Reduce availability to a targeted group. That was your plan.
Further, I see no cause to reduce access of a right to law abiding citizens.
Incorrect, yet again.
As everyone would have to pay for the permit, just like everyone in Kentucky has to pay for their C&C permit. This just affects poor folks more, which also happen to be the demographic that commits the overwhelming majority of gun crime.
You’d be right if folks over a certain income were exempted, but I’m not advocating that, so you’re just flatly wrong here.
And again, the successful legal defenses of the assault weapons ban proves rather well that folks don’t have an unassailable right to these things.
Prices in a capitalist society are controlled by supply and demand…
My undergrad was in finance, I know the topic well.
One of the ways to affect policy is through taxes and fees, which increases the effective price of a good, which reduces demand - achieving the desired end.
And there’s the difference between us. I’m game for stopping criminals, not restricting the rights of free Americans
We both want to get just the “bad guys”, Jon.
The fundamental difference is that I’m interested in real, actual solutions that do that rather than just sitting on my hands and watching people get shot.
It’s not enough to say “we should just restrict them away from people who would do bad things with them” because there’s presently no way to know exactly who that is. The “pre-crime magic 8-ball” you’re hinting at doesn’t yet exist.