Could you attempt to enlighten us as to exactly what sort of "crazy military weapons" to which you believe we in the US have unfettered access?Like I said. I am not for any kind of full ban on all guns. I just see no reason for civilians to have these crazy military weapons.
Nor apparently does it make it any easier, as attested to by the flood of guns easily available to criminals in every part of the world, regardless of the local laws. As someone once observed, if all guns were to be outlawed and every one confiscated in the US tomorrow, criminals would simply hide contraband firearm imports in current drug shipments, and they'd be sold as widely and easily as drugs are today.For civilians to have access to these weapons, it certainly doesn't make it harder for criminals to get a hold of them does it? If the weapons are somewhere that someone can steal them, does it not increase the risk of criminals getting these weapons?
Do you have any statistics on how many time this sort of thing (i.e., a legal gun owner with no previous history of serious mental illness "just snaps" and kills someone) actually happens? Here's a hint: it's significantly less than 1% as often as a legal gun owner using a firearm to defend their life or the lives of their family or neighbors.What about these lawfully gun owning nutcases that have access to these weapons? Not that not having access to these weapons would stop someone from hurting others, but they sure do help and make said acts easier and more effective. Surely there is some slack somewhere in the laws that can be tightened to help prevent this?
Oh, rest assured, that as rational people with a much firmer grasp of the empirical evidence than your lot tends to demonstrate, we see numerous improvements that can be made. Why is it that you're unwilling to consider such improvements when they run counter to your party line?The issue isn't so black and white. I am not some "gun's are bad mmmk" kind of activist, but I don't understand how the people on the other side of the fence can not see that there can't be some kind of improvement.
Yes, the idea that government derives its only just powers from the consent of the governed, and that the people always retain the absolute right to replace a government that refuses to accept that reality with another one more cognizant of its proper place in the grand scheme of things, is a concept that's proven rather difficult for some people to grasp. As one of our founders once said, ""If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home from us in peace. We seek not your counsel, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you; May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.""Maybe, coming from the city and from a country where people aren't so diehard patriotic, I just don't understand that kind of mind-set that those from the US have about the Constitution and guns. I guess I never will.
One certainly hopes so.I'm sure nowadays in the US it really wouldn't make a difference anyways, the guns are already out there.