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-   -   Obama should ban assault style weapons now. executive order effective ASAP. (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1201964)

dyna mo 06-13-2016 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 420 (Post 20958878)

Exactly. It's more than reasonable to think that an assault style weapons ban would have an immediate and profound effect on curbing mass shootings.

bronco67 06-13-2016 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dyna mo (Post 20959760)
You don't get it at all. My point was there can be sensible legislation, just like elsewhere.

Where on the planet is there a Republican starting threads about banning firearms?

Heads up: there isn't.

Use your head, read the title, try and figure something out that's over your head for once. That's how people get smarter.

I did read the title....and I don't believe for one second you're on that side of the argument. I took it as deadpan sarcasm, which is what it is.

This is you trying to be enigmatic and failing.

dyna mo 06-13-2016 08:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bronco67 (Post 20959865)
I did read the title....and I don't believe for one second you're on that side of the argument. I took it as deadpan sarcasm, which is what it is.

This is you trying to be enigmatic and failing.

claims the reject that doesn't even know what a quote is for and uses that ignorance to try and accuse me of plagiarism elsewhere.

you're delusional paranoid reject that probably has a substance abuse issue on top of being uneducated and a simpleton.

so let's add up all the shit about me you run around here exclaiming i'm disingenuous about:

1. bernie sanders support

2. trying to claim credit for a quote i quoted.

3. not being a republican

4. wanting sensible gun legislation

:1orglaugh:1orglaugh

what a reject. think what you want, you're a paranoid freak.

baddog 06-13-2016 09:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by videobunch (Post 20958902)
Logic of banning guns is like if this nut job drove his car into the building killing the same and injuring the same. Do you ban all cars or just the type of car they drove?

Yes I have AR and I hunt animals I eat with it. Took a dear last year with mine and will do the same again this year. Am I bi est on this topic, Yes. Would I walk into a room and kill several people, Hell no because i am not nuts

I am not saying there is not a prob going on with people getting weapons they should not have but we need to look at more than just guns and try to find out how and why this keeps happening.

Bad people are going to do bad things period. Bombs are illegal yet bad people still can get them or make them.

The word is biased

SuckOnThis 06-13-2016 09:02 AM

https://scontent.fsnc1-1.fna.fbcdn.n...90&oe=5808BD7B

clarka77 06-13-2016 09:21 AM

I thought to bare arms was a 'right' not a 'priviledge'

2MuchMark 06-13-2016 09:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 20960000)

Exactly.

Here's some facts to back that up.

The GOP-controlled Senate refusal to pass new gun control measures came weeks after the Washington Post reported that suspected terrorists had successfully purchased more than 2,000 guns from American dealers between 2004 and 2014, even though law enforcement is notified whenever someone on the FBI?s watchlist attempts to purchase a firearm.

Also on Thursday, the Senate failed to pass another bill that would have expanded background checks to gun show and online firearms sales. The measure would also prevents convicted felons and the mentally ill from having access to weapons.



Source: GOP blocks bill to stop terrorists from buying guns | MSNBC

SuckOnThis 06-13-2016 09:51 AM

I really would like to know why we can't buy nuclear weapons at Walmart.

The 2nd Amendment says we have a right to bear arms, nuclear weapons are considered arms, so wtf?

Nuclear weapons are inanimate objects, they can't go off by themselves.

Criminals don't obey laws, so obviously thousands of criminals are walking around with nukes.

There are thousands of responsible nuclear weapon owners throughout the world that have not used their nukes to harm a single person.

So c'mon NRA, get with it already!

C H R I S 06-13-2016 09:58 AM

It's quite simple:

In Europe where they have strict gun laws there are little or no mass shootings by lone nut jobs. (Paris was a planned terrorist attack).

Here we have mass shootings on a weekly or at least monthly basis, it's accepted as the norm.

Doing nothing will continue the regular bloodshed.

Barry-xlovecam 06-13-2016 09:59 AM



Should we ban BB guns too?

dyna mo 06-13-2016 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 20960000)

Quote:

Originally Posted by ********** (Post 20960060)
Exactly.

Here's some facts to back that up.

The GOP-controlled Senate refusal to pass new gun control measures came weeks after the Washington Post reported that suspected terrorists had successfully purchased more than 2,000 guns from American dealers between 2004 and 2014, even though law enforcement is notified whenever someone on the FBI’s watchlist attempts to purchase a firearm.

Also on Thursday, the Senate failed to pass another bill that would have expanded background checks to gun show and online firearms sales. The measure would also prevents convicted felons and the mentally ill from having access to weapons.



Source: GOP blocks bill to stop terrorists from buying guns | MSNBC

there has been gobs and gobs of bills to regulate and control assault style weapons introduced and bandied about for many many years now and all have been detoured or whatever. that's why i'm advocating the extreme measure of an executive order.

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 20960135)
I really would like to know why we can't buy nuclear weapons at Walmart.

The 2nd Amendment says we have a right to bear arms, nuclear weapons are considered arms, so wtf?

Nuclear weapons are inanimate objects, they can't go off by themselves.

Criminals don't obey laws, so obviously thousands of criminals are walking around with nukes.

There are thousands of responsible nuclear weapon owners throughout the world that have not used their nukes to harm a single person.

So c'mon NRA, get with it already!

the SC was able to figure out how to ban private ownership of nukes and still not tread on the 2nd amendment. i think they can do the same with assault style weapons. and more really, next step though. but yeah, close the gun show loopholes and ban assault style weapons and i would think that would be a profound step in the right direction and still maintain the 2nd amendment.

dyna mo 06-13-2016 10:09 AM

here's another staggering statistic:

2000 suspected terrorists legally bought guns in the USA

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...m-buying-guns/

Did 2,000 suspected terrorists legally buy guns in the U.S.? | PolitiFact California

dyna mo 06-13-2016 10:18 AM

the orlando terrorist was on the FBI terrorist watchlist and purchased his assault style weapons legally in the week(s) just prior to his attack.

Pulse nightclub massacre: questions over how suspect on FBI's radar could buy guns

Barry-xlovecam 06-13-2016 10:25 AM

Sorry if this offends someone's ill conceived (tortured) reading of the 2nd Amendment -- there is reasonable cause to deny their purchase -- we are at war. Their lives are not at risk (usually) ... Not selling them arms is risk-avoidance. However, there should be a right of appeal to show cause if they are US citizens.

Quote:

But in the United States, known and suspected terrorists are allowed to purchase firearms under federal law.

"Membership in a terrorist organization does not prohibit a person from possessing firearms or explosives under current federal law," the Government Accountability Office concluded in 2010. The law prohibits felons, fugitives, drug addicts and domestic abusers from purchasing a firearm in the United States. But people on the FBI's consolidated terrorist watchlist ? typically placed there when there is "reasonable suspicion" that they are a known or suspected terrorist ? can freely purchase handguns or assault-style rifles.

And, as the GAO found, a number of them do: Between 2004 and 2014, suspected terrorists attempted to purchase guns from American dealers at least 2,233 times. And in 2,043 of those cases ? 91 percent of the time ? they succeeded. There are about 700,000 people on the watch-list ? a point that civil libertarians have made to underscore that many on the list may be family members or acquaintances of people with potential terrorist connections.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...m-buying-guns/

PR_Glen 06-13-2016 10:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by videobunch (Post 20958902)
Logic of banning guns is like if this nut job drove his car into the building killing the same and injuring the same. Do you ban all cars or just the type of car they drove?

Yes I have AR and I hunt animals I eat with it. Took a dear last year with mine and will do the same again this year. Am I bi est on this topic, Yes. Would I walk into a room and kill several people, Hell no because i am not nuts

I am not saying there is not a prob going on with people getting weapons they should not have but we need to look at more than just guns and try to find out how and why this keeps happening.

Bad people are going to do bad things period. Bombs are illegal yet bad people still can get them or make them.

That isn't the argument at hand. It's controlling who can buy them. Should some punk kid with emotional issues, who was investigated and interviewed by the fbi twice be able to buy guns and assault rifles legally? No. The counter that they 'will all buy illegally' instead goes out the window once you make the seller of the weapons just as accountable on illegal use with illegal sales.

C H R I S 06-13-2016 10:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PR_Glen (Post 20960219)
That isn't the argument at hand. It's controlling who can buy them. Should some punk kid with emotional issues, who was investigated and interviewed by the fbi twice be able to buy guns and assault rifles legally? No. The counter that they 'will all buy illegally' instead goes out the window once you make the seller of the weapons just as accountable on illegal use with illegal sales.

Exactly :thumbsup:thumbsup

CDSmith 06-13-2016 10:39 AM

The genie is out of the bottle. A ban means turn in your AR's. Legal responsible owners all turn them in. Great. Meanwhile the crooked and demented and those not quite right in the head all flout the new law. Yay.

Oh what the hell, try it. Of course law enforcement will have to expend a lot of energy and focus to get even most of the law abiding US citizens to part with their heavier weapons I would think. Most if not all will find it unconstitutional and do a "from my cold dead hands" type of thing.

Bring on the ban. Will be interesting to see how it plays out. Or is Obammer trying to sabotage a Hillary-led government by choosing to yammer about this now? lol

Bladewire 06-13-2016 10:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PR_Glen (Post 20960219)
That isn't the argument at hand. It's controlling who can buy them. Should some punk kid with emotional issues, who was investigated and interviewed by the fbi twice be able to buy guns and assault rifles legally? No. The counter that they 'will all buy illegally' instead goes out the window once you make the seller of the weapons just as accountable on illegal use with illegal sales.

Common sense:

Convicted drunk drivers get their license suspended.

Pilots have to get physicals before getting their pilots license.

You take drivers ed and take a driving test before getting a license to drive.

Wanna buy an AR-15 that shoots 13 rounds a second for $250? No license, no health or psych evaluation, no problem. Fucked up

NatalieK 06-13-2016 10:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by galleryseek (Post 20958362)
1. Ban assault weapons.
2. Good people with good intentions can't access assault weapons.
3. Bad guys with bad intentions use the black market to purchase said assault weapons.
4. Bad guys effectively become more armed than the good guys via legislation.
5. Problem either stays the same or gets worse; but definitely not better.

doesn't happen like this...

ban the guns :2 cents:

dyna mo 06-13-2016 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CDSmith (Post 20960231)
The genie is out of the bottle. A ban means turn in your AR's. Legal responsible owners all turn them in. Great. Meanwhile the crooked and demented and those not quite right in the head all flout the new law. Yay.

Oh what the hell, try it. Of course law enforcement will have to expend a lot of energy and focus to get even most of the law abiding US citizens to part with their heavier weapons I would think. Most if not all will find it unconstitutional and do a "from my cold dead hands" type of thing.

Bring on the ban. Will be interesting to see how it plays out. Or is Obammer trying to sabotage a Hillary-led government by choosing to yammer about this now? lol

i don't think a ban would need for current owners to turn in their weapons. the statistics show that mass shooters typically buy their assault style weapons in the weeks prior to their assaults. it seems to me, based on the stats like these, that a ban alone, a buying moratorium, would go a long way towards curbing mass shootings in the USA.

teg0 06-13-2016 11:00 AM

The real problem is mental health. If you take away a certain weapon, people will just find a new weapon. There is something about mental health in the USA that is a problem. Religion sure doesn't help.

dyna mo 06-13-2016 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by teg0 (Post 20960315)
The real problem is mental health. If you take away a certain weapon, people will just find a new weapon. There is something about mental health in the USA that is a problem. Religion sure doesn't help.


a new study from Duke University, John Hopkins University, and the University of Southern Florida shows that there is very little correlation between gun crime and mental illness. It goes to show that those pushing the blame onto the mentally ill are not only unfair, but often a tactic used to pigeonhole the multiple problems associated with gun violence into one faction.

?This is one of the hardest distinctions to make,? said Emma McGinty, a professor at John Hopkins and lead author of the study. ?There could be emotional regulation issues related to anger, for example, which are a separate phenomenon. There could be underlying substance use issues. There could be a whole host of other risk factors for violence going on.?

Although violent crime statistics were high among the mentally ill, The Washington Post noted that those with a diagnosis were actually less likely to carry a gun. Arrest records ranked those with illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or depression lower than those without, and those who had committed suicide were half as likely to use a gun.

Jeffrey Swanson, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences from Duke and one of the study?s researchers, noted that pushing the blame onto one group of individuals was dangerous and doesn?t solve the problem at hand.

Untangling Gun Violence from Mental Illness - The Atlantic

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...-is-dangerous/

flashfire 06-13-2016 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 20960000)

pretty much

Bladewire 06-13-2016 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by teg0 (Post 20960315)
The real problem is mental health. If you take away a certain weapon, people will just find a new weapon. There is something about mental health in the USA that is a problem. Religion sure doesn't help.

Everyday people should have special training and a permit to own something that shoots 13 rounds a second. The permit should be free and good for life, unless you fuck up, then its revoked with the AR-15.

Unfortunately there are over 3 million AR-15's in circulation in the U.S. already, huge black market after any regulation.

The point is for owners to be documented and have training, not to stop distribution or confiscate from current owners.

420 06-13-2016 12:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 20960000)

Hard to believe citizens are even allowed to own this type of gun. First, if you need a weapon that fires multiple shots simultaneously to hunt you should stick to buying grocery meat. Second, how can people value their freedom to own a fucking machine gun over human lives? Why not ban them so these lunatics have a harder time killing people? Then you guys that want machine guns can buy them on the black market since that's so easy.

Porko 06-13-2016 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by galleryseek (Post 20958362)
1. Ban assault weapons.
2. Good people with good intentions can't access assault weapons.
3. Bad guys with bad intentions use the black market to purchase said assault weapons.
4. Bad guys effectively become more armed than the good guys via legislation.
5. Problem either stays the same or gets worse; but definitely not better.

2) What can be a 'good intention' to buy an assault weapon?

Barry-xlovecam 06-13-2016 12:49 PM

Well, the alternative would be armed soldiers in public gatherings of more than 50 people. Trained guards who have military discipline might work -- but the Posse Comitatus Act prohibits this to federal troops but a state's National Guard can be mobilized.

The Guard's training and discipline is less than optimum. But you cannot put a cop on every corner. I read there were 600 to 800 people in that club -- a target of opportunity shooting gallery for a psycho-terrorist ISIS wannabe :2 cents: Good thing he was taken out before he killed more innocents.

Paul Markham 06-13-2016 12:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CDSmith (Post 20960231)
The genie is out of the bottle. A ban means turn in your AR's. Legal responsible owners all turn them in. Great. Meanwhile the crooked and demented and those not quite right in the head all flout the new law. Yay.

So keep flooding more genies out of the bottle.

Quote:

Oh what the hell, try it. Of course law enforcement will have to expend a lot of energy and focus to get even most of the law abiding US citizens to part with their heavier weapons I would think. Most if not all will find it unconstitutional and do a "from my cold dead hands" type of thing.
Long term it will save them weork and of course lives.

Quote:

Bring on the ban. Will be interesting to see how it plays out. Or is Obammer trying to sabotage a Hillary-led government by choosing to yammer about this now? lol
Do you really believe this would cost the Dems the election?

Paul Markham 06-13-2016 01:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by teg0 (Post 20960315)
The real problem is mental health. If you take away a certain weapon, people will just find a new weapon. There is something about mental health in the USA that is a problem. Religion sure doesn't help.

If the perpetrator has a knife, it's harder to kill people than have a gun or two with large magazine clips.

I agree with you about mental health, so why not very thorough checks before a gun license is issued?

That's assuming a gun license is required. Or is it just dogs that need to be licensed?

dyna mo 06-13-2016 01:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 20960573)
Do you really believe this would cost the Dems the election?

yes. this will be the #1 issue now. the other side of the coin of BO issuing an executive order banning the sale of assault style weapons is the right would seize on that with the BO is coming to take your guns away theme. during an election year with Hillary staking her candidacy on more of the BO status quo, while Trump issues more hyperbole could very well cost the dems the election.

Rochard 06-13-2016 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 20960561)
Well, the alternative would be armed soldiers in public gatherings of more than 50 people. Trained guards who have military discipline might work -- but the Posse Comitatus Act prohibits this to federal troops but a state's National Guard can be mobilized.

So your idea is to hire armed security guards to protect night clubs. You know, like the armed security guard who just killed forty-nine people in Atlanta?

vending_machine 06-13-2016 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by baddog (Post 20959985)
The word is biased

I think "bi est" was a freudian slip..

420 06-13-2016 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20960624)
So your idea is to hire armed security guards to protect night clubs. You know, like the armed security guard who just killed forty-nine people in Atlanta?

I read this mother fucker in orlando was a fucking security guard too. The point is we need to make it harder for mass murderers to kill people. Somehow. It's really fucked up because the FBI knew about the guy and still he was able to buy guns. I know they need proof to make charges stick but it's still fucked up.

flashfire 06-13-2016 01:48 PM

The real problem is there is more than one problem

all the arguments both sides are making contribute

No you don't blame a car for driving over people...we do however have many restrictions on the cars that can legally be driven and sold in the US

Paul Markham 06-13-2016 02:06 PM

Facts.

In 2010, guns took the lives of 31,076 Americans in homicides, suicides and unintentional shootings. This is the equivalent of more than 85 deaths each day and more than three deaths each hour.

73,505 Americans were treated in hospital emergency departments for non-fatal gunshot wounds in 2010.

Firearms were the third-leading cause of injury-related deaths nationwide in 2010, following poisoning and motor vehicle accidents.

Between 1955 and 1975, the Vietnam War killed over 58,000 American soldiers ? less than the number of civilians killed with guns in the U.S. in an average two-year period.

In the first seven years of the U.S.-Iraq War, over 4,400 American soldiers were killed.
Almost as many civilians are killed with guns in the U.S., however, every seven weeks.

In 2010, unintentional firearm injuries caused the deaths of 606 people.

From 2005-2010, almost 3,800 people in the U.S. died from unintentional shootings.

Over 1,300 victims of unintentional shootings for the period 2005?2010 were under 25 years of age.

And the logic of the pro-gun crew is we can't stop all these so let's not try to slow it down. The accidental shootings are the scariest. A lot of people don't respect what a gun is. How many times have we read of a child shooting someone by accident while playing with a gun?

Some people believe the #1 issue in the coming election is their right to have a gun and all the risks attached to it. Obviously, one has to be hiding from the real world to think that. America has far bigger problems than the right to have a big gun and lots of ammo.

Barry-xlovecam 06-13-2016 02:39 PM

Well, we definitely know who the gun-nuts and the wannabe terrorists will vote for -- if they can vote :1orglaugh

It is easier to buy an assault rifle here that to buy a dog license. You don't even have to renew your long gun license. If you had to pay a $10 renewal fee and file a license report -- a lot of stolen guns might be accounted for -- [x] firearm was stolen -- no fee. At least we could track such things? Oh Yeah, $500 fine and a federal misdemeanor for filing a false report. This goes toward firearms illegally possessed by criminals mainly.

Firearms are a regulated industry and most regulated items have license fees. Make the license fee a tax-credit item but you have to pay to stay legal :2 cents: Of course, that is a year (annually) after the fact (the sale). This won't directly help mass shootings as they are not planed that far in advance -- they are usually impulse actions -- the straw that broke the camel's back (no pun intended).

SuckOnThis 06-13-2016 02:58 PM

I will ban all guns temporarily until we figure out what's going on. - Trump

Bladewire 06-13-2016 03:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 20960741)
Facts.

In 2010, guns took the lives of 31,076 Americans in homicides, suicides and unintentional shootings. This is the equivalent of more than 85 deaths each day and more than three deaths each hour

There were 3,988,076 births in America last year. Roughly 32,000 died by guns last year, that's .8% of the number of births. Total deaths were 2,596,993. Yearly we're at a net gain of 1,391,083 new Americans added to the population. This is not sustainable.

We need more deaths.

SilentKnight 06-13-2016 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by galleryseek (Post 20958362)
2. Good people with good intentions can't access assault weapons.

What "good intentions" are carried out with an assault weapon?! :disgust

SuckOnThis 06-13-2016 04:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SilentKnight (Post 20960996)
What "good intentions" are carried out with an assault weapon?! :disgust

Hunting squirrels and such.

:1orglaugh


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