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normiss

Here's an interesting approach to gun rights.

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yes, but to drive, you have to prove that you are competent to drive, you have to be educated in driving and then tested in driving.....albeit minimal



And to carry a gun you have to prove you are competent, be educated, and are tested.....albeit minimally

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For guns, there is no such test



False. To carry you must pass a class.

Both guns and cars have no requirement to OWN them, only use them.

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I am all for a requirement to own and use a gun, the user must have taken and passed gun handling, gun safety programs. Along with recurrent training to maintain that rating.



To carry a gun you must do all of that in most States.

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Last year, Arizona become the third state to make it legal for adults to carry a concealed weapon without getting training and a background check. In 2009, the big change was allowing armed people in bars and restaurants, if they're not drinking alcohol and the establishments haven't posted signs against it."

Oh yes, untrained people without any background check carrying in bars. Really helpful.



This was not in a bar.... and there have been no cases of a gun fight in a bar caused by this... So your argument has no data and is just hot air.

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You just insult people that disagree with you.

When you ask people questions, you demand an answer.
When people ask you questions... you tell them to do a search. Hypocrisy at its best.

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Do you think the current state of the laws that allow disturbed people like Cho and Loughner easily to obtain weapons



Cho and Loughner both had mental issues that were known about. In both cases the STATE and the SCHOOL failed in reporting.

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Do you think the current state of the laws that allow disturbed people like Cho and Loughner easily to obtain weapons



Cho and Loughner both had mental issues that were known about. In both cases the STATE and the SCHOOL failed in reporting.



Cho, probably. Loughner, not likely. 'Guy acting weird' isn't a reportable event. They're unqualified to say more than that.

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Cho, probably. Loughner, not likely. 'Guy acting weird' isn't a reportable event. They're unqualified to say more than that.



Cho had been sent to an eval... But that info was not allowed to be reported to the State.

Loughner was told he could not come back to school without a letter from a shrink since he was deemed a "danger to himself and others"

So both had documented mental issues. The VA law was changed after Cho (with the support of the NRA BTW).

There was hard data that Cho had an issue... Less with Loughner. But there was some data available.

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yes, but to drive, you have to prove that you are competent to drive, you have to be educated in driving and then tested in driving.....albeit minimal



And to carry a gun you have to prove you are competent, be educated, and are tested.....albeit minimally

Quote

For guns, there is no such test



False. To carry you must pass a class.




Both guns and cars have no requirement to OWN them, only use them.



There are states where no such requirements exist.
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I am all for a requirement to own and use a gun, the user must have taken and passed gun handling, gun safety programs. Along with recurrent training to maintain that rating.



To carry a gun you must do all of that in most States.



There are states where no such requirements exist.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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maybe I should buy or just steal a plane, I've got the skill to take off and fly, point it at something, jump out, then they can talk about banning planes

joking of course but to even suggest banning guns in the US is a nonstarter
Give one city to the thugs so they can all live together. I vote for Chicago where they have strict gun laws.

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Cho, probably. Loughner, not likely. 'Guy acting weird' isn't a reportable event. They're unqualified to say more than that.



Cho had been sent to an eval... But that info was not allowed to be reported to the State.

Loughner was told he could not come back to school without a letter from a shrink since he was deemed a "danger to himself and others"

So both had documented mental issues. The VA law was changed after Cho (with the support of the NRA BTW).

There was hard data that Cho had an issue... Less with Loughner. But there was some data available.



Well, you're stretching reality to include those evaluators and school personnel as qualified to deem someone as having mental issues and issue certifications to that effect.

Personal opinions, even yours and mine, don't count even if the subject truly does have "mental issues".

Who gets to put the weirdo in for true psychiatric evaluation? His professor? Me? You? Who gets to say, "I think this guy is a nutter. Put him through the evaluation process to see if he's truly a "mental case" that should be banned from participating in our free society."

As far as I know, only a judge can do that. Correct me if I'm wrong but I think even Florida's Baker Act needs an eventual judge's sign-off.
My reality and yours are quite different.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239

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Cho, probably. Loughner, not likely. 'Guy acting weird' isn't a reportable event. They're unqualified to say more than that.



Cho had been sent to an eval... But that info was not allowed to be reported to the State.

Loughner was told he could not come back to school without a letter from a shrink since he was deemed a "danger to himself and others"

So both had documented mental issues.



One was documented by a professional. The other was not. The school can only say that they were unsure, and weren't inviting him back until a professional evaluation was given.

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Cho, probably. Loughner, not likely. 'Guy acting weird' isn't a reportable event. They're unqualified to say more than that.



Cho had been sent to an eval... But that info was not allowed to be reported to the State.



Sent to an eval isn't a reportable event.

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Loughner was told he could not come back to school without a letter from a shrink since he was deemed a "danger to himself and others"



Who deemed him a danger to himself or others? A judge can say that all he wants, but it has to be confirmed by a psych eval before it can be reported.
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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There are states where no such requirements exist.



So? In every State there is a requirement to go through a background check to buy a gun from a dealer... no State has the requirement for a car.

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There are states where no such requirements exist.



That is why I said MOST.

But like normal you are unable to debate on the ISSUE and instead throw a strawman.

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Well, you're stretching reality to include those evaluators and school personnel as qualified to deem someone as having mental issues and issue certifications to that effect.



No, I am saying they could have reported him to people who could have made that call. This is why I said "There was hard data that Cho had an issue... Less with Loughner. But there was some data available."

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Who gets to say, "I think this guy is a nutter. Put him through the evaluation process to see if he's truly a "mental case" that should be banned from participating in our free society."



I would think a Judge after discussing the issue with a Dr. that is qualified to make that kind of call.

My point is that we had such data on Cho and it was not reported. And that Loughner had indications that could (maybe should) have led to further investigations.

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BTW, still waiting for you to answer these:

1. This was not in a bar.... and there have been no cases of a gun fight in a bar caused by this... So your argument has no data and is just hot air.

2. So is the right to self defense.... Ask Blackstone and the SC

Failure to provide an answer will be taken as your inability to provide one.

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Sent to an eval isn't a reportable event.



Cho's case it was since it was ordered by a JUDGE.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/21/us/21guns.html

"After an investigation, a Virginia special justice declared Cho mentally ill and ordered him to attend treatment."

And if you have read the report about the incident it freely admits there were failures in the reporting and the NRA and the VPC joined together to close those loopholes.

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Sent to an eval isn't a reportable event.



Cho's case it was since it was ordered by a JUDGE.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/21/us/21guns.html

"After an investigation, a Virginia special justice declared Cho mentally ill and ordered him to attend treatment."

And if you have read the report about the incident it freely admits there were failures in the reporting and the NRA and the VPC joined together to close those loopholes.



Huge changes to Virginia law followed from the Cho case. Not just related to guns and reporting, either. Also relaxed teh standards to have somebody committed, created better tracking of treatment, etc.
"What if there were no hypothetical questions?"

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Sent to an eval isn't a reportable event.



Cho's case it was since it was ordered by a JUDGE.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/21/us/21guns.html

"After an investigation, a Virginia special justice declared Cho mentally ill and ordered him to attend treatment."



That's not "committed to a mental institution", sorry.

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And if you have read the report about the incident it freely admits there were failures in the reporting and the NRA and the VPC joined together to close those loopholes.



States making sure they report to NICS is a good thing - so long as they ALSO report clearances.
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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There are states where no such requirements exist.



So? In every State there is a requirement to go through a background check to buy a gun from a dealer... no State has the requirement for a car.

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There are states where no such requirements exist.



That is why I said MOST.

But like normal you are unable to debate on the ISSUE and instead throw a strawman.



It's not a strawman, it's a fact that anyone can bypass a background check by going to one of 33 states.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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BTW, still waiting for you to answer these:

1. This was not in a bar.... and there have been no cases of a gun fight in a bar caused by this... So your argument has no data and is just hot air.

2. So is the right to self defense.... Ask Blackstone and the SC

Failure to provide an answer will be taken as your inability to provide one.



Who do you think you are, Emperor of the Universe?
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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>It's not a "bypass" when it's not required.

Sort of the definition of a bypass. If there's a bypass around a city, it means you're not required to pass through it.



It's the same lame argument that mnealtx uses. Trouble is, we all know it's lame.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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