Message from @LotheronPrime

Discord ID: 440229060811948084


2018-04-29 19:06:39 UTC  

Because if they are unconstitutional, how are they still on the books, and being enforced

2018-04-29 19:06:45 UTC  

yup

2018-04-29 19:07:06 UTC  

because they have to be challenged in the courts to be unconstitutional

2018-04-29 19:07:09 UTC  

Well, in order for a law to be judged unconstitutional, it has to be fought in court and make it to the Supreme Court.

2018-04-29 19:07:19 UTC  

They have been, and they usually don't win

2018-04-29 19:07:43 UTC  

Otherwise they wouldn't still be on the books.

2018-04-29 19:07:56 UTC  

most of the time that's because of activist judges or judges that really don't understand the constituion

2018-04-29 19:08:45 UTC  

But that is simply a Judiciary judgement, and the fact of them being unconstitutional is not actually dependent on what the Supreme Court says. I mean, for example, let's take law X. Let's say law X is found to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Was it constitutional before their finding? No. They simply had not yet ruled on it.

2018-04-29 19:10:01 UTC  

again, you still haven't addressed my point.. exactly how will increasing gun control laws stop people from BREAKING LAWS?

2018-04-29 19:10:11 UTC  

Again. London Murders vs NY murders this year

2018-04-29 19:10:20 UTC  

Nor is the Supreme Court infallible. If they were, they wouldn't have issued the decision which they did in the case of Citizens United versus the Federal Election Commission. 😁

2018-04-29 19:10:22 UTC  

Guns are NOT the problem

2018-04-29 19:10:50 UTC  

I honestly believe a good majority of it has to do with the proliferation of anti-depression and anxiety drugs

2018-04-29 19:10:59 UTC  

There is a difference between increasing gun control laws, and restructuring what is already here to make it less restrictive.

2018-04-29 19:11:22 UTC  

people lives with guns for a very long time without the types of crimes that have happened in the last few years

2018-04-29 19:11:47 UTC  

Some people spend far too much time focused on the "gun" part of "gun violence" and nowhere near enough time paying attention to the "violence" part of "gun violence." Violence is going to happen with or without firearms. It is violence which needs to be addressed, not the tools with which it is done.

2018-04-29 19:12:00 UTC  

And if you would like to address that, then you need to answer some questions about it.

2018-04-29 19:12:29 UTC  

If you can't answer the questions, then you can't do anything about the violence. You don't cure a disease by treating the symptoms. You cure it by treating the cause. What are the causes of the violence? That's the question which needs to be asked and answered.

2018-04-29 19:12:36 UTC  

I currently live in a state with stupid gun control laws and they want to add more. Whether they get to before everyone has left before they tax everyone out of state is a different question. But if you want to fight me trying to get my rights back, a little peice at a time, just because "but it's still a form of gun control" then to hell with you people, you would be the exact same as the asshats trying to take them away

2018-04-29 19:12:48 UTC  

And the answer is really rather simple. The causes of the violence are socio-economic.

2018-04-29 19:13:07 UTC  

and also the aforementioned drugs

2018-04-29 19:14:20 UTC  

Zoloft, Paxil, Ritalin

2018-04-29 19:14:25 UTC  

repeat.

2018-04-29 19:14:48 UTC  

@LotheronPrime exactly. 204 years of Civilian ownership of firearms with very rare incidents of mass shootings by civilians outside of gang violence during prohibition. So why did we go for over 200 years with exceptionally rare instances of mass shootings by civilians, and then all of a sudden the rate increased to 1 every 300 days in the 1980's, and then after 2012, why did that rate triple to one every 80 Days?

2018-04-29 19:14:51 UTC  

Boy, you guys really stop listening the moment you label it "gun control". How progressive of you.

2018-04-29 19:15:27 UTC  

I don't think that the compromise is necessary. At all.

2018-04-29 19:16:22 UTC  

And I do apologize, Grenade, but I was talking with someone besides you as well as with you. To say that I stopped listening, however, would be incorrect.

2018-04-29 19:17:10 UTC  

If I thought "gun control" would change anything, sure, I'd look at it

2018-04-29 19:17:17 UTC  

but its futile

2018-04-29 19:17:19 UTC  

its not ht eproblem

2018-04-29 19:17:29 UTC  

again, London murders are higher than NY

2018-04-29 19:17:32 UTC  

and they have gun control

2018-04-29 19:17:37 UTC  

so obviously that's not it

2018-04-29 19:17:57 UTC  

The challenge is violence. And the solution to that challenge is to address the causes. The causes are socioeconomic. And I'm including mental health and psychiatric drugs under the category of socio-economic.

2018-04-29 19:18:21 UTC  

But what compromise would YOU be making? I already said let's tweak, or add a provision, that made it optional. Which would mean it would make it something I could sign up, that would make it easier for me to get a gun, and other gin owners, but wouldn't make you have to sign up for it. The only "comprise" would be supporting it to help people who like guns that still live in states with "unconstitutional" laws.

2018-04-29 19:19:22 UTC  

It would be an easier fight, and consolidate all the stuff you usually fight for into one law.

2018-04-29 19:19:33 UTC  

I will say that there has been no establishment of a causal relationship between psychiatric drugs and Firearm violence. There has, however, been a positive correlation noticed. A positive correlation is not necessarily a causal relationship.

2018-04-29 19:20:22 UTC  

It could be explained also by those people having gone off their meds.

2018-04-29 19:20:25 UTC  

Just like a positive correlation between obesity and tv. But it ain't the tv.

2018-04-29 19:20:38 UTC  

We simply don't have sufficient data yet to draw any real conclusions.