Yes, and it's so reassuring to know that there are enough of them to protect us whenever needed, as in the recent situation where a man was brutally beaten with no one to help him. |
Why do gun sales skyrocket after an incident? Because once is enough to be caught with your pants down. |
I'm not an NRA member and I support reasonable gun restrictions. The problem is that, if you make ANY concessions on gun regulations, the democrats will take that as a sign that they can demand even more restrictive concessions. This is the pattern the left has taken on many issues (e.g., gay rights starting out just being civil unions which "would never be gay 'marriage', then turning around and demanding gay marriage, then demanding acceptance of "trans" people and so on and so forth). The NRA has figured out that you need to fight on every little issue and not give an inch, or the left will end up using their momentum to ban guns entirely. |
Remember the Night Stalker murders in LA and San Fran? Idiot Diane Feinstein gave away vital details in an on-air PSA to the public, including the shoes that the killer always wore. The police were using those shoe prints to link the cases.
Result was Ramirez changed shoes after that and very nearly destroyed the case altogether, as the officers never did find the shoes when Ramirez was caught. He had disposed of them. In addition, Ramirez changed his behavior, throwing off the police, leading to more deaths. With this kind of 'help' from elected officials, seems to me staying armed is not a bad thing. Might I remind y'all that while Feinstein told Californians no guns, she, herself, had a concealed weapons permit and carried? She must've felt pretty safe from the Night Stalker, given the security she already had as an elected official plus this rare permit. |
That's a slippery slope argument from the NRA with no real basis in historical fact, for example the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban which expired after 10 years. |
The 1994 Assault Weapons Ban was indeed a slippery slope. The 1994 Assault Weapons Ban targeted semi-automatic weapons that cosmetically look like true military assault rifles. These so called assault weapons are no more powerful than your typical wood stock semi-automatic hunting rifle. A true assault weapon (aka machine gun) can fire multiple shots with a single pull of a trigger. True assault weapons are already banned at the federal level. So functionally speaking the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban signaled that semi-automatic weapons are dangerous and should be banned which would include many hunting rifles. The only feature keeping semi-automatic hunting rifles from being banned was cosmetics. Part of the problem is the loose definition that politics have created to define an assault rifle. |
Yeah well there are 500 times more civilian gun owners than there are cops and obviously none of them stepped up to help him. So much for the idea of the country being so much safer with "good guys with guns" to intervene... |
Everyone keeps saying that it's just cosmetics and correctly pointing out that they are functionally equivalent to a Remington semi auto hunting rifle, but again, what did the Paris attackers use? What did the Colorado Planned Parenthood attacker use? A Remington? No, they used AK style semi auto assault rifles, and why? Because of the mindset, acting like Rambo. They aren't the same. |
So you want to ban semi-auto rifles? What do you want people to use? Old-fashioned bolt-action like the winchester repeater from the 1850s? Blunderbusts? People who drone on about "semi-auto assault weapons!" don't realize that almost all guns are semi auto. Virtually every pistol is semi-auto (e.g., glocks, barretas, double action revolvers, etc.). Do you want people to be forced to use old-fashioned single-action revolvers that you have the cock the hammer each time you want to take a shot? |
The Paris attackers used true military grade assault rifles capable of firing multiple rounds with a single trigger pull. They had Chinese Model 56 variants of the AK47 Kalashnikov assault rifle and Zastava M70 assault rifles. Both types of guns are Federally banned in the US and banned throughout Europe. They also had semi-automatic pistols. I'm not so sure you can blame mass shootings on Hollywood Rambo movies. |
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]That's a slippery slope argument from the NRA with no real basis in historical fact, for example the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban which expired after 10 years.[/quote]
The 1994 Assault Weapons Ban was indeed a slippery slope. The 1994 Assault Weapons Ban targeted semi-automatic weapons that cosmetically look like true military assault rifles. These so called assault weapons are no more powerful than your typical wood stock semi-automatic hunting rifle. A true assault weapon (aka machine gun) can fire multiple shots with a single pull of a trigger. True assault weapons are already banned at the federal level. So functionally speaking the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban signaled that semi-automatic weapons are dangerous and should be banned which would include many hunting rifles. The only feature keeping semi-automatic hunting rifles from being banned was cosmetics. Part of the problem is the loose definition that politics have created to define an assault rifle.[/quote] Everyone keeps saying that it's just cosmetics and correctly pointing out that they are functionally equivalent to a Remington semi auto hunting rifle, but again, what did the Paris attackers use? What did the Colorado Planned Parenthood attacker use? A Remington? No, they used AK style semi auto assault rifles, and why? Because of the mindset, acting like Rambo. They aren't the same.[/quote] So you want to ban semi-auto rifles? What do you want people to use? Old-fashioned bolt-action like the winchester repeater from the 1850s? Blunderbusts? People who drone on about "semi-auto assault weapons!" don't realize that almost all guns are semi auto. Virtually every pistol is semi-auto (e.g., glocks, barretas, double action revolvers, etc.). Do you want people to be forced to use old-fashioned single-action revolvers that you have the cock the hammer each time you want to take a shot?[/quote] I don't want to ban semi-autos, I am just more sensible than the folks who are fixated on "military look" weapons, like AR-15s and AKs. Though I've used ARs, AKs, and the real deal, full auto M-16s I grew up on bolt-action hunting and military rifles and between hunting and military marksmanship training can probably do a lot better than the typical yokel Rambo wannabe with an AR, in particular bigger grain weight/caliber, higher velocities, et cetera. |
Gun lobby is just a pawn for gun manufacturers.
And a bunch of cowards afraid of facts. For nearly two decades, Congress has banned needed research on gun violence by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Last week, Congress, doing the bidding of the gun industry, quietly killed a provision in the omnibus spending bill that would have reversed that ban. In so doing, it left intact an anti-science smoke screen that has helped the industry and its lobbyists deny and dispute the facts of the gun violence that takes more than 30,000 lives a year. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/24/opinion/the-republican-fear-of-facts-on-guns.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage®ion=CColumn&module=MostViewed&version=Full&src=mv&WT.nav=MostViewed&_r=0 |
+1000 |
NO, CONGRESS HAS NOT "stopped CDCP from doing research on gun violence." Congress included language in the 1996 Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Bill (PDF, 2.4MB) for Fiscal Year 1997 that “none of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.” Referred to as the Dickey amendment after its author, former U.S. House Representative Jay Dickey (R-AR), this language did not explicitly ban research on gun violence. " [Congress] not FUNDING the CDCP research isn't the same thing as Congress prohibiting research. Why don't YOU put your money where your rmouth is to fund some research? Make an effort to know what you're talking about before launching the invective, grabber. |
What are they supposed to stop work on in order to do this? Childrens' Leukemia? |