Jose Rossy wrote:
Are people like you for real?
Let me guess......you thought the crime control act of 94 was a good idea. Right?
People who think like you and Ricardo are worse than anti-gunners.
Of course I’m for real. But, perhaps you misunderstand where I’m coming from. I’m firmly opposed to gun control. The book I referenced by Joyce Lee Malcolm was about the total failure of gun control in Great Britain and the resulting astronomical increase in the rate of violent crime. Since Obama was elected, there has been a tremendous surge in the purchase of guns and ammunition in this country, resulting in a corresponding drop in the murder rate of 7.5 percent nationally. There was a similar surge in gun buying and a corresponding drop in the murder rate nationally in the wake of the Columbine shootings, when Domestic Policy Advisor Elena Kagan started calling for tighter gun controls.
Gun ownership is at an all-time high in the U.S., and the violent crime rate in this country is at a 35 year low (so are accidental firearms deaths) – it’s not a coincidence.
That doesn’t mean, however, that gun control advocates don’t have legitimate concerns. Have you ever seen one of these?
http://www.keltecpistols.com/item/56520 ... 23_9_.aspx
I have. One day someone came to the range where I used to shoot with one of these. He is licensed to carry concealed firearms, so he carries one of these with a sling under his coat … just in case he ever gets mugged. God help anyone who happens to be down-range of his attacker! While I support his right to carry, I just wish he had a little common sense. In the very unlikely event that he ever does kill an innocent bystander as a result of his use of extreme overkill, I wonder if he’ll feel any remorse?
I have no problem with restricting the right of people to carry that kind of weapon in public, any more than I have a problem with speed limit laws. As I wrote in a previous post, we live in a society – your rights stop where my rights start, and vice versa. You have a right to shoot an armed attacker in self-defense; you don’t have the right to shoot innocent bystanders who just happen to be nearby.
I’m a safety officer at the range where I currently shoot. You might think that we range officers wouldn’t have to constantly remind people to keep their muzzles pointed down-range, or explain to people what ‘down-range’ means. Unfortunately, a lot of the people who come to our range aren’t experienced shooters, so we range officers are frequently busy.
Unfortunately, accidents do happen, and criminals do use guns. As Justice Breyer pointed out in his dissent in the McDonald case, we have 60,000 firearms related deaths per year in the U.S. (his statistics are high by a factor of 2). He neglected to mention the 1.5 to 3 million defensive gun uses every year in the U.S., and the untold number of lives saved as a result. People generally only see the harm caused with guns – they rarely see the benefits, thanks to an anti-gun bias in our news media. So, when the gun-control crowd does a cost-benefit analysis of gun ownership, they count only the costs.
Richard asked what rationale people could have for restricting the type or number of guns someone could own, or the magazine size, or how frequently someone could buy them. So I explained it to him. I don’t agree with it, but unfortunately, 4 of the 9 justices on our Supreme Court do. And we’re about to replace an old one with a much younger one.
Regards,
Al B.