If Texas church shooter Devin Kelley was background-checked, he wouldn't have been allowed to buy any gun. :idunno:
We can do better. We can be safer.
We being the Air Force could have done better, sure. Is there any reason why the Air Force wouldn't or shouldn't or couldn't tell the FBI about Kelley's criminal behavior, so that his background check would have come back dirty, thus denying him the ability to buy guns from an FFL?
There's no reason not to reform our approach and every motivation to have a serious dialogue and examination of how.
Nothing wrong with dialogue and examination. Problem is when we disagree, and then start accusing our opponents of evil, because we disagree.
Maybe all we can agree on at this point is mandatory safety and registration.
I don't agree on registration. It only targets law abiding people, and ignores criminals, who will avoid registration, and it would be good for a future compulsory buy-back to run smoother. Without registration, when a gun is used in a crime, we won't know whose gun it is, true, but we can continue to address criminals obtaining guns with other means, see below.
Mandatory safety: I've floated the notion already about having gun safety be a requirement for high school graduation, which won't affect people who don't graduate high school, but it would cover most people. It would also force our youngsters turning into adults, to become aware of guns, which is a good idea because there are about as many civilian owned guns in this country per capita. A lot of people probably never touch guns their whole lives, but I would guess that most of us do, whether or not we ourselves initiated the exposure. How to administer this safety training will take a lot of leg work, but it's a thought that can be addressed.
Said safety training for now could be patterned after the NRA's own gun safety courses. They've been in the gun safety business for longer than anybody, and that remains the NRA's primary mission, is to spread gun safety. We've already mentioned how at least one of the NRA's top gun safety principles is already law, maybe we begin examining how many more can be codified also. Don't point a gun at anybody (already law). Treat every gun as if it's loaded, even when you know it isn't. Know what's behind what you're aiming at. Such things.
It won't be enough, but it could be a start.
Criminals do not have the RKBA, they've forfeited it, or otherwise shown that they can't be trusted with guns. The "gun show loophole" regards, in states without gun permitting, the private sale of guns without the requirement to involve a criminal background check to rule out a criminal buying a gun in a private sale. Private individuals just do not have the ability to check if a buyer is a criminal or not. To "close the gun show loophole," every private sale would involve an FFL who would run the background check for the seller, on the buyer. For states where they issue permits, this might be unnecessary, or at least not as urgent as in states where there is no permitting, because permitting itself involves a criminal background check.
I can be talked out of any number of things, but not that peaceable law-abiding citizens have the civil right to possess and carry loaded standard issue military weaponry, and I'd like to see laws regarding the open carrying of such weapons loosened, along with the tightening of other laws, like criminal background checks for private sales. The RKBA is a civil right, and I can't accept tightening laws on peaceable law-abiding citizens, in order to target criminals.
Of course in the case of Paddock, none of these things would have done a darn thing to stop him, since he wasn't a criminal yet when he committed his mass shooting terrorist act, except maybe if more people carried rifles.