S
styrgwillidar
Guest
1.Support measures that control the sale and use of firearms
2.Support measures that make guns safer (especially efforts that prevent their unsupervised use by children and anyone other than the owner)
3.Call for sensible regulations of handguns
4.Support legislative efforts that seek to protect society from the violence associated with easy access to deadly weapons including assault weapons
5.Make a serious commitment to confront the pervasive role of addiction and mental illness in crime.
Ok, no problem with any of these. However, what are the details and if the proposed laws actually make things worse instead of better in terms of deaths of innocents, what is the correct moral position?
2.Support measures that make guns safer (especially efforts that prevent their unsupervised use by children and anyone other than the owner)
3.Call for sensible regulations of handguns
4.Support legislative efforts that seek to protect society from the violence associated with easy access to deadly weapons including assault weapons
5.Make a serious commitment to confront the pervasive role of addiction and mental illness in crime.
Ok, no problem with any of these. However, what are the details and if the proposed laws actually make things worse instead of better in terms of deaths of innocents, what is the correct moral position?
- We already have plenty of laws controling weapon sales. Done.
- Pretty generic statement I can support, but–what are the details of specific laws and will they make things worse instead of better overall?
- Your and my definition of ‘sensible’ regulations are far different. The stricter regulations in Chicago are directly related to the higher death rates of innocents then more lenient regulations elsewhere. So, which are sensible-- the ones passed based on good intentions which actually have worse results? No.
- I’ll support legislation elimating gun-free zones as the most effective means of protecting society from violence. Far more effective and less impact in making the law abiding more vulnerable than weapon bans. Again, ‘assualt weapons’ whatever legal definition you apply are statistcially miniscule contributor to the problem.
- Agreed.