JimThompson
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It happened one time in one hundred instances. Of course they are going to cling to it.
What does this have to do with being able to get a gun legally, by passing a background check? Crenshaw was talking about giving guns to his friends without any supervision. Why should that be legal? If you can't own a gun legally, if you can't pass a background check, why should someone just be allowed to give you one? And if the answer is, "well they didn't have time to get one", they sure as hell didn't care enough to get a gun in the first place.
So, why should one be allowed to lend a gun to someone else? It's a gun. The entire argument is based around the idea of being able to just lend your gun to people. The entire point of the paperwork, is to make sure the person should be allowed to be in possession of a gun and to know who is responsible for that gun. In case you know, a crime.Dan Crenshaw & Universal Background Checks -- A ThinkProgress Smear | National Review
"Or put another way: Crenshaw’s objection is that, under H.R. 8, all transfers that do not fit the cramped “family loan” or “temporary transfer” criteria are deemed permanent. Currently, Crenshaw can lend a Texan friend a gun, and, when that friend is done with it, he can give that guns back to Crenshaw. Were H.R. 8 in force, this would not be true. On the contrary: Under H.R. 8, each exchange would involve Crenshaw first transferring ownership of a given gun to his friend, and then, when his friend was finished with that gun, he would be obliged to transfer ownership back to Crenshaw. Both transactions would be heavy on paperwork, and would involve costs — both for the mandatory background check and whatever transportation and time was necessary to get both people in front of a federally licensed firearms dealer. That — not that his friends are criminals and domestic abusers — is what Crenshaw is complaining about. And he’s justified in doing so."
I'm not sure why Crenshaw used that example of someone using a gun in self defense other than it happened recently.
So, why should one be allowed to lend a gun to someone else? It's a gun. The entire argument is based around the idea of being able to just lend your gun to people. The entire point of the paperwork, is to make sure the person should be allowed to be in possession of a gun and to know who is responsible for that gun. In case you know, a crime.
If someone wants a gun, it should be on them to purchase it. Legally.
Funnily enough for the reading public... of course... Note how no one is saying the self defense scenario doesn't happen?More stories to cling to:
Armed neighbor shoots suspect stabbing woman in her front yard
2 men shot in attempted home invasion in Bevo Mill neighborhood
Man with knife inside Coshocton McDonald’s charged
WPD: Man fatally shot after trying to enter neighbor’s home
Youngstown store owner shoots suspects in attempted robbery
OSBI seeking robbery suspects who tied up elderly couple in Tuttle
Long Beach resident shoots, kills man attacking him, police say
84-Year-Old Man Shoots Would-Be Home Invader in Dallas
Akron man, 73, with gun under pillow detains burglary suspect until police arrive
Store clerk shoots would be robber; police investigating
Days after girl mauled to death by dogs, her uncle is attacked by two loose German shepherds
Off-duty officer & retired officer fatally shoot armed robbery suspect
I'm aware of the absurd amount of unlawful shootings (mostly committed by people who can't legally own a gun I'd bet) that surely have also happened in this same week and a half time frame but some of y'all act like self defense shootings only exist in the imaginations of young or middle aged white men.
Funnily enough for the reading public... of course... Note how no one is saying the self defense scenario doesn't happen?
That guns are used in situations that end up with a person rightfully defending themselves from harm wasn't in dispute. These things happen and in fact the link I have in my previous post doesn't dispute that... What's in dispute, and of which it seems more stringent analysis than the highly flawed methodology of the Anti-regulation side or a grab bag of anecdotal "evidence" supports, is the over all amount and frequency and on that level, yeah... The apparent only to adolescent minded males of whatever category world of U.S. streets where on every corner (Or at least in states with open carry laws etc.) people merely flashing their guns or using them in pitched fire fights with criminals is in fact a strange wet dream (Especially given the 30 year plus long trend of an over all decrease in crime, especially violence inflicted by a random stranger upon another random stranger... Remember the chances a victim KNOWS their attacker are way greater than somebody just experiencing or succumbing to violence inflicted upon them from a person they have never seen before...) that doesn't reflect the reality of how often the ideal scenario of guns used for self defense really plays out.
I think evidence actually suggests it's far more likely that a purchased fire arm is going to be used in an act of suicide than will ever see action in use against a criminal attacker.
Why shouldn't suicides count? Of course suicides should count!
How about this as a standard: anyone that's ever attempted suicide isn't allowed to own a gun anymore. Can you even get behind that?As a gun death statistic yeah, but not as an argument against legal gun ownership.
How about this as a standard: anyone that's ever attempted suicide isn't allowed to own a gun anymore. Can you even get behind that?
How about this as a standard: anyone that's ever attempted suicide isn't allowed to own a gun anymore. Can you even get behind that?
Suicide attempts, probably not. Successful suicides, probably it would.
 
				