Shapiro wiped the floor with him.Kimmel is the bees knees to lefties
Shapiro wiped the floor with him.Kimmel is the bees knees to lefties
Stop acting like they will be used for everything.Except that auto makes almost anyone less safe and less effective, which is why our military moved to the three shot burst and away from it. And almost no civilian ever finds themselves being pursued by several people.
So there's rarely a situation where that works and few outside of the military who are sufficiently trained to respond to it in a way that doesn't make inadvertent carnage more probable.
Yet no one can quote me misrepresenting. Funny that. And, he didn't expose a thing. I simply showed statistics. Numbers don't lie
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Followed by a prosecution for maiming or killing the innocent people you're more likely to hit with that little control and in a panicked situation.Stop acting like they will be used for everything.
You only need it for a mow down.
When has it?The need for one just might arise any day now.
That's being worse prepared at the risk of others.Be prepared is a pretty good motto to have.
58 Dead, 500 Plus Wounded
How disgusting that is of you. Will you say anything to smear your President?I'm sure there is nobody more disappointed than "The Donald" that the Las Vegas shooter didn't have Muslim connections1
58 Dead, 500 Plus Wounded
I'm sure there is nobody more disappointed than "The Donald" that the Las Vegas shooter didn't have Muslim connections1
Stop acting like they will be used for everything.
You only need it for a mow down.
The need for one just might arise any day now.
Be prepared is a pretty good motto to have.
You don't have to get one if you don't want one.How many of you who want machine guns to protect themselves have actually fired one?
How many of you have carried one- and its ammunition?
How many of you have served in military combat units?
Show of hands, please.
How many criminals want one?How many of you who want machine guns to protect themselves have actually fired one?
How many of you have carried one- and its ammunition?
How many of you have served in military combat units?
Show of hands, please.
Me. Me. Me.How many of you who want machine guns to protect themselves have actually fired one?
How many of you have carried one- and its ammunition?
How many of you have served in military combat units?
Show of hands, please.
:BRAVO:Me. Me. Me.
Also, when I was a child my grandfather, who was a lifetime gunsmith, had countless guns we grandchildren were allowed to handle and ask questions about. We got to shoot automatic.
Freaking useless.
So I knew in the army when we first were able to shoot automatic that I didn't care much. Most others were excited. But sure enough, everyone was committed to semi-auto after that exercise. If you had a situation where one would have to use automatic, it was because you were being overrun and automatic was a last effort before the knives come out.
That being said. If someone wants to buy an automatic, trying to stop them would be worse than letting the few people that want them have them. The current regulations against autos could be softened and little would change except that good people wouldn't be made into criminals just for possession of an inanimate object.
Beyond that, all humans have a right to defend themselves, and guns are important to that right. Any weapon that can be directed at a single person should be available.
I used to think that registration would be OK as long as the government didn't use it to take away a person's guns or make it harder to acquire a gun. But now that we see the government salivating over registration so they can eventually take away every owner's gun, or at the very least single out groups so they can't get guns, registration was never a good idea.
Registration is a bad idea as demonstrated by Nazi Germany where gun laws were relaxed, but Jews were kept from being able to buy through red tape that was applied unjustly throughout the population.
But that is the take away on the gun issue. Humans have a right to defend themselves, regardless what any document states, so they should be allowed to freely buy and sell guns and ammo. Sometimes there will be crazy people that shoot other people, but there will be less people killed if they are allowed to defend themselves.
Right. It's useless for personal defense in any reasonable scenario outside of a war zone. Worse, that use could easily become something worse for people in the vicinity who aren't engaged or involved. It's a public safety issue. I think anyone with a lick of sense can see that, which is why Nihilo likely isn't answering my question relating to RPGs.If you had a situation where one would have to use automatic, it was because you were being overrun and automatic was a last effort before the knives come out.
How? How would it be worse to put reasoned limits on weapons than to deny a few people who want them to have them?That being said. If someone wants to buy an automatic, trying to stop them would be worse than letting the few people that want them have them.
An argument for making all of us safer isn't inherently an argument against the right. It's against an unfettered right that isn't found in the exercise of any other.Beyond that, all humans have a right to defend themselves, and guns are important to that right
Show me a government declaration of an intent to "take away every owner's gun." :nono:...But now that we see the government salivating over registration so they can eventually take away every owner's gun
You can't deny a person or people what they have a legal right to possess. The conversation is really about that, but people who have left any real and constructive conversation out of their ideological wheelhouse run to the extremes to make it about something else. It isn't.or at the very least single out groups so they can't get guns, registration was never a good idea.
The problem is that there were plenty of guns squirreled away and registration had no real impact on what happened to the Jews. You could have given them machine guns and it still would have ended badly. The Jews were victims because they lived in a paranoid military state that had been sold on the idea of Jews as their enemy.Registration is a bad idea as demonstrated by Nazi Germany where gun laws were relaxed, but Jews were kept from being able to buy through red tape that was applied unjustly throughout the population.
That's a false dichotomy. It's not every kind of weapon or a want of safety. In fact, every kind of weapon being available makes us all less safe. Intelligent regulation and restriction can actually accomplish what most people who aren't employed by the arms industry or haven't been brainwashed by its rhetoric want.Humans have a right to defend themselves, regardless what any document states, so they should be allowed to freely buy and sell guns and ammo. Sometimes there will be crazy people that shoot other people, but there will be less people killed if they are allowed to defend themselves.
I've never been in the military.How many of you have served in military combat units?
I've fired and owned their semi auto versions.How many of you who want machine guns to protect themselves have actually fired one?
What an odd question, I owned one so yes I carried it around I guess. I didn't take it to the park with me. The semi auto and it's ammo weigh the same as the full auto version. The only difference is a switch and some small parts.How many of you have carried one- and its ammunition?
Jgarbage points out
How disgusting that is of you. Will you say anything to smear your President?
Because they are so easy to make. You'd need a police state to stop people from having automatic weapons.How? How would it be worse to put reasoned limits on weapons than to deny a few people who want them to have them?
It's either unfettered or it doesn't exist. One either has the right to defend themself or they don't. Everything else is just the transition to the right being suppressed completely.An argument for making all of us safer isn't inherently an argument against the right. It's against an unfettered right that isn't found in the exercise of any other.
“I don’t know enough details to tell you how we would do it or how it would work, but certainly the Australia example is worth looking at,” Hillary Clinton. Australia went waaaaaaayyyyyy beyond bump stocks, silencers, and magazine capacities. Where, exactly, is the line drawn on what and who can keep their guns. Please be exact (even if Hillary doesn't know the details, you need to in order to support your argument).Show me a government declaration of an intent to "take away every owner's gun." :nono:
A California bill — passed by the state senate and recommended for passage by an assembly committee — would authorize jail for nursing home staff who “willfully and repeatedly fail to use a resident’s preferred name or pronouns” - Washington Post Aug 18, 2017 |
Sure you can. The assault weapons ban limited magazines to 10 rounds. A former coworker had his rifle confiscated when an officer broke his magazine and muscled an 11th round in. He lost another rifle due to not having it in a case when the officer found it in his trunk.You can't deny a person or people what they have a legal right to possess.
No. The conversation is simply that humans have the right to defend themselves and guns are an important part of defending one's self.The conversation is really about that, but people who have left any real and constructive conversation out of their ideological wheelhouse run to the extremes to make it about something else. It isn't.
The point is that despite the loosening of gun laws, they were in reality tightened on Jews. Registration is always a bad idea.The problem is that there were plenty of guns squirreled away and registration had no real impact on what happened to the Jews. You could have given them machine guns and it still would have ended badly. The Jews were victims because they lived in a paranoid military state that had been sold on the idea of Jews as their enemy.
Registration is never a necessary thing unless the government wants to keep confiscation in their back pocket for when they need it. In general or for a particular set of people even if they are innocent. Registration is just another way to create criminals out of innocent people.Registration is about information, not confiscation.
Of course. But you created a straw man to make this claim. Will you realize you created a straw man and apologize or confess you didn't realize you created a straw man?every kind of weapon being available makes us all less safe.
You've been brainwashed by gun control rhetoric. If you want to enact "Intelligent regulation" of guns you might as well enact an "Intelligent point at which a person begins" because the latter has been proven to be so effective at saving babies.Intelligent regulation and restriction can actually accomplish what most people who aren't employed by the arms industry or haven't been brainwashed by its rhetoric want.
Blalblabarian observes:I've heard that they even sometimes didn't reveal that a shooter was a Methodist, or a Baptist, or a Catholic. Either they were covering something up, or they didn't find it to be a factor in the crime.One of those. (sarcasm goes right over Stipe's head)Sorry, forgot my Warning For The Humor-Impaired. Actually, Stipe, police never include the religion of a shooter, unless they think it's a key to the shooting itself. I'll try to warn you when I use humor in the future. lain:
Than every other Western industrial nation? lain: That way lies xenophobia. That's nonsense. We simply have an industry that continues to tell Americans the solution to their personal safety is the largely unfettered possession of guns. Even as countries that reject that notion do an objectively, demonstrably better job of actually protecting their citizens.
People break all sorts of laws, but it's still better to have them.Because they are so easy to make. You'd need a police state to stop people from having automatic weapons.
Seems like the better way would be to penalize employers of people who aren't properly documented. If there's no opportunity there's not much incentive. And you don't have to shoot anyone for wanting a better life.There is a better way.
Consider; if we wanted to stop the immigration problem, all we would have to do is allow a great deal more immigrants into the country in an easier way. The easier way would be to identify the people coming in. They could do it at the boarder gate. Then, anyone trying to get over the wall could be shot without question.
That's simply not true of any right. They're all subject to balancing.It's either unfettered or it doesn't exist.
No one is arguing that you can't defend yourself.One either has the right to defend themself or they don't.
No, we've been balancing rights from the beginning and we still have them.Everything else is just the transition to the right being suppressed completely.
I've already presented some fairly concrete ideas. I'm open to intelligent discussion on what appears to work elsewhere.“I don’t know enough details to tell you how we would do it or how it would work, but certainly the Australia example is worth looking at,” Hillary Clinton. Australia went waaaaaaayyyyyy beyond bump stocks, silencers, and magazine capacities. Where, exactly, is the line drawn on what and who can keep their guns. Please be exact (even if Hillary doesn't know the details, you need to in order to support your argument).
Your coworker wasn't denied the right to own a firearm. He just had to follow the law. So if it's supposed to be in a case you put it in a case, etc.Sure you can. The assault weapons ban limited magazines to 10 rounds. A former coworker had his rifle confiscated when an officer broke his magazine and muscled an 11th round in. He lost another rifle due to not having it in a case when the officer found it in his trunk.Yeah, silly rules absolutely do deny a person what they have a legal right to possess.
Since most of us who favor restrictions aren't arguing about whether you have the right to defend yourself or to own a gun, but about what is reasonable and balances the safety of others in the consideration THAT is the conversation.No. The conversation is simply that humans have the right to defend themselves and guns are an important part of defending one's self.
Registration is about information. You have to create this notion of a Nazi like police state (which gets its power from what majority again?) to begin to fashion a largely imaginative paranoia to avoid it. Better to avoid that effort. It lacks legs.The point is that despite the loosening of gun laws, they were in reality tightened on Jews. Registration is always a bad idea.
I did no such thing. You said the right must be unfettered (see: bold above) or it isn't a right at all. I unfettered it. And the moment I do your position becomes as obviously absurd as it actually is. That's the problem and it's yours, not mine....you created a straw man to make this claim. Will you realize you created a straw man and apologize or confess you didn't realize you created a straw man?
That's your fetter. Now we're just negotiating price.Individuals can defend themselves reliably with a weapon that can be brought to bear against a single other human. If it can do such, it should be freely allowed.
Not really. I own guns. I am intimately familiar with their safe use and lethality. Where this nation is at present is irresponsible and dangerous. It's time to recognize that we don't live in the 18th century and that some of the changes have impacted this debate.You've been brainwashed by gun control rhetoric.
I've long advocated the protection of the unborn via two completely rational arguments in extension of right and logical necessity.If you want to enact "Intelligent regulation" of guns you might as well enact an "Intelligent point at which a person begins" because the latter has been proven to be so effective at saving babies.
How many of you who want machine guns to protect themselves have actually fired one?
How many of you have carried one- and its ammunition?
How many of you have served in military combat units?
Show of hands, please.