated and dangerous read of the Constitution. Let's fix it.
Call me naïve or any number of other things, but my suggestion is no more naïve than most of the arguments that gun advocates trot out on a daily basis. Its also no more naïve than thinking that well solve our gun problem with half measures or, even worse, doing nothing.
Code:http://www.salon.com/2015/12/04/the_second_amendment_must_go_we_ban_lawn_darts_its_time_to_ban_guns/
Someone from the country that bans carrying cutlery in public probably isn't the best judge for idiocy. Or for judging threats, unless you're deathly afraid of a mass killing by someone using a fish deboner or deadly instrument of cheddar cheese slicing.
Yes, but on the other hand we don't have mass killings making the news on approximately a monthly basis.
Which culture would you prefer to live in, one where you feel the need to lobby against practices that directly contribute to regular mass killings in the general population, or lobby for your right to transport your fish deboner in peace?
Ban cars. Tens of thousands of people die because of them every year.
BTW, from what I can find, 2/3's of the number in the graph were suicides.
How does lobbying for gun laws to restrict lawful gun owners from owning guns contribute directly to reducing mass shootings be people illegally owning guns already?
Hint, it doesnt. Laws only work for those willing to obey them. I'd wager a guess that the guy killing people doesn't give two shits about gun laws.
That graph adds int the 20000+ suicides in which a gun was used. That's stupid.
So what your saving is you found a place to save some federal $$$.
Yes, but on the other hand we don't have mass killings making the news on approximately a monthly basis.
Which culture would you prefer to live in, one where you feel the need to lobby against practices that directly contribute to regular mass killings in the general population, or the other where you feel the need to lobby for your right to transport your fish deboner in peace?
Yes, but on the other hand we don't have mass killings making the news on approximately a monthly basis.
Which culture would you prefer to live in, one where you feel the need to lobby against practices that directly contribute to regular mass killings in the general population, or the other where you feel the need to lobby for your right to transport your fish deboner in peace?
I'm not sure why you're responding to me with this question since I haven't actually advocated any particular approach on this thread. glenn1 responded to a joke I made, basically saying how idiotic things are in the UK, so I responded with the post you quoted.
If you want to know my opinion on gun ownership in the US, I think it's idiotic that you guys made it this far while dragging along an interpretation of the law that should have ended at least a century ago. However, with the apparent extent of gun ownership (legal and otherwise), as someone else on this thread already said "the cat's out of the bag", and furthermore given the emotionally charged responses to the OP, I think a lot of Americans think of their firearms as something between a "symbol of freedom" (even to the point that they think the government would allow itself to be overthrown in such a fashion!) and their penis. Hopefully that attitude will wear off over time, once it does then perhaps gun laws can be steadily tightened and supply dwindles to an extent that's typical of most developed countries. That process would still probably take a lifetime once public opinion has mostly come around to the idea, but perhaps a long-term commitment (in some way that when made can't be broken, perhaps cross-party agreement and/or a referendum) over a fixed time period is what's needed, as opposed to a haphazard approach where gun ownership rights and randomly snipped here and there and people don't know what to expect with it; is there still going to be say a gang-firearms-violence problem when a vital part of gun control gets passed, making law-abiders vulnerable, for example.
But if they didn't have a gun they wouldn't have committed suicide:thumbsup:
Really? We can't even get get past the regulation part even though it is the third word in the amendment.
Yes, but on the other hand we don't have mass killings making the news on approximately a monthly basis.
Which culture would you prefer to live in, one where you feel the need to lobby against practices that directly contribute to regular mass killings in the general population, or the other where you feel the need to lobby for your right to transport your fish deboner in peace?
To be fair, when a gun kills somebody it may be performing one of its functions as a tool. When a car kills somebody, it's almost always unintentional. There's far dumber things to spend money on than trying to bring vehicular related deaths as close to zero as possible.