Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toy guns are more tightly regulated than real guns.
Preposterous claim.
No, it’s correct. The CPSC oversees toy safety. There is no federal agency that oversees gun safety.
I can hand a 12-year-old a $100 bill, send them into a toy store, and ask them to buy me toy guns. Try that with an actual gun shop.
Your claim is preposterous. The ATF would agree.
The claim covers safety regulations around the design and manufacturing. It has nothing to do with regulations around who can purchase. Nice try though.
The initial post mentioned nothing about safety, just “regulations.” Toy guns are not regulated more than actual guns.
Like other products, if there is a proven safety issue there will be a recall.
Anonymous wrote:Cosplaying resistance is cute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toy guns are more tightly regulated than real guns.
Preposterous claim.
No, it’s correct. The CPSC oversees toy safety. There is no federal agency that oversees gun safety.
I can hand a 12-year-old a $100 bill, send them into a toy store, and ask them to buy me toy guns. Try that with an actual gun shop.
Your claim is preposterous. The ATF would agree.
The claim covers safety regulations around the design and manufacturing. It has nothing to do with regulations around who can purchase. Nice try though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Good luck with that. There is already Supreme Court precedent on the subject, and you would need a liberal court majority to do it.
Precedent doesn't matter. SCOTUS has shown that they can twist arguments, language, and reasoning to achieve a desired end. Yes, a more liberal SCOTUS will be required, but an amendment is not required. The Second Amendment is not sacred and can be re-interpreted.
Ah but it is. It is the amendment that allows all of the rest to stand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
You're mistaken. Most people want fewer mass shootings, but there is no agreement around the causes or cures. Some think firearms "cause" shootings, while other think people operating firearms illegally bear responsibility. I wonder if the people who think that firearms "cause" mass shootings also think that retail stores and banks "cause" robberies because they have cash on hand? Do computers "cause" cybercrime, or are they merely instruments used by some criminals as well as by people who are law-abiding? Shall we "control" all computers, because billions of dollars are lost annually to cybercrime?
Criminals, whether mentally ill, addicted, or just sociopaths, are the problem, not the mechanisms they use to facilitate criminal conduct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Good luck with that. There is already Supreme Court precedent on the subject, and you would need a liberal court majority to do it.
Precedent doesn't matter. SCOTUS has shown that they can twist arguments, language, and reasoning to achieve a desired end. Yes, a more liberal SCOTUS will be required, but an amendment is not required. The Second Amendment is not sacred and can be re-interpreted.
Ah but it is. It is the amendment that allows all of the rest to stand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Good luck with that. There is already Supreme Court precedent on the subject, and you would need a liberal court majority to do it.
Precedent doesn't matter. SCOTUS has shown that they can twist arguments, language, and reasoning to achieve a desired end. Yes, a more liberal SCOTUS will be required, but an amendment is not required. The Second Amendment is not sacred and can be re-interpreted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Good luck with that. There is already Supreme Court precedent on the subject, and you would need a liberal court majority to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toy guns are more tightly regulated than real guns.
Preposterous claim.
No, it’s correct. The CPSC oversees toy safety. There is no federal agency that oversees gun safety.
I can hand a 12-year-old a $100 bill, send them into a toy store, and ask them to buy me toy guns. Try that with an actual gun shop.
Your claim is preposterous. The ATF would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Then we will no longer be living in a free America.
We'll be living in the same free America that we're living under Trump. He's just updated the governance model. A Constitutional amendment will not be required. Just a re-interpretation of the language.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Then we will no longer be living in a free America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Try enforcing that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want a little control. The majority of them don't want any control. Sure, they sympathize with the victims, but for most Americans, as long as they're not the ones being shot at or killed, they will defend the constitution and sit back feeling that they are safe, and that they have the right to blow someone's head off if they feel the slightest bit threatened.
Show me any credible poll showing a majority of Americans are fine with the status quo of mass shootings and don't want any gun control. Every poll I have ever seen says a solid majority DOES want gun control. Instead we're being fed fabrications, fictions, fantasies as gun lobby propaganda.
Who cares what you want?
An amendment must be proposed either by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of Congress or by a convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures. The proposed amendment then needs to be ratified by three-fourths of the states (38 out of 50) to become part of the Constitution.
Until then, go away.
Not really. The President just needs to re-interpret the Second Amendment and have SCOTUS agree. Going forward, a true Constitutional amendment is not required.
Try enforcing that.