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James Baker: Gun laws Republicans can support Login/Join 
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. . . seem like common sense propositions to me. I would be inclined to go farther, e.g., raising the age to purchase firearms to 21, red=flag restrictions. Or do we just do nothing and hope for a different result . . . all the while understanding that nothing will change and the mass shootings will continue.

James Baker: Gun laws Republicans can support

James Baker: Gun laws that Republicans can support (Opinion)
Bipartisan agreement is possible. Here's where.

As someone who learned to hunt wild game at my father’s elbow, and who continues to prowl after wild turkeys, quail and elk at the age of 93, two things about guns are crystal clear to me. First, I maintain strong passions for firearms and the outdoors and, just as importantly, a healthy respect for both. But second, in the face of a seemingly daily barrage of mass shootings like the recent one in Allen, Texas, it is evident our country is suffering a tragic epidemic of gun violence that has veered out of control.

The numbers are overwhelming. At a time when modern medicine is finding ways to reduce cancer, heart disease and other causes of death, our nation is experiencing an upward spiral in firearm fatalities. Since 2000, such deaths have increased by 55 percent to 44,310 last year. The toll of American civilians who have suffered gun-related deaths during the past 50 years is more than the 1.35 million U.S. soldiers who died during all our wars combined.

When all firearms-related deaths are combined (accidental, suicide and homicide), they become one of the nation’s 15 biggest killers. Sadly, the most vulnerable among us are the biggest victims. In 2021, firearms were the leading cause of death for U.S. children and teens, accounting for nearly 19 percent of deaths of those 18 or younger.

With the carnage seemingly out of control, it is little wonder a recent Gallup poll indicates Americans’ dissatisfaction with U.S. gun laws has risen to 63 percent, the highest since Gallup began tracking national gun policies in 2001. Although demand for change comes largely from Democrats and independents, 44 percent of Republicans are dissatisfied with gun laws as well. Absent new laws, that public dissatisfaction will only increase as the death toll mounts.

Such public sentiment is one reason Congress passed a bipartisan bill last summer — the first major federal gun safety legislation since the assault weapons ban of 1994, a law that expired after 10 years. Last year, Republicans and Democrats hammered out the new legislation in the aftermath of mass shootings in a Buffalo, New York supermarket and an elementary school in Uvalde. The law established background checks for gun purchasers younger than 21, further criminalized arms trafficking and provided millions of dollars for states to implement red flag laws and other crisis intervention programs.

Though the new law did not go far enough to reduce gun violence, it was a promising first step towards the development of further legislation. Additional steps should be considered that might be able to attract bipartisan support, including:

· A ban on ammunition magazines holding more than ten rounds except for military or police use. Similar bans have been in place since 1935, when federal law began restricting waterfowl hunters to three shells in a shotgun.

· A ban on armor-piercing bullets, the kind that are opposed by police chiefs around the country.

· A longer waiting period — or a “cooling off period” — for the purchase of a handgun.

· Further strengthening background checks for all gun purchasers, and not just those younger than 21.

At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.

Any approach, of course, will demand bipartisan support. This is not only important because our current system requires a 60-vote majority in the Senate. But also because, absent wide support, any laws passed now might well be rescinded once the partisan balance of power inevitably shifts.

Getting to a bipartisan deal will not be easy, particularly under the dysfunctional political climate in our country. A sensible middle ground will be needed to thread the difficult partisan needle.

I worked for three wise U.S. presidents — George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford. All were men with great respect for the freedom provided by the Second Amendment. They understood that our Constitution is a precious safeguard for those worried that “they’re going to take our guns away.” But they also understood that our nation has had gun laws throughout its history. And all favored reasonable restrictions.

Some will say that Americans may just have to get used to the gun violence that plagues our nation. There are too many guns in this country, they will say, to put the genie back in the bottle. We should reject such pessimism.

Can we get rid of gun violence in one fell legislative swoop? Of course not. But to help stem the rising tide of gun violence, we can and should take practical, pragmatic steps — both those directly related to firearms and those related to mental health.

James A. Baker, III, was the nation’s 61st Secretary of State and 67th Secretary of the Treasury.


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.


I could go for this part....bit that's about it.

We could also enforce our existing laws and actually incarcerate criminals....

We could put hard labor back in our prison systems.....
 
Posts: 42463 | Location: Crosby and Barksdale, Texas | Registered: 18 September 2006Reply With Quote
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Can you explain how someone who will take their own life will be deterred by the prospect of hard labor in prison? Most of these shooters do not plan on living out the next 24 hours, prison is not something they consider.
 
Posts: 3770 | Location: Boulder Colorado | Registered: 27 February 2004Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by JTEX:
We could also enforce our existing laws and actually incarcerate criminals....

We could put hard labor back in our prison systems.....


. . . you mean close the barn door after the horse is already out? Capital punishment for murder does not deter murder.


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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Again an example of just doing “something”. The only thing that makes any sense is the last paragraph.

· A ban on ammunition magazines holding more than ten rounds except for military or police use. Similar bans have been in place since 1935, when federal law began restricting waterfowl hunters to three shells in a shotgun.

How long does it take to chance a 10 round mag and how easy is it to carry 5 in chest webbing.

· A ban on armor-piercing bullets, the kind that are opposed by police chiefs around the country.

Barnes flat-nose brass .375s are considered armor piercing. And what in Sam Hill does this have to do with mass shootings?

· A longer waiting period — or a “cooling off period” — for the purchase of a handgun.

Here lately…all long guns.

· Further strengthening background checks for all gun purchasers, and not just those younger than 21.

OK…doctors don’t log mental illness on these people. If they did…this might help.

At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.

This^^^is the only thing in the whole article that might help…let’s do it.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
quote:
Originally posted by JTEX:
We could also enforce our existing laws and actually incarcerate criminals....

We could put hard labor back in our prison systems.....


. . . you mean close the barn door after the horse is already out? Capital punishment for murder does not deter murder.


There is ZERO data to support that statement.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by skb:
Can you explain how someone who will take their own life will be deterred by the prospect of hard labor in prison? Most of these shooters do not plan on living out the next 24 hours, prison is not something they consider.


Some of what you say is somewhat true.

They basically are committing suicide and getting an emotional high at the same time by fantasizing about martyrdom (not the islamic thing but a glorified death that they feels rights injustice in their sick minds).

If they could see a humiliating punishment in death by public execution…it would deter. Same for drug dealers and child molesters.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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Gun prohibitive laws are just classic “ Must do something “ for governments to disarm law abiding citizens…nothing more and nothing less
Why don’t we ban bloody videos games instead?
Why don’t we restrict footages of violence in news and movies?
We all know, violence sells so those industries will never allow it so easiest way is to go after armed citizens
I can’t believe anyone on this site who is hunter and gun owner would ever advocate for this
You gotta be retarded and you are living in bubble and more likely “ above regular people” thus you perpetuate this kinda view…
 
Posts: 201 | Location: Heart of Europe where East meets the West | Registered: 19 January 2023Reply With Quote
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The sole purpose of the 2nd Amendment is...the Security of a free state

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

All the arguments the left makes is B.S.

How many of these shooters are psychotic? Most all of them and how many are known by LE prior? Lots of them.

How hard is it to put these ill people on medical hold? Very hard. Unless the individual is suicidal or a danger to themselves or others at the time the police are called,they will not intervene and especially if a family member or guardian objects.

Why are Democrat cities exploding with crime and murder? Because those Mayors and Governors want it that way...to take your guns and defeat the only leverage you have for personal freedom and a free Nation.

Do people die in mass shootings? Yes,but it will be a hell of a lot worse if tyrannts do not fear the People.


"A long life, and the good sense to live it." ...Quintis Arrius

375H&H,404J,416DAK,458AFR,416RIG,450RIG,505GIB

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NRA member

 
Posts: 858 | Registered: 27 October 2007Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by ledvm:
quote:
Originally posted by skb:
Can you explain how someone who will take their own life will be deterred by the prospect of hard labor in prison? Most of these shooters do not plan on living out the next 24 hours, prison is not something they consider.


Some of what you say is somewhat true.

They basically are committing suicide and getting an emotional high at the same time by fantasizing about martyrdom (not the islamic thing but a glorified death that they feels rights injustice in their sick minds).

If they could see a humiliating punishment in death by public execution…it would deter. Same for drug dealers and child molesters.


Humiliating and public executions for people who sell drugs?

Yeah, let's be Iran. thumbdown


-Every damn thing is your own fault if you are any good.

 
Posts: 16304 | Registered: 20 September 2012Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by ledvm:
quote:
Originally posted by skb:
Can you explain how someone who will take their own life will be deterred by the prospect of hard labor in prison? Most of these shooters do not plan on living out the next 24 hours, prison is not something they consider.


Some of what you say is somewhat true.

They basically are committing suicide and getting an emotional high at the same time by fantasizing about martyrdom (not the islamic thing but a glorified death that they feels rights injustice in their sick minds).

If they could see a humiliating punishment in death by public execution…it would deter. Same for drug dealers and child molesters.


Hard to kill a guy twice, if he plans on dying during the attack then he avoids the public humiliation. These people do not think like you and I do, we place value our own lives as well as those of others. Punishment is not the answer, this type of behavior needs to be prevented.
 
Posts: 3770 | Location: Boulder Colorado | Registered: 27 February 2004Reply With Quote
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Across a broad spectrum we've idolized violence.

Movies and video games are obvious, but I think it's relatively new that even among outdoor sportsmen fighting and shooting people is favored. How many of the newer shooting competitions are based on combat themes or scenarios? How many use human silhouette targets? Sporting Clays doesn't. The "American Hunter" magazine on my table has half a dozen pictures and adds for combat oriented firearms. Why in a hunting magazine?

My gun range if full of Tacticool idiots. Gun range Green Berets. One idiot has a several thousand dollar AR in 300 win mag that fouls itself so badly it won't function after seven shots. Exactly seven shots every time to make his Tacticool stick perfectly useless but he's so proud because he thinks "Bearing" this arm makes him intimidating, dangerous.

After more than twenty years of arbitrary war in the M.E., footwear, other fashion and personal accessories are military themed. Camo is cool, "bug out" gear is trendy, vehicles are designed and themed to have a Delta Force appearance, to look like it could have been used to hunt Bin Laden.

40 and 60 years ago a couple elders of mine considered it skilled and a measure of competency to be able to skin and butcher a buck with a small appropriately chosen folding pocket knife, not getting yourself bloody past your wrists. 30 years ago the Rambo knife came out and today we've all got one.
 
Posts: 9654 | Location: Dillingham Alaska | Registered: 10 April 2006Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by Kanec:
Gun prohibitive laws are just classic “ Must do something “ for governments to disarm law abiding citizens…nothing more and nothing less


The left is selling simplistic thinking.

Unaligned artificial intelligence might come up with answers like this for "...how to prevent human warfare...".

Easy. Kill off all the humans, and there will be no more human warfare. Oh.

How to prevent gun violence? Melt the guns, no more GUN violence, back to ball bats and big fellows beating smaller ones.

Samuel Colt made men equal...for better or worse...


TomP

Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right.

Carl Schurz (1829 - 1906)
 
Posts: 14747 | Location: Moreno Valley CA USA | Registered: 20 November 2000Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by TomP:
quote:
Originally posted by Kanec:
Gun prohibitive laws are just classic “ Must do something “ for governments to disarm law abiding citizens…nothing more and nothing less


The left is selling simplistic thinking.

Unaligned artificial intelligence might come up with answers like this for "...how to prevent human warfare...".

Easy. Kill off all the humans, and there will be no more human warfare. Oh.

How to prevent gun violence? Melt the guns, no more GUN violence, back to ball bats and big fellows beating smaller ones.

Samuel Colt made men equal...for better or worse...


You can't argue with the fact that the countries that don't make guns available to their citizens don't have gun massacres.

I always wonder too about the argument that the purpose of the 2A is to protect ourselves from the government. How have all these other folks in all these other countries managed to survive the government tyranny that requires the right to own magazine-fed semi-automatic rifles?


-Every damn thing is your own fault if you are any good.

 
Posts: 16304 | Registered: 20 September 2012Reply With Quote
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No laws will ever stop the stupidest criminals from killing others.

You really need to start proper education, family and human values.

Instead of encouraging the young to decide if they are men, women, or a bloody bicycle! clap


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Posts: 69287 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by ledvm:
quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
quote:
Originally posted by JTEX:
We could also enforce our existing laws and actually incarcerate criminals....

We could put hard labor back in our prison systems.....


. . . you mean close the barn door after the horse is already out? Capital punishment for murder does not deter murder.


There is ZERO data to support that statement.


Bullshit. Talk to criminologists that study the matter. But I am sure you are an expert on this too.

2020


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Mike Mitchell:
quote:
Originally posted by TomP:
quote:
Originally posted by Kanec:
Gun prohibitive laws are just classic “ Must do something “ for governments to disarm law abiding citizens…nothing more and nothing less


The left is selling simplistic thinking.

Unaligned artificial intelligence might come up with answers like this for "...how to prevent human warfare...".

Easy. Kill off all the humans, and there will be no more human warfare. Oh.

How to prevent gun violence? Melt the guns, no more GUN violence, back to ball bats and big fellows beating smaller ones.

Samuel Colt made men equal...for better or worse...


You can't argue with the fact that the countries that don't make guns available to their citizens don't have gun massacres.

I always wonder too about the argument that the purpose of the 2A is to protect ourselves from the government. How have all these other folks in all these other countries managed to survive the government tyranny that requires the right to own magazine-fed semi-automatic rifles?


It was to protect the States from the Federal Government. That is the text. That is why the traditional, legal application did not apply to the states, but solely to the Fed Government.

That is also why states were free to regulate the citizenry possession, storage, and use of arms without interference from the Fed. Courts. One would have to seek protection from the state through legislation, the state constitution, or state bill of rights.

That line of legal thought has now been left behind (except when the faction want to regulate something).

As for, all the other people, some would say they have existed, but not survived such tyranny.
 
Posts: 12633 | Location: Somewhere above Tennessee and below Kentucky  | Registered: 31 July 2016Reply With Quote
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Regarding 18-20 year olds and gun rights…

This was in Federal court.

https://gunowners.mn/press-rel...gation-in-minnesota/
 
Posts: 11200 | Location: Minnesota USA | Registered: 15 June 2007Reply With Quote
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. . . was that a victory or a defeat?


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
. . . seem like common sense propositions to me. I would be inclined to go farther, e.g., raising the age to purchase firearms to 21, red=flag restrictions. Or do we just do nothing and hope for a different result . . . all the while understanding that nothing will change and the mass shootings will continue.

James Baker: Gun laws Republicans can support

James Baker: Gun laws that Republicans can support (Opinion)
Bipartisan agreement is possible. Here's where.

As someone who learned to hunt wild game at my father’s elbow, and who continues to prowl after wild turkeys, quail and elk at the age of 93, two things about guns are crystal clear to me. First, I maintain strong passions for firearms and the outdoors and, just as importantly, a healthy respect for both. But second, in the face of a seemingly daily barrage of mass shootings like the recent one in Allen, Texas, it is evident our country is suffering a tragic epidemic of gun violence that has veered out of control.

The numbers are overwhelming. At a time when modern medicine is finding ways to reduce cancer, heart disease and other causes of death, our nation is experiencing an upward spiral in firearm fatalities. Since 2000, such deaths have increased by 55 percent to 44,310 last year. The toll of American civilians who have suffered gun-related deaths during the past 50 years is more than the 1.35 million U.S. soldiers who died during all our wars combined.

50 years with a population of over 300 million vs wars when the largest casualty event was in 1863. Our population was 18.5 million. We lost a huge percentage more people then.

When all firearms-related deaths are combined (accidental, suicide and homicide), they become one of the nation’s 15 biggest killers. Sadly, the most vulnerable among us are the biggest victims. In 2021, firearms were the leading cause of death for U.S. children and teens, accounting for nearly 19 percent of deaths of those 18 or younger.

Banning firearms is not likely to reduce suicide deaths.

With the carnage seemingly out of control, it is little wonder a recent Gallup poll indicates Americans’ dissatisfaction with U.S. gun laws has risen to 63 percent, the highest since Gallup began tracking national gun policies in 2001. Although demand for change comes largely from Democrats and independents, 44 percent of Republicans are dissatisfied with gun laws as well. Absent new laws, that public dissatisfaction will only increase as the death toll mounts.

How about a more reasoned discussion of the causality than just “guns”?

Such public sentiment is one reason Congress passed a bipartisan bill last summer — the first major federal gun safety legislation since the assault weapons ban of 1994, a law that expired after 10 years. Last year, Republicans and Democrats hammered out the new legislation in the aftermath of mass shootings in a Buffalo, New York supermarket and an elementary school in Uvalde. The law established background checks for gun purchasers younger than 21, further criminalized arms trafficking and provided millions of dollars for states to implement red flag laws and other crisis intervention programs.

Really? I thought background checks were already mandated. What they passed was what, exactly? More like trying to improve the information in the system.

Though the new law did not go far enough to reduce gun violence, it was a promising first step towards the development of further legislation. Additional steps should be considered that might be able to attract bipartisan support, including:

· A ban on ammunition magazines holding more than ten rounds except for military or police use. Similar bans have been in place since 1935, when federal law began restricting waterfowl hunters to three shells in a shotgun.

Two points…

it was tried and failed.

It is impossible to do at this point. Too many out there and magazines are pretty simple to make.


· A ban on armor-piercing bullets, the kind that are opposed by police chiefs around the country.

With the proliferation of body armor, this is going to adversely affect self defense, and secondly, any decent hunting rifle has more penetration than any handgun bullet. It’s impossible to make a reasonable law here.

· A longer waiting period — or a “cooling off period” — for the purchase of a handgun.

As others said, handgun delays wouldn’t affect much. Most mass casualty events were planned well in advance.

· Further strengthening background checks for all gun purchasers, and not just those younger than 21.

At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.

Any approach, of course, will demand bipartisan support. This is not only important because our current system requires a 60-vote majority in the Senate. But also because, absent wide support, any laws passed now might well be rescinded once the partisan balance of power inevitably shifts.

Getting to a bipartisan deal will not be easy, particularly under the dysfunctional political climate in our country. A sensible middle ground will be needed to thread the difficult partisan needle.

I worked for three wise U.S. presidents — George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford. All were men with great respect for the freedom provided by the Second Amendment. They understood that our Constitution is a precious safeguard for those worried that “they’re going to take our guns away.” But they also understood that our nation has had gun laws throughout its history. And all favored reasonable restrictions.

Some will say that Americans may just have to get used to the gun violence that plagues our nation. There are too many guns in this country, they will say, to put the genie back in the bottle. We should reject such pessimism.

Can we get rid of gun violence in one fell legislative swoop? Of course not. But to help stem the rising tide of gun violence, we can and should take practical, pragmatic steps — both those directly related to firearms and those related to mental health.

James A. Baker, III, was the nation’s 61st Secretary of State and 67th Secretary of the Treasury.
 
Posts: 11200 | Location: Minnesota USA | Registered: 15 June 2007Reply With Quote
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I'm curious if they mean true armor piercing, or simply FMJ?
 
Posts: 7449 | Registered: 10 April 2009Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by JTEX:
quote:
At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.


I could go for this part....bit that's about it.

We could also enforce our existing laws and actually incarcerate criminals....

We could put hard labor back in our prison systems.....


I think all politicians, from dog catcher to president, should have a mental health check
 
Posts: 984 | Registered: 20 December 2005Reply With Quote
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A ban on ammunition magazines holding more than ten rounds except for military or police use.


When it comes to self-defense and defense of my family, I want what the experts on the subject want. There must be some good reason the cops want more than ten shots.
 
Posts: 7027 | Location: Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, USA | Registered: 08 March 2013Reply With Quote
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Picture of ledvm
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Mike Mitchell:
quote:
Originally posted by TomP:
quote:
Originally posted by Kanec:
Gun prohibitive laws are just classic “ Must do something “ for governments to disarm law abiding citizens…nothing more and nothing less


The left is selling simplistic thinking.

Unaligned artificial intelligence might come up with answers like this for "...how to prevent human warfare...".

Easy. Kill off all the humans, and there will be no more human warfare. Oh.

How to prevent gun violence? Melt the guns, no more GUN violence, back to ball bats and big fellows beating smaller ones.

Samuel Colt made men equal...for better or worse...


You can't argue with the fact that the countries that don't make guns available to their citizens don't have gun massacres.

I always wonder too about the argument that the purpose of the 2A is to protect ourselves from the government. How have all these other folks in all these other countries managed to survive the government tyranny that requires the right to own magazine-fed semi-automatic rifles?


Easy answer…many haven’t. Freedom is everything.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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For those that reject ideas like those proposed by Baker, what is your solution to the recurring mass shooting issue? Pray for better nuclear families and bury more victims until those prayers are answered? Reform our educational system and bury more victims until the decades pass for those efforts to come to fruition? Train up our elementary school children to be battlefield medics to try and save some of their classmates and bury the rest? What exactly do we do in the interim, pretend it is all going to get better because we want it to? Let’s hear your suggestions for the timely resolution of what is clearly a problem.

coffee


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
For those that reject ideas like those proposed by Baker, what is your solution to the recurring mass shooting issue? Pray for better nuclear families and bury more victims until those prayers are answered? Reform our educational system and bury more victims until the decades pass for those efforts to come to fruition? Train up our elementary school children to be battlefield medics to try and save some of their classmates and bury the rest? What exactly do we do in the interim, pretend it is all going to get better because we want it to? Let’s hear your suggestions for the timely resolution of what is clearly a problem.

coffee


You seem to be missing the main point!

GUNS DO NOT KILL!

Stupid criminals do.

Anyone committing a gun crime should be shot on sight!

See how that works out.

Instead of being on death row for 30 years.

30 years of wasting time and money paying bloody lawyers! clap


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Instagram : ganyana2000
 
Posts: 69287 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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. . . how about a proposed solution as opposed to trite bromides.

2020


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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Punish the criminals.

NOT the tool!

How many people die of drunk driving?

Ban cars?

Bank drinking?


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. . . most of these mass shooters are shot and killed in the police response. Most of those that survive are mentally ill and end up in prison or institutions. The risk of being shot or imprisoned does not deter these mass shooters. The shooters are being punished. People kill, not guns. Punish criminals, not law abiding citizens. Those are wonderful simplistic bromides, but how do they prevent or deter mass shootings? Let’s hear solutions, not trite adages.


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by MJines:
. . . most of these mass shooters are shot and killed in the police response. Most of those that survive are mentally ill and end up in prison or institutions. The risk of being shot or imprisoned does not deter these mass shooters. The shooters are being punished. People kill, not guns. Punish criminals, not law abiding citizens. Those are wonderful simplistic bromides, but how do they prevent or deter mass shootings? Let’s hear solutions, not trite adages.


So where is the problem originate?

Guns?

Not on your life.

Basic human understanding, which seems to be rather lacking in America!

When you have a young population that is feeding on legal and illegal drugs.

Pill popping for every conceivable ailments one could think of, human life means nothing.

Oh and lets us not forget your law enforcements agencies, and your media, spends years, and millions, to prove your crooked, criminal, politicians, are innocent! clap


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Posts: 69287 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by Saeed:

Oh and lets us not forget your law enforcements agencies


Well, our law enforcement agencies do ask more questions in America than in the UAE, only one question really matters in your country Saeed,
"who's your Daddy?" rotflmo
 
Posts: 3770 | Location: Boulder Colorado | Registered: 27 February 2004Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
. . . most of these mass shooters are shot and killed in the police response. Most of those that survive are mentally ill and end up in prison or institutions. The risk of being shot or imprisoned does not deter these mass shooters. The shooters are being punished. People kill, not guns. Punish criminals, not law abiding citizens. Those are wonderful simplistic bromides, but how do they prevent or deter mass shootings? Let’s hear solutions, not trite adages.


What's your solution?
 
Posts: 984 | Registered: 20 December 2005Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by MJines:
For those that reject ideas like those proposed by Baker, what is your solution to the recurring mass shooting issue? Pray for better nuclear families and bury more victims until those prayers are answered? Reform our educational system and bury more victims until the decades pass for those efforts to come to fruition? Train up our elementary school children to be battlefield medics to try and save some of their classmates and bury the rest? What exactly do we do in the interim, pretend it is all going to get better because we want it to? Let’s hear your suggestions for the timely resolution of what is clearly a problem.

coffee


For schools…they must hardened by:
1) limited entry access
2) surveillance
3) armed guard presence at all times

For places like Allen…the mental illness aspect is the only hope. I agree with Baker in that paragraph.

The other things he proposed will do NOTHING to help with the problem and only erode freedoms.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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A ban on ammunition magazines holding more than ten rounds except for military or police use. Similar bans have been in place since 1935, when federal law began restricting waterfowl hunters to three shells in a shotgun.

· A ban on armor-piercing bullets, the kind that are opposed by police chiefs around the country.

· A longer waiting period — or a “cooling off period” — for the purchase of a handgun.

· Further strengthening background checks for all gun purchasers, and not just those younger than 21.

At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.


How about the proponent of these new laws coming forward to show, logically and without emotionalism, how they would reduce mass shootings?

A ban on 10 round magazines for non-cops is nonsense. I want what the experts use. I have probably 50 magazines holding more than 10 rounds for seven different firearms. You can switch mags and fire rapidly with multiple ten-round mags. However there must be some slight advantage to having extra rounds because the cops and military want them that way. So I want them that way too. I should add that none of my 50 +10 round mags have inserted themselves in guns and killed anyone. Is there any data suggesting that mass killers were or would have been less effective with ten-round magazines?

What does a ban on armor piercing bullets have to do with mass shooting? Are there any instances of mass shooters relying on armor piercing rounds to kill their unarmored victims? This ban might catch up Barnes solid copper bullets along with other favorite hunting bullets.

For the longer waiting period, why not show instances where a longer waiting period would have prevented mass shootings. What's that you say? You can't prove the allegation? Then why in hell's bells do we need new laws to ban stuff, over-regulate, and thereby erode our rights.

"Further strengthening background checks" probably includes a ban on private sales. Prohibiting private sales has no logical connection to preventing mass shootings. Again, any evidence to support how new laws would be a cure? I guess you should decide what "strengthen" means in this context.

I agree with increased funding for mental health treatment. Unlike Baker's other four proposals, this one at least shows a nexus between the problem and proposed solution, since most of these mass killers had a serious screw loose. It puts proper emphasis on the killers, not the firearms which kill nothing by themselves.

Whenever there is a shooting, the urban dwellers fall for emotionalism instead of logic and reason. It's unfortunate to see urban liberals fall for this nonsense, but it's downright disappointing watching gun owners agree with them.
 
Posts: 7027 | Location: Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, USA | Registered: 08 March 2013Reply With Quote
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clap


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38438 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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I think the change in our gun culture is the last 20 years is sad, the embrace of all the tactical/military arms have zero to do with my interests as well as being a terrible look for the non shooting public to see. I'm almost 53, have been a hunter and shooter since I was old enough to walk and have never fired a .223 or AR in my life, nor do I have any desire to. If you care to notice, almost every single one of these shooters chooses a semi-auto of some type, usually an AR but sometimes a handgun. Increased scrutiny for the purchase of these items seems logical. Have you ever looked at the statistics on crime committed with class 3 items? Almost zero due to the difficulty of obtaining them, the level of vetting is far higher than that for purchasing a non class 3 firearm. Maybe we should look at everyone buying semi autos/AR type weapons a bit closer than those buying sporting arms. When was the last time you read about a bolt gun being used in a mass shooting? The Texas tower shooter in the 60's? There is a connection between these shootings and the guns they choose.
 
Posts: 3770 | Location: Boulder Colorado | Registered: 27 February 2004Reply With Quote
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The only thing that makes any sense is more scrutiny of the purchaser of the weapon at the time the weapon is purchased. I'm all for more funding for mental health treatment but that paints with such a broad brush that it means virtually nothing in the context of preventing gun massacres.


-Every damn thing is your own fault if you are any good.

 
Posts: 16304 | Registered: 20 September 2012Reply With Quote
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Picture of MJines
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Originally posted by skb:
I think the change in our gun culture is the last 20 years is sad, the embrace of all the tactical/military arms have zero to do with my interests as well as being a terrible look for the non shooting public to see. I'm almost 53, have been a hunter and shooter since I was old enough to walk and have never fired a .223 or AR in my life, nor do I have any desire to. If you care to notice, almost every single one of these shooters chooses a semi-auto of some type, usually an AR but sometimes a handgun. Increased scrutiny for the purchase of these items seems logical. Have you ever looked at the statistics on crime committed with class 3 items? Almost zero due to the difficulty of obtaining them, the level of vetting is far higher than that for purchasing a non class 3 firearm. Maybe we should look at everyone buying semi autos/AR type weapons a bit closer than those buying sporting arms. When was the last time you read about a bolt gun being used in a mass shooting? The Texas tower shooter in the 60's? There is a connection between these shootings and the guns they choose.


Precisely. Why don't we start to consider solutions based on the common elements present in most of these mass shootings. Most, albeit not all, involve younger shooters. Why not consider either raising the purchase age for weapons or for gun purchasers below a certain age, increase the rigor around the background checks, add red flag restrictions, etc. Most involve AR platform rifles or high capacity semiautomatic pistols. Again, why not consider things like increasing the rigor around background checks for such weapons, adding red flag restrictions, etc. How many mass shootings are committed by shooters armed with Class 3 suppressed weapons, or even suppressed non-Class 3 weapons? Maybe there is reason that is the case.

There is something wrong with us when we get to the point that we simply accept that such shootings are inevitable so we need to turn our schools into armed camps and train our children in triage medical care. Mental health care, strengthening families, those are all laudable objectives but they are solutions that take years even decades to bear fruit. (And what about the mental health care for children that grow up in an environment involving the fear and uncertainty of what might happen at school.) In the mean time do we just pretend there is no problem and accept that these shooting will continue . . . seems to be the epitome of stupid.


Mike
 
Posts: 21865 | Registered: 03 January 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by ledvm:
quote:
Originally posted by MJines:
For those that reject ideas like those proposed by Baker, what is your solution to the recurring mass shooting issue? Pray for better nuclear families and bury more victims until those prayers are answered? Reform our educational system and bury more victims until the decades pass for those efforts to come to fruition? Train up our elementary school children to be battlefield medics to try and save some of their classmates and bury the rest? What exactly do we do in the interim, pretend it is all going to get better because we want it to? Let’s hear your suggestions for the timely resolution of what is clearly a problem.

coffee


For schools…they must hardened by:
1) limited entry access
2) surveillance
3) armed guard presence at all times

For places like Allen…the mental illness aspect is the only hope. I agree with Baker in that paragraph.

The other things he proposed will do NOTHING to help with the problem and only erode freedoms.


I have never understood why all schools do not have a 10' perimeter fence with concertina wire on top with turnstyle entry gates.. Its just that simple.. We put fences around our businesses and powerplants and military bases - why not the schools??? Its that fucking simple!!!!


"At least once every human being should have to run for his life - to teach him that milk does not come from the supermarket, that safety does not come from policemen, and that news is not something that happens to other people." - Robert Heinlein
 
Posts: 895 | Location: Akron, OH | Registered: 07 March 2006Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by Mike Mitchell:
The only thing that makes any sense is more scrutiny of the purchaser of the weapon at the time the weapon is purchased. I'm all for more funding for mental health treatment but that paints with such a broad brush that it means virtually nothing in the context of preventing gun massacres.

Not nearly as broad a brush as penalizing all gun owners. I have to agree that the change in the gun culture, over the last 20 years or so, is lamentable. It is less a matter of the gun culture changing as it is society in general. I also have to agree that scrutiny of purchasers at the time of purchase might be an effective stop gap (though stop-gap is all it is). The problem is exactly how would such a thing be implemented without trampling all over the rights of the law abiding shooter (the vast majority; in fact, beyond vast, it is closer to total than to 95%).
The most effective action may be to increase vigilance to look out for the nutbars among us, and deal with them as necessary. This is our problem. It is not the government's problem, or a law enforcement problem. It is a societal problem , and there is no easy fix. Regards, Bill.
 
Posts: 3851 | Location: Elko, B.C. Canada | Registered: 19 June 2000Reply With Quote
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