Gun control is illogical and here's why.

Ray9

Diamond Member
Jul 19, 2016
2,707
4,467
1,970
We are living in a time where stupid is the new smart. If you are able to make the people stupid enough, you can take away all their rights. Example: Guns are inanimate objects that can be dangerous if misused. So, in order to live in a safe world some would take away all the guns from people even if they are not misusing them. The safety of the many trumps the individual right of the citizen for self-defense or so it goes.

An analogy: A car is an inanimate object that can be dangerous if misused. Alcohol related deaths with automobiles are skyrocketing in the US for various reasons. So, would it not make sense to take away all the cars from average citizens that do not misuse them in order to guarantee the safety of the many by taking away the right of the one to drive a car?

The logic is the same:




 
Last edited:
Good analogy I use myself.
People never recognize the slippery slope they embark on until they are on their ass heading for a cliff.
Knives & hammers are other inanimate objects that can be used for deadly ends. Do we ban those as well?
Guns are just a boogeyman proggies are conditioned to hate & fear
 
IDK. That I cannot own an M1 Abrams is probably why some of my neighbors and relatives are still alive.
 
Sadly, the anti's don't deal in logic. Sadder yet is that their zeal could be used for constructive efforts. As it is it's a wasted, divisive, agenda.
 
We have common sense gun laws here in Massachusetts and nobody here is less free than those of you who live among the killing fields of regular mass shootings. I would argue we are more free than you are. Civilians don’t need assault weapons and large capacity magazines, civilians don’t need immediate access to firearms. If you can’t wait a few weeks and successfully navigate an in person conversation with a local law enforcement officer in order to obtain a license to purchase a firearm, you don’t need guns in your possession right now and maybe never. Don’t like the decision? Take it to a judge. Nobody is being denied due process here.
 
We have common sense gun laws here in Massachusetts and nobody here is less free than those of you who live among the killing fields of regular mass shootings. I would argue we are more free than you are. Civilians don’t need assault weapons and large capacity magazines, civilians don’t need immediate access to firearms. If you can’t wait a few weeks and successfully navigate an in person conversation with a local law enforcement officer in order to obtain a license to purchase a firearm, you don’t need guns in your possession right now and maybe never. Don’t like the decision? Take it to a judge. Nobody is being denied due process here.
Tell us more about Massachusetts. Maybe we can benefit from your ideas.
 
This article is from 2018 but discusses the most relevant laws we enjoy here:

Are Massachusetts Gun Laws a Model for the Country?​

The state has the lowest gun death rate in the country. Congress is considering a bill that would incentivize other states to copy its firearm policies.​

U.S. Sen. Ed Markey introduced a bill this month that would incentivize other states to adopt his state's gun laws, which advocates say have helped make Massachusetts the home of the lowest gun death rate in the country.

In 2016, 3.4 people per 100,000 died of gun violence in Massachusetts, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By comparison, in slightly less-populous Tennessee, the firearms death rate was nearly five times that, at 17.3 per 100,000.

The legislation comes in the wake of the Parkland, Fla., shooting, which killed 17 students and teachers and fueled nationwide calls for gun control. This past weekend, more than a million Americans participated in "March for Our Lives" protests around the country.


Markey's bill would allocate $20 million in Department of Justice grants each year for the next five years to states that adopt laws like those in Massachusetts.

Most well-known is the state's ban on assault weapons, signed in 2004 by GOP Gov. Mitt Romney, who is currently running for U.S. Senate. The state also requires gun dealers to conduct background checks, mandates private sellers to verify that buyers have a valid gun license, bans “mentally defective” people from owning firearms, and requires weapons to be unloaded and locked away when not in use.

Those laws are far from common, but six states and D.C. ban assault weapons, as well as threaten criminal penalties for storing guns improperly around children. Five states let families and police remove guns from people determined to be at risk of harming themselves or others, going even further than Massachusetts' "mentally defective" statute.


Last year, Massachusetts became the first state to ban rapid-firing bump stocks after the Las Vegas shooting. At least 15 states are currently considering similar bans, and several others have tightened up restrictions already in place.

But the state's gun policy touted most by Markey is one not often mentioned in debates on gun control at the national level. It gives police chiefs the authority to deny, suspend or revoke licenses for handguns and long guns.

“The involvement of police chiefs in the licensing process is key. We can’t overstate that enough,” Markey said at a press conference about his bill earlier this month.

Gun policy experts say this part of the law has been instrumental in keeping guns out of the hands of dangerous people.

“There are lots of cases where the police will go to a house multiple times for domestic violence, but there will be no charges or restraining order or anything,” says Jack McDevitt, who helped draft the state's gun laws as the former chair of the Massachusetts Committee to Reduce Gun Violence. “That person is not federally prohibited, but the police know this is a dangerous person. So they could turn his license application down.”

That doesn't mean police are rejecting gun applications left and right. McDevitt says 97 percent of gun license applicants in the state receive their license, suggesting that police aren't being overly restrictive about who can own a gun.

Still, gun rights groups have adamantly opposed the police-approval law in Massachusetts, arguing that it can result in law-abiding citizens losing their right to arm themselves.

Federal courts, however, struck down a challenge to the state law that claimed it violated the Second Amendment.

The law is a fairly unique one. Currently, only five other states and the District of Columbia have enacted a law allowing local law enforcement to approve or deny gun licenses -- California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois and New Jersey.

The bill introduced by Markey, a Democrat, doesn't have great chances for passage. The Republican-controlled Congress is unlikely to advance a bill that touts some of the strictest gun regulations in the country. The legislation will, however, bring light to Massachusetts' gun laws at a time when they are being debated in statehouses across the country.

But while Massachusetts' gun laws have had Republican support, it remains to be seen if many of these policies will be politically feasible in more conservative states. Republican politicians in Massachusetts have historically been more open to gun regulations. Charlie Baker, for instance, was the first Republican governor to join the States for Gun Safety, a multistate coalition meant to reduce gun violence and enact stricter gun regulations after the Parkland shooting. He has also come out in favor of a national ban on assault weapons.

Gun laws are not the only factor in Massachusetts’ low gun death rate. Gun ownership in the state, for instance, is low. And some states with even more restrictive gun laws -- like California -- have higher rates of gun death.

But McDevitt says the numbers speak for themselves.

“Massachusetts went from being the third-safest state to the safest state after the 2014 law,” he says. “We believe other states could benefit from this."
 
Laws cannot prevent people from doing anything - they can only be used to punish people after they act.
Laws enacted with the purpose to prevent people from breaking other laws will fail; the restrictions included in these laws are thus unnecessary and ineffective.
Thus, the illogic of gun control.
 
Laws cannot prevent people from doing anything - they can only be used to punish people after they act.
Laws enacted with the purpose to prevent people from breaking other laws will fail; the restrictions included in these laws are thus unnecessary and ineffective.
Thus, the illogic of gun control.
Silly assertion. The Uvalde shooter would not have been able to purchase two assault weapons and 375 bullets and high capacity magazines on his 18th birthday if Texas had the same laws as Massachusetts. The weapons and high capacity magazines wouldn’t have been available for legal purchase. He wouldn’t have qualified for a license because law enforcement would have known the information now emerging, that he had threatened a school shooting years ago and was involved in the juvenile justice system for some time.

If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.
 
Silly assertion. The Uvalde shooter would not have been able to purchase two assault weapons and 375 bullets and high capacity magazines on his 18th birthday if Texas had the same laws as Massachusetts.
False.
He could have bought a MA-compliant 'assault weapon' with the exact same functionality as the weapons he used.
The magazines and ammunition are both available on-line w/o restriction - never min the state had to prove a magazine in question was not possessed in-state prior to the ban.
If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.
Proven false., above.
MA law in his regard mirrors the 1994 AWB, which would have done nothing to prevent this shooting.

Thus: laws cannot prevent people from doing anything.
 
Last edited:
This article is from 2018 but discusses the most relevant laws we enjoy here:
I like the idea of denying gun ownership to persons involved in repeat domestic abuse cases where violence against another is involved.
 
We have common sense gun laws here in Massachusetts and nobody here is less free than those of you who live among the killing fields of regular mass shootings. I would argue we are more free than you are. Civilians don’t need assault weapons and large capacity magazines, civilians don’t need immediate access to firearms. If you can’t wait a few weeks and successfully navigate an in person conversation with a local law enforcement officer in order to obtain a license to purchase a firearm, you don’t need guns in your possession right now and maybe never. Don’t like the decision? Take it to a judge. Nobody is being denied due process here.

Bullshit.

Massachusetts is a "may issue" state, which means they can reject an application for an LTC (licesne to carry) for any reason whatsoever.

Any state that isn't a "shall issue" state is in a position to deny due process...
 
We are living in a time where stupid is the new smart. If you are able to make the people stupid enough, you can take away all their rights. Example: Guns are inanimate objects that can be dangerous if misused. So, in order to live in a safe world some would take away all the guns from people even if they are not misusing them. The safety of the many trumps the individual right of the citizen for self-defense or so it goes.

An analogy: A car is an inanimate object that can be dangerous if misused. Alcohol related deaths with automobiles are skyrocketing in the US for various reasons. So, would it not make sense to take away all the cars from average citizens that do not misuse them in order to guarantee the safety of the many by taking away the right of the one to drive a car?

The logic is the same:




Very few are talking about taking away ALL guns.
 
Bullshit.

Massachusetts is a "may issue" state, which means they can reject an application for an LTC (licesne to carry) for any reason whatsoever.

Any state that isn't a "shall issue" state is in a position to deny due process...
Totally untrue, due process and right of appeal before a court is part of the statute. And no, a lawyer isn’t required for that appeal.

Only ammosexuals would have issues with our gun laws. I really wish such people didn’t suffer from impotence in the absence of a firearm, so the rest of the country - 70-90% support the kind of laws we have here - could live in peace.
 
Silly assertion. The Uvalde shooter would not have been able to purchase two assault weapons and 375 bullets and high capacity magazines on his 18th birthday if Texas had the same laws as Massachusetts. The weapons and high capacity magazines wouldn’t have been available for legal purchase. He wouldn’t have qualified for a license because law enforcement would have known the information now emerging, that he had threatened a school shooting years ago and was involved in the juvenile justice system for some time.

If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.

What is an ''assault weapon''

''If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.''... because I say so.
 
We are living in a time where stupid is the new smart. If you are able to make the people stupid enough, you can take away all their rights. Example: Guns are inanimate objects that can be dangerous if misused. So, in order to live in a safe world some would take away all the guns from people even if they are not misusing them. The safety of the many trumps the individual right of the citizen for self-defense or so it goes.

An analogy: A car is an inanimate object that can be dangerous if misused. Alcohol related deaths with automobiles are skyrocketing in the US for various reasons. So, would it not make sense to take away all the cars from average citizens that do not misuse them in order to guarantee the safety of the many by taking away the right of the one to drive a car?

The logic is the same:





Thing is, with cars, you need to prove you can drive to be able to drive. They have a purpose which is more than just killing people. They get people places. When people misuse their cars, they get stopped from using their cars.

And, the US's death rate on the roads is HIGH. Compared to the UK for example, it's very high.

The UK has a road death rate of 2.9 per 100,000 people.
It has a murder rate of 1.2 per 100,000 people.

That's a road death + murder rate of 4.1

The US has a murder rate of 6.3 and a road death rate of 12.4

Kind of what happens when you have politicians who couldn't care less.
 
Silly assertion. The Uvalde shooter would not have been able to purchase two assault weapons and 375 bullets and high capacity magazines on his 18th birthday if Texas had the same laws as Massachusetts. The weapons and high capacity magazines wouldn’t have been available for legal purchase. He wouldn’t have qualified for a license because law enforcement would have known the information now emerging, that he had threatened a school shooting years ago and was involved in the juvenile justice system for some time.

If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.

Wrong.
Due to the War on Drugs, anyone, any age, and instantly buy an illegal gun as long as they are willing to pay a little more.
And since the goal is suicide, the cost really does not matter at all.

The first school shooting, going back to Klebolt and Harris, were too young to buy guns legally.
Made no difference.
 
Silly assertion. The Uvalde shooter would not have been able to purchase two assault weapons and 375 bullets and high capacity magazines on his 18th birthday if Texas had the same laws as Massachusetts. The weapons and high capacity magazines wouldn’t have been available for legal purchase. He wouldn’t have qualified for a license because law enforcement would have known the information now emerging, that he had threatened a school shooting years ago and was involved in the juvenile justice system for some time.

If the gun laws of Massachusetts were the laws of the nation, there is no question that mass shootings would decline significantly.

Nonsense.
The gun laws in Massachusetts reduces legal purchases only, and those intent on murder/suicide are not at all deterred from an illegal purchase.
So as long as we have the War on Drugs, then any sort of gun control is absurd and completely ineffective.
 

New Topics

Forum List

Back
Top