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Police in UK have killed 52 people in the last 115 years. Police in US have killed 369 people in the last 115 days.
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We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today! Quote:Well there's the documented history of Cuba pre-Castro and their extensive gun registration and restrictions which left the populace helpless as Castro over threw the government. Wouldn't the example for the UK though actually help the argument for those who want stricter gun regulations? Quote: I'm not sure that means anything. Crime is actually down from when he grew up, no? Quote:Wouldn't the example for the UK though actually help the argument for those who want stricter gun regulations? The question was when has registration precluded confiscation, I'm just giving the history of registration leading to confiscation. Now the debate about gun ownership and the consequences of a disarmed society is a different topic.
Quote:Sure if you want to ignore every tyrannical regime in historically just about every other region of the world guns in America is the root of all our problems. If Guns prevented crimes, wouldn't America (the country with the largest concentration of guns by far) have the lowest crime rate? That seems like common sense to me. Ergo, guns don't prevent crimes. You say you're okay with 1000 criminals owning guns if it means not registering your gun. How about 2000? 3000? 10,000? At what point do you say "You know what, we need to stop criminals from having guns." When gun violence actually affects you?
I was wrong about Trent Baalke.
We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today! Quote:If Guns prevented crimes, wouldn't America (the country with the largest concentration of guns by far) have the lowest crime rate? That seems like common sense to me. Ergo, guns don't prevent crimes. When criminals start obeying laws I'll consider passing laws about gun ownership, in the mean time you're only making it difficult for law abiding citizens to arm themselves. As for guns effecting crime rates, yes the areas of America that have a high number of gun owners have a drastically lower crime rate then area's with strict gun laws. You see the high crime concentrated in the North East with draconian gun laws. You don't see mass shootings in the South, why because as the two ISIS members found out, we shoot back.
I don't think the guns are the problem. It's the idiots with the guns. I'm pretty sure the next step is electing Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho as our next president..
Quote:When criminals start obeying laws I'll consider passing laws about gun ownership, in the mean time you're only making it difficult for law abiding citizens to arm themselves. Actually reports show that states with most gun deaths are the states with the weakest gun laws. On the other side, the states with the largest gun restrictions (Massachusetts, Hawaii, New York) also have the lowest gun deaths.
I was wrong about Trent Baalke.
Quote:Actually reports show that states with most gun deaths are the states with the weakest gun laws. On the other side, the states with the largest gun restrictions (Massachusetts, Hawaii, New York) also have the lowest gun deaths. Gun Deaths can mean suicides, accidental shootings, murder or police involved shootings so that's a pretty broad stroke to use to support an argument. According to CBS the District of Columbia which has a total gun ban has the highest rate of gun deaths http://www.cbsnews.com/news/states-with-...un-deaths/ We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
Quote:Gun Deaths can mean suicides, accidental shootings, murder or police involved shootings so that's a pretty broad stroke to use to support an argument. Yes, and Hawaii, New York, and Massachusetts are among the lowest. Alaska on the other hand is among the highest, and has some of the weakest gun laws. So is Alabama, Tennessee, Nevada, New Mexico, Louisiana, Montana, Wyoming, Mississippi, and Arizona. Most people in DC just go to Virginia or Maryland to get their guns. It's that easy.
I was wrong about Trent Baalke.
Quote:Yes, and Hawaii, New York, and Massachusetts are among the lowest. Alaska on the other hand is among the highest, and has some of the weakest gun laws. So is Alabama, Tennessee, Nevada, New Mexico, Louisiana, Montana, Wyoming, Mississippi, and Arizona. Most people in DC just go to Virginia or Maryland to get their guns. It's that easy. That is all based on "gun deaths (criminal and accidental) per capita, there's no way with a straight face you can tell me you're more safe in New York or Massachusetts then Montana or Wyoming. You want to compare apples to apples compare New York (high population strict gun laws) and Texas (high population relaxed gun laws) and their crime rates.
"Whether or not you buy that reasoning, and it does make sense to me, what about the notion that tougher gun laws have or would make any difference? With the toughest gun laws in the nation, Chicago saw homicides jump to 513 in 2012, a 15% hike in a single year. The city’s murder rate is 15.65 per 100,000 people, compared with 4.5 for the Midwest, and 5.6 for Illinois.
Up to 80 percent of Chicago murders and non-fatal shootings are gang- related, primarily young black and Hispanic men killed by other black and Hispanic men. Would tightening gun laws even more, or “requiring” background checks, change these conditions?" http://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/20...s-plummet/
Quote:Well there's the documented history of Cuba pre-Castro and their extensive gun registration and restrictions which left the populace helpless as Castro over threw the government.That does not answer how it is plausible. Gun ownership has become to most Americans a basic tenet of what it means to be an American. No bans would ever become legal and no Military coup would be even remotely successful, IMO We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
Quote:I disagree it's not the lack of individualism that has lead to our crisis of culture if anything it is the focus on the collective.I think our idea of radical individualism is different and I'm on some strong meds right now to combat a serious sinus infection so am not even going to try to form the thoughts necessary to explain it to you. I will say I agree with your last paragraph to a point.
Quote:That does not answer how it is plausible. Gun ownership has become to most Americans a basic tenet of what it means to be an American. No bans would ever become legal and no Military coup would be even remotely successful, IMO The same way the left does everything, creeping encroachment over decades. They play the long view better than the right does, that's why their modern day successes find their beginnings more than a hundred years ago. “An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato
Quote:The same way the left does everything, creeping encroachment over decades. They play the long view better than the right does, that's why their modern day successes find their beginnings more than a hundred years ago.What you call encroachment I call progress. That still does not explain the plausibility of the country just up and banning guns and seizing guns. Forgive me but I just don't see gun lovers letting that happen let alone the rest of the rational population as it's a direct violation of the constitution that needs no interpretation. Not without an amendment that requires the voice of the people. Quote:What you call encroachment I call progress. It's been done everywhere else to think because we're "Americans" it won't happen here is to say we are immune from the historical evidence that registration has lead to confiscation. I believe it would be a slow progress, first cross checking the database for anyone in the home that is deemed "mentally ill" anyone with PTSD, any household where perhaps the mother or father are taking medicine for depression any home where a child is take Ritalin or another behavior modifier. Next you would see a move to limit the amount of weapons or the capacity those weapons can fire, a registration could cross check how many firearms are in each home. Next you'd see legislation forbidding the passing down of weapons upon death they are turned over to the state. It would be very easy to eliminate 80% of the public from the ability to own a weapon, it wouldn't take long at all it never has. Just because we're American doesn't make us immune from the threat of tyranny, that's why we where given specific protections but history has shown the state will only limit itself in the regards that we the people demand. We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
Quote:That does not answer how it is plausible. Gun ownership has become to most Americans a basic tenet of what it means to be an American. No bans would ever become legal and no Military coup would be even remotely successful, IMO The idea that guns protect us from tyranny is a bit funny. I mean the government has drones. So good luck dealing with those with guns if the government were to ever decide to go tyrannical on us.
I was wrong about Trent Baalke.
Quote:The idea that guns protect us from tyranny is a bit funny. I mean the government has drones. So good luck dealing with those with guns if the government were to ever decide to go tyrannical on us. No one's saying it would be a fair fight
Quote:It's been done everywhere else to think because we're "Americans" it won't happen here is to say we are immune from the historical evidence that registration has lead to confiscation. I believe it would be a slow progress, first cross checking the database for anyone in the home that is deemed "mentally ill" anyone with PTSD, any household where perhaps the mother or father are taking medicine for depression any home where a child is take Ritalin or another behavior modifier. Next you would see a move to limit the amount of weapons or the capacity those weapons can fire, a registration could cross check how many firearms are in each home. Next you'd see legislation forbidding the passing down of weapons upon death they are turned over to the state.I understand the concerns gun owners have I really do. I do not think they are warranted but I understand them. Trying to defend gun ownership people with mental instability is.... sketchy at best. Can't get behind that and is a terrible example to use IMO. As for the bolded, I stated those protections as my basis for the implausibility of government seizure of guns. Let's be honest the fervent owners would die before letting it happen, the American people would not stand for that. I guess I understand where you come from in that you think the people have no power over the government and in same cases you are correct. This is not one of them IMO. |
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