Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next mass shooting.
Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next mass shooting.
Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next, next , next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next mass shooting.
The compromise was so obvious and benign that this seemed like it should be a no brainer. Democrats want to keep terrorists on the watch list from buying guns, republicans say fine but you got to go to a judge and show probable cause within 3 days. Seems perfectly reasonable? So why no vote? Because the Dems are better off with no compromise in the next elections. If they compromise the issue is over. Now they can kick and scream like children about how the big bad republicans want to give weapons to terrorists.
Requiring a probable cause hearing within 72 hours of the purchase request is an absurd burden to place on the government and judiciary. Thinking through the logistics to satisfy that makes my eyes bleed.
Then perhaps debate lengthening the amount of time past 72 hours but the point is it should be done with a layer of due process. Can't just take away a Constitutional right w/ a government list and no process.
Would within 14 days be acceptable?
Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next mass shooting.
Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next mass shooting.
Its scary how disdainful my fellow democrats are of requiring due process before the deprivation of a right. I feel like a portion of the left is moving further and further towards authoritarianism.
I mean just look at that Elizabeth Warren tweet. Twisting the desire for adding due process into support for selling guns to terrorists is so clearly in bad faith, that it shouldn't surprise anyone that gun owners don't trust the intentions behind gun control reforms.
It's a right. The fact that you dont like it doesn't change that. The majority of the country still supports the 2nd amendment.Having a killing tool is not a fucking right, no matter what a magical document says.
Having access to food, water, shelter etc are rights. Having a toy that kills things is not a fucking right. it's a luxury, one that you clearly cannot be trusted with as a country.
Are you letting your thoughts and feelings be known to the NRA?This is such bullshit. I'm a gun-toting Texan (literally, I carry almost everywhere) and I don't think that suspected terrorists should be able to walk into a gun store and buy stuff. I'm not worried in the slightest about my own gun rights, and why? Because I'm not a suspected terrorist.
Fuck the NRA.
I don't know WTH your original "half the country wants" referred to begin with. I've certainly seen nothing cited that says that half the country actually wants to outright repeal the 2nd amendment.Well over half of the country wants to repeal the 2nd Amendment? Or wants stricter gun control? I feel like we're debating two different things.
I think it takes 2/3 of the country to amend the Constitution anyway. I doubt the numbers are there for that one.
This is such bullshit. I'm a gun-toting Texan (literally, I carry almost everywhere) and I don't think that suspected terrorists should be able to walk into a gun store and buy stuff. I'm not worried in the slightest about my own gun rights, and why? Because I'm not a suspected terrorist.
I won't speak for your fellow dems but, as an independent and from what I understand, the terrorist watch/no fly lists are already fraught with plenty of due process issues that undermine individual rights. Getting picky about which rights get undermined is just playing favorites without addressing the core problem.Its scary how disdainful my fellow democrats are of requiring due process before the deprivation of a right. I feel like a portion of the left is moving further and further towards authoritarianism.
Innocent before proven guilty. It's scary how left wingers switch to authoritarianism when they don't get their way.
There is no prosecution involved when you are put on a watch list. Do you want somebody to have a gun before they are cleared as non-threats? Totally different than giving somebody a sentence before a trial.
At least inform the person and have them be able to challenge it. Given the state of mass surveillance these days and how easily abused that power is I'm wary of allowing government to judge that a right should be forfeited without a fair trial. Also, as other people have said, no due process.
Also, anti-gun GAF, Europe isn't exactly so free of guns as you think they are. Liberal Sweden has the 9th most guns per capita in the world for example. America of course is number 1. 'Murica.
Having a killing tool is not a fucking right, no matter what a magical document says.
Having access to food, water, shelter etc are rights. Having a toy that kills things is not a fucking right. it's a luxury, one that you clearly cannot be trusted with as a country.
There is no prosecution involved when you are put on a watch list. Do you want somebody to have a gun before they are cleared as non-threats? Totally different than giving somebody a sentence before a trial.
Getting picky about which rights get undermined is just playing favorites without addressing the core problem
The issue is pretty basic.
Who is on the list?
How to you get on the list?
Who controls the list?
What criteria does it take to get on the list?
How do you get off the list?
How long does it take to get off the list?
What are my rights to get off the list?
What is the time line to get on and off the list?
I believe I should not be on the list, what can I do?
Oh guess what, there are actually three lists. How do they interact together?
I linked a fivethirtyeight article a couple posts up that goes into more detail about the system. It is not perfect. And it is not being worked on because it is not properly being used, though it has come in handy as the article points out.
In a perfect world, using the list to run background checks that prevents gun purchases in the moment at registered arms dealers AND Gun Shows whilst also refining the process of getting on the list and how to appeal it, etc would happen all at once.
Unfortunately, the votes have already been bought through concrete ideology and corporations, and I am struggling to not resign to apathy.
Those questions I proposed, including a lot more would need to be defined before anyone should move an inch. That list needs to be made ethical and not some secret device with no processes or controls. Also, timelines must be defined, and must be law before moving forward.
"Whilst refining the process" is not acceptable, and should not be acceptable for liberal people and those that believe in rights. I do not believe the Government wants to let the public have access to its list or methods. Without that, and all the other things I mentioned, it is rightly not passed.
It's a right. The fact that you dont like it doesn't change that. The majority of the country still supports the 2nd amendment.
"the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
We don't pick and choose what parts of the constitution are valid. It either applies to the hard cases or its just a meaningless piece of paper.
Sadly, I'm pretty sure even a shooting that debunks a lot of NRA arguments won't help.Even this isn't realistic.
Wait, were the rights already taken away by these lists *not* part of the Constitution or something? It's not like we derive our rights from anything other than the Constitution.Also, this is nonsense. So we have terrible procedures that take rights away, so now we should use those terrible procedures as a mandate to take even more rights away. Rights that are part of the Constitution.
Hopefully we'll get some reforms passed after the next mass shooting.
"the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
"the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
We don't pick and choose what parts of the constitution are valid. It either applies to the hard cases or its just a meaningless piece of paper.
I don't know. Right now the 4th amendment is pretty battered and bruised.
What if a suspected terrorist had the same name as you and when you went to buy one, they denied you because you were flagged for having the same name? You didn't even realize you were on the list and now your rights were stripped from you simply because there was little oversight to how this list is maintained. You're okay with losing your rights because someone decided to put your name on a list?
But you're picking and choosing what parts of the second amendment to display, so that it looks less ambiguous than it is. Between 1875 and 2008, federal law explicitly took the position that the second amendment did not protect individual gun-bearing rights. When that position was overturned in 2008, it was a 5-4 result with the dissent hotly contesting the reinterpretation of the second amendment."the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
We don't pick and choose what parts of the constitution are valid.
Yes, I am.What if a suspected terrorist had the same name as you and when you went to buy one, they denied you because you were flagged for having the same name? You didn't even realize you were on the list and now your rights were stripped from you simply because there was little oversight to how this list is maintained. You're okay with losing your rights because someone decided to put your name on a list?
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
Second Amendment was about using a militia to defend the state, AKA, the National Guard. The Second Amendment was not made to enable and facilitate constant mass shootings.
Just because you're John Smith doesn't mean you can access all the bank accounts of all John Smiths out there. You are John Smith, born on January 1st 1980 in Someplace, Somewhere with SSN 123456789. We have more ways to identify people than just by name or else the whole society would have broken apart. Your argument holds no merits in my opinion.
Yes, I am.
If this was really about the watchlist, and not just another distraction by Republicans, they would have proposed legislation to overhaul the watchlist.