Ty wrote:
Also for someone not to bat an eyelid at a civilian buying 6000 rounds of pistol and .223 calibre ammunition and combat gear just reflects how messed up the attitudes toward firearms are in the US and how incidents like this one will keep being too frequent.
Whereas I would say that this EVER happened is
TOO frequent, I would also like to reiterate that mass murders similar to this one happen much more frequently in countries with anti-gun laws than they do here. They don't even become discussions when the news comes out of some countries because it is almost expected.
I know I am repeated a couple of my points here, but we have a couple different threads going and I get mixed up with what I said where:
Everytime this debate comes up, the anti-gun people like to avoid the fact that all the other laws in place did nothing to help. Example: Bombs. This guy was loaded up with them. He could have blown up his whole apartment complex... The anti-bomb laws did not stop that. If you mention this, the anti-gun people ALWAYS say "So by your logic we should just legalize xyz then."
No... That is asinine. The primary defense against people with guns is people with guns. That is why everyone HERE thinks it is fine for cops to have guns.
It *IS* already legal to kill people in certain situations. That doesn't make it widespread... Just like have someone go bat-shit crazy and murder a ton of people is also not widespread.
Lets look at violence globally. Look at the countries with and without guns. The countries without guns are not utopias. This discussion turned to Russia the other day, where one crazy serial killer over there killed 62 people. 62! He got them drunk, then SHOT THEM IN THE HEAD with a HOMEMADE gun. The gun law didn't help. Each victim was drunk at the time, but they aren't outlawing vodka, now are they?
This guy was a loon. He was nuts. He was going to kill people. Illegally. Be it bombs, hand guns, hunting rifles, assault rifles, or picture frames, murder was going to take place. No laws could have stopped that.
The U.S. government couldn't even keep alcohol outlawed without facing a full scale civil war of police versus gang bosses, with wondering alcoholics in the middle. How do you think a law taking all of our gun rights away would be received? Do you think everyone would just hand them all over and walk away happy? No, you are talking about something that would tear this country apart. For you not to realize that and to keep recommending it is just pure ignorance on your part.
I don't know what to recommend, as Dilbert asked for. Right now, gun laws are actually loosening up nationwide, not tightening down. As I, and others have said several times, I don't think the issue is so much about adding NEW laws, but stricter enforcement of the ones we already have. I think there should be harsher penalties on repeat offenders... And twice is a repeat. Not this 3 strikes crap. You rob a store, go to jail, do your time, get out, and rob a store, you are done. You have shown the first X number of years did not help you. You didn't get it. You can't function in society.
Actually, I do have a few ideas on things to recommend. Registration without restriction. I think that should be the catchy slogan. I like it. Instead of restricting guns more, I would have no issue registering mine. That is something that you don't have to do in Oklahoma. I don't see a problem with it.
So:
1) You have to register your guns.
Now here is the catch. The conspiracy theorists can't complain about the government targeting them because they have guns, AND the government can't use this registration as any sort of cause to look into someone. Just because Joe Blow has 10 guns does NOT mean you can raid his house, or bug his phones, or put him on a watch list. It just means those guns are registered to him. If something happens, and one of those guns are involved, you know who to go talk to.
2) Background checks and registration need to be done when guns are sold, and the ownership needs to be officially transferred. Similar to a car title. I realize most people think that background checks already always happen. Well, when you buy from a brick and mortar dealer, yes. When you buy from a gun show, no. When you buy from your buddy down the street, no. I think this would serve two functions a) force more guns out of the back alley market, and into legal channels, and b) make gun owners more responsible with their guns and ownerships. The reason is this: If a gun were registered in my name, and I sold it, I would want it out of my name. Otherwise, if the person I sold it to (or the person he sold it to, etc) goes out and kills someone, that gun could be traced back to me. I would not want that. Just like I make sure my cars get officially taken out of my name when I sell them. I don't want someone performing my namesake, and running over some poor slob, and leaving. Then a witness sees the tag, and the tag is still registered to me because the buyer never bothered to fill out the paperwork... Then the police want to talk to me about it and I have to prove I sold that car, and when, and to who. I have seen this happen. I would not want to go through it with a gun. So this would create a paper trail for the guns. Also, back to background checks, this would enforce those... You wouldn't want to be the guy with a gun in your name and it look like YOU were the one that sold it to that felon with 18 warrants. Get it officially transferred and you don't have to worry about it.
Now here is the bitching part about those ideas: How do you pay for it? I think small registration fees would be acceptable. The thing is, you would have to regulate it to keep everyone happy. You would probably add this function into a sheriff's office, but maybe could use a tag agency... But the big trick is regulating, or capping, the fees. Otherwise, states that don't want you to have guns, could end up raising that fee so high as to block you.
Another pro/anti argument I would foresee:
Person A: It is just like registering your car, and you do that without complaint.
Person B: Having a car is a privilege, having a gun is a protected right! You can't regulate that.
Anyway... I think those would be steps in the right direction that ultimately would be an agreeable area on both sides.
However, in the case of this Joker... None of this would have helped.