kenberg, on 2013-May-13, 10:49, said:
I perhaps maybe sort of agree. My thoughts:
a. There is absolutely no point in trying to work out an agreement with the NRA. There intentions are as clear as they are implacable.
b. Others can be worked with. Many, including many gun owners, support background checks. Why on Earth not, except that it would reduce sales? OK, they will find a different reason. Ignore them. Many, I expect, would favor some sort of licensing standards that go toward ensuring the owners of weapons have some sort of knowledge of their legal responsibilities.
c. Some thoroughly responsible people wish to have guns for reasons such as hunting, target shooting, collecting, and so on.
d. Some people in some settings need a weapon for self-defense. If responsibility is demonstrated along the lines of b., then those of us who are not in his/her shoes should, at least somewhat, defer to his/her judgment on this. I don't have a gun. This is partly my judgment, partly my situation. I can't really imagine needing one.
I expect reasonable people will come to a reasonable solution on this. Sooner or later. Sooner would be much better. Besides being lethal, our current situation is embarrassing.
So maybe this is not really agreeing. But I think many people think along the lines I am saying, and we need to get it, or something like it, done.
a. Frankly I don't see the NRA as a "bad guy". As I mentioned in a post above they promote gun education and gun safety. Yet the main stream media paints them as the culprit every time there is a mass shooting just because of their support of the 2nd amendment. I think every person on earth with a soul was heartsick upon hearing about the Newtown massacre; I know I was. However, I have serious doubts that Adam Lanza was an NRA member. I am equally doubtful about James Holmes, Seung-Hui Cho, Eric Harris, Dylan Klebold, the three guys who just shot up a parade in New Orleans, etc. etc.
b. I could support background checks even though it appears to me to be nothing more than feel-good legislation. Would a background check have stopped Lanza? Doubtful since the weapons were bought by his mother who apparently was just as sane (or insane) as the Kentucky parents who prompted this thread. Licensing to ensure knowledge of legal responsibilities of gun ownership sounds like a good idea if we can accept the fact that only responsible people who already know their legal responsibilities will buy a license; the friendly neighborhood drug dealer will probably be a cold prospect.
c. I agree.
d. My 21 year-old granddaughter is working her way through vet school. She lives in a semi-remote area alone. She has a Ruger .380 pistol and a Remington 223 rifle (she likes to hunt too). Will she ever
need them? I hope not. But she knows how to use them and I'm glad she has them.
We all wish for a reasonable solution to the senseless mass killings. But I don't think it's reasonable to lay 100% of the blame at the feet of the NRA and the gun manufacturers.