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07-03-2008, 05:02 PM #1
Registration is ornerous because there is no purpose to it. It will neigther aid the owner in getting a stolen gun back, nor modify in the least any unsafe practices that person has with regards to guns. The only possible purpose for the Government knowing where every gun is is so that upon their desire they can come and take them. As for mandatory training, I addressed the abusive limiting way it is possible for a tyranical government to use that to infringe on the rights of ownership.
I will compromise. Respect the constitution and my rights to not be infringed in my desire to own a gun, and I'll allow you to live in the US. Thats all there is to it. When one side wants Guns and the other side specifically wants to keep them from owning them, there can be no compromise. Thanks to the foresight of the founders of this Nation there is no need to.
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07-03-2008, 05:12 PM #2
pudu-> which brady laws are you referring to? the waiting period or the assault weapons ban? both are frequently referred to by that name, not sure which you mean.
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07-03-2008, 05:52 PM #3
Your absolutely right. Crimes involving assault weapons obviously decreased, but gun crimes overall decreased as well, so both I guess. I don't know much about assault weapons except that the police forces aren't big fans of people using them.
Riiiiiiiiight.
I think it's best if we agree to disagree on this one and leave it at that, at least as far as SRP is concerned.
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07-03-2008, 07:15 PM #4
crimes involving assault weapons did NOT decrease during 94-04. And they didn't go up after 2004. They were less than 1% of shootings to begin with, and less than 1% of shootings during and after. The AWB was the most flawed piece of legislation I've ever seen, apart from the Bridge to Nowhere in ALaska. The AWB did not ban machine guns or assault RIFLES, it made up a new category of weapons based ENTIRELY on cosmetic features and nothing more. All it accomplished was to raise magazine prices for law abiding citizens, and force a bunch of law abiding AR15 owners to file their bayonet lugs off. That's it. [/rant]
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stritheor (07-03-2008)
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07-03-2008, 07:17 PM #5
Why didn't the 2nd amendment have to be repealed before any anti-gun laws could be passed anywhere at all? I need to ask my lawyer friend, maybe he knows
Find me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage
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07-03-2008, 08:37 PM #6
I double checked my source on this (a widely published book) and it confirmed what I thought it had said about assault weapon stats. But then I realized it was still third party information. So doing some more checking it seems to be a pretty contentious issue as to whether the ban did reduce assault weapon crime.
First off you're 100% correct that the two laws are completely different and often confused:
1993: Congress passes the The Brady Handgun Violence Act, establishing the National Instant Criminal Background Check System gun dealers are to use before selling a gun. The law is named after former White House Press Secretary James Brady, who was shot in the head during the 1981 assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan.
1994: The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act becomes law. The law banned the manufacture, use, possession and import of 19 types of assault weapons, including AK-47s and Uzis. The law expired in 2004.
from NPR - U.S. Gun Laws: A History : NPR
I haven't found anyone actually citing hard stats (I avoided those places with an axe to grind - bradycenter.org, NRA.org and the like), but I did find a good NPR news report from Sept 13, 2004 (in streaming audio alas) that seems to back up completely your take on the assault weapon ban - " a swiss cheese law".
Ten-Year Assault Weapons Ban Expires : NPR
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07-04-2008, 12:10 AM #7
- Join Date
- May 2005
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- Virginia
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Thanked: 79I remember when the AWB was first being pushed, and was outraged to a point. There was a huge media push in favor of the AWB, but every time I saw anything about it, they would have someone on television demonstrating a (real) assault weapon, firing it on full automatic fire until the magazine was empty. It is all a moot point now, but until this big push, the term "assault weapon" meant a selective fire weapon capable of either semi-automatic (one bullet each time the trigger is pulled) or full automatic fire. This is also what, in my home area, was demonstrated on the news. Obviously those were not the weapons being banned, and so media outlets ran stories on semi-auto's (but demonstrating full automatic or trigger modified weapons) and the ban got wide support. They then proceeded to ban every firearm that they felt was somehow more "deadly" due to its cosmetic features (What? a pistol grip instead of a straight stock!?? Black metal? NO!!) magazine capacity (which doesn't make the weapon more deadly-hits do that) or the ability to take a bayonet. This was obviously aimed at aficionados of service rifles and at less wealthy people whose only option was surplus Chinese, Russian, and other, military rifles should they want to shoot.
I know I'm rambling a bit, but I seriously dislike the tendencies to redefine a particular word to make it apply to whatever the lawmakers/media/etc. want it to apply to, rather than what it actually is.
True Assault rifles have been heavily regulated as class III weapons since at least the 1930's, yet there seemed to be no qualms on the part of the media in misleading the public in order to have them believe this was what the AWB concerned.
I for one am glad that piece of legislation and indeed restriction on citizens' rights, fell through. After all, if there weren't any advantages to being a citizen here, why would anyone choose to serve, why would anyone even stay, when it means working 12-15 hour days and still struggling to make by.
It is the freedoms.
Just my opinion.
John P.
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07-04-2008, 01:34 AM #8
correct, this was addressed by the NFA in 1934, partially in response to the St. Valentine's day massacre and the outrage is caused.
fyi, fully automatic weapons were STILL LEGAL before during and after the AWB. all it did was make my AR15 illegal because of the bayonet mount, while a Mini14 (same magazines, same ammunition, same rate of fire) was legal because it had a wooden stock and didn't look all tactical and scary.
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JohnP (07-04-2008)
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07-04-2008, 04:04 AM #9
"...why is registration and training so onerous?"
Pudu
Registration is repugnant to law abiding citizens, because once data is in the hands of the Guv'mint, it NEVER goes away! Now that may be just peachy, RIGHT NOW. But can you gaurantee me that a totalitarian regime won't take this country over? The gun registration information in the wrong hands will lead to confiscation. Just as it did in New Orleans a few years ago. It's the old "What they don't know, won't hurt me" scenario.
There is an organization called Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership (JPFO for short) that declares that registration always leads to genocide.
http://www.jpfo.org/filegen-a-m/deathgc.htm#dgc
I cannot argue with them, they seem to have all their ducks in a row!
I don't think a responsible gun owner will balk at training. I never have. It's FORCED training, required by the Government that rankles Americans. Or training that's required BEFORE you are deemed "Worthy" to buy a gun. If that was enacted, it wouldn't be long before we would all hear, "You were SO close, but you didn't pass the test...Sorry."
I am pretty Libertarian in my views. I believe that the very least amount of Government you can possibly get by with, is EXACTLY what you want! Hey...wait a minute, that's what the men who started this country thought too.
Regards,
Jeeter
Last edited by Brother Jeeter; 07-04-2008 at 04:11 PM. Reason: My bad
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stritheor (07-04-2008)