gizmojumpjet wrote:Crossroads Inc. wrote:I would like to jump in here on the whole "Gun Control" issue with the following... While I LOATHE guns, and really REALLY do not like them, not for a second do I think they should be either "banned" nor do I think that taking all guns away would reduce crime.
What I DO think, is that guns should have the same restrictions, rules forced safety measures as something like a car...
You
do not have a right to own or operate a car. You
do have a right to own and operate a firearm in the US. Saying that because we require training to drive a car, a
privilege, we should therefore have mandatory firearms training misses the point that gun ownership is a
right.
Oh yes, thats right, the famous "Guns are a RIGHT" argument. Its so cute, really it is. Funny how saying something is "A Right" somehow evidently excludes ANY restrictions, ANY regulations, ANY consequences to the gun makers when things go wrong.
All cars today have 101 safety features and designed up the wazoo to keep them from killing people. You have car companies actively competing for various prizes of "Im safer then you" Compare that with the gun industry right now, were it is basically all about trying to make it as easy as possible for your average hick to get a gun, ANY gun, and nothing else.
Those stupid community groups, all about trying to make it as easy as possible for your average urban black to vote. HOW DARE THEY!!!
Are you SERIOUSLY equating getting people to vote with getting people a dangerous tool that kills people? And nice way of totally side stepping the issue that Car sales and the Car industry Revolves around SAFTEY about making them safe, about Teaching safety, about mandating standards.
But hey, I guess that doesn't really matter much to you
Real 'gun control' for the purposes of reducing both crime and accidental deaths.
*"Mandatory safety training classes before buying a gun." Virtually 3/4th of all aspects of getting a Drivers license is how NOT to run into someone else on the roads. Taking a driving corse focuses immensely on NOT doing stupid stuff. Implementing mandatory safety corses before getting a gun might not stop people form doing stupid things, but you could at least say you warned them...
In an ideal world, sure, it would be lovely if everyone who owns a gun had some safety training, but there are a number of problems with this:
1) Who will provide the training?
2) What standards will be used to determine their suitability for the role?
3) What will the curriculum be, exactly? Because gun safety is actually really simple.
There are four rules. They're very simple. Learning them and abide by them will keep you safe. I question how beneficial any sort of mandatory training would actually be on gun crime statistics. As you've pointed out, driver's education classes are required in order to get one's license, but the most dangerous people on the road are new drivers in whose minds the lessons learned in these classes must necessarily be the freshest.
4) Will enough instructors be available to serve the demand? If not, does that mean people don't get to buy guns until sufficient instructors become available?
5) What will the training cost and how long will it take?
6) What will the availability be? If I live in a low population area, might I wind up being required to travel all the way to the County Seat, so to speak, in order to avail myself of this mandatory training?
All of these are problematic in and of themselves from a logistical standpoint, but mandatory gun safety training is even more onerous because no sort of mandatory training is required to exercise any of my other rights.
I'm not required to take a communications class in order to exercise my right to free speech, and I'm not required to take a civics class in order to exercise my right to vote.
I'm not entirely sure any sort of mandatory training would stand up to a SCOTUS challenge because it is in very many ways similar to the poll taxes of the past: obstacles set in the way to discourage people from exercising their Constitutional rights.
You know, there is this great institution called the "DMV" and, despite what you might think, they have been able to form a coherent, well used, standardized and Nation Wide system of testing people to see if they should be given then "right" to drive a Car. Funny that it has worked well for so long. You know, the government seems to do quite well at, you know, Providing Training, creating testing criteria, evaluating standards to be used.
Also worth noting that, well I can't think of a 'shortage' of instructors EVER leading to people not being able to get a Drivers license.
And you know what? If you live in some small town, You might JUST have to go out to the big city for the test, you MIGHT even have to pay for the license. How horrible Truly such things like, driving to a county seat, or paying a small fee, truly these will infringe upon your "Right" to bare arms.
*"All guns should come with a gun lock, standard." No one would buy a car without a seatbelt these days, why do we sell guns without a mandatory way to keep someone from using it?
Are you talking about trigger locks, or internal locks that can be deactivated with, say, a key or a magnetic ring? The latter sorts of measures are problematic; they increase the complexity and decrease the reliabity of the firearm. As for the former, the last gun I bought that didn't come with a trigger lock of some sort was a Mosin Nagant manufactured in 1941. Most police departments will give you a trigger lock for free, or so I've heard. The lack of trigger locks isn't responsible for gun crime.
Trigger locks will do, But you know if the Police are giving them away for free, why aren't the gun companies? How hard is it to add something that might keep a kid form picking up a loaded gun and blowing his brains out?
Funny how because something is offered by a group like the Police, I guess we shouldn't demand that it be offered everywhere? Specifically from the companies that Make guns? That would go great with cars you know?
""Hey! You know seatbelts? We don't "HAVE" to add them to cars, you can just get them and put them in yourself at your local auto shop! No responsibility on us Auto makers at all!""
gizmojumpjet wrote:Gun owners love to go on and on about being 'law abiding citizens' yet when it comes to gun laws, they turn into shrieking monsters at ANYthing that keeps them from guns.
People tend to get upset about what they perceive as an infringement on their rights. People even get upset about infringements on rights they claim to have but do not seem to appear in the Constitution. The right to keep and bear arms is explicitly enumerated in the Constitution. Opposing infringements upon that right doesn't turn one into a "shrieking monster" any more than opposing infringements on speech, religion, or the protection against self-incrimination turns one into a "shrieking monster."
Thank you for confirming everything I believe about most Right Wing gun nuts.
When you can tell me how:
Mandatory Safety classes,
Mandatory Trigger locks
Gun registration,
Are "infringing" on your rights, please get back to me. As others have said your oh so sacred "Right" is something of an anachronism, something put into place during a time when having a gun was "needed" in society. You know, perhaps if the constitution was made today, "The right to own a car" might be put into it as well. Does that mean we should do away with all the restrictions on owning a car? Because its a 'right' and God help anyone who tires to
infringe on that right with, you know RULES and stuff...