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Well said Buzz. As usual you made good and logical points. I see the woman had pledged allegiance it ISIS. Also the assault guns are not legal to buy or sell in California, but you can get them from any doper or black market group. I don't have a stash of guns but have had a CCP for many years and have always had at least a couple of guns. I have worked with various LEOs at times in the past and just wish that people from other countries would stop trying to decide what we should or should not be allowed to do and I also wish out crooked politicians would stay out of other countries business.
Ron :) |
Buzz said; "I can safely say I have to choose on the side of sensible restrictions." Just what are "sensible restrictions?" We have laws, plenty of them, but someone who is determined to get a gun and do harm with it will.
For example, in California to purchase a gun, the following laws apply: First you must: Pass a universal background check, no matter where you buy your gun. Wait at least 10 days to receive that gun (the idea here is to give law enforcement enough time to conduct the background check). Get your handgun microstamped, which means the make, model and serial number of the gun is transferred to each cartridge case every time the gun is fired (the idea is to allow police at a crime scene to trace a gun back to its owner). Take and pass a written safety test. Things you can’t do: Own most assault weapons or buy and sell large-capacity ammunition magazines or .50 caliber rifles. Buy your gun through a private sale, like online or via a friend, without first going through a licensed dealer (and thus getting a background check). Buy more than one handgun a month. Of course the two AR15s used by this couple, although purchased legally, were NOT purchased by either of the shooters. So, were these not “sensible restrictions?” Some may say these are far too restrictive, others would settle for no less that a total ban on any firearm. How does an act of terrorism turn into a debate on gun control? I wonder if the people of France had these same discussions after their recent attacks. How about India after 10 terrorists kill 166 in Mumbai during a 60 hour siege? Brussels, where a gunman, a French national with ties to ISIS murdered four people (with a gun) at the Jewish Museum? Pakistan where Taliban gunmen killed 148 (mostly school children) by shooting them in the head? Tunisia, where a lone gunman storms a beach resort and kills 37… The horrific killings in San Bernardino had NOTHING to do with gun control, or gun laws. It has EVERYTHING to do with the war we are engaged in now. Unless and until we wake up and accept the fact that there are people out there who intend us harm and wish to destroy everything we stand for, I am certain there will be more attacks. Now, more than ever the second amendment is relevant to protect our “unalienable rights” of Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Most importantly our right as free people to defend ourselves. |
Gun control is like the war on drugs. The criminals are not going to cooperate. Do you think gun control would have stopped those two people? If so there is no use in arguing this.
If there were people there with a carry permit it may have ended very differently. |
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Criminals will get guns no matter what. There is no stopping that. You want to control guns for the rest of the population which is not going to change mass shootings, especially terrorist shootings. Lets say there was gun control and the two terrorists applied and went through the process. Would the outcome have changed? A person intent on causing harm will. Would it have been better if they made a bomb or a chemical weapon? Those two were going to do something. Do you recall Timothy James McVeigh. Not a shot was fired. |
Good points, guys. I didn't realise there were such extensive regulations in California. I suppose its a state by state thing. I have to agree re: the attacks in Paris, as I admit I was compelled to wonder how much easier it was for the cowards to plan and execute the murders knowing full well not one of the innocent victims they wanted to slaughter would be carrying a gun or weapon of any kind.
When I think about the ease of buying large amounts of advanced weapons and ammo, it's not so much about the connected terrorists or serious, hard-core criminals who have their own supply lines and know their way around the black market. I'm thinking more about the introverted high school kid and the mentally deranged person, or the lonely, angry loser who wants to go out in a blaze of glory taking revenge on all the normal folks they resent for being normal. Those types of mass shooters probably outnumber all others and are the ones who almost always use store-bought weapons. Having said that though, I agree that radical islamic jihadism on home soil is a newer, growing threat that needs a whole new mindset and different set of tactics to combat effectively. Those measures go well beyond any gun laws or regulations but they may also challenge traditional constitutional values when it comes to rights and freedoms. |
I just bought an M1 carbine, my dad just bought a Garand...:)
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Lucky you - I've always loved the M-1 carbine.
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The interesting thing about gun control is to compare it to booze prohibition - that didn't work very well partially because booze can be made practically anywhere - well, so can guns - therefore, the mafia and others would simply get busy making guns and the bad guys would get busy buying those guns - with anyone else unarmed......
So, gun control is a really stupid idea. |
You can't legislate behavior. As said, prohibition, drug laws, and capital punishment do nothing to change behaviors. But there is one exception.
California enacted a three-strikes law. A third felony carries a mandatory 25-year-to-life sentence. Since that law was enacted, when felons have two strikes, their parole officer advises them of the law. 95% of them now get out of jail, get a good education, and become model citizens.........:LOL: I crack myself up. Culture, culture, culture. The zeitgeist of a country is what drives behavior. Not laws. |
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Ill say a few more things on this issue before I sign out because it really is like banging your head against a wall. I am not for gun prohibition, but surely, in America, a system where you can be on a no fly list but you can buy a gun is wrong. How can ANYONE think this system is OK. Even if you are "pro gun", you would have to be insane to think it is OK for potential terrorists to buy a gun. Cars aren't designed to kill people, fast food isn't designed to kill people, so comparing guns (which are designed to kill people) to these things is really dumb IMO. According to recent CBS news poll, 58% of Americans want to see change to the gun laws. Those folk telling me that Im not welcome to visit your fine country because disagree with you and agree with the majority of your countrymen - Im guessing you would like those 58% to leave then? Separating terrorist attacks from gun control is not entirely valid. If you were to compare the most recent attack in San Barnardino to the 2 most recent in the UK and Australia. Both lone attackers, the UK guy using a knife in the subway injuring a few, the Australian using a single pistol killing one. The huge part of why these were so less damaging than the San Barnardino attack was because access to weapons in the UK and Oz is so much more difficult. It is very logical to conclude that if there are more weapons in circulation in the general public, then more weapons are able to end up in the hands of those we don't want to have then, such as terrorists. This is not a quick fix. It is a little like the global warning debate (and Im not saying I support one side or another) but the sooner a change is made the sooner the problem starts to get better. Even if the sale of all guns was banned from now, it would still take decades for an impact to be felt, however, if something is not done, then in 50 years time you will still be seeing the same type of stats saying you are 20 times more likely to die in the US by being shot then any other first world country. Any of those bragging about your gun collections, that stat is nothing to be proud of. It is actually shameful. Cheers |
One more time.
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Buy the way, do a google search for knife massacres. You will find that in countries with near zero access to guns, crazy people still kill dozens of children in schools, with knifes. Japan, China, Russia, Etc. Happens at about the same frequency as the US and is just as deadly, only it does not get reported the same (a side note on the back page rather than talking about it for 2 weeks), because it does not fit the anti-gun agenda. Also after the Great Australian Gun Confiscation program, your government changed how it reported crimes, to cover up the true increase in crime caused by the criminals knowing no one could defend themselves. |
Tenrocca opens this thread with an insulting comment on USA society, and NO sympathy or condolences to the families of the victims. Speaks volumes of his character right there. Moral superiority above all else.
He spouts statistics like they actually mean something. Mark Twain had it right : "Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics". Every survey, etc he quotes were created by an agency with an agenda, that matches his own, so he likes it. He claims to speak for the rest of the world, but in reality just speaks for himself and his very small pocket of like-minded progs. Progs blame the world's evil on inanimate objects, but have actually created the evil through moral/cultural decay, and pressure on the justice system to release criminals at the drop of the hat. He admits to just turning in a weapon that could be used for defense of himself and his family. He's not a man. Just a loud mouthed subject, a sheep. But hey, he knows better than all of us, right? Done with this twit. |
Dupe, sorry.
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Australians cant even put in an engine of their choice, it has to be government approved, might as well have them spoon feed you , no thanks, ill keep our guns and big blocks...:LOL::LOL:
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Exactly, Great space program they have too. Oh, wait..:LOL:
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Get yourself a nice lawyer buddy and have him explain some basic principles to you. This has got little to do with common sense anything, nor did it fact have anything to do with anything that could have been prevented by non- gun no fly co- lists. The other type of incidents happened with legal guns that proposed regulations by our progressive friends would have zero influence upon. If you follow Mrs. Clinton, for instance, and take a hard look at Mike Bloomberg and his funding, you should take him at his word, because he has stated it rather publicly more than a few times. His approach, in fact the major moneyed anti gun liberal approach has long stated that this is a battle that will require many victories. The long term objective is elimination of handguns, restrictive ownership, ideally zero ownership. It must start with strong legal precedent. It must start with restrictive laws that rational people can call " common sense" and then be constantly expand upon until the ultimate long term objectives are realized. This is why it is " exactly" spelled out as a constitutional right and not an earned privilege. One should think more about that given the most restricted areas of this entire nation are murder capitols as long as laws on the books don't get enforced. Given the last few of these events, when's the last time anybody heard a damn thing about common sense mental health care laws other than the post shooting" he was always volatile" ", he was never right" ", I was always scared of him, " he alway said he'd hurt somebody". A final point. All this relation to the no fly list is spurious at best. While I understand the list itself is a cause for closer scrutiny. Unfortunately we still have something here called "due process". Is it going to lead us down a rabbit hole when rights get suspended, not reviewed but suspended, not because you were convicted, charged, or even suspected of something, but made a list that nobody really knows much about? |
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Anyway, its going to be interesting when Hillary gets in. |
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