
#3-- fail.
Whoa.
Vrede too wrote: ...
Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.Mr.B wrote:Blame it on Trump? Bush? The NRA? The Republicans? The Second Amendment?
Vrede too wrote: "crybaby paranoid fantasies ®....."
Dang. I forgot about this being another of your names for us "gunhuggers".
"Guess he'll never be signing nor living the promise."
Shades of Facebook's "can I get a like, comment and share?". The link smacks of 'click-bait'.
Well said.rstrong wrote:Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.Mr.B wrote:Blame it on Trump? Bush? The NRA? The Republicans? The Second Amendment?
Clinton failed to seize everyone's guns the way the Republicans and NRA constantly and endlessly promised he would.
Obama went even further, making even Ronald Reagan look Mr.B's gun-grabber boogeyman by comparison. The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has given Obama an “F” on every issue on which it graded him. Obama even signed legislation allowing guns in national parks and on Amtrak trains. Which again, rudely contradicted constant and endless promises by the Republicans and NRA that he'd seize everyone's guns at any moment.
And so when Obama supported universal background checks - which Bush II, McCain, Reagan and NRA leader Wayne LaPierre had all supported - now the NRA and Republicans were forced to declare a jihad against the idea. They had to make increasingly wingnutty demands, like the one for loaded guns in every pre-school and classroom. It was the only way they could keep conning gullible inbreds.
As Mr.B demonstrates, they were successful. Any nutjob or felon is merely inconvenienced in getting a gun, all because Bill Clinton and Barack Obama failed to be anti-gun the way the NRA promised.
"click-bait" - "Sandy Hook Promise is led by several family members whose loved ones were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School and a talented staff of seasoned professionals". Yep, even grieving parents are part of the conspiracy against pants-wetting frightened, poor widdle Mr.B. Sad.I looked, thought that there was a chance of being pleasantly surprised by reading the same horror and compassion that I felt watching the video (2 million views in 2 days).
Nope, just the usual whiny perpetual victimhood from a coward that couldn't handle going to the recommended website to see if his crybaby paranoid fantasies are really there. Hint: They aren't. Guess he'll never be signing nor living the promise.
Vrede too wrote:It's adorable® that Mr.B thinks I should bother with new adjectives when his self-abasement never wavers.
I had posted, as Mr.B runs screeching away® from most of with his selective quote, but I quickly removed it because I didn't want to add to his being an inconsiderate spoiler of the apolitical video that both Boatrocker and I were deliberately vague about. Here's the full post:
"click-bait" - "Sandy Hook Promise is led by several family members whose loved ones were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School and a talented staff of seasoned professionals". Yep, even grieving parents are part of the conspiracy against pants-wetting® frightened,® poor widdle Mr.B. Sad.I looked, thought that there was a chance of being pleasantly surprised by reading the same horror and compassion that I felt watching the video (2 million views in 2 days).
Nope, just the usual whiny perpetual victimhood® from a coward that couldn't handle going to the recommended website to see if his crybaby paranoid fantasies® are really there. Hint: They aren't. Guess he'll never be signing nor living the promise.
Let's dispense with the b.s. and your copyrighted-name calling for a moment and get serious."Guess he'll never be signing nor living the promise."
The NRA provides a perfect example. Even with a relatively small membership, merely by being loud and political they're able to affect policy. They're able to ensure that there are still loopholes for selling guns to felons and the mentally ill. They're able to ensure that people can go unpunished when their toddler shoots someone. (Which happens in America on a weekly basis; 58 times last year.) They're able to prevent and punish government-funded research into gun safety.Mr.B wrote:What good would/does it do to sign a promise?
No-one claims that legislation stops all murders and rapes and kidnappings. But only most stupid of sub-morons would deny that the legislation greatly cuts down on those crimes.Mr.B wrote:Lastly, how is strict/stricter gun legislation going to keep guns out of the hands of idiots who are bent on murder, robbery, or assaults?
None other than opening yourself up to receiving more information, just as saying one believes in Jesus does no good for anyone. Signing/saying is just the first step, one then has to take concrete action to live up to the promise. And, as the website makes clear, there are lots of actions besides gun/gun owner regulation. Or, you can just throw up your hands in helpless defeat and accept our epidemic of murdered children.Mr.B wrote:What good would/does it do to sign a promise?
rstrong makes a strong logical case, but we also have indisputable empirical evidence. Fewer guns and/or stricter regulation consistently leads to less gun violence, not just in the homes that he mentions, but also among US states and comparable nations. Mr.B can try to argue that it shouldn't be so, but we have the facts in hand.rstrong wrote:Whether you like it or not, Vrede is correct in that in having a gun "for protection", the increase in danger of an accidental gun death
And suicide and family/friend homicide, along with sometimes putting the stolen/seized gun into the "hands of idiots who are bent on murder, robbery, or assaults."
far outweighs the decrease in danger from a robbery or assault. It doesn't have to be this way, and reducing the risk doesn't require banning guns any more than reducing drunk driving fatalities required banning alcohol.
But of course you'll ignore the responsibility angle and keep claiming that it's about taking away everyone's guns.