Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/12/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Absollutely perfect, Jon. Phil Forrest On Sat, 15 Dec 2012 09:59:17 -0800 "jon.streeter" <jon.streeter at cox.net> wrote: > Some very sensible ideas. > > This is an issue that will never be settled. > > The biggest threat to the lives of people the world over and > throughout history has been and remains their own governments. > Governments are composed of people. Nothing guarantees those people > will comport themselves nobly and in the best interests of the people > over whom they inevitably hold power. > > Tyrants cannot remain in power over an armed citizenry. All > tyrannies and genocides and democides (death by government, cf Prof. > Rummel) have begun by disarming the citizenry. All disarming of the > citizenry has begun with regulation, which is to say, gun control. > > Regulation generally begins with registration and usually involves > taxes and licenses and rules on who gets to own what. In the US it > began with bans on gun ownership by freed slaves. > > Typical approaches to gun control can seem quite reasonable: > restrictions or bans on only certain kinds of weapons (such as > large-caliber or high-capacity or inexpensive or very expensive or > military-in-appearance or very large or very small) in a divide-and > conquer strategy. > > In the 20th century, governments murdered six times as many of their > own citizens (or subjects) as were killed in all the wars in that > century. All of these democides began with gun confiscation which > began with gun control. > > Of course, that can't happen "here." > England confiscated most firearms a few years ago. Crime and gun > crime have risen. A UN report stated that England is now the most > likely place in Western Europe to get mugged. > > Typically the "debate" is characterized by much heat and little > light. John Lott, Harvard economist, has written a densely technical > book regarding his study of every county in the US for a period, > initially, of 18 years, "More Guns, Less Crime," in which he claims > to show that violent crime rates fall when citizens are permitted by > local laws to carry concealed weapons. The response by the > opposition, for example, Alan Dershowitz, has been simply to call his > entire study "junk science." > > As I say, this issue will never be settled. Governments everywhere > will continue to expand gun control. Gun control advocates are now > hard at work crafting a worldwide ban on gun ownership by private > citizens ti be put into effect by a treaty which, it's claimed, will > supercede the US Constitution. > > The tragedy in the school shooting took about twenty lives. In the > 20th century, governments took over 270 million lives, lives of their > own citizens whom they had first disarmed. > > Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone > > ----- Reply message ----- > From: "Mark Kronquist" <mak at teleport.com> > To: "Leica Users Group" <lug at leica-users.org> > Subject: [Leica] OT Gun Violence > Date: Fri, Dec 14, 2012 8:43 pm > > > Gun violence. Time for some sensible legislation > > Many of you know my day job, some don't. I am "in the industry" as a > Vice President for the largest manufacturer of firearms in the > region. Our products are far more tightly controlled and not likely > to be involved in one of these incidents. > > First, my heart goes out to the victims of these senseless tragedies. > > I realize that the AR-15 platform used in Oregon was stolen and the > Bushmaster used in CT was illegal in CT. Not sure about CT handgun > laws and whether the Glock and Sig P226 were CT legal or not. Nor do > I know if the weapons were stolen, purchased legally before the 1994 > ban or whatnot. These are minor issues. Criminals will break the law. > > We cannot be Pollyanna's and magically make guns or the Second > Amendment disappear. Face it guns are a part of our society...like it > or not. Will these few ideas end gun crime? No. If a criminal or an > mentally ill person is going to use a gun to commit a crime, they > will find a gun...just maybe these ideas will make it a bit harder > and discourage the opportunist. > > 1. What we can do is get rid of the crazy patchwork of gun laws that > ban a gun in one county or city or state or the purchase of that > gun...for example, the Gifford's shooter in Arizona could not have > legally purchased the gun used int he killings in say, a far left, > liberal state called oh...Idaho...or at least three dozen other > states. Why can a mentally ill (sorry to offend those who don't like > labels but call it otheradvantaged, challenged or whatever the > shooter was not of right mind) purchase a hand gun in Arizona and not > in Idaho? Why not have ONE NATIONAL STANDARD FOR RIFLES? HANDGUNS? > CONCEALED CARRY? States rights folks will be up in arms but, I think > the 2nd Amendment makes this a Federal issue, not a state one...we > did it at the FEDERAL LEVEL with the 1934 act banning machine guns > and the 1968 act banning Saturday Night Specials. > > 2. I just got home from a long day and opened a beer. We pay a social > welfare tax on beer. We pay a social welfare tax on cigarettes. We > pay a social welfare tax on lottery tickets. On chewing tobacco on > candy in some places. Right now any 18 year old can walk into any > BiMart, Fred Meyer, K-Mart, WalMart or wherever and lay down 15-16 > bucks for 500 rounds of .22 ammo. Yes I know that .22 is not often > used in mass murders and that there is a 15% excise tax on new ammo > but this tax goes to the general fund, not to offsetting the toll > caused by gun violence in our society. So I grant those arguments and > ask is a penny or a nickel a round for rifle ammo going to hurt > hunters that badly? Heck double it and put the other half to hunting > habitat restoration through Rocky Mountain Elk or Ducks Unlimited. > > 3. Scary guns and pretty guns are just as deadly in the wrong hands. > My French 49-56 MAS Battle Rifle holds only 10 rounds per clip and > has a beautiful, wood stock and lacks a pistol grip, muzzle > compensator or other cosmetics that were banned in the US from > 1994-2004. Yet in the wrong hands it is far more deadly than > a .223/5.56 (the most common M-16 AR-15 platform round)...and the MAS > makes it easy as easy to change a magazine in about 2 > seconds...unclip, drop, clip, rerack shoot. Capacity limits are > do-good fiction. 10 rounds (the 1994-2004 maximum) are just as deadly > as 30 and changing any mag takes just a second or two...in a mall or > school filled with innocents it's not going to matter. > > 4. Driver's license. Motorcycle License. Food Server's Food Handling > Permit, Alcohol Server's License. On and on and on. Gun. Walk in to a > gun shop slap down ten bucks for a basic background check and we give > you the keys to an Indy Car...Yes a Libertarians' nightmare. Why not > REQUIRE a national standard handgun safety class to buy a handgun > (pass the class once, you receive a license as counterfeit proof as > currency (will a criminal copy it? Sure. Will a 15 year old gang > banger (again sorry to offend) No.) Why not a hunting safety class > for a rifle purchase and a national class and standard for concealed > carry as well...and, yes, please NRA, you guys are great at gun > safety, please teach and profit from the classes. > > My 2 cents. > > I am sure many disagree. Disagree with dignity and finesse. We all > have opinions...please share yours. > > Thank you > > Mark > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information -- http://philipforrestphoto.wordpress.com/ http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/philforrest