[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173397#p30173397:1xx37huw said:ayemahnuhrd[/url]":1xx37huw]
I guess I think that I'd rather live in a world where it is less likely that people in society have access to those types when planning to kill folks.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173197#p30173197:2056nxfb said:iOSecure[/url]":2056nxfb]Wow.. child pornography charges and attempted mass murder at 19... he needs to be locked up in a ward for a few decades.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30194675#p30194675:1dzcejka said:rogerHarding[/url]":1dzcejka]
One last thing: while overall homicide rates are higher in the US than in France, it's important to remember that those homicides are not distributed (even close to) evenly across the population. If you're arguing with an American on the Internet about gun control, particularly here on Ars Technica, there's a good chance that their first-hand experience of gun violence isn't substantially different from yours. As with many things, there's a disconnect between the personal or communal experience of violence and the broader voting patterns that maintain a particular status quo.
As a whole, students in the United States lagged the best Asian and European nations in the TIMSS international math and science test. However, broken down by race, US Asians scored comparably to Asian nations, white Americans scored comparably to the best European nations. Although some racial generally score lower than whites in the US, they scored as well as whites in other European nations. Hispanic Americans averaged 505, comparable to students Austria and Sweden, while African Americans at 482 were comparable to Norway and Ukraine.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30174109#p30174109:uaa6s8dn said:SixDegrees[/url]":uaa6s8dn][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30174083#p30174083:uaa6s8dn said:pjlahaie[/url]":uaa6s8dn][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30174033#p30174033:uaa6s8dn said:simonov[/url]":uaa6s8dn]
Made some minor edits to emphasize a point. A little education is required here. When some criminal misuses an AR-15 the bicoastal media and their credulous consumers are outraged. But no one is outraged when someone misuses a Honda Accord or Ford F150. You kind of expect the most popular cars in America to also be popular with criminals.
Except the Honda Accord or the Ford F150 weren't designed to kill. Guns were created for the sole purpose of injuring/killing. Handguns are designed to injure/kill *people*, so are assault rifles.
Also, I'll note that the dangerous nature of automobiles is thoroughly recognized by society, and as a result they are extremely tightly regulated, from manufacturing through driver education and licensing through titling requirements.
By all means, if safety is of concern, let's regulate guns as tightly as we do cars.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30189851#p30189851:2tut1v6z said:Natt[/url]":2tut1v6z]No worry. I sleep quite fine, thank you. If you think otherwise you might want to pull your head out of your ass.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30187667#p30187667:2tut1v6z said:psd[/url]":2tut1v6z]In her search warrant affidavit, McManus noted that the old method had "definable costs" and required a "significant amount of skill."
But not anymore. The Internet, which provides simple global gathering places for every niche interest, has done the same thing for child pornographers.
Sleep well anonymizing network researcher/developer/operator who's sense of social responsibility is only of the self-serving kind. When oh when will you get your head out of your back side to recognize that your genius and labor are being exploited by some of the most heinous pieces of scum to walk the Earth!
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173149#p30173149:2htllpte said:muhname[/url]":2htllpte]It would be one thing to upload self-encrypted files to some cloud storage, but to upload illegal pics/vids as such. After everything we have learned about the NSA and stuff.. Perhaps these guys unconsciously want to get caught..
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173045#p30173045:3ftt38ym said:simonov[/url]":3ftt38ym]I haven't even read the article yet, but just wanted to say, "After Dropbox finds a child porn collector, a chess club stops his knife attack" is certainly the Ars Technica headline of the year.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173193#p30173193:1znuwuai said:RockDaMan[/url]":1znuwuai][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173183#p30173183:1znuwuai said:Pokrface[/url]":1znuwuai]Ain't no strength like angry old man strength.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173161#p30173161:1znuwuai said:drewd[/url]":1znuwuai]One thing that always escaped me when I was younger was that old people got that way for a reason. Don't mess with them.
Second only to the mother bear and/or the woman scorned.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30184693#p30184693:y08ys33e said:artvandelayIIII[/url]":y08ys33e]Perfect illustration of why we need strong gun control laws. If this disturbed creep had had a gun or two a bunch of kids would be dead, no question.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30184633#p30184633:1wvaruqi said:cpast[/url]":1wvaruqi][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30176931#p30176931:1wvaruqi said:Jurrasic[/url]":1wvaruqi][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173097#p30173097:1wvaruqi said:Rommel102[/url]":1wvaruqi]Great job James Vernon, a 75 year old Vet taking down a 19 year old psychopath.
I have a very strong suspicion that this attack was not real, but was a cynical ploy to set up an insanity defense.
A scrawny nerd who is not skilled in knife fighting who REALLY wants to kill some kiddies is NOT going to march into the area in question, pull his knives and loudly announce his intentions! He will enter the area, pick his first victim away from any adults, move close to him/her and THEN pull blades and go to work.
I don't buy it at all. It's a either an actual cry for help (unlikely in this case) or a ploy to get a reduced sentence or committal to a mental hospital rather then go into the prison population upon conviction, where he will rapidly learn what it felt like to be the abused kids he jerked off to.
That would only make sense if you had no clue what the insanity defense meant. It's not a matter of "he did something irrational? He MUST be crazy!" The Illustrated Guide to Law has a good primer; essentially, insanity (which is a legal term here, and not a medical one) means that because of a mental issue, you were unable to understand that what you were doing was criminal at the time you did it (Illinois law says "at the time of such conduct, as a result of mental disease or mental defect, he lacks substantial capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct").
Going on a berzerker rampage isn't actually any evidence at all that you are incapable of understanding that what you're doing is criminal, nor that you were insane when you did something different over a year ago before you had a huge extra source of stress. And the insanity defense puts a pretty high burden of proof on the defendant; the defendant has to prove it by "clear and convincing evidence." Insanity is a defense which is very rarely tried, and when it is tried is very rarely successful.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30206651#p30206651:26lkvjio said:King_DuckZ[/url]":26lkvjio]Nice story. Glad it ended up well. And I'm also glad pedos get caught.
A big question remains in my mind: why do people store sensitive and private data on DropBox? In this case it's a good thing they did, since it allowed them to expose a criminal, but come on...
This! And just imagine, if you can bear it, what would've surely happened if he'd had a flame thrower! Or ... or ... an Atom Bomb! /s[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30209289#p30209289:ihovs14i said:Zoolook[/url]":ihovs14i]And therein lies the difference between guns and knives. If he'd had an automatic weapon, nothing could have stopped him.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30209669#p30209669:bopvdd2k said:gwold[/url]":bopvdd2k]This! And just imagine, if you can bear it, what would've surely happened if he'd had a flame thrower! Or ... or ... an Atom Bomb! /s[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30209289#p30209289:bopvdd2k said:Zoolook[/url]":bopvdd2k]And therein lies the difference between guns and knives. If he'd had an automatic weapon, nothing could have stopped him.
Spencer Stone might disagree with that assessment.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30209289#p30209289:1jing44v said:Zoolook[/url]":1jing44v]And therein lies the difference between guns and knives. If he'd had an automatic weapon, nothing could have stopped him.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173305#p30173305:8cgnkc13 said:Statistical[/url]":8cgnkc13]assault rifles .... nonsensense, nonsense, nonsense
Assault rifles have been heavily regulated since the NFA in the 1930 and new sales banned since 1980s. Maybe you are thinking about "scary black rifles". Weapons no more dangerous than their non-black counterparts but since they were scary looking a huge amount of political capital was expended to ban them for a decade with absolutely no benefit found (as concluded by the DOJ).
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30221621#p30221621:1turm3lt said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":1turm3lt][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30173305#p30173305:1turm3lt said:Statistical[/url]":1turm3lt]assault rifles .... nonsensense, nonsense, nonsense
Assault rifles have been heavily regulated since the NFA in the 1930 and new sales banned since 1980s. Maybe you are thinking about "scary black rifles". Weapons no more dangerous than their non-black counterparts but since they were scary looking a huge amount of political capital was expended to ban them for a decade with absolutely no benefit found (as concluded by the DOJ).
This doesn't make much sense.
An assault rifle is a well defined category of infantry long-arm among weapons scholars and aficionados. Its prototypical form is the Sturmgewehr 44, a German infantry weapon from the later part of the Second World War. "Sturmgewehr" means, literally, "Assault Rifle." It defined an entire category of weapon, due to it being the first practical example in wide use.
It’s different from older infantry rifles like the k98 in that it was chambered for a smaller rifle round, had a high-capacity quick-change magazine, pistol-grip, and automatic action. It was not meant to replace the machine gun - it was meant to allow the soldier rapid follow-up shots in the heat of action, and to keep killing while the enemy needed to pause.
Now, an interlude to stomp down on the “AR-15s aren’t automatic weapons!” horsecrap. Ask any gun enthusiast what are the two main types of pistols, and they won’t even hesitate an eyeblink in answering “Revolver and Automatic.” And they’d be correct - an automatic action is a mechanism that uses the energy of the round fired to load the next round (gas expansion or recoil, usually). Fully automatic, select-fire and semi automatic are different subcategories of an automatic action, and the gun enthusiasts damn well know it. They’re just trying to lie to you by getting their terminology wrong on purpose.
Indeed, the standard-issue modern American infantry rifle, the M4, is no longer a fully-automatic weapon, but has a select-fire action, where it can be set to shoot small bursts of three rounds per trigger-pull. Even this mode is rarely used, and only in certain circumstances such as covering fire. Studies have proven that you can shoot more people if you take the time to aim each round. (Yes, they study this stuff. Quite a deal. I can provide citations, but they may take a day or two to dig out of my notes.)
So! an Assault Rifle can be defined as a weapon that meets the design goals of the original StG 44 -
1) Fires a smaller-caliber centerfire rifle round than an earlier infantry rifle.
2) Automatic action to allow quick follow-up shots without having to operate a bolt with only a minor loss of accuracy.
3) Pistol-grip, which allows quick target acquisition with only a minor loss of accuracy
4) Large-capacity magazine, simply and quickly interchangeable, to engage more of the enemy without needing to reload as often as earlier clip-fed rifles.
Now, we can dance around some parts of the definition - for instance, the Ruger Mini-14 doesn't have a pistol-grip, and the FN-FAL is chambered in a large center-fire round, and they have both been employed with great success by mass-murderers.
You will notice, however, that "Scary" and "Black" aren't part of the category definition.
"Able to acquire and shoot as many human-sized targets at close and medium range as possible" *is.*
They are weapons designed for an infantryman, not a hunter or competitive marksman. This is where some people have an issue with them being available to anyone who waltzes into a gun show.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222859#p30222859:18iesr21 said:AliceWonder[/url]":18iesr21]Changing the constitution isn't about a minority opinion. Reality has shown that you just need the opinion of the supreme court.
The kind of firearms that exist now simply weren't conceived of when the 2nd amendment was written, it is rather silly to believe modern tech should held to literal interpretation of laws written before the modern tech was dreamed of.
Hence why lots of different types of firearms are illegal to own despite the literal "shall not be infringed"
It's the gun nuts that need a grasp on reality.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:2552bub3 said:Natt[/url]":2552bub3]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223743#p30223743:2tdcz4yu said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":2tdcz4yu][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:2tdcz4yu said:Natt[/url]":2tdcz4yu]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
This doesn't make much sense. A private individual cannot own a MA-2A machine gun or a M203 grenade launcher and the attendant ammunition without a ton of expensive licensing and background checks. I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223743#p30223743:3t67rx8m said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":3t67rx8m][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:3t67rx8m said:Natt[/url]":3t67rx8m]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
This doesn't make much sense. A private individual cannot own a MA-2A machine gun or a M203 grenade launcher and the attendant ammunition without a ton of expensive licensing and background checks. I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
Well that may be the way many read the 2nd amendment, but that's certainly not the way the US Supreme Court has interpreted the 2nd amendment in District of Columbia v. Heller (see above).[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223811#p30223811:eqbcy23k said:AliceWonder[/url]":eqbcy23k][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223743#p30223743:eqbcy23k said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":eqbcy23k][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:eqbcy23k said:Natt[/url]":eqbcy23k]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
This doesn't make much sense. A private individual cannot own a MA-2A machine gun or a M203 grenade launcher and the attendant ammunition without a ton of expensive licensing and background checks. I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
Well the way that many read the amendment, we have a right to bear arms because the state has a well-regulate militia.
But anyway, the arms back then were radically different than the arms we have now, and the courts take that into considerations.
The benefits to risk ratio of population have access to whatever arms exist is radically different now.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222859#p30222859:2e2djowz said:AliceWonder[/url]":2e2djowz]Changing the constitution isn't about a minority opinion. Reality has shown that you just need the opinion of the supreme court.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30224903#p30224903:9quq0vm6 said:Natt[/url]":9quq0vm6]Well that may be the way many read the 2nd amendment, but that's certainly not the way the US Supreme Court has interpreted the 2nd amendment in District of Columbia v. Heller (see above).[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223811#p30223811:9quq0vm6 said:AliceWonder[/url]":9quq0vm6][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223743#p30223743:9quq0vm6 said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":9quq0vm6][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:9quq0vm6 said:Natt[/url]":9quq0vm6]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
This doesn't make much sense. A private individual cannot own a MA-2A machine gun or a M203 grenade launcher and the attendant ammunition without a ton of expensive licensing and background checks. I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
Well the way that many read the amendment, we have a right to bear arms because the state has a well-regulate militia.
But anyway, the arms back then were radically different than the arms we have now, and the courts take that into considerations.
The benefits to risk ratio of population have access to whatever arms exist is radically different now.
And please, the arms they had in 1791 when the US Bill of Rights was adopted were every bit as modern and radical to them as today's firearms are to us. And they had no problem with the notion of an individual having the right to keep and bear those arms, and enshrined that belief in the 2nd amendment.
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222859#p30222859:1d8cjjc3 said:AliceWonder[/url]":1d8cjjc3]Changing the constitution isn't about a minority opinion. Reality has shown that you just need the opinion of the supreme court.
The kind of firearms that exist now simply weren't conceived of when the 2nd amendment was written, it is rather silly to believe modern tech should held to literal interpretation of laws written before the modern tech was dreamed of.
Hence why lots of different types of firearms are illegal to own despite the literal "shall not be infringed"
It's the gun nuts that need a grasp on reality.
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225123#p30225123:1xijcpbf said:AliceWonder[/url]":1xijcpbf][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30224903#p30224903:1xijcpbf said:Natt[/url]":1xijcpbf]Well that may be the way many read the 2nd amendment, but that's certainly not the way the US Supreme Court has interpreted the 2nd amendment in District of Columbia v. Heller (see above).[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223811#p30223811:1xijcpbf said:AliceWonder[/url]":1xijcpbf][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223743#p30223743:1xijcpbf said:RI_Swamp_Yankee[/url]":1xijcpbf][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30222809#p30222809:1xijcpbf said:Natt[/url]":1xijcpbf]
Well tough effin' luck, the 2nd amendment doesn't limit the right to own and bear arms to hunting, competitive marksmanship and other nonsense that those types of folks would like to restrict it to. If they don't like it muster the support to change the US Constitution. But of course, if they could they already would have. They haven't because there's is a minority opinion.
This doesn't make much sense. A private individual cannot own a MA-2A machine gun or a M203 grenade launcher and the attendant ammunition without a ton of expensive licensing and background checks. I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
Well the way that many read the amendment, we have a right to bear arms because the state has a well-regulate militia.
But anyway, the arms back then were radically different than the arms we have now, and the courts take that into considerations.
The benefits to risk ratio of population have access to whatever arms exist is radically different now.
And please, the arms they had in 1791 when the US Bill of Rights was adopted were every bit as modern and radical to them as today's firearms are to us. And they had no problem with the notion of an individual having the right to keep and bear those arms, and enshrined that belief in the 2nd amendment.
But you couldn't have an angry kid wipe out 20 classmates with the radical firearms they had in 1791.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225361#p30225361:ifknvu08 said:Natt[/url]":ifknvu08]
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...
Exactly? No, hardly. Sorry, but your reading of the 2nd amendment is fundamentally flawed, and is not supported by the wording of the amendment itself, or the Supreme Court's interpretation of it.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225269#p30225269:2c0w8iu5 said:AliceWonder[/url]":2c0w8iu5]`The right to bear arms was put in place so that people could defend themselves against the state'
Exactly, but at the time, the benefit did not outweigh the risks.
That has clearly changed, the kind of firearms that now exist can do far far far more damage to innocents than they could back then, and the kind of firearms available to the military now are well beyond the budget of 99% of the population even if they were legal.
The benefit they received from the second amendment simply is no longer obtainable, and the risk with the firearms that can now be obtained is far greater.
Yes, you should be allowed to have a firearm. Lots of them if you want lots of them.
But *especially* since the purpose of the 2nd amendment is no longer obtainable, the risk factor of what a firearm can be used for must be taken into consideration.
Firearms designed to kill lots of people in a short period of time are too risky to be legal. Even if they can be used to shoot a deer.
Speaking of which, as i recall California has some very strict guns laws. I wonder what firearms they used? :/[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225387#p30225387:10rsuvt8 said:AliceWonder[/url]":10rsuvt8][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225361#p30225361:10rsuvt8 said:Natt[/url]":10rsuvt8]
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...
It is the responsibility of adults to defend those who can not defend themselves.
So yes, I do think of the children.
But it's not just children.
Today's shooting in San Bernardino wasn't targeting a school.
The gunmen “were dressed and equipped in a way that indicate they were prepared, and they were armed with long guns, not handguns; I do not know what type of long guns,” Chief Burguan said at a news conference about three hours after the shooting. “They came prepared to do what they did, as if they were on a mission.”
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225269#p30225269:10ul51ty said:AliceWonder[/url]":10ul51ty]`The right to bear arms was put in place so that people could defend themselves against the state'
Exactly, but at the time, the benefit did not outweigh the risks.
That has clearly changed, the kind of firearms that now exist can do far far far more damage to innocents than they could back then, and the kind of firearms available to the military now are well beyond the budget of 99% of the population even if they were legal.
The benefit they received from the second amendment simply is no longer obtainable, and the risk with the firearms that can now be obtained is far greater.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30223893#p30223893:25gayudl said:Statistical[/url]":25gayudl]I fail to see why a modern antipersonnel infantry weapon like a Bushmaster AR-15 should be excluded from those precautions, or how the constitution prevents it. "Well Regulated" is right there in the amendment.
Because it isn't an infantry weapon anymore than a civic with a spoiler is a formula one car. Name one military which uses a semi-automatic rifle as an infantry weapon. True infantry weapons (like an M-16 or M-4) ARE tightly regulated and all but banned.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225473#p30225473:2o2i2kfd said:Natt[/url]":2o2i2kfd]Speaking of which, as i recall California has some very strict guns laws. I wonder what firearms they used? :/[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225387#p30225387:2o2i2kfd said:AliceWonder[/url]":2o2i2kfd][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225361#p30225361:2o2i2kfd said:Natt[/url]":2o2i2kfd]
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...
It is the responsibility of adults to defend those who can not defend themselves.
So yes, I do think of the children.
But it's not just children.
Today's shooting in San Bernardino wasn't targeting a school.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225767#p30225767:pugrl41z said:AliceWonder[/url]"ugrl41z]
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225473#p30225473:pugrl41z said:Natt[/url]"ugrl41z]
Speaking of which, as i recall California has some very strict guns laws. I wonder what firearms they used? :/[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225387#p30225387:pugrl41z said:AliceWonder[/url]"ugrl41z]
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225361#p30225361:pugrl41z said:Natt[/url]"ugrl41z]
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...
It is the responsibility of adults to defend those who can not defend themselves.
So yes, I do think of the children.
But it's not just children.
Today's shooting in San Bernardino wasn't targeting a school.
We don't know, but I believe both Nevada and Arizona that border us have less restrictive laws. Unless there is just reason to search a vehicle entering California from another state, they can't.
That may be an argument for federal laws, just like many dangerous narcotics are controlled by the federal government.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30228311#p30228311:2l94u7cc said:S8ER01Z[/url]":2l94u7cc][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225767#p30225767:2l94u7cc said:AliceWonder[/url]":2l94u7cc][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225473#p30225473:2l94u7cc said:Natt[/url]":2l94u7cc]Speaking of which, as i recall California has some very strict guns laws. I wonder what firearms they used? :/[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225387#p30225387:2l94u7cc said:AliceWonder[/url]":2l94u7cc][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=30225361#p30225361:2l94u7cc said:Natt[/url]":2l94u7cc]
Oh course, of course! think of the children! It's always about the children...
It is the responsibility of adults to defend those who can not defend themselves.
So yes, I do think of the children.
But it's not just children.
Today's shooting in San Bernardino wasn't targeting a school.
We don't know, but I believe both Nevada and Arizona that border us have less restrictive laws. Unless there is just reason to search a vehicle entering California from another state, they can't.
That may be an argument for federal laws, just like many dangerous narcotics are controlled by the federal government.
Well they have done such a wonderful job cutting off those dangerous narcotics... clearly if they make guns illegal like they do cocaine or heroin no one will be able to get them and we will all be safe from guns.