Mammoth, we've but heads on this issue in the past...
You do have sense.
The sense you have isn't illustrated by the NRA. Its like being a republican at the moment, and trying to desperately defend the party. Your party, your NRA, your fellow gun owners that agree with this nonsense, are the problem.
Thanks. Just a clarification. I'm not a Republican. I'm a pro-Gun Democrat and I'm not a single issue voter so I'm not going to magically vote Republican if an Assault Weapons Ban goes through.
Its a problem, and we need to start with healthcare.
I completely agree.
When we tried, the NRA & The republican party told us all to fuck off, and that no one wants to take care of any freeloaders.
I've already commented on the NRA in this thread and how I completely disagree with their approach. I get they don't want more anti-gun legislation and I agree. I'd be more open to sensible gun legislation (And I've agreed with many ideas in the other gun thread related to this incident) if it were being written by people that have some idea about guns and where the problems with guns is. People can get emotional about it all they want the stats proves pistol crime is the overwhelming majority. Not lest I get bitched about repeating myself I'll just say I feel very strongly about starting there.
That is the solution to this issue, and removing efficient weapons from the equation.
Thats literally it, its not going to solve everything, but its going to reduce.
Its not as if there are models of worlds without guns...
Problem is all guns are efficient. A single example would be Virginia Tech. That guy used
2 Pistols to cause a ton of mayham.
I'm hesitant to keep the comparison to other countries up because it puts firearms in a vacuum and ignores everything else different about them. But if we're going to do that I'd mention Mexico.
In terms of laws that deal with the circumstances of this case I look at the fact that he tried to go to a gun shop and buy a gun and he was denied. The system worked. The failure was in the home. Hence why the mother isn't included in many of the fatality counts, in the media, in the memorial services..etc. She was supposed to be a responsible gun owner and she fucked up completely. To me that's the issue in that specific case. So if we're going to draft legislation as a response to this specific case then let's start there.
If I were the head of the NRA and I wouldn't rush out to "defend freedom" as so many on the anti-gun side were so quick to use this tragedy to further their agenda of getting rid of guns. But I'd *have* to wonder if there are some laws citizens would need to accept in order to hopefully help. I'll get shat on but here it goes:
(If Mammoth Jones were head of the NRA)
-I would not agree nor concede to a Federal Assault Weapons Ban. Period. Those firearms have legitimate uses. States are free to implement it just like NY does if they so chose.
-Agree to a magazine limit of 15 rounds. That's half of what's currently in there. If they insisted on 10rds I'd concede to that. I'm from NY. I already have a 10rd cap on my Magazines so it's not the end of the world for me. I don't agree that it'd really make a difference but at the WORST it's an inconvenience for hunters/shooters that they have to carry/buy/change more magazines. It sucks but it's better than ban on firearms that "Look scary."
-Publicly call on all NRA members to install a safe in their homes. Publicly. Rights have responsibilities. I can't yell "FIRE" in a crowded room. I can't leave my semi-auto out for the little ones.
-Agree to a federal plan to give breaks for gun-owners that purchase safes.
-Agree to reform to the NICS background check system. Many time people don't get listed that should.
-Agree to a NRA backed/funded National Program to add not just child-safety firearm instruction but domestic storage firearm instructions for free to any gun owner that wants to take them. Drill in the notion that if you believe you have someone that's mentally unstable in the home either ensure your firearms are stored extremely securely or trade them in.
-Agree to institute a 100% voluntary federal gun buy back program. No questions asked.