R
rcwitness
Guest
Obviously, my point is that up until Paddock brought his guns into the hotel, he was perfectly abiding by the law, right?
In other words, punish the innocent for the acts of the guilty, while the guilty remain unpunished.The goal is not to eliminate illegal possession of guns. The goal is to reduce the number of guns. And a high cost of owning guns will do that.
My insurer would not pay a nickel toward the damages arising out of a gang war in Chicago. The gang members aren’t supposed to have guns anyway and won’t have insurance. So other than imposing a gift to insurers at the expense of the innocent, what does this insurance do?There would be many more people selling heroin or meth if it is legal to do so. As far as your Mauser, I feel it should be registered, you should pay the appropriate insurance on it and if you wanted to pass it to your son, I don’t see a problem with that as long as the law following proper registration of the weapon are followed and the weapon remained legal for private ownership.
That is a matter of opinion.That’s actually a good idea.
Still, trying to require gun owners to pay insurance for the cost of mass murders doesn’t sound like it would work.
I’m not a fan of guns, and I have never owned one.
But the United States does and should allow the right to have them. And personal protection and hunting are legitimate reasons to own guns.
While mass killings do invite a public discussion on gun rights vs gun control, they really aren’t the main problem. 59 people where killed in Las Vegas four day ago and we haven’t stopped talking about it since. But do you know what else happened during those four days? 172 more people died from gun violence. And in the next four days there will be another 172 people killed. The real reason to do something about guns is these everyday shootings that happen without much fanfare. The mass shootings by comparison are just a drop in the bucket. But they do capture the world’s attention, so I guess that is a good thing. But I would not push the narrative too far that says mass shootings are the reason to address gun violence.But something does need to change. The number of mass killings with guns is becoming increasingly common. It’s basically two or three major instances every year. And that is becoming more important to avoid than the ease and privileged of owning guns.
I think you’re going to need to do a lot more than that. I heard on TV that Paddock had not only ammonium nitrate but 50 pounds of Tannerite. The Tsarnaevs’ bomb was made out of toy car parts and powder taken from legal fireworks and matches.If all guns needed to be rented, then I think it might be a good way to establish and regulate all of the requirements and regulations for gun use.
Your first sentence contradicts your second. You are proposing taking away the right to bear arms.I’m not proposing we take away the right to bear arms, just the ability to aquire and posses those firearms, and which kind and how many are safe for the rest of society
What regulation would have prevented Paddock’s massacre? As far as anyone now knows, he wasn’t on anybody’s radar screen for any reason. What new regulation would have prevented him from buying guns legally. He wasn’t a felon. He wasn’t a known terrorist with terrorist links. He wasn’t a mental patient.You are not realizing the need to protect the innocent by establishing better regulations and a better way to enforce those regulations.
I’m not proposing we take away the right to bear arms, just the ability to aquire and posses those firearms, and which kind and how many are safe for the rest of society
I recall reading Rahm Emmanuel’s complaint that a big part of the problem in Chicago is that judges won’t imprison people who commit gun crimes. And he, of course, is as liberal as liberal gets.The vast majority of gun murders are done by well know bad people. If you want to prevent them increase the number of executions for lesser crimes or lock them up for life. But people don’t seem to want to do that. They want to punish the innocent.