| I sent messages to Kaine and Warner to voice my support |
| If only I had a rep... |
| I just messaged my senators to ask them to join the filibuster. |
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Anyone familiar with the law and the disagreement between the Democrats and REpublicans about whether any judge should be able to arbitrate disputes vs. the Justice Department able to explain the material differences between the approaches? It seems to be a matter of different branches of government, but how does it play out.
I'm very much in favor of gun control, but it actually seems to me that the Republican argument has more solid Constitutional grounds (not a lawyer, though). |
| I second that. Go Chris Murphy!!! I'm listening, It's heartening that he's doing this. |
Contact some other rep. It's not like they have time to research where you're from! |
| It's great! But wow what a low bar we have now regarding gun safety. |
| I sent emails to Sen. Cardin and Se. Mikulski. Who else should I send email to? |
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The low hanging fruit:
-Feds and state police to prosecute (some) straw buyers. I see why they can't/won't sometimes. It's not worth the cost to lose or get a light sentence, but it's just allowing more illegal guns. Prosecute enough, and harshly, to send a message. -no gun show loophole anymore -follow up on background checks that come back too late, and default to the gun buyer. In the entire insane process, there are like 7 times this could be followed up on in 100% legal ways. Start there and then let's talk. |
My loose understanding is that the Dems want the government to be able to add a person to the list when it decides that person is a credible threat. If the person thinks he was mistakenly added to the list, he can asked to be removed. The Repubs want the rule to be that the govt cannot add anyone to the list without first seeking court permission. IMHO, the safety the public gains by allowing the government first control over who gets on this list is more important than the need of some individuals to get immediate access to a gun. At worst, the individual's ability to get a gun may be delayed by a few weeks. That's not too big a price to pay to prevent an evildoer from getting access too quickly. Forcing the government to first go to a court for permission will limit the safety and will clog the courts. |
Cornyn & McConnell. Tell them to get their asses to the negotiating table. |
| This is great! Finally! |
What you're saying makes sense, but it doesn't square with the Politico article:
The disagreement as Politico paints it, is difficult to tease out except for the different branches of government. But I can't imagine a reason the Dems wouldn't be willing to accept such a compromise from the NRA...so I feel like your explanation might be the correct one. |
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Cornyn's Republican Proposal (backed by NRA): Under Republican legislation, the federal government may delay the sale of a firearm to someone on the watch list for up to 72 hours. During that time, if the government can show a judge there's "probable cause" that the individual is plotting terrorism, then the gun sale is denied outright. But if the government cannot show that the individual is plotting terrorism within 72 hours, the individual gets the gun.
Dem Proposal: The Democratic bill allows the federal government to block anyone on the government's watch list from buying a gun. The gun buyer can challenge the block in court. The government's decision will be sustained only if a "preponderance of evidence" [i.e., more likely than not] indicates that the attorney general has a "reasonable belief" that the prospective gun buyer may be engaged in terrorism. |