this post was submitted on 06 Dec 2023
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[–] RememberTheApollo_ -3 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (3 children)

It’s not a mental health issue. There are people with mental health issues all over the civilized world and those countries don’t deal with mass shootings weekly, even if the citizens are allowed access to guns. It’s the relatively unrestricted access to firearms with minimal to no oversight of gun owners, and no rules to secure said firearms.

Edit: well, here we go again.

https://abc7.com/unlv-active-shooter/14148302/

[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 months ago

Okay and? This was my point, ya aint gonna get a solid backing for any type of gun control due to the courts. I support firearms licensing, so long as its about as easy/hard as getting a drivers licence. The thing is though that going "its the guns" while technically true is about as helpful as going "its cause of capitalism" great youve found the problem now what practical solution do you have?

My point was moreso to give an example of what the Dems could do to syphon votes from the republicans. The current "lets ban guns" shtick clearly aint working so come up with a better solution. I think folks who make their identity all about firearms are stupid, but that also means they should be easy to be made apathetic on voting at minimum.

[–] Maggoty 4 points 11 months ago

You're both right. We can't put the genie back in the bottle. There are more guns than people in the US so to reduce gun suicide we must work both sides of the issue.

[–] Deftdrummer 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

"minimal oversight and rules" he says. Tell us you've never bought a gun without telling us.

Please don't speak about things you have no clue on. There are plenty of rules and restrictions. The fact that our federal government can't or doesn't enforce them properly means the law abiding citizen should suffer?

The fuck outta here with that nonsense.

[–] RememberTheApollo_ -1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

Yeah. You don’t know anything about my firearms knowledge, and that’s fine with me. I don’t give a damn about some dick measuring contest over whatever is in someone’s arsenal.

What oversight? Most rural places you pass a nominal background check at best. Buy your gun, and nobody bothers you about it again. Urban areas? Yeah, more rules; but again, fill out the paperwork, pass the background checks, buy your gun and that’s it. The majority of rules apply to handguns. I can head on down to my local gun shop and pick up a deer rifle with almost no hassle at all. Or maybe you mean a tax stamp? Same story. Fill out the paperwork, pass the check, pay the money, get the gun.

Yet again, nobody pays attention to what you do with the gun once you have it. That’s the oversight part I’m talking about. Nobody is making you re-test for anything. There’s no license to maintain to own a long gun or even a handgun in the vast majority of places.

I’m not even going to touch CCW because that’s not buying a gun or owning a gun, that’s how you carry it.

What is apparent is that you haven’t a clue what real oversight is. Gun ownership in the rest of the civilized world is highly regulated, licensed, tested, and monitored. So is how the firearm is stored, where and when it can be transported and used.

So “get outta here with that nonsense” when you consider a single background check or a tax stamp “monitoring” your ownership.

[–] Narauko 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

This is the other side of the argument that I don't really understand. There shouldn't be "monitoring" of your ownership. A law abiding citizen going in, filling out a background check and proving they aren't prohibited from owning a gun and then buying said gun and ending their involvement with the government from that point on is just normal. We are innocent until proven guilty. We have a right to privacy. We have a right against unwarranted searches. Exercising one of your other constitutional rights shouldn't and doesn't mean you give up others.

The government shouldn't be monitoring it's citizens with regular check-ins, making sure they are good worker drones. I don't understand the desire for the government to dictate or arbitrate every action you take, because the government doesn't care about you as an individual. Allowing the government to monitor your personal life is a distopian trope for a reason. I don't want to live in a police state like the UK or China, and our own police state is already bad enough.

[–] RememberTheApollo_ 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Well, law abiding citizens shouldn’t shoot up schools, concerts, or businesses. But that doesn’t matter when it’s a right to own guns, because somehow magically a law abiding citizen with guns suddenly isn’t so law abiding, but gun owners never really want to deal with that. Wash their hands and walk away.

[–] Narauko 1 points 11 months ago

Just dropping the whole basis of our legal system because lives could be in jeopardy, just throw out innocent until proven guilty and your right to privacy. Let me guess, you also disagree that it is better that 10 guilty men go free than 1 innocent man be convicted, especially if the crime is severe enough?

Law abiding citizens shouldn't steal, use illegal substances, or assault people either, but that doesn't matter because a statistically significant percentage of people suddenly aren't so law abiding. Are you prepared to allow law enforcement to regularly enter your home and inventory your property to match with receipts backed up by your pay stubs to make sure your not stealing anything or committing fraud, while also ensuring you don't have any drugs? How about regular interviews with your friends, family, and coworkers to make sure you always conduct yourself in a upstanding manner? Having to get evidence and/or reasonable articulable suspicion to search your person or property prevents police from stopping you from commiting crime before you do it.

You want to buy whipped cream? People can use those cannisters illegally. You need to go to a drug counselor for an evaluation, and pass a drug screen proving you aren't a drug user of any kind, then you can get a permit. It needs to be renewed every year to make sure you remain sober.

A guy down the block broke the law by driving drunk, but you law abiding drivers never really want to deal with that by putting interlock systems in all motor vehicles and requiring the cops to do a blood draw, breathalyzer and field sobriety test before you are allowed to drive anywhere. Just wash their hands and walk away as if they couldn't prevent people they don't know from driving drunk.