And cons ution boy disappears...
Coming to to grips with the fact that the founding fathers supported gun control sent him into an emotional tailspin![]()
I love the way that emotional comment is a thorn in your side. It really struck a chord with you.
Nevertheless, what about the white man who was prevented from owning a gun if he hadn't pledged allegiance to the rebellion?
edit: you can also address the specifics in BDs post above.
And cons ution boy disappears...
Coming to to grips with the fact that the founding fathers supported gun control sent him into an emotional tailspin![]()
What new law would have stopped this guy from obtaining a firearm?
It's intellectually dishonest to paint this as "gun control" when Loyalists also had their land seized, were often thrown in jail, publicly humiliated, tarred and feathered during the war and were deported to Canada after the war. This law had much more to do with punishing those who did not support the Revolution than any concerted effort to reduce gun ownership.
At one point, there was even a federal mandate requiring every free able-bodied white male between the ages of 18 to 45 to own a gun, which was later expanded to able-bodied men of every race between the ages of 18 and 54 - pretty much the exact opposite of the type of gun law that emotional lib s like you would ever advocate for, since you're scared less of firearms. A government as concerned with curtailing the ownership of guns as you paint them to be certainly wouldn't be forcibly arming such a significant number of its cons uents. Of course, you ignore this because it doesn't fit your narrative.
Last edited by Clipper Nation; 06-23-2015 at 12:16 AM.
Myth 1: As long as we're reaching all the way back to colonial America, it's important to note that the Revolution really started when the British banned imports of firearms and gunpowder in 1774 and then began confiscating them the following year. Clearly the colonists were far more married to their gun rights than your cherry-picked portrayal would suggest, since they literally started a war about it.
Myth 2: The Founders specifically stated at the time that individual self-defense was just as important of a rationale for gun ownership as "watering the tree of liberty."
Speaking of disappearing, notice how the lib s disappear whenever you ask this question. Coming to grips with the fact that murderers won't follow any law they come up with must be sending them into an emotional tailspin.
tons of people say we should outlaw guns. most not in a position to do anything though.
Where and how did the shooter obtain the gun?
How long will we let conservatives write off Republican racism as a coincidence?
The New York Times reported this morning that Earl Holt—the leader of the white supremacist group, the Council of Conservative Citizens, that apparently had so much influence over Dylann Roof—donated thousands of dollars to various Republican politicians.
Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and Rick Santorum all responded by trying to put some distance there, by either returning the money or giving it to charity.That’s all a good first step, but it’s also frustrating and telling that this is only being done after nine people lost their lives to a racist ideologue with a gun.
It’s not like no one knew before about the Council of Conservative Citizens and their deep and very often successful desire to get involved in Republican politics.
Trent Lott, who also had to apologize in 2002 for basically suggesting that this country would have been better off if we’d kept segregation, addressed the group at their 1998 convention.
But such as how it is when it comes to
racism and Republican politics: The benefit of the doubt will be endlessly extended, no matter how unwarranted and no matter how many times Republicans show they don’t deserve it.
These candidates will give the money back and that will be that, the end of the story. There won’t be any deeper discussion about why open and overt racists—ones that are defending Dylann Roof’s paranoid racist manifesto, by the way—just so happen to give money and lobbying attention to Republicans.
We will all be expected to act like that’s a remarkable coincidence and there’s nothing racist about conservatism per se and the only reason that overt racists feel at home with Republicans is ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.
That whole “it’s a remarkable coincidence!” bull is all over the debate over the Confederate flag that has cropped back up as everyone remembers that South Carolina hangs that flag and has all these laws against taking it down. We’re expected to pretend that it’s a coincidence that the same people who find that flag attractive also vote for policies that exacerbate racial disparities.
We’re supposed to ascribe the fact that the South rebelled and the fact that the South had legal slavery to being a remarkable coincidence, but daring suggest that the two had something to do with each other causes temper tantrums and meltdowns.
The Confederate flag actually receded from public view for decades after the war, but only returned as a symbol of the pro-segregation forces when desegregation efforts started up in earnest, but this, too, is supposed to be treated like a remarkable coincidence and not evidence that the flag is a racist symbol.
The flag that hangs over the South Carolina capitol was only put there in 1961. You could be honest and say that was in direct response to desegregation efforts, but obviously, conservatives would like you to believe, yet again, that this is a remarkable coincidence. Totally unrelated.
Well, I refuse.
There’s a reason overt racists are drawn to the Republican party, and that’s because they sense the covert racism of it. It’s not hard to see why: Republican policies are tailor made at exacerbating racial disparities, something I also refuse to see as a remarkable coincidence, but prefer instead to see as design.
Also not a coincidence is the fact that four out of five conservative justices on the Supreme Court ruled in favor of those who think Texas owes it to them to make Confederate flag license plates.
This is the conservative side of the bench, may I remind you. Conservative, authoritarian types should, by nature, be less supportive of free speech and more supportive of authority in disputes like this.
In fact, the conservatives on the court are generally that way, ruling against free speech in situations where someone speaks out in favor of marijuana.
Nor would you think it “conservative” to support the idea of treason or rebellion.
But if it’s all done in service of the message that black Americans are lesser than white Americans, by remarkable coincidence, the conservatives suddenly become free speech absolutists.
It’s too many remarkable coincidences. I do think we have a ing pattern. And giving a little money back isn’t going to change that.
http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/how-...e+Raw+Story%29
no. What is intellectually dishonest is conflating the "need" for the Militia Acts of 1792, when America did not have a standing army with the "need" to own as many and any types of ing guns as I want because it's my cons ional right as a mother in American.Baldeagle
I do like the way you've cribbed my emotional shtick. That one really hit home![]()
Strict enforcement of penalty on people who sell any guns that are used to commit any sort of crime might help deter some of this. Of course a lot would need to go into place to make that work...none of which is politically feasible.
Yes it's a good idea to compare car accidents and degenerates who deliberately open fire on people.
Brilliant
Is a drunk that kills someone with a car any less culpable than a drunk that kills someone with a gun?
drunks that kill people with a car are sent to jail and never allowed to drive again. a person getting drunk and getting into an accident isn't in any way comparable to somebody opening fire onto a crowd of people. that is an asinine comparison considering how many people NEED a car to get to work because they live in an area with no mass transportation available. quit being intellectually dishonest.
equating auto deaths with gun deaths, and car regulation with gun regulation, are undeniable symptoms of gun fellatin derangement syndrome. Prognosis is negative.
People who shoot people with a gun are also sent to jail
If you show me a drunk driver who got the death penalty and was executed in the states for drunk driving, I will buy your argument.
Miss. police: Open carry laws kept us from arresting shotgun-toting man who terrorized Walmart shoppers
The police chief of Gulfport, Mississippi, expressed his frustration with his state’s open carry laws after a man strolling through a Walmart Sunday night menaced shoppers by loading and racking s s into his shotgun, causing police to dispatch a SWAT team and evacuate the store.According to Police Chief Leonard Papania, he would have arrested the unidentified man and his companion if he could for stretching the city’s police forces thin while panicked Walmart employees huddled in a safe room, WMC reported.
“If I were in a situation where I’m in the store shopping with my family and I see an individual loading a 12 gauge, and racking it, I’m not coming to the conclusion this is good,” said Papania. “While the actions of these two men are sanctioned by state laws, what they did negatively impacted our community.”
According to police they received multiple calls about the men who had possibly done the same thing at a local Winn-Dixie, forcing police to divert officers to the Walmart to form a perimeter as the SWAT entered and searched the store. By the time police had arrived, the two men had left.
Using surveillance video police were able to track the men down and speak with them, but due to Mississippi’s open carry laws, the chief said his hands were tied after conferring with city attorneys.
“In our nation there continues to be violent events. Many of these tragic events start to unfold with very similar cir stances where individuals exhibit peculiar actions with firearms around large crowds,” he explained. “The actions of these two men could have inadvertently led to a very violent misunderstanding.”
Without mentioning it, the police chief may have been alluding to the shooting of John Crawford in an Ohio Walmart last August, after police gunned the African-American man down while he held a toy rifle.
Asked whether he believed police overreacted to the situation, the police chief said absolutely not.
“You don’t have to look hard in today’s media and see demonstrations of very violent acts. And if I had been in the store last night watching someone load a shotgun and rack it — that’s not normal. And that’s usually precipitates a violent act.
http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/miss...e+Raw+Story%29
Thanks, NRA/GOA/gun-industry and their Repug s !
note that the black guy was shot dead IMMEDIATELY, but the white redneck gun fellators all walked away to terrorize another day.
Last edited by boutons_deux; 06-23-2015 at 01:12 PM.
kkk busts being removed. confederate flag blasted to the past.
blacks are finally free!!! hallelujah!
Come and take them right guy, you rabid communist dog
There's a pe ion for BMW and Adidas, lured to SC by tax breaks and "right to work for less" laws, to take a position against the stars n bars.
And also, no insurance would provide coverage for willful misconduct, gross negligence, or intentional acts. So coverage would be limited to those injuries (and whatever de minimus property damage) caused by a truly negligent act. How many times has someone, who has no health insurance, been injured by a truly negligent operation of a firearm?
Short of a complete ban on firearms, it's hard to see how more stringent restrictions would do anything to stop incidents like this. If anything, stronger restrictions incentivize a stronger black market for guns.
maybe we'll learn eventually how and where this mass murderer obtained his gun(s).
Thanks for reinforcing my point.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)