Fine. Go ahead and organize one. Personally, I think you might have trouble, and I'm not quite sure who would have the authority to do it - the federal government couldn't do it without the consent of the states and, politically, without a popular mandate, and the states on their own wouldn't have enough clout to do it, either.
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Gun control/2nd Amendment
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A quick response to the original message by Sava...
Automatic sub-machine-guns (mp5, uzi, mac10, etc)
Automatic rifles (M16, Colt M4a1, ak47, etc)
Automatic machine guns (M60, M249 Para)
Explosives (grenades, rockets, etc)
Man Portable Nuclear Weapons
Forbidding those is logical and understandable, if it also includes the exception of light use by the police and armed forces.
I think everything except Hunting Rifles/Shotguns and Handguns should be illegal to the general public.
I completely agree with you and I also add that this system is in use in e.g. Finland and it works perfectly well.
Handguns should only be legal in rural areas.
At this point I wouldn't have any limit because someone would have to define what is a rural area for gun control and it would also require some extra control. However you could of course add it to the law, but it would be enforced as a part of any other gun control done by the police and sheriffs, so it wouldn't warrant any extra actions. But it still sounds abit stubborn IMO, so not having any limit would work better.
Carrying a concealed weapon should require a different type of permit which requires the completion of a weapons training/safety course... if at all.
That would sound understandable too.
I think all guns should have fingerprint technology so that only the registered owner(s) should be able to use them.
I think that would be a good and working system. I don't know if it's in use anywhere now, but at least it would be a good way to put effort on limiting the number of illegal guns among minors. Of course there's the black market and criminals, but at least you couldn't walk around as a 12 years-old and carry a pistol (which is insane IMO)."Kids, don't listen to uncle Solver unless you want your parents to spank you." - Solver
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Aaaarrrggghhhh!!!
...not another gun control thread....
D. Floyd said:
You think it's okay for people to own man-portable nuclear weapons? Man portable anti-tank missiles, grenade launchers? Fully automatic, belt fed machine guns?
Yes.
Okay, this was a complete turn-off... I need to read no further.
Bye...I'm not a complete idiot: some parts are still missing.
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DF do you ever draw the line, Wouldn't you think the possession of man portable maight be a little too dangerous for society as a whole. I can understand people being allowed personnal handguns, after all they are likley only to harm themselves if they malfunction However the bigger the weapon the worse it gets.
I think its fine and dandy that you have absolute beliefs, but do they extend to allowing the killing of an entire community by mistakeSpace is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.
Douglas Adams (Influential author)
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Sava, in my view, the 2nd Amendment applies to the Federal Government and is absolute. It forbids the feds from infringing on the right of the people to keep and bear military type arms so that the states may have a well regulated Militia.
The Amendment does not apply to the States. The States can ban gun ownership if they want.
I must admit, that the need to keep arms in the home in order to have a well regulated Militia is gone. Perhaps it is time for an amendment to allow federal licensing.
But until such an amendment is passed, Congress cannot constitutionally pass a federal license law.http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en
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Mr. Floyd, are you aware of the fact that you make yourself absolutely dumb in the public here, by saying that you accept bazookas, grenades, SMGs, etc. in the public. Well, the society where you would then live would look something like this.
Rasbey: - Help, help! Someone is out for a rampage with a SMG as someone tried to attack him.
Police: - Duh, just let him carry on.
Is this what you want? Loonies "defending themselves" with military weapons? Right, then you'd better get someone medical care soon."Kids, don't listen to uncle Solver unless you want your parents to spank you." - Solver
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Worth remembering: the 2nd Amendment is the only amendment in the Bill of Rights that the Founders felt the need to provide a rationale for. All the rest are simply declaratory: "Congress shall make no law..." "The rights of the people...shall not be infringed..." etc. Only the 2nd begins with that dependent clause, designed to explain why the amendment exists: "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state..."
Now, what does you make of this exceptional phrasing, this unique language and sentence structure? I think it suggests that, for the founders, the emphasis was on the well-regulated militia, not on gun ownership; otherwise, why not just say "Congress shall make no law infringing on the right to bear arms"? That phrasing would be clearer and more consistant with the language in the other 9 amendments. No, they made this one different, and for a reason: the imagined that guns would be readily available, but that gun ownership would be "well-regulated." In general, this has also been what SCOTUS has held. And I say, bully for them all."I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin
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Interstate commerce clause. Licensing is also not an infringement, unless there are arbitrary restrictions on who can obtain a license.
Nor is identification or background checks as a condition of purchase - again, as long as there is no "arbitrary" purpose.
The other thing I want to clarify is your stance on the legality of different types of firearms. Of the following types of weapons, what should be legal and what shouldn't be?
Automatic sub-machine-guns (mp5, uzi, mac10, etc)
Automatic rifles (M16, Colt M4a1, ak47, etc)
Automatic machine guns (M60, M249 Para)
Hunting rifles/Shotguns
Handguns
Explosives (grenades, rockets, etc)
Man Portable Nuclear Weapons
Same as above
Nope
Yep
Yep
Depends on size/yield
NopeWhen all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."
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Originally posted by Rufus T. Firefly
Worth remembering: the 2nd Amendment is the only amendment in the Bill of Rights that the Founders felt the need to provide a rationale for. All the rest are simply declaratory: "Congress shall make no law..." "The rights of the people...shall not be infringed..." etc. Only the 2nd begins with that dependent clause, designed to explain why the amendment exists: "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state..."
Now, what does you make of this exceptional phrasing, this unique language and sentence structure? I think it suggests that, for the founders, the emphasis was on the well-regulated militia, not on gun ownership; otherwise, why not just say "Congress shall make no law infringing on the right to bear arms"? That phrasing would be clearer and more consistant with the language in the other 9 amendments. No, they made this one different, and for a reason: the imagined that guns would be readily available, but that gun ownership would be "well-regulated." In general, this has also been what SCOTUS has held. And I say, bully for them all.
As for the founding fathers assuming that we would still be using muzzle loading muskets 200 plus years later, I doubt that they were that stupid. Consider the difference in weaponry between 1589 and 1789. Fire power was much more effective in 1789. Now consider that guns available for civilian purchase in the U.S. are frozen technologically somewhere between about 1860-1900, eg machineguns existed in the middle of the 19th century, while detachable magazines and semi-automatic weapons were available at the end of the 19th century. So in reality, we are allowed to purchase only the types pf guns that were available within about 100 years of the writing of the constitution. I don't think that they would be blown away with the firepower capability of readily available weaponry for citizens, especially in comparison to the many orders of magnitude greater increase in the firepower of military weapons in the last 220 years.
Imran,
The Columbine killers did not have automatic weapons, though the impression that they did was put forward by the media and repeated ad nauseum. They were in fact pretty badly armed. They had a crappy 9mm pistol with an oversized magazine that looked like a SMG, a 9mm carbine (their best weapon, but no one focused on it because it didn't look bad) and two cut down shotguns with birdshot! Had more people simply ran from them they wouldn't have killed nearly so many people. But people froze and allowed them to shoot them at point blank range, where even birdshot is deadly.
The funny thing is that these punks weren't as well armed as a police officer when one considers that the police officer has an automatic shotgun that fires buckshot and slugs, as well as a quality high capacity 9mm that he actually knows how to shoot. I couldn't believe it when I watched the police stand around outside the building. Even us REMFs in the Army knew enough to counterattack quickly in order to save as many of our wounded as possible from bleeding to death. And this was before I knew that there were only 2 guys who were not very well armed, and had killed themselves early on.He's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
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Originally posted by Sikander
The Columbine killers did not have automatic weapons, though the impression that they did was put forward by the media and repeated ad nauseum. They were in fact pretty badly armed. They had a crappy 9mm pistol with an oversized magazine that looked like a SMG, a 9mm carbine (their best weapon, but no one focused on it because it didn't look bad) and two cut down shotguns with birdshot! Had more people simply ran from them they wouldn't have killed nearly so many people. But people froze and allowed them to shoot them at point blank range, where even birdshot is deadly.
Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.
Douglas Adams (Influential author)
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Originally posted by aaglo
3 round burst ok?
What the **** is wrong with you people?between single-shot semi-auto fire and three-round burst mode (a la the M4A1 / M16A2)?
When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."
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Originally posted by TheStinger
Oh I see its the victims fault for not being propepared to be attacked by gun weilding maniacs, after all they live in acountry where guns are allowed so they should know what they let themselves infor when they GO TO SCHOOLHe's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
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Originally posted by Sikander
The explanatory clause does not mean what you say it does, ie "well regulated" meant disciplined, rather than heavily laden with regulations. Why would a heavily laden with regulations Militia be necessary for the defense of a free state? The war with Britain was just over, and the Militia seemed to do ok without being heavily regulated by law, though many of their difficulties stemmed from their lack of discipline (ie their not being "well regulated"). The idea IMO was that the Militia should be well trained and reliable, rather than a pack of drunken rabble rousers who rob passers by etc.
As for the Revolution, though, the militias did NOT do okay without heavy regulation. Washington complained endlessly about their indolence, insubordination, and extremely high rate of desertion. The regular army did okay, but the militias needed greater regulation, in BOTH senses of the word, and Washington fairly pleaded for it."I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin
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Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
I could ask you the same question, toots. Care to explain the extreme differencebetween single-shot semi-auto fire and three-round burst mode (a la the M4A1 / M16A2)?
But it's not the difference itself. I mean, why do you need those extra 2 bullets? If you try to shoot at something, the first will propably hit and the rest will go who-knows-where...
Or is it just that "it is very cool and it makes me feel like a real man" -feeling you get when you shoot 3-round burst...I'm not a complete idiot: some parts are still missing.
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