That's pretty much what makes me want to rip my dick off every time some jackass is "Obama's hometown has strict gun laws and look at all the crime in Chicago herp derp" when you can drive 20 minutes, wait 10 minutes in a store, and walk out with a handgun in Indiana or Wisconsin. There was a similar report of 3 gun stores accounting for 19% of all recovered weapons used in crimes in the city.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
lol what kind of autocratic municipality do you live in where installing a gun safe requires a building permit and inspection? What I want is for people who demonstrate that they cannot responsibly own a gun to not be able to own a gun. And I want people to have to demonstrate gun safety. And I want elimination of straw purchases to as much extent as they can.Jay wrote:
And fyi, gun safes are equivalent to poll taxes. You're limiting legal gun ownership to only people who can afford expensive approved safes, installed under building permit, inspected etc.
Did you hear about that Pawn shop in Milwaukee that just got sued by two policemen who were shot by a guy who bought a gun at the store? The pawn shop sold something like 30% of all guns used in crimes in the area. There is something wrong with that. There are initiatives that can be enacted to limit this stuff.
As a gun owner, I think there are enough advantages to owning a gun safe to justify its cost.
1) Helps keep your guns in better condition by reducing dust contact.
2) Helps keep your guns out of sight so obnoxious house guests (friends and family alike) won't pester you for handling or demonstrations.
3) Helps keep your guns out of irresponsible or criminal hands.
4) Can hold a lot of your other gun paraphernalia, things like bows or long blades, or important documents.
5) That warm fuzzy feeling you get when you know your shit's all accounted for.
I believe buying a safe should be the least of precautions a prospective gun owner should be required to take. I would also go a step further and push for automated home security systems.
1) Helps keep your guns in better condition by reducing dust contact.
2) Helps keep your guns out of sight so obnoxious house guests (friends and family alike) won't pester you for handling or demonstrations.
3) Helps keep your guns out of irresponsible or criminal hands.
4) Can hold a lot of your other gun paraphernalia, things like bows or long blades, or important documents.
5) That warm fuzzy feeling you get when you know your shit's all accounted for.
I believe buying a safe should be the least of precautions a prospective gun owner should be required to take. I would also go a step further and push for automated home security systems.
How quickly can you get to your guns if your house were to be attacked by ninjas or a burglar?
if you actually cared a lot about security, invest in other measures. fireproof glass and thick doors should suffice.SuperJail Warden wrote:
How quickly can you get to your guns if your house were to be attacked by ninjas or a burglar?
and how many fucking enemies do you have if you need to have your gun always at the ready.
Jay could brake in and teabag him in the middle of the night.Cybargs wrote:
if you actually cared a lot about security, invest in other measures. fireproof glass and thick doors should suffice.SuperJail Warden wrote:
How quickly can you get to your guns if your house were to be attacked by ninjas or a burglar?
and how many fucking enemies do you have if you need to have your gun always at the ready.
SuperJail Warden wrote:
How quickly can you get to your guns if your house were to be attacked by ninjas or a burglar?
One major terrorist attack per 100 years, that's like 25 people/year, half a person per state per year, and yet it was worth starting two wars over.Jay wrote:
1 incident per state per year is hardly an epidemic... it's almost like the publisher is looking for cheap click bait headlines in order to push a policy agenda...KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Toddlers are using guns at a rate of roughly once a week in the US.
Are the gun owners being charged with negligence. I'd say that if you can't lock up a fucking gun around a toddler, you shouldn't be allowed to own a gun.
Fuck Israel
Who is talking about prohibition? Just sensible controls, like background checks for anyone who buys a gun.Jay wrote:
I live in reality. I'm also pretty much disgusted by prohibitionists using child safety every time they want to push through unpopular ideas by playing on stupid people's emotions with insignificant statistics like this.
Gun safes are a) Expensive and b) need a building permit and inspection, are you stoned?And fyi, gun safes are equivalent to poll taxes. You're limiting legal gun ownership to only people who can afford expensive approved safes, installed under building permit, inspected etc.
In the UK and Australia, with the tightest rules in the Western world, I've needed neither.
Ken wrote:
What I want is for people who demonstrate that they cannot responsibly own a gun to not be able to own a gun.
If someone demonstrates they are not responsible with guns it seems obvious to not let them have guns, that was the argument, not reversing the onus.Jay wrote:
How can one demonstrate the ability to be responsible with a gun?
People break the law? OK! Lets remove all laws!Jay wrote:
Eliminate straw purchases? Good luck. Black market beckons.
What do you think is being discussed, rapture insurance?Jay wrote:
Insurance, other than liability, should be optional.
Your asinine reductio ad absurdum arguments are asinine and absurd.
Removing loopholes, like allowing people to buy guns without background checks, is so very obvious, as is requiring people to store guns securely and safely when they're not in use so toddlers and criminals can't access them.
They're mostly in the hands of criminals, not mentally ill teenagers, they aren't therefore a big problem.Jay wrote:
Besides, fuck off and worry about the ten million undocumented illegal weapons in your own country.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2015-10-16 04:26:48)
Fuck Israel
Who are you arguing with?Dilbert_X wrote:
One major terrorist attack per 100 years, that's like 25 people/year, half a person per state per year, and yet it was worth starting two wars over.Jay wrote:
1 incident per state per year is hardly an epidemic... it's almost like the publisher is looking for cheap click bait headlines in order to push a policy agenda...KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Toddlers are using guns at a rate of roughly once a week in the US.
Are the gun owners being charged with negligence. I'd say that if you can't lock up a fucking gun around a toddler, you shouldn't be allowed to own a gun.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Literally none of the proposals pushed forward by the anti-gun crowd would stop mass shootings. None. They would cut down on legal gun ownership and create many new criminals. These are the same people boohooing non-violent drug offenses leading to prison.Dilbert_X wrote:
Who is talking about prohibition? Just sensible controls, like background checks for anyone who buys a gun.Jay wrote:
I live in reality. I'm also pretty much disgusted by prohibitionists using child safety every time they want to push through unpopular ideas by playing on stupid people's emotions with insignificant statistics like this.Gun safes are a) Expensive and b) need a building permit and inspection, are you stoned?And fyi, gun safes are equivalent to poll taxes. You're limiting legal gun ownership to only people who can afford expensive approved safes, installed under building permit, inspected etc.
In the UK and Australia, with the tightest rules in the Western world, I've needed neither.Ken wrote:
What I want is for people who demonstrate that they cannot responsibly own a gun to not be able to own a gun.If someone demonstrates they are not responsible with guns it seems obvious to not let them have guns, that was the argument, not reversing the onus.Jay wrote:
How can one demonstrate the ability to be responsible with a gun?People break the law? OK! Lets remove all laws!Jay wrote:
Eliminate straw purchases? Good luck. Black market beckons.What do you think is being discussed, rapture insurance?Jay wrote:
Insurance, other than liability, should be optional.
Your asinine reductio ad absurdum arguments are asinine and absurd.
Removing loopholes, like allowing people to buy guns without background checks, is so very obvious, as is requiring people to store guns securely and safely when they're not in use so toddlers and criminals can't access them.They're mostly in the hands of criminals, not mentally ill teenagers, they aren't therefore a big problem.Jay wrote:
Besides, fuck off and worry about the ten million undocumented illegal weapons in your own country.
I get the desire to feel safe, but both sides of the debate want the same thing. Some people live in absolute terror of guns, others live in absolute terror of not having one. They're both irrational.
At the end of the day, the 2nd amendment makes gun ownership a natural right (like voting when you become an adult), not a privilege. You can't be preemptively stripped of your rights or face onerous burdens to exercise your right. Want to change that? Pass a new constitutional amendment.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Various proposals would have some impact, without significantly impacting the rights of the sensible, law-abiding gun owner.
How does having a background check impact anyone's rights? They're required by Federal law IIRC, how does closing a few dumb loopholes impact on anything?
And the people who don't actually have that right?
Children, criminals, the mentally ill, doesn't it make sense to make sure they can't exercise a right they don't have?
How does having a background check impact anyone's rights? They're required by Federal law IIRC, how does closing a few dumb loopholes impact on anything?
And the people who don't actually have that right?
Children, criminals, the mentally ill, doesn't it make sense to make sure they can't exercise a right they don't have?
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2015-10-16 05:07:06)
Fuck Israel
Most of the "loopholes" don't exist. The only "loophole" is from private sales i.e. me buying a gun from my cousin. "Sensible legislation" would mean that my cousin would have to go to a licensed gun dealer and pay him to perform a background check on me and do all the paperwork to transfer ownership. I'm not saying this is unreasonable, but it is a largely unnecessary expense that doesn't decrease crime. None of the mass shooters would've been thwarted.Dilbert_X wrote:
Various proposals would have some impact, without significantly impacting the rights of the sensible, law-abiding gun owner.
How does having a background check impact anyone's rights? They're required by Federal law IIRC, how does closing a few dumb loopholes impact on anything?
And the people who don't actually have that right?
Children, criminals, the mentally ill, doesn't it make sense to make sure they can't exercise a right they don't have?
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Or you could go to a police station and do it for free - its how it works here.
Those loopholes do exist, straw purchases are so very obvious a loophole which needs to be closed, gun shows where anyone can buy a gun no questions asked also.
Photo licences, background checks, registration, secure storage do not impinge on anyones right to own a gun.
Various of the mass shootings, and numerous smaller scale events, could have been thwarted if straw purchases and background checks had been dealt with.
Those loopholes do exist, straw purchases are so very obvious a loophole which needs to be closed, gun shows where anyone can buy a gun no questions asked also.
Photo licences, background checks, registration, secure storage do not impinge on anyones right to own a gun.
Various of the mass shootings, and numerous smaller scale events, could have been thwarted if straw purchases and background checks had been dealt with.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2015-10-16 13:17:46)
Fuck Israel
I didn't watch your video because I am at work. However the Supreme Court (through precedent, I want to say the first ruling was back in the 1910's) has ruled many times the right to enact legislation that limits the ability to own a gun and the types of firepower available to the public. So actually you're wrong.Jay wrote:
At the end of the day, the 2nd amendment makes gun ownership a natural right (like voting when you become an adult), not a privilege. You can't be preemptively stripped of your rights or face onerous burdens to exercise your right. Want to change that? Pass a new constitutional amendment.[/url]
The whole "2nd Amendment makes gun ownership a natural right" is kind of silly. If (and that's a big if) the authors of the constitution were worried about protecting the citizens against a corrupt or overpowering state and to counteract that allowed the citizens the "right to bear arms", then why can't we buy tanks? RPGs? Attack Helicopters? After all, a bunch of coots in Idaho popping rounds off their AR15 at the oppressive government aren't going to stop an APC, tank, drone, etc. It's a farce, and it's a really weak argument.
You you idiot.Jay wrote:
Who are you arguing with?Dilbert_X wrote:
One major terrorist attack per 100 years, that's like 25 people/year, half a person per state per year, and yet it was worth starting two wars over.Jay wrote:
1 incident per state per year is hardly an epidemic... it's almost like the publisher is looking for cheap click bait headlines in order to push a policy agenda...
Fuck Israel
There's that, the 2nd amendment has been so thoroughly emasculated it might as well not exist.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
The whole "2nd Amendment makes gun ownership a natural right" is kind of silly. If (and that's a big if) the authors of the constitution were worried about protecting the citizens against a corrupt or overpowering state and to counteract that allowed the citizens the "right to bear arms", then why can't we buy tanks? RPGs? Attack Helicopters? After all, a bunch of coots in Idaho popping rounds off their AR15 at the oppressive government aren't going to stop an APC, tank, drone, etc. It's a farce, and it's a really weak argument.
As it is, it has not been used to 'fight tyranny', but to allow crazy people to shoot children and America's better Presidents.
Fuck Israel
Prince Harry is a heir apparent and he has been radicalized in Iraq.Dilbert_X wrote:
it has not been used to 'fight tyranny'
He might want to reconquer the colonies once again.
Better be prepared with a well armed militia.
The biggest defense against tyranny isn't semi-automatic .308 rifles. A well educated, informed, citizenry who respect their fellow Americans is.
Last edited by SuperJail Warden (2015-10-16 17:21:28)
Slightly off-topic, the best defence (yes, its spelled with a c) against tyranny is civics lessons for Police officers.
Their proper role is to uphold the law and put people before the courts, regardless of their background, to have the court determine whether they're criminals or not.
Their role isn't to sweep the streets for the rich and powerful and jail people they deem to be criminals.
Their proper role is to uphold the law and put people before the courts, regardless of their background, to have the court determine whether they're criminals or not.
Their role isn't to sweep the streets for the rich and powerful and jail people they deem to be criminals.
Fuck Israel
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/ … tiago.htmlAn avowed former gang member in Chicago has been charged with felony child endangerment after his 6-year-old son shot and killed his 3-year-old brother with a gun that was kept loaded on top of a refrigerator, authorities say. Michael Santiago, 25, was at work when the shooting occurred on Saturday night at his home in the Humboldt Park neighborhood; the childrens' grandfather was at the home at the time. From the Chicago Tribune:"The gun was purchased off the street. It was kept loaded, and it was wrapped in pajama pants on top of the refrigerator," Assistant State's Attorney Joseph DiBella said. "The defendant previously showed the 6-year-old where the gun was kept, and in a videotape statement the defendant said he kept the gun for protection because he was a former gang member who snitched on a gang member in a murder trial."
"About a week prior to the shooting, he showed his older son where he kept the gun. ... (Santiago) took the gun from on top of the refrigerator, unwrapped the pajama pants and explained to the 6-year-old that the gun was only to be used by adults," DiBella said.
That must be every parents nightmare! As a future parent, it makes me nervous thinking about the fragility of my future child.
But at least they can get their guns quickly if attacked by ninjas or burglars.
If you were a patriot you'd be more concerned with whether your toddler has ready access to an AR15 in case the British invade.SuperJail Warden wrote:
That must be every parents nightmare! As a future parent, it makes me nervous thinking about the fragility of my future child.
Fuck Israel
amazing that lawn darts get banned after one death but guns dont
fuck lawn darts, they're unbalanced. unlike my Ruger, that has a nice heft and feel to it . . .Adams_BJ wrote:
amazing that lawn darts get banned after one death but guns dont
I conceal carry an outlawed lawn dart, even at my local high school. Screw the feds, I will protect myself.Adams_BJ wrote:
amazing that lawn darts get banned after one death but guns dont