Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:50 PP, I think that's a great start -- ensure that people who do have guns store them and ammunition properly, and that they are properly registered and trained. It goes without saying that people who are mentally ill, criminally minded, or otherwise potentially unstable (this includes young adults before their rational reasoning is fully mature, around age 25) should not be able to access guns. Sure, you can't stop bank robberies either, but banks do a whole to try to minimize them.
Also, (semi)automatic rifles have no place outside the military.
I don't think you know what semi-automatic guns are.
Yes. Most people don’t. They have no idea what this stuff is.
And, after all the guns are taken away, who do you think is left to stand up to Trump 2.0...the one who isn’t an idiot, who actually tries to be a real hardcore dictator?
-signed, a 2nd Amendment savvy Democrat. We do exist.
Anonymous wrote:Over react much? A mass shooting was your first thought? Amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:50 PP, I think that's a great start -- ensure that people who do have guns store them and ammunition properly, and that they are properly registered and trained. It goes without saying that people who are mentally ill, criminally minded, or otherwise potentially unstable (this includes young adults before their rational reasoning is fully mature, around age 25) should not be able to access guns. Sure, you can't stop bank robberies either, but banks do a whole to try to minimize them.
Also, (semi)automatic rifles have no place outside the military.
I don't think you know what semi-automatic guns are.
Anonymous wrote:12:50 PP, I think that's a great start -- ensure that people who do have guns store them and ammunition properly, and that they are properly registered and trained. It goes without saying that people who are mentally ill, criminally minded, or otherwise potentially unstable (this includes young adults before their rational reasoning is fully mature, around age 25) should not be able to access guns. Sure, you can't stop bank robberies either, but banks do a whole to try to minimize them.
Also, (semi)automatic rifles have no place outside the military.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed. As a nation our leaders clearly do not agree.
Why do we need to wait for outr "leaders" to do something? Why don't we as a society take some responsibility?
Ok. How do you suggest we do this?
Hold it as a make-or-break issue. Support strict gun regulations or you do not get my vote. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed. As a nation our leaders clearly do not agree.
Why do we need to wait for outr "leaders" to do something? Why don't we as a society take some responsibility?
Ok. How do you suggest we do this?
Hold it as a make-or-break issue. Support strict gun regulations or you do not get my vote. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over react much? A mass shooting was your first thought? Amazing.
Not an overreaction. My DS is twelve and so far we have dealt with a rumor (thankfully false) of a gun threat, and when he was in preschool, he had to be evacuated due to a bomb threat (also thankfully unfounded).
Not an overreaction?? Both examples you gave were...overreactions.
OP, you are paranoid. The media sensationalizes shootings. There have been 15 school shootings (of those, 4 were university)in the US this year and there are over 132,000 k-12 schools. That puts the odds of a mass shorting happening at your child's school closer to zero than pretty much any other bad thing that could happen.
These statistics are horrifying, but what’s even worse, is your passive acceptance of this problem. It seems people an rationalize anything.