KyAllroad (Jeremy) said:In reply to Toebra :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Elementary_School_shooting_(Stockton)
I had to look it up, I was a senior in high school at the time and the news cycle wasn’t as immersive then as it is today.
And for for those who missed my meaning earlier as to “why have such a weapon vs some other type?” For me it’s a question of faith in the system. As long as the system works and the grocery stores stay stocked, the electricity stays on, and most everyone is generally healthy, the black rifle stays in the closet and doesn’t have a job. But if the excrement ever hits the fan in a big way, the food trucks stop rolling/plague/grid collapse/ whatever, I have the tool for the job of protecting me and mine. It’s a better than average tool for that job which ingests a common caliber that can be scavenged from many places and users.
It appears that you get it.
The school shooting in Stockton back in 1989 led to California passing all sorts of laws to restrict magazine capacity, what sort of weapons you can purchase and so forth. Thing is, guy that did it bought everything in Oregon, so the laws would not have done a thing to prevent it. Most recent event, kid used a revolver and a shotgun.
People are looking at the wrong thing when they talk about banning assault weapons.
z31maniac said:Legitimate question:
What are you guys doing that you don't feel safe without a pistol or rifle nearby? I grew up in Tulsa, look up the violent crime per capita rates, working at QTs in ROUGH neighborhoods.................like we piled up cased of beer to hide the bullet holes, or one store I worked at where a manager was taken into the cooler and beaten to death with a baseball bat.I was actually robbed at knife point in one of less dangerous stores.
I'm genuinely curious.
That is not a legitimate question. It is a strawman
FIYAPOWA said:As far as rights go, no American citizen has to prove a need to exercise their 2nd Amendment right. It's an enumerated right, and I am not required to justify myself to anyone, especially the government.
This is really the crux of it.
The biggest problem with all this is people are concerned about mass shootings, feel like they should do something about it, and they go do something that has no chance of helping, and may actually make things worse. It would maybe be different if the people trying to restrict them had at least a rudimentary understanding about it, but they don't, so they come up with silly, ineffective laws that would not have helped if they were in place before whatever event happened most recently to spur the discussion again.
Surprising this thread has lived this long