Ever since Columbine these little ******** know that they'll go out famous if they take their problems out on 20 or so schoolmates instead of just jumping off a chair in their own damn room. Little **** will have his name all over every TV channel within hours.I will never understand this. What has changed in 35 years since I was a senior in high school? Pretty sure I know the answer.
Saddest, most baffling thing I can fathom. We won't get behind holding our representatives accountable to pass checks and tests with some actual teeth to require people to show they have two scraps of sense and mental stability to rub together.
Instead we send our kids to school to do drills for when somebody starts shooting up the place. It isn't hard to see the manufacturers have no interest in stopping it. Every time a big one happens they're sure to trot Wayne out to remind everyone they'd better buy some more of their own like that's some kind of solution.
Turned my stomach the day my 5 year old told me they did lockdown drills in school.
If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.Sincere question, what legislation do you believe would have stopped this? And what could a firearm manufacturer do to prevent it? It's admittedly a loaded question coming from me since I am a firearms enthusiast, but I think talking about ideas is in fact productive. I start work shortly, but hope this thread is still around when I get off.
Saddest, most baffling thing I can fathom. We won't get behind holding our representatives accountable to pass checks and tests with some actual teeth to require people to show they have two scraps of sense and mental stability to rub together.
Instead we send our kids to school to do drills for when somebody starts shooting up the place. It isn't hard to see the manufacturers have no interest in stopping it. Every time a big one happens they're sure to trot Wayne out to remind everyone they'd better buy some more of their own like that's some kind of solution.
Turned my stomach the day my 5 year old told me they did lockdown drills in school.
If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.
It's such a lax culture that acts like guns are a crucial way of life and yet shows them no fundamental respect by treating them like toys and leaving them lying around in cars, night stands, etc. Then people act surprised when some kid gets his dad or uncle's guns and shoots up a school.
Along with that would have to be aggressive buybacks and sweeps to remove illegal arms from circulation. The reason none of the laws currently in place accomplish anything is because you're never more than a few hours' drive from totally circumventing those laws.
I used to shoot when I lived in NE, it's fun. I would probably own and maybe even hunt if I lived out in the country. But this business of having it be harder by far to get a driver's license than it is to buy something made for the purpose of killing living things...are we serious with all that? Why does anyone who calls himself a "responsible gun owner" stand up for the notion that any idiot should be able to walk into a shop and buy five of whatever puts a grin on his face?
Maybe...I mean...I break some laws...but I sure won't break others.Maybe they should make these schools "gun free" zones? We all know that more laws work since criminals are known for following the law, right?
They need to go after the owner of the guns that these kids apparently have access to. And actually enforcing current gun laws would be a good start. The noise about "doing something about guns" is just hysteria until those 2 easily attainable things happen. I am a gun-toting 2nd amendment loving redneck, and thinks it's sad they have no interest in enforcing current laws.Sincere question, what legislation do you believe would have stopped this? And what could a firearm manufacturer do to prevent it? It's admittedly a loaded question coming from me since I am a firearms enthusiast, but I think talking about ideas is in fact productive. I start work shortly, but hope this thread is still around when I get off.
If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.
It's such a lax culture that acts like guns are a crucial way of life and yet shows them no fundamental respect by treating them like toys and leaving them lying around in cars, night stands, etc. Then people act surprised when some kid gets his dad or uncle's guns and shoots up a school.
Along with that would have to be aggressive buybacks and sweeps to remove illegal arms from circulation. The reason none of the laws currently in place accomplish anything is because you're never more than a few hours' drive from totally circumventing those laws.
I used to shoot when I lived in NE, it's fun. I would probably own and maybe even hunt if I lived out in the country. But this business of having it be harder by far to get a driver's license than it is to buy something made for the purpose of killing living things...are we serious with all that? Why does anyone who calls himself a "responsible gun owner" stand up for the notion that any idiot should be able to walk into a shop and buy five of whatever puts a grin on his face?
How is it harder to get a drivers license?If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.
It's such a lax culture that acts like guns are a crucial way of life and yet shows them no fundamental respect by treating them like toys and leaving them lying around in cars, night stands, etc. Then people act surprised when some kid gets his dad or uncle's guns and shoots up a school.
Along with that would have to be aggressive buybacks and sweeps to remove illegal arms from circulation. The reason none of the laws currently in place accomplish anything is because you're never more than a few hours' drive from totally circumventing those laws.
I used to shoot when I lived in NE, it's fun. I would probably own and maybe even hunt if I lived out in the country. But this business of having it be harder by far to get a driver's license than it is to buy something made for the purpose of killing living things...are we serious with all that? Why does anyone who calls himself a "responsible gun owner" stand up for the notion that any idiot should be able to walk into a shop and buy five of whatever puts a grin on his face?
The written portion is a *****! How many feet can you park from a hydrant? Come on!How is it harder to get a drivers license?
Apparently for some it is.The written portion is a *****! How many feet can you park from a hydrant? Come on!
I must have missed where I had to have an original birth certificate, go through a federal background check, and get fingerprinted to carry around my drivers license.
But by all means, let's go the hysterical route.
18th school shooting so far this year.
Christ sake what is our country coming too.
What is it?I will never understand this. What has changed in 35 years since I was a senior in high school? Pretty sure I know the answer.
I hope the same for you, especially to not get mowed down by a truck-wielding psycho in a gun-free countryHA! You all discuss this like LIFE is of valued importance and that tragedy's can be avoided. Our society stopped caring about these issues a long time ago. Some stupid $@%& about unalienable rights written well over 200 yrs ago that people actually got sold (& bought) into...pathetic. Don't believe me? I'll gladly start listing all of the popular BS "take your eye of the ball" counterarguments that get spewed before any current tragedy is even completed....yes, that common rhetoric is successful and has brought a tremendous amount of apathy, and normalization, towards this issue. IMO Gun violence isn't even considered a tragedy today (maybe 10+yrs ago but now it doesn't even register...like hearing about someone in a car accident, etc.).
Happy V Day and I hope that anyone you care about never gets in a lethal situation that is completely unnecessary.
I'm all for laws on the books being enforced. But they rarely are. Therein lies the problem, and everyone that has a scary gun gets labeled as crazy. It's almost laughable how little people think about gun-owners. 99.9% of us support the current laws, but get incredibly frustrated when they are not enforced.18 school shootings in 43 calendar days of 2018. I hate guns so them being banned outright would not impact me at all. Having said that, an outright ban would not work nor be fair to the responsible gun owners.
A crazy idea I have is to offer gun buybacks while offering way more than the gun is worth. Combine that with making it extremely difficult to get a gun going forward and maybe it's a starting point? I don't know. People way smarter than me haven't figured out the proper balance so doubt I have the answers.
Time for one more shot...into his head.Shooter is in custody.
I'm all for laws on the books being enforced. But they rarely are. Therein lies the problem, and everyone that has a scary gun gets labeled as crazy. It's almost laughable how little people think about gun-owners. 99.9% of us support the current laws, but get incredibly frustrated when they are not enforced.
Maybe they should make these schools "gun free" zones? We all know that more laws work since criminals are known for following the law, right?
If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.
It's such a lax culture that acts like guns are a crucial way of life and yet shows them no fundamental respect by treating them like toys and leaving them lying around in cars, night stands, etc. Then people act surprised when some kid gets his dad or uncle's guns and shoots up a school.
Along with that would have to be aggressive buybacks and sweeps to remove illegal arms from circulation. The reason none of the laws currently in place accomplish anything is because you're never more than a few hours' drive from totally circumventing those laws.
I used to shoot when I lived in NE, it's fun. I would probably own and maybe even hunt if I lived out in the country. But this business of having it be harder by far to get a driver's license than it is to buy something made for the purpose of killing living things...are we serious with all that? Why does anyone who calls himself a "responsible gun owner" stand up for the notion that any idiot should be able to walk into a shop and buy five of whatever puts a grin on his face?
If I got to design the legislation, I'd make it hard as hell to prove you're qualified to own a firearm and there would be limits on the type and number you could own. Long guns only. If you can't hunt what you're hunting or stop a break in with a shotgun or a bolt-action, I guess it just wasn't meant to be. That's the short version. You'd need to demonstrate a lot of aptitude and respect for your weapon to be licensed to own it.