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PoliGAF 2013 |OT1| Never mind, Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

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Of course. We all know how Reagan one fine day went to his room, crafted the amnesty bill with his bare hands, and passed it in both chambers of congress.
I heard for his budget agreement with Tip O'Neill he actually wrote the entire thing himself and used dark magic to animate O'Neill's hand long enough to sign his name on the document.
 
TacticalFox88 said:
PoliGAF 2013 OT2 No Background Checks required for Membership

That is going to make me sad every time I read it. :-(

Why don't gun people want other gun people to be responsible? I just don't get it.
 
That is going to make me sad every time I read it. :-(

Why don't gun people want other gun people to be responsible? I just don't get it.
Because they're worried if background checks are put into place they won't pass them for whatever reason.

Or it's filtered through to them that background checks means gubmint gonna come take your guns.
 
Background checks -> federal gun registry -> confiscation -> TYRANNY.

Of course the bill contain EXPLICIT language saying there would be no gun registry.


It is a fucking coalition of paranoid gun nuts and gun manufacturers that don't want to lose a single sale even if it it is to a criminal or a crazy.

And to add extra humiliation . . . so many of these guns are not even American. It is foreign gun manufacturers selling guns in the USA that they would not be able to sell so easily in their own countries. Fuck them. Can't we even pull some protectionist shit and at least keep the blood money profits in the USA? Nope. We kill ourselves and send a pile of profits abroad.
 
My mind still can't wrap around how people believe in 2013 that any rebellion wouldn't be put down in a few hours, if not less.

And not only that, it is the wrong people arming themselves. It is not like Dennis Kucinich is going to take over and demand you to turn in your Bibles and guns. If anything, it is blacks, gays, Muslims, and atheists that should be arming themselves in the very unlikely event that some far-far-far-right politician gets control and goes crazy.
 
Gun rights advocates or Republicans in general?

yes


And not only that, it is the wrong people arming themselves. It is not like Dennis Kucinich is going to take over and demand you to turn in your Bibles and guns. If anything, it is blacks, gays, Muslims, and atheists that should be arming themselves in the very unlikely event that some far-far-far-right politician gets control and goes crazy.


but then that person will just make sure that they pass some kind of "white christians" only gun law.
 

Link

The Autumn Wind
Of course the bill contain EXPLICIT language saying there would be no gun registry.


It is a fucking coalition of paranoid gun nuts and gun manufacturers that don't want to lose a single sale even if it it is to a criminal or a crazy.

And to add extra humiliation . . . so many of these guns are not even American. It is foreign gun manufacturers selling guns in the USA that they would not be able to sell so easily in their own countries. Fuck them. Can't we even pull some protectionist shit and at least keep the blood money profits in the USA? Nope. We kill ourselves and send a pile of profits abroad.
There's a fantastic Facebook image macro in there.
 

Zeus Molecules

illegal immigrants are stealing our air
And not only that, it is the wrong people arming themselves. It is not like Dennis Kucinich is going to take over and demand you to turn in your Bibles and guns. If anything, it is blacks, gays, Muslims, and atheists that should be arming themselves in the very unlikely event that some far-far-far-right politician gets control and goes crazy.

Is a Bush is running again?
 

GhaleonEB

Member
Well that's why we still need guns. That will be the best retirement vehicle for so many Americans.


Yeah, I'm in a bad mood. :-(

more guns does lead to a higher suicide rate

This is what I was going to say. A pretty big share of the gun deaths in the US is suicide. And suicide is a rising cause of death for the elderly. I predict the two will mingle a great deal in the coming years. ;(
 
This is what I was going to say. A pretty big share of the gun deaths in the US is suicide. And suicide is a rising cause of death for the elderly. I predict the two will mingle a great deal in the coming years. ;(
Well . . . I'm of two minds on this. I'm a supporter of assisted-suicide . . . if people are old and want to go, let them go. But guns seem a crude way to do it.
 

Piecake

Member
Well . . . I'm of two minds on this. I'm a supporter of assisted-suicide . . . if people are old and want to go, let them go. But guns seem a crude way to do it.

The problem with suicide, especially youth suicide, is that its usually an impulse decision. The majority arent suicidal or have been thinking about it for months. In fact, there was a study that asked young people who survived serious attempts and they said that the majority of them only thought about killing themselves for about 5 minutes.

Problem with guns is that you can't go back once you pull the trigger. There is a reason why cutting only has a 1% suicide death rate while guns is at like 80%. People feel that pain and then decide, oh wait, this is a stupid fucking decision. I want to live. And even if they go through with it, like taking pills or cutting and survive, they can get the help they need. bullet to the brain? youre dead.

And I think assisted suicide is quite a bit different than suicide. To me, assisted suicide is someone who is in so much pain that they simply cannot go on living anymore. Youre not using a gun in that situation (well, i guess you could, but why the hell would you tell someone to shoot you to kill you?)

Youre not asking someone to kill you based on depression or some spur of the moment impulse. Youre asking because you can't bear the phyiscal pain of living anymore.
 

GhaleonEB

Member
Well . . . I'm of two minds on this. I'm a supporter of assisted-suicide . . . if people are old and want to go, let them go. But guns seem a crude way to do it.

I support it as well, but a rise in suicides because an entire generation is going to retire into deep poverty is quite troubling to me. And we're busy working to undercut what little they will have.

(Looking forward to that Frontline piece.)
 
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/means-matter/

One huge aspect that's very much ignored.

Also that veterans kill themselves at a greater rate then the general population.
Yeah, there was some Senator who was conflicted on the mental health issue of background checks. He didn't think it was a good idea to prevent people who went to the VA for PTSD to be barred from having guns. Now he has a point in that it would be a shame if someone decided to not get treatment because they would be worried they could not get a gun. But on the other hand . . . if they really have PTSD, not having a gun might be a really good thing.

Tough situation.

I think it was Jon Tester who brought this up. And it is definitely a good fucking point that is hard to resolve.
 

Aaron

Member
And not only that, it is the wrong people arming themselves. It is not like Dennis Kucinich is going to take over and demand you to turn in your Bibles and guns. If anything, it is blacks, gays, Muslims, and atheists that should be arming themselves in the very unlikely event that some far-far-far-right politician gets control and goes crazy.
Don't expect logic from people who demand guns to protect themselves from the government, and cry outrage when defense cuts are proposed. Not really fair for them either when the world around them actively discourages critical thinking skills.
 

Socreges

Banned
I see a lot of garbage from politicians that is frustrating, mind-numbing, deceptive, etc. Normally I'm able to laugh it off. But for some reason this made me legitimately angry:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/...i-Parents-remind-your-kids-not-to-kill-people

“There is no doubt that we need to do more to curb the senseless acts of violence that continue to occur in this country,” Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY), an opponent of the underlining gun bill, said. “One of the things we need are parents, parents to be more careful and more repetitive at telling their kids that it is not right to kill people."
I'm not sure what was unique about this, but I really want to punch him in his fucking face.
 
Sooooo what's up. I hope I don't get annoying with this over the next week, but I'll be coming here to help me research some information. In one of my political science classes I'm taking, called the American Legislature, we'll be having a model Congress for the last four days of class. We're only doing the House because they're aren't enough people to do both chambers. We also had to take up a role of a certain legislator. I'm Representative Schakowsky.

Looks like we'll be able to do about four bills a day. I have two here that I may need help figuring out. I apologize if I'm annoying with this! Hopefully we can get some good discussion here as well.

The first bill is the most curious. It's from the dude who's legislator is Justin Amash (ugh). His bill says it amends the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (a bill I had never heard of until now, go 111th!) by reducing the weight ratio of powdered cocaine to crack cocaine needed to trigger certain federal penalties from 18:1 to 2:1. Thing is, I've read the FSA of 2010 (it's only four pages long), and the section of the Controlled Substances Act it amends. Basically, the FSA of 2010 increased the amount of cocaine a person can have. Which, I think is good, because the more you're allowed to carry on hand, the less people will be convicted for having cocaine. However, I see nothing, either in the CSA or the FSA of 2010, about an 18:1 weight ratio. Am I missing it? And regardless, decreasing the weight ratio will just make it easier to convict people, won't it?

The second bill is something I'm even more confused about. This one, at the expense of some federal dollars if they do not do so otherwise, says that any state that requires a voter ID must issue a free photo identification. Now, isn't this a little redundant because in any state that does require photo ID, aren't those photo IDs already free? Additionally, isn't the problem with any voter ID is that it makes it harder to vote, whether or not you have to pay for it?
 
It extends a federal penalty for states failing to provide voter IDs to every voter, where the state might not have had a penalty before for non-compliance. (That's my take)

If voter ID is inevitable, which I think it is, at least the feds are doing their best to ensure that the secret purpose of Voter ID (being discriminatory) is thwarted.
 
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