Sorry to disappoint, not a sock puppet. Reasonable assumption though in a thread like this. Came here to lurk for the recruiting info, tried to avoid the political crab buckets, but got pulled in post-Uvalde and made an account.
Unfortunately, I'm sure you're right that it's never going to be solved, but I think there's a lot more we can do to make it better. Especially when we're doing so little now.
Before I get started Drayer, I'm operating from the perspective I mentioned of respecting guns and treating them seriously. I don't want to make life more difficult for mentally healthy, responsible gun owners, I want to reinforce that culture of responsible ownership. I do want to look at changes that can make the acquisition process much more difficult for people who shouldn't have guns. I'm also looking at this as preventing gun deaths of all kinds - mass shootings, suicides (gun attempts are much more likely to be fatal), gang violence, etc.
I understand most transactions already have background checks. Pushing to all transactions makes red flag laws more effective and makes it more onerous for the bad guys to get a gun. If we need to make the process easier in some circumstances - accommodations for transfer to a family member or something similar, some TSA Pre-check equivalent, then that's fine. Absence of universal background checks allows for a freer flow of guns to people who shouldn't have them.
Largely agreed. I think we agree that the devil is in the details of a temporary order in a time of acute crisis. Hopefully more research can better identify risk factors and support refinement of processes.
I appreciate the burden for the purchaser for this one, though I actually think it takes a burden off dealers to identify and deal with someone who may be acting impulsively. Waiting periods may not do much for mass shootings, but the limited research we have indicates waiting periods have a weak correlation to decreased suicides overall and a moderate correlation to decreased firearm suicides.
I can't connect the dots with you on this one and honestly, this feels like it borders on paranoia.
In my world, this is a list maintained by FBI that local law enforcement can query when they have a serial number for a crime gun. I don't see any utility of publishing a list of gun owners. I think all republicans and most democrats would rightfully see publishing such a list as an invasion of privacy. Is there any precedent for government seizing anything (outside of eminent domain and civil forfeiture on traffic stops) that was not preceded by a crime of some significance or court order? Providing police the ability to trace crime guns back to their source to cut off the supply is the definition of law enforcement and consequences in my book.
Can you elaborate? Why can't we associate extra responsibility with owning a 100 round drum mag? What parts of my original proposal were specifically objectionable?
original proposal: "I could see something like legal to have at your home or at a range, restrictions on how they can be transported, illegal in public spaces. Carveouts for feral hog hunters, South African armored car drivers, etc. as appropriate."
I'm confident 95% of dealers are great and nothing needs to change for them. All I said was we don't have much recent data and current laws are not always being appropriately enforced.
Link 1 Link 2
I agree catch and release needs to be refined so we don't have criminals out doing exactly what they were just doing. At the same time, we also don't need to imprison someone for 3+ months because they can't make $5,000 bail for a misdemeanor, causing them to lose their job, get behind on bills, and fall down a deep economic hole with few legal ways out, all when they haven't even been found guilty of anything yet.
I was ready to agree with you on firearm enhancements, but saw a few sources of info indicating research on enhancements was mixed at best (
including this as an example). I am still moderately in favor it as another bullet point reinforcing responsible gun ownership, but could be convinced to go away from it.
I'm interested in hearing what you think a crime bill should entail. I'm not sure how a crime bill stops many, if any, mass shootings or does anything for people who shoot themselves in a moment of mental crisis, but I certainly have gaps in my knowledge I'd be happy to have filled.