wjmphoto wrote:Remove them to where? Are you going to build more prisons to take them out of society and make sure they don't get guns?
Tent cities and chain gangs would work, deportation is kind of impractical these days, but maybe forced labor overseas, and there's always branding and mutilation.
wjmphoto wrote:That's a great plan - not. If you mean remove them from being able to carry, how do you do that without a qualification process?
As you have already acknowledged the criminals won't care about the qualification process, so it acomplishes nothing more than acting as a check on the law abiding, it changes a right to a privilege granted by the state.
wjmphoto wrote:Licensing serves a two-fold purpose - it allows the state to establish a safe level of proficiency in order to carry and disqualifies people from getting a permit. Having a problem with this is less than rational.
Only if you define rational as allowing the state to have control over your rights.
wjmphoto wrote:As for Cho, he is an example of failure of government to enforce the laws on the books. Virginia chose to not report Cho, when cases like his are supposed to be on the NICS records and stop people like hom from buying the gun in the first place. The failure was not the Federal law, it was Virginia and the Supreme court ruling that said states can opt to report these things or not. When reporting to the one database that every state uses to confirm people are OK to buy a weapon is not done uniformly, that is the problem. Virginia is to blame for Cho getting a weapon - period!
Cho lied on his 4473, the FEDERAL system accomplished nothing.
wjmphoto wrote:jimlongley wrote:wjmphoto wrote:The only way to insure that law abising citizens are the only ones that carry a gun legally is to require background checks, like Texas. Granted it will not stop criminals from carrying because they don't worry about following the law in the first place, but it helps.
I don't see how your first sentence and second sentence even fit in the same paragraph. How does a background check ensure that only law abiding citizens are carrying? Your second sentence denies this. And then, if criminals will, by definition, disobey that law, how does it help?
It would help if you were not guilty of selective omission when you reference a quote. I stated that a background check guarantees that only law abiding citizens
legally carry. Omission of that single word make the 2 sentences appear to be in contradiction of each other. Inclusion of it eliminates that contradiction. Selective quoting and omission does not prove your point in any way shape or form.
I did not selectively quote, I quoted the sentences in their entirity, the "legally" is redundant as by definition the law abiding citizens will be legally carrying under a Vermont style system, and criminals will be, by the same definition, illegally carrying and a background check does nothing to prevent that, it merely places an obstacle in the path of law abiding citizens and changes a right to a privilege administered by the state.
wjmphoto wrote:There is no logical reason to not have a process of licensing guns for the purpose of carrying them in public,
Not having an arbiter to decide whose logic is truly logical, I'll decline to argue whether there is indeed no "logical" reason not to have a licensing process. OTOH, I will argue, as I have before and seem to not be able to make the point clear, once you license the right, you have reduced it from a right to a government administered privilege. Call that illogical if you will, but I don't think so.
wjmphoto wrote:just as there is no logical reason to not have a system of licensing people in order to drive a vehicle. Unsafe drivers should be kept off the road and not allowed to drive,
Like that really works.
wjmphoto wrote:Public safety does come into play and licensing that demonstrates ability to use a firearm safely and the fact that you have not done something to lose that right is part of the equation.
Okay, comparing it to driver's licenses, as long as the government establishes public ranges as ubiquitous as public highways, then I'll go for a license to use them, but I can own any car I want without licensing it, and I can drive without a license on private property, so no license to own a gun and no license to carry in public except at the public ranges.
wjmphoto wrote:The founders set up a system of government to establish the laws of the land, establish states and let them form their own governments, and a court system to interpret the laws and their integrity. Speech, freedom of the press and other items granted in the bill of rights are not absolutes.
I wonder what "shall not be infringed meant to them.
Part of the problem is in your thought process, your statement above indicates you keep thinking of these rights as something granted, whereas the founders wrote them down as pre-existing and protected, not to be infringed upon.
wjmphoto wrote:You can't yell fire in a theater, post troop movements in the papers and many other things are restricted from these so-called absolute freedoms.
Sure you can, it's just not protected as a right.
wjmphoto wrote:No freedom and no law is absolute.
Maybe not, but pre-existing rights are.
wjmphoto wrote:But there are some very big differences in demographics that do make Vermont a great deal different that other places. They are overwhlemingly a white state with few minorities.
I don't think I even want to go there, you appear to be saying that minorities cause crime or some such.
wjmphoto wrote:There are a lot of people who hunt and teach their kids to use a weapon early on. That is not the case in a lot of these big cities in places that are much more dangerous. I try to avoid bringing cultural diversity into it, but the facts are that Vermont is not a cultrually diverse place and does no have a lot of the racial and cultural issues that places like Arizona and Texas do have.
But one thing your quick google of the demographics of Vermont didn't show you is that the overwhelming majority of the minorities in that state are concentrated in a small number of population centers, where the racial and cultural issues are very evident.
Vermont is quite culturally diverse, hippies living alongside arch conservatives, yuppies living alongside day laborers, heck they even have the supremely anti-gun Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream, and there are several American Indian tribes represented.
Yes there are people who teach their kids to hunt and handle firearms young, and there are those who teach their kids to hate guns, there are those who grow pot and those that report them, all that and more, and they still have unlicensed concealed carry that works.
wjmphoto wrote:We will have to agree to disagree on this one. I am simply of the mindset that licensing does serve a purpose, be it licensing of vehicles, drivers or people allowed to carry a weapon.
And licensing of drivers accompishes nothing, too.
wjmphoto wrote:Taking the time to take a class, show proficiency with a weapon and get a license is little enough for me to be able to legally carry a firearm.
And it's barely enough to do more than scratch the surface. If you're going to license to ensure legality and safety, you need to go a lot farther than Driver's Ed. courses do, and the CHL class today doesn't even come close to that level of thoroughness, and Driver's Ed. accomplishes little if anything.
As a law abiding citizen I should be able to carry without having to be licensed, if you catch me carrying illegally, throw the book at me, if I do it again, throw a bigger book, but there is no way that taking a course and shooting straight prove that I don't have criminal intentions and requiring a license for the law abiding does nothing to prevent criminals from carrying.
wjmphoto wrote:I simply think that we need to come down harder on people who carry without a license just as we need to be much harsher on people who drive on a suspended or revoked license.
Not much of an arguement with that, except that the current laws against driving suspended, revoked, or never licensed at all, have no effect on those who choose to ignore the laws. I listen to a scanner quite a lot, and the numbers of stops for driving without, suspended, revoked, unregistered, uninsured, etc. every day is quite amazing, and that's just in one small city. Also heard regularly, numerous repeat offenders of above. I would expect no greater compliance with any gun licensing system, and experience has borne that out.
OTOH, Vermont style carry takes away the problem of the government granting a privilege and turns it back into a right. The criminals will go on carrying illegally, just like they do now, and commiting crimes with them, just as they do now, and when caught should be treated as criminals, just as they are now, and make the sentences tougher for use of a gun in whatever crime (which has been shown to work) and a bureaucracy is eliminated, so the funds can be transferred to the tent city for criminals out in Borden County.
wjmphoto wrote:There is nothing wrong with having these laws and requirements, but there is something very wrong with not punishing those who fail to abide by the rules.
There is something very wrong with having these laws and requirements, they are an infringement on a Constitutionally guaranteed (not granted) right.