Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. They’ve proposed several ideas. All you’re doing is shrugging and coming up with excuses for why nothing can ever be done to reduce gun violence.
Other countries have addressed the issue. It’s not impossible like you claim.
If people keep fantasizing about illegal and unconstitutional “solutions” I’ll keep pointing it out. I’ve heard all of these arguments before, yet here we are. That people here think they’re coming with unique solutions is interesting.
There's no such thing as unconstitutional solutions. All we need is a President to take action and SCOTUS to interpret those actions. That's the roadmap Trump has established. It's not going to happen now, but it can happen in the future. There is absolutely nothing sacred about the Second Amendment or permanent with respect to how it's currently interpreted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. They’ve proposed several ideas. All you’re doing is shrugging and coming up with excuses for why nothing can ever be done to reduce gun violence.
Other countries have addressed the issue. It’s not impossible like you claim.
If people keep fantasizing about illegal and unconstitutional “solutions” I’ll keep pointing it out. I’ve heard all of these arguments before, yet here we are. That people here think they’re coming with unique solutions is interesting.
Anonymous wrote:DP. They’ve proposed several ideas. All you’re doing is shrugging and coming up with excuses for why nothing can ever be done to reduce gun violence.
Other countries have addressed the issue. It’s not impossible like you claim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
It’s not my job to come up with policies. It’s my job to follow the law. I do that spectacularly well.
If it's not your job to come up with policies then it's also not your job to obstruct the people who do want to come up with policy.
Either lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way.
If you don't think you have a role in coming up with policy then shut up and stand down.
You don’t have a role either. That you believe you do is the problem.
DP. They’ve proposed several ideas. All you’re doing is shrugging and coming up with excuses for why nothing can ever be done to reduce gun violence.
Other countries have addressed the issue. It’s not impossible like you claim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
It’s not my job to come up with policies. It’s my job to follow the law. I do that spectacularly well.
If it's not your job to come up with policies then it's also not your job to obstruct the people who do want to come up with policy.
Either lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way.
If you don't think you have a role in coming up with policy then shut up and stand down.
You don’t have a role either. That you believe you do is the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
It’s not my job to come up with policies. It’s my job to follow the law. I do that spectacularly well.
If it's not your job to come up with policies then it's also not your job to obstruct the people who do want to come up with policy.
Either lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way.
If you don't think you have a role in coming up with policy then shut up and stand down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Persistent, searchable database.”
Is that like a regular old boring database, but with extra names, like when Mom calls Larlo by his full name “Larlolargo Campagne Maleffluente,” to show she’s really mad?
How would it differ from the one that seems to have allowed authorities to determine in just minutes where the MN sicko got his guns and that the purchases had complied with all of MN’s very extensive and stringent regulations?
They executed a search warrant on his residence and found the purchase record. That's how.
ATF only has a database that tracks guns going from manufacturers to dealers. Not to purchasers. The 4473s are currently only held by the retailer, they are not entered into any central ATF database. And in fact the NRA pushed legislation to make it illegal for ATF to put it into a central database. So there's no central system to help identify and flag someone who may have bought 2000 guns over the span of 10 years to resell to criminals. That alone is a crystal clear demonstration of a broken system, and those expected to "enforce the current laws" having their hands tied and being blindfolded.
So, no database, persistent, searchable, or otherwise, played any role in determining the source of the MN shooter’s firearms, and would not have played any such role in any event? Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Persistent, searchable database.”
Is that like a regular old boring database, but with extra names, like when Mom calls Larlo by his full name “Larlolargo Campagne Maleffluente,” to show she’s really mad?
How would it differ from the one that seems to have allowed authorities to determine in just minutes where the MN sicko got his guns and that the purchases had complied with all of MN’s very extensive and stringent regulations?
They executed a search warrant on his residence and found the purchase record. That's how.
ATF only has a database that tracks guns going from manufacturers to dealers. Not to purchasers. The 4473s are currently only held by the retailer, they are not entered into any central ATF database. And in fact the NRA pushed legislation to make it illegal for ATF to put it into a central database. So there's no central system to help identify and flag someone who may have bought 2000 guns over the span of 10 years to resell to criminals. That alone is a crystal clear demonstration of a broken system, and those expected to "enforce the current laws" having their hands tied and being blindfolded.
Anonymous wrote:“Persistent, searchable database.”
Is that like a regular old boring database, but with extra names, like when Mom calls Larlo by his full name “Larlolargo Campagne Maleffluente,” to show she’s really mad?
How would it differ from the one that seems to have allowed authorities to determine in just minutes where the MN sicko got his guns and that the purchases had complied with all of MN’s very extensive and stringent regulations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
It’s not my job to come up with policies. It’s my job to follow the law. I do that spectacularly well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
It’s not my job to come up with policies. It’s my job to follow the law. I do that spectacularly well.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
What's your alternative to "existing laws"? Confiscation? The Second Amendment exists to prevent this very activity.
Any proposal requires an honest, clear-eyed view of the root cause of mass shootings. But let's not stop there. How about we look at the root cause of shootings in general? (Hint: It's not the availability of guns - just ask the Swiss and other countries that have relatively high gun ownership rates).
What’s the root cause? And what’s the solution?
The root cause is behavior, not whether tools or technology are misused. Endless varieties of crime occur using endless tools or technology, or just exploiting human physical weakness or gullibility. Identify and neutralize bad behavior.
So you want to regulate the behavior of gun owners? Psych profiles, extensive background checks, etc? Makes sense.
DP. Actually, the PP likely wants you to acknowledge that the people who commit mass shootings are crazy - and to tell the public why - without downplaying or omitting inconvenient facts. Hiding the motivations of mass shooters helps no one.
DP
Ahhh... So the answer is we need to acknowledge them. So whenever there's a mass shooting we just shrug, say "oh they were crazy," and accept the loss of another dozen dead kids or churchgoers or shoppers or wherever else in a place where people congregate as totally acceptable collateral damage, and go on about our lives. Not bothering to make sure that other crazy people don't also get guns and commit mass shootings. Because, where it comes to "we don't have a gun problem, we have a mental health problem" we're gonna refuse to have red flag laws because, "hey, what if they think I'm crazy and come to take away my paranoid zombie armageddon stockpile of AR-15s and ammo" and also refuse to do anything about treating the mental health problem, because paying for someone else with my taxpayer dollars makes it "communism" or something, right?
Do I have that all captured correctly? Because I don't think I've heard anything different or better in terms of proposals from the pro-2A posters in this thread.
They were crazy before they committed a crime. Nothing was done about it, because we prefer to leave the crazies alone. That's the problem. People who are neither insane nor criminals are not the problem, and regulating their behavior further accomplishes nothing useful.
Well, they actually are the problem - because people who allegedly aren't criminals and allegedly aren't crazy are the ones who keep funneling guns to the criminals and crazies. So ONLY focusing on the crazies isn't going to solve it. We need significantly greater accountability.
I would mandate that EVERY gun transfer needs to be registered, and to go into a persistent, searchable database. I would mandate a requirement that guns be locked up when not in one's immediate possession. A persistent, searchable database would quickly reveal who the bad actors are. If someone has bought 200 guns in the last 10 years then law enforcement should be able to expect to show up at their home and have all 200 guns produced and shown to them as evidence they didn't do anything wrong with them. If not, they need to be investigated and prosecuted as being a gun runner and/or accomplice to other gun crimes.
In fact I'd mandate we treat guns the way we do cars. Require training and passing a safety test before being allowed to handle or own guns. Have health requirements - not only do I not want crazy people owning guns, I don't want people with blindness or other impairments that would interfere with their ability to safely handle and use a gun to be owning and handling guns. I would also require registration as noted above, and as with vehicles, require periodic inspection. If you bought shotguns I want to see proof that you haven't sawed them off or otherwise illegally modified them. If you bought an arsenal of ARs and handguns I want you to be able to present and account for every single one of them. If a gun was stolen or lost, you need to report it immediately. If you have a questionable history of "losing" gun after gun after gun then you should be flagged as either a straw buyer who is illegally buying guns for others, or if you actually lost them you should be flagged as too irresponsible to have guns. There should also be insurance requirements that you pay in to that will cover the expenses of every gun mishap nationally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of blah blah blah about semantics and minor nuances of weapon functionality in these last two pages. But no action.
That's unacceptable.
One mass shooting is too many mass shootings.
We need action, not words.
If you don't want confiscation and you want to preserve 2A that's all fine and good but you still need to come up with a proposal that will make America safer, because without one you are failing America and you are standing in the way of people who want America to be safer.
So what's your proposal? (Hint: "the existing laws" clearly aren't working.)
What's your alternative to "existing laws"? Confiscation? The Second Amendment exists to prevent this very activity.
Any proposal requires an honest, clear-eyed view of the root cause of mass shootings. But let's not stop there. How about we look at the root cause of shootings in general? (Hint: It's not the availability of guns - just ask the Swiss and other countries that have relatively high gun ownership rates).
What’s the root cause? And what’s the solution?
The root cause is behavior, not whether tools or technology are misused. Endless varieties of crime occur using endless tools or technology, or just exploiting human physical weakness or gullibility. Identify and neutralize bad behavior.
So you want to regulate the behavior of gun owners? Psych profiles, extensive background checks, etc? Makes sense.
We do, Plenty of laws on the books relative to firearms, as well as to other activities. The problem is enforcing the laws, all the laws, in the face of bad behavior. If penalties are neither sure nor impactful, they don't deter anyone. Criminals in jail cannot commit further crimes against the public. Criminals who receive trivial sentences, are released without bail, or who are enabled by policies imposed on law enforcement which limit its effectiveness, remain criminals. The mentally ill who are not dealt with effectively can, depending on their specific issues, become violent if unsupervised. We can deal with violence and crime, we just don't want to, often because we characterize the criminals as somehow not responsible for what they do, so we leave them to it. We could end carjacking by outlawing cars, how about that? Or, we could deal with carjackers in a manner which denies them access to cars in the future, by leaving them in jail. Ditto for gun crime - commit a crime with a gun, you should be done, but all too often such criminals receive light sentences and are back on the street.