ColtWalker1847
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2017
Hey I moved this conversation over here because there is a pretty strong but unspoken "don't shit up A&H with gun sperging" rule.
There hasn't been a call for a blanket ban since, ever, really. It's always been these small "reasonable" regulations and laws.
I would just like to point out something here you are misrepresenting. Doing mental health studies about cops or crazy people or violence is not anything that is against the rules for the CDC to do. What is being pushed is the CDC conducting studies on guns, gun violence, and gun owners and making recommendations for regulations. That's the ATF's job. If we want to do a study about firearms we should give the job to them. They are the experts in those areas. Not the CDC.
Why are you bringing up something nobody is opposed to? Did someone convince you that gun owners or advocate groups were? They aren't.
No, not really. It's pretty much the same stuff that has been pushed for the last 15-20 years after they got their asses handed to them after they ramrodded through the late 80's early 90's legislation that everyone hated. They changed their tune and bringing back the AWB, registries, mag limitations, ending the "gun show loophole", along with vague suggestions about banning crazy people from having guns has been their standard fare since the last decade at least.The older activists wanted to ban handguns, conceal carry, shotguns, and just about everything else. This group is just using a more incremental approach.
There hasn't been a call for a blanket ban since, ever, really. It's always been these small "reasonable" regulations and laws.
That's a law enforcement thing. They keep their own stats. They have their own training and procedures too. There are entire fields of study dedicated to this. What the hell is the Centers for Disease Control going to tell them that they don't already know? Shit, how the hell are they qualified to even speak about police matters?Personally, the CDC should keep stats. If anything about law enforcement and their lethal engagement stats. The fact that we consider intervention by the SWAT team to be almost a lethal given should concern us. Germany's GSG9 has only had 5 uses of its firearms in its 40 yr history. US law enforcement has proportionally had a lot more deadly outcomes for often less dangerous encounters.
Crazy people can't own firearms legally in the US. The issue here is reporting requirements and database failures. Cruz, for example, had a ton of red flags that should have gotten him barred but the system failed. Putting the CDC on the case is not going to fix that.If recent events have taught us anything, we do have an issue at the very least of the police and crazy people being unable to self regulate themselves in regards to firearms. Yes, the CDC should look into this at the very least. Having more research on this and developing more non-lethal methods for the police to employ can't be a bad thing.
I would just like to point out something here you are misrepresenting. Doing mental health studies about cops or crazy people or violence is not anything that is against the rules for the CDC to do. What is being pushed is the CDC conducting studies on guns, gun violence, and gun owners and making recommendations for regulations. That's the ATF's job. If we want to do a study about firearms we should give the job to them. They are the experts in those areas. Not the CDC.
Exactly. Nobody disagrees here. Not you. Not me. Not the NRA. Not the Brady Campaign. Well, I guess some privacy groups might be peeved. But nobody involved in the gun control debate disagrees.Mental health in the US is laughable. No one disagrees with this and doctors should report these cases more often to law-enforcement.
Why are you bringing up something nobody is opposed to? Did someone convince you that gun owners or advocate groups were? They aren't.
I disagree. I think laying low and torpedoing bad policy and legislation is exactly what they should do. They aren't saying no to reasonable legislation. They are saying no to recycled proposed legislation with gigantic flaws in them that won't do a thing to fix the problem of violence thus inviting the next batch of "common-sense" solutions the next time it happens. The aforementioned small "reasonable" regulations and laws that they have been parading around for decades.Yes, gun control activists will blow everything out of proportion; but being the guys to say no to reasonable things, publically attacking survivors, concocting crazed conspiracy theories, or just trying to change the subject will only lose in the long and short run.