It Was Done on Tobacco. It Can Be Done on Guns.

The second amendment is needed more today than any other time in American history. Why should we allow that right to be taken away?

What is it needed for? Are the Redcoats coming? Is there a commie in the woodpile? The National Guard is the only close analog to the "Well regulated militia" existing today. The founders didn't trust a large standing army, but the fact is, we have had a large standing army since WW1.

It's needed to protect our children from scumbags like the ones populating usmb these days....saying retarded things like "if you don't give up your guns we will take your children from you".

I sent Beretta a message earlier when I first saw that post and told him the same thing.. Very frightening people in this country who threaten to go to a school and take your kids away if you don't give up your Constitutional rights. FASCISM plain and simple.. Leftists are the true threat to this nation.I've said it many times.
 
I agree. They see our children as expendable, and as pawns.

And they always have. They want to reduce the population of the earth, and they are going to start with children, if they get the chance.
 
What we have is this...progressives don't want to protect our children in schools, because the people who are a menace are those who legally own firearms...and the risk to the children is greater if they are defended than it is if they just submit to execution by random nutjobs who know they will not be stopped if they walk into a school and start mowing people down.

They tell us that we are paranoid for thinking that our children are at risk in schools....

Then they threaten to walk into the schools and forcibly remove our children if we don't hand over our guns.

They are the enemy, and they want our kids. Dead, alive, it's all the same.
 
It's indicative of a sad state of affairs, when constitutional rights are reduced to nothing more than "a lobby."
 
By Dennis A. Henigan

The American people can overcome the gun lobby, but only if we confront, and expose, three myths that have long dominated the gun debate and given the politicians a ready excuse for inaction.

First, we must not let the opponents of reform get away with the empty bromide that "guns don't kill people, people kill people." Does any rational person really believe that the Sandy Hook killer could have murdered twenty-seven people in minutes with a knife or a baseball bat? Guns enable people to kill, more effectively and efficiently than any other widely available weapon.

Second, we must challenge the idea that no law can prevent violent people from getting guns. This canard is refuted by the experience of every other western industrialized nation. Their violent crime rates are comparable to ours. But their homicide rates are exponentially lower because their strong gun laws make it harder for violent individuals to get guns.

Third, we must not accept the notion that our Constitution condemns us to the continued slaughter of our children. It is true that the Supreme Court has expanded gun rights in recent years; it is equally true that the Court has insisted that the right allows for reasonable restrictions. In his opinion in the Heller Second Amendment case, Justice Scalia listed restrictions on "dangerous and unusual weapons" among the kinds of gun laws that are still "presumptively lawful." Assault weapons that fire scores of rounds without reloading surely are "dangerous and unusual."

The tobacco control movement overcame some equally powerful mythology to fundamentally alter American attitudes toward tobacco products. The tobacco industry's effort to sow confusion and uncertainty about the link between smoking and disease eventually was exposed as a fraud. The entrenched view that smoking was simply a bad habit that individuals can choose to break was destroyed by evidence that the tobacco companies knew that nicotine was powerfully addictive and engineered their cigarettes to ensure that people got hooked and stayed hooked. The assumption that smoking harms only the smoker was contradicted by the overwhelming evidence of the danger of second-hand smoke.

Once these myths were exposed, attitudes changed, policies changed and we started saving countless lives. Since youth smoking peaked in the mid-1990s, smoking rates have fallen by about three-fourths among 8th graders, two-thirds among 10th graders and half among 12th graders. A sea change has occurred on the tobacco issue.

Similarly fundamental change can come to the gun issue as well. The myths about gun control, however, still have a hold on too many of our political leaders and their constituents. We will hear them repeated again and again in the coming weeks of intense debate. Every time we hear them, we must respond and we must persuade.

There is too much at stake to be silent.

More: Dennis A. Henigan: It Was Done on Tobacco. It Can Be Done on Guns

The hopes and dreams of the democrat party....

Then we go after conservative talk show hosts....
Then the radio/TV networks that put them on the air.
Big cars,big engines...use lots of gas...they will be denied...
want to own a big house..lots of rooms.Nope that's a BIG carbon footprint..also denied.

You will serve the State.
The state will decide what you need and what you may have. :eusa_clap:
 
By Dennis A. Henigan

The American people can overcome the gun lobby, but only if we confront, and expose, three myths that have long dominated the gun debate and given the politicians a ready excuse for inaction.

First, we must not let the opponents of reform get away with the empty bromide that "guns don't kill people, people kill people." Does any rational person really believe that the Sandy Hook killer could have murdered twenty-seven people in minutes with a knife or a baseball bat? Guns enable people to kill, more effectively and efficiently than any other widely available weapon.

Second, we must challenge the idea that no law can prevent violent people from getting guns. This canard is refuted by the experience of every other western industrialized nation. Their violent crime rates are comparable to ours. But their homicide rates are exponentially lower because their strong gun laws make it harder for violent individuals to get guns.

Third, we must not accept the notion that our Constitution condemns us to the continued slaughter of our children. It is true that the Supreme Court has expanded gun rights in recent years; it is equally true that the Court has insisted that the right allows for reasonable restrictions. In his opinion in the Heller Second Amendment case, Justice Scalia listed restrictions on "dangerous and unusual weapons" among the kinds of gun laws that are still "presumptively lawful." Assault weapons that fire scores of rounds without reloading surely are "dangerous and unusual."

The tobacco control movement overcame some equally powerful mythology to fundamentally alter American attitudes toward tobacco products. The tobacco industry's effort to sow confusion and uncertainty about the link between smoking and disease eventually was exposed as a fraud. The entrenched view that smoking was simply a bad habit that individuals can choose to break was destroyed by evidence that the tobacco companies knew that nicotine was powerfully addictive and engineered their cigarettes to ensure that people got hooked and stayed hooked. The assumption that smoking harms only the smoker was contradicted by the overwhelming evidence of the danger of second-hand smoke.

Once these myths were exposed, attitudes changed, policies changed and we started saving countless lives. Since youth smoking peaked in the mid-1990s, smoking rates have fallen by about three-fourths among 8th graders, two-thirds among 10th graders and half among 12th graders. A sea change has occurred on the tobacco issue.

Similarly fundamental change can come to the gun issue as well. The myths about gun control, however, still have a hold on too many of our political leaders and their constituents. We will hear them repeated again and again in the coming weeks of intense debate. Every time we hear them, we must respond and we must persuade.

There is too much at stake to be silent.

More: Dennis A. Henigan: It Was Done on Tobacco. It Can Be Done on Guns

Funny, I'm reading this tripe while smoking a Macanudo 1868 that I bought online...... this guy is an imbecile.
 
It find it really hypocritical that leftist support abortion, which has killed almost a million children over the past three years at Planned Parenthood alone, yet they want to ban guns.
 

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