This makes me fearful for Obama's safety. Some of these second amendment nuts are fucked up.
First thing I thought about when the announcement was made. The security at the inauguration is going to be insane.
This makes me fearful for Obama's safety. Some of these second amendment nuts are fucked up.
We've got to movie to biometrics. Lock a gun down to use by its owner, through magnetics, thumbprints, proximity devices, whatever. Dedicated people would be able to circumvent the tech, but it could make these incidents where a gun is stolen, accidentally fired, etc less likely.So how does this stop a kid from going to get his moms ar 15 variant and shooting a school? Proposal is pointless to criminals and only hinders law abdiing citizens. Throwing money at a lost cause part of the problem onstead of going for the root.
introduce background checks on all gun sales; currently private sales and some sales at gun shows, constituting about 40% of the national total, are exempt
pass a ban on possession and sale of armour-piercing bullets
introduce harsher penalties for gun-traffickers, especially unlicensed dealers who buy arms for criminals
Yeah. Scary. Won't somebody please think of the slightly depressed and anxious gun owners?
Regardless of one's position on gun bans, I feel like these are the motions that should be passed at bare minimum.
So how does this stop a kid from going to get his moms ar 15 variant and shooting a school? Proposal is pointless to criminals and only hinders law abdiing citizens. Throwing money at a lost cause part of the problem onstead of going for the root.
So when is Eric Holder going to jail then?
We've got to movie to biometrics. Lock a gun down to use by its owner, through magnetics, thumbprints, proximity devices, whatever.
I'm figuring this tech would just be used to toggle the safety, right? That doesn't seem like too much extra effort to ask. And if its something like a magnetic wristband or other proximity device you wouldn't even need additional steps.They've actually tried this with police firearms in order to prevent a firearm from being taken from a police officer and used against him or her. Unfortunately, the tech is very fiddly and people decided they would rather have a reliable gun rather than have yet another button to press or something else to fuck up in a high-stress situation.
Wife called me and gave me the green light to go buy the 2 guns I've been waiting to buy, thanks Biden!
note : They're pistols, not AR's or anything. And I'm in CA where we already have 10 round magazine laws, back ground checks and long waiting periods. Regardless, I'm not telling my wife that.
I'm pretty disappointed. The only people this will hurt are honest gun owners. I do support all the mental health and background check stuff but the 10 round mag limit is ridiculous.
So we should take away rights to own stuff in the hopes that it might stop something bad from happening?
But I posted the exact language that stipulates what is considered an armor-piercing bullet. That sentence you just typed is an adequate paraphrase but the law is already more specific. To be more clear, it already allows for exceptions that fit the description you just offered. S
So you're saying some new legislation could alter the existing definition to make it more restrictive, to include certain types of rounds that weren't banned before. While I agree of course that's possible, I don't understand how any value judgement can be exercised before seeing the actual provisions.
A spokesperson for the Violence Policy Group in that article says: "There is no rationale that would justify allowing the sale of any handgun ammunition that can pierce body armor and endanger first responders," she told Sunlight.
I'm inclined to agree, at least theoretically. Where am I going wrong?
The mag limit doesn't stand a chance of passing, so don't worry.I'm pretty disappointed. The only people this will hurt are honest gun owners. I do support all the mental health and background check stuff but the 10 round mag limit is ridiculous.
First thing I thought about when the announcement was made. The security at the inauguration is going to be insane.
Thats... scary?
who's gonna be the one to jump on that 3-5 second reload window? nobody.
I'm pretty disappointed. The only people this will hurt are honest gun owners. I do support all the mental health and background check stuff but the 10 round mag limit is ridiculous.
Your wife sounds infromed.
Yep. Down to 7 here in NY. It'll be 5 next year.
Don't you know anything about Obama? He produces the moderate position on his own then puts it forward, so that people coming from a more extreme view like yourself can pull it away from the moderate position.Oh gawd, don't you guys know anything about negotiations?
You never start negotiations at moderate stage - always aim for the highest possible thing so you can cut fluff things (like AWB and mag limit) to get the actual things that's really helpful.
Yep. Down to 7 here in NY. It'll be 5 next year.
Kind of scary to see this sort of ignorance on GAF. There are different levels of mental disorders. A person who witnesses a traumatic incident, ends up going through counceling and gets on anxiety meds for a few weeks and completely gets over it shouldn't have their second amendment rights taken away. Nor should someone who takes anxiety medications for panic attacks for fear of flying.
who's gonna be the one to jump on that 3-5 second reload window? nobody.
I'm pretty disappointed. The only people this will hurt are honest gun owners. I do support all the mental health and background check stuff but the 10 round mag limit is ridiculous.
Obama being gunned down will only bolster his proposals and strengthen the need for gun control. America loves a martyr.
I just want to take a minute to thank you for approaching this rationally and not locking yourself into a worst-case-scenario mindset. It's weird because I just had the exact same experience with someone else, another issue on another thread earlier today. I really appreciate it, far too often debates go the other way.I just realized I've talked myself into being upset about a possible law that may or may not even pass. I will say that I agree with the current law, fully, and only hope this new mess isn't used as leverage to ban all FMJ or high velocity rounds. You're right we don't have the final wording of the new law and it would be pointless for me argue against something I only pessimistically assume to exist.
The point of suppression fire is to keep firing so other people don't get a chance to advance or retaliate. A couple seconds may not be much but they're a vital window for a response.who's gonna be the one to jump on that 3-5 second reload window? nobody.
They tried a few different "toggles"... from a fingerprint scanner in the grip, to a ring/bracelet with an RFID, and even to voice activation. All had their issues and compromised the reliability of the firearm, which was a risk no police department (nor their officers) were willing to take.I'm figuring this tech would just be used to toggle the safety, right? That doesn't seem like too much extra effort to ask.
There are a lot of departments looking into this sort of thing for things like locking down the shotguns/rifles they keep in the car (to keep someone from just walking by and taking it) and the laptops that sit in the cruisers.The best application of biometrics is probably in locking whatever container the weapons are safely stored in.
Yep. Down to 7 here in NY. It'll be 5 next year.
What most people fail to realise is, for example, that in Europe (Austria in my example) it is actually nearly as easy to get a gun as in America. But you have to register and perform a psychological evaluation every 5 years. Also you need to prove that you can store the weapons in a secure place and that there is no police file on you. Wait for 30 days and the weapon is your's.
What I am trying to show is, even though it's easy to get a gun if you really want one, for most people it's simply too much hassle and petty criminals don't dare to register a gun that could somehow be traced back to them. So in the end, the circulation of guns reduces significantly simply because people are lazy.
I think a national register would help tremendously as well as background / psychological evalutions that are performed in certain intervalls. For all the gun owners that actually don't really care about guns, this will become too much of a hassle to care. That's my view on these matters.
We've got to movie to biometrics. Lock a gun down to use by its owner, through magnetics, thumbprints, proximity devices, whatever. Dedicated people would be able to circumvent the tech, but it could make these incidents where a gun is stolen, accidentally fired, etc less likely.
Just like a club doesn't stop car theft, it can deter it.
Serious question, what pressing reason do you have to personally own more than 10 round mags? Not talking about controlled use at a gun range, but personally owning?
This is a very reasonable and pragmatic position. I think I like you quite a bit, GungHo.They tried a few different "toggles"... from a fingerprint scanner in the grip, to a ring/bracelet with an RFID, and even to voice activation. All had their issues and compromised the reliability of the firearm, which was a risk no police department (nor their officers) were willing to take.
In theory, if everything worked right, I don't disagree that it wouldn't seem like too much to ask. But, I can tell you as a former soldier that I'd have lost my shit if my bosses asked me to go into combat with a weapon that may or may not fire if I needed it to fire. There's enough shit to deal with. I realize that comparing being a soldier to being a civilian LEO or just a person trying to defend themselves is a big stretch as far as the number of things that could go wrong, but it does help me understand the bigger picture that reliabilty plays in an officer's confidence in their personal safety.
All the more reason to keep development going ;PThey tried a few different "toggles"... from a fingerprint scanner in the grip, to a ring/bracelet with an RFID, and even to voice activation. All had their issues and compromised the reliability of the firearm, which was a risk no police department (nor their officers) were willing to take.
In theory, if everything worked right, I don't disagree that it wouldn't seem like too much to ask. But, I can tell you as a former soldier that I'd have lost my shit if my bosses asked me to go into combat with a weapon that may or may not fire if I needed it to fire. There's enough shit to deal with. I realize that comparing being a soldier to being a civilian LEO or just a person trying to defend themselves is a big stretch as far as the number of things that could go wrong, but it does help me understand the bigger picture that reliabilty plays in an officer's confidence in their personal safety.
Wouldn't you say that the people who want to commit a mass shooting are pretty dedicated?
Is there any actual evidence that they're dedicated? Seems like most grabbed whatever was handy. They weren't jumping in with full auto weapons etc.
I suppose I might be able to be convinced that such an exemption is worthwhile. What is a handgun containing rifle-caliber ammunition used for that a hunting rifle would not be better-suited for?
As Hannity put it on his show yesterday, "this woman in her attic needed to fire 5 times; what if she had needed to fire 5 more?"You know, in case 11 government officials break your door down and force you to bow to king obama.
Sorry, by lever guns you mean bolt-action, right?The only practical examples I can think of are lever guns that are chambered for magnum rounds like .357 and .44. These guns wouldn't be on the list anyway, but definitely could be used for hunting.
Serious question, what pressing reason do you have to personally own more than 10 round mags? Not talking about controlled use at a gun range, but personally owning?
Because it's pointless regulation. Mass killings would still happen even if only revolvers were legal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_de_Janeiro_school_shooting
The only reason a 10 rd limit would be a win is if people considered it a first step in banning all guns.
Economy is one very basic reason. Buying two 30-round magazines instead of buying six ten-round magazines. After about 60 rounds, you are likely to have to take a break, change out targets, wait for the prairie dogs/rats/other varmints to pop back up out of their holes ect, and you can go through the tedious operation of reloading the magazines at that time.
I'm honestly curious as to why, for honest gun owners, this is a problem. Is it just the annoyance of having to reload more? Do you feel less safe with 3 fewer bullets? If you don't feel like it will do anything to curb violence ("reloading is easy and fast"), then why would it affect your shooting?
The only practical examples I can think of are lever guns that are chambered for magnum rounds like .357 and .44. These guns wouldn't be on the list anyway, but definitely could be used for hunting.
Like no-knock warrants.You know, in case 11 government officials break your door down and force you to bow to king obama.
I'm honestly curious as to why, for honest gun owners, this is a problem. Is it just the annoyance of having to reload more? Do you feel less safe with 3 fewer bullets? If you don't feel like it will do anything to curb violence ("reloading is easy and fast"), then why would it affect your shooting?