Simon_Jester wrote: ↑2017-10-02 01:09pm
I'll say the same thing to Flagg that I'm about to say to Jub.
Until we know how he obtained the guns, we do not and cannot know what, if any, legal oversights or errors or flaws were involved. Therefore, we cannot prescribe a solution until we understand the nature of the problem it's meant to solve. The fact that people are suggesting how to treat the problem before they know what the problem
is does not speak well of the chances that said solution will actually do what it's supposed to.
Reducing the number of weapons in the United States significantly would make owning 20+ rifles and hundreds (possibly thousands) of rounds of ammo something to take note of. It wouldn't be perfect, after all, Canada still does have shootings though these shootings are often gang on gang violence along with unfortunate bystanders of such attacks.
What we don't have are mass shootings, this single attack equals the amount of deaths caused by mass shootings in Canada going back to '99 ('96 if we remove 8 deaths in a gang related mass murder). The worst firearms related instance of mass murder going back to the 1900's is 15 deaths in 1989. The lack of firearms likely plays some part in this even if there are other factors at play.
You know, mass shootings aren't an issue in a LOT of countries, including countries whose gun ownership rates are much higher than the ones in Canada.
Meanwhile, there are other countries in the world where
berserk killing rampages are a documented phenomenon, countries that are by no means extraordinary in terms of gun ownership rates. And yet in many countries, these kinds of rampages do not occur normally, whether they involve guns or not.
The US is pretty much unique here in having
both random crazy berserkers
and a lot of guns. The guns might be influencing the type of violence, but it's debatable whether they're the actual underlying problem. Me, I think the problem is whatever is causing Americans to go murderously insane without psychiatric treatment or community support.. Maybe the US is more violent for other reasons, which are more fundamental and significant, and higher gun ownership rates are only responsible for a small fraction of the overall problem?
This is likely true, but why should the issue only be attacked from one angle? Why not nibble away from all sides taking away some guns here, patching the social safety net there, and so on?
...and automatic weapon ownership is virtually non-existent outside of heirloom weapons that basically cannot be transfered.
Until we know exactly how these automatic weapons were obtained, it is
completely pointless to talk about how they should have been secured differently. For all I know, this guy literally made his own machine guns. People can and have done that with access to a set of metalworking tools. They might not be reliable, but that's why you carry ten of them I guess?
While this is true and it's also true that crimes with automatic weapons are vanishingly rare in most 1st world nations, the fact that so many automatic weapons exist in civilian hands makes buying or stealing them easier than it is in many other nations.
Saying that gun control doesn't factor in is patently false and, in this specific case, I dare somebody to claim that this attack would still have happened if the suspect had a knife/car/some other non-firearm means of attack.
This exact attack would not have happened.
Some attack of comparable horribleness could still have happened. The same guy might have, oh, I don't know, gradually amassed a pile of fertilizer, then used it to blow up a federal office building. We know this because
that exact thing happened just over twenty years ago when another lone nut (with an accomplice or two) decided to make his mark in the newspapers by killing people.
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As Flagg noted that is more closely tracked ever since the attacks and has a far greater risk to the would-be killer. I don't know about you, but I think that if all spree shooters had to make bombs instead more of them would die or be caught before reaching their target location. Even the Boston Marathon attacks were far lesser in scale than this and left the attackers more open to capture after the fact.
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SCRawl wrote: ↑2017-10-02 11:30pmI'm among the least sympathetic person to gun rights here. If I could snap my fingers and remove all firearms that aren't for hunting from civilian hands -- yes, that's a problematic distinction, so it's just as well my finger-snapping doesn't have any special powers -- I'd do it today. So when I say that it isn't a gun control issue, I'm being very serious. Well, after reading a bit more about it, it *could* be a gun control issue. I will explain.
As has been discussed, it's practically impossible to obtain automatic weapons legally. Let's assume the shooter either obtained them illegally, modified existing firearms illegally, or used some other technique to get the results that he did. In doing so I think we're on reasonably safe ground.
If his weapons were obtained illegally by purchasing them from abroad and having them smuggled into the country, this is not a gun control issue. There is no gun control regime that can prevent this kind of activity; it is an issue of the smuggling of illegal goods.
If the killer was able to modify otherwise legal weapons to make them fully automatic, or even just even just shoot the things off as has been suggested via "bumpfire", then this is a big problem that only gun control can solve, and it seems to me difficult to solve without some actions the American people would probably think too draconian. I'd never heard of "bumpfire" before, but after having Googled the thing, it seems to me that if fully automatic weapons are too dangerous for civilians to own, then semi-automatic weapons which can be converted into fully automatic (or effectively simulate fully automatic fire) are too dangerous for civilians to own. I just don't know how to do that, other than say "Sorry, you can't have it."
If the guns were stolen that's still a gun control issue as one can't steal that which has been seized and destroyed. Canadian laws also restrict magazine sizes while encouraging people to lock up their ammo or store it well away from their firearms. This reduces crimes of passion and makes firearm theft less immediately dangerous. We also restrict weapons based on how easy it is to convert them into automatic weapons.
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/fs-f ... ge-eng.htm
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/faq/index-eng.htm#a3
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts ... .html#h-37
Canadian Firearms Storage Regulations wrote:Restricted and prohibited firearms
Attach a secure locking device so the firearms cannot be fired and lock them in a cabinet, container or room that is difficult to break into; or trigger locks.
Lock the firearms in a vault, safe or room that was built or modified specifically to store firearms safely.
For automatic firearms, also remove the bolts or bolt carriers (if removable) and lock them in a separate room that is difficult to break into.
Canadian Restricted Firearms Transport Rules wrote:Restricted and prohibited firearms
Unload the firearms; and
Attach secure locking devices to the firearms; and
Lock the firearms in a sturdy, non-transparent container; and
Remove the bolts or bolt carriers from any automatic firearms (if removable).
Obtain an Authorization to Transport (call 1-800-731-4000).
Yeah, if you want to drive your firearm from your home to the range you have to call it in. You're also highly discouraged from making stops between those points with said weapons.
So yeah, if you're willing to pay the political tax to restrict firearms you can sure as fuck do it and enforce it. Canada makes California look like Texas.