27 dead, 18 children

I tend to agree with Ezra Klein’s take on the situation when he recalled being lambasted for posting gun statistics “too soon” after Aurora:

IOW: Screaming “don’t politicize it” is actually a form of politicizing it. And there’s nothing wrong with politicizing it in the first place.

Because she didn’t die in her sleep and therefore it wasn’t “her time” in a pretty important sense of the words. Do you suck at this or was there a deliberate irony to this post I am missing?

Stolen from a FB post Re: 2nd Amendment:

This is a very astute observation and I agree with it completely.

I mean, look at the way that Republicans have gone about handling their own social bugaboo pet issue abortion: record-setting numbers of regulations at the state level in states that went red in 2010, vocal support to ending abortion through TRAP laws in states as disparate as Mississippi and Michigan, tons of extreme bills - almost all proposed by the Republican Vice Presidential nominee - at the Federal level.

If Democrats went after gun control the same way that Republicans went after abortion, it would have had the same polarizing effect as it did to the Republicans in 2012.

Had the Tea Party brigade just stuck to their promises of economic austerity and tax reforms and American Exceptionalism and avoided abortion, maybe 2012 turns out a little differently. Just as how, had Obama not completely let down those who thought he would be tough on guns by instead expanding gun rights and instead took major stances to deal with guns, it might have been enough to swing the election towards Romney.

(The fact that the NRA still screamed that Obama wanted your guns - evidence being he hasn’t taken them yet - or that Romney signed an assault rifle ban into law just shows how silly the whole debate has become. But that’s another issue.)

It sucks that taking a stand on an important issue can mean political suicide. But that may be the case with guns for Dems just as it was for abortion with Repubs.

This is true. However what I think **SenorBeef **meant wasn’t that it was a losing issue for Democratic voters, but a losing issue for the Democratic party. Those pesky independents and all…

Yup, but that just shows what a piss-poor job was made of writing the Second, because it sloppily doesn’t say anything like “The people shall have the right to form a well-regulated militia and keep and bear arms as members in good standing of the same”, it just says such a militia is essential to the security of a free state and, with no further connection made, the people shall have the right to keep and bear arms. Seriously, these guys were the best political brains of their generation?

Yeah, that seems to be the case.

I really have zero desire to blame the victim. I think it’s repugnant for almost all crimes and especially so for sex crimes where it is prevalent. So I am not blaming the shooter’s mother who was supposedly killed away from the school.

And I have to make some assumptions which are based on preliminary reports.

However, what we have here is a woman with a 20 year old son with a history of mental illness who also happened to have a legally obtained arsenal at her disposal.

Even the most responsible gun owner can have their weapons stolen; even the best trained shooter can have their guns turned on them.

My son has mental health issues. Even if I felt I needed a gun, that alone would be enough to make sure I turned them all in.

I think that a great many gun owners fail to ask themselves who else has access to their firearms and how likely it is those without access can gain it. And that’s a problem.

And, IMHO, sooner or later, we’re going to reach the tipping point and decide that that damn tree needs the second branch trimmed off at the trunk.

Are they? I’ve actually said in this thread we should try limiting access to people who shouldn’t have guns in the first place. That’s a reasonable approach, and “banning all guns” is not reasonable. As another poster even pointed out, I was wrong in how strict I thought the UK’s gun laws were, and they are pretty much the strictest of any democratic country.

You guys are just not being realistic if you think we’ll ever have gun control in America such that we have the strictest in the Western world.

Why should we ban handguns? Most of Europe hasn’t. Again, you guys talking about bans are simply ignorant on how gun control works around the world, so much so I’m not sure you can say you have reasoned opinions on the matter.

If I thought it would be effective at preventing or even slowing what happened yesterday, I might be okay with it. But with my knowledge and experience with firearms, I don’t think that it will.

HIPPA. I’m not an expert, but I see no provisions for revealing info on a person a health care provider suspects might commit a crime. So the Colorado school counselor’s hand’s may have been tied anyway.

Any Health Care Professional Dopers who want to jump in here wrt HIPPA, and how it might relate to identifying and preventing spree-killers, would be welcome.

As someone who has assuredly attended a lot more gun shows that you’ve even heard of, I can unequivocally say…you’re somewhat correct. The ones I attend locally have been doing a fantastic job, in coopoeration with law enforcement, of banning private sales on show grounds (typically a convention center or VFW/AMLeg. Hall). This does not keep private sales from being arranged at the show between private individuals (not dealers), and taken off-grounds to happen anyway.

Other shows I have attended, this is much less the case. If it’s any comfort at all, it’s the actual licensed dealers who have been leading the charge on cracking down on private sales at gun shows; part of it is the business competition, but it has a lot to do with the bad publicity and LEO scrutiny they undergo as a result, for something they aren’t even engaged in.

Obviously, this is not going to happen, as the media is only responding to market forces. We, you, me, J.Q. Public, are to blame , for being media-junkies and sitting glued to our TV sets when this kind of shit happens. That’s tens, if not hundreds of millions of people “tuned in,” and no network is going to let the ad revenue stream go to waste, so they go into “24-hour” coverage mode, which in turn helps feed the next maladjusted whack-job out there thinking “fuckitall!”

I apologize in advance for the analogy I’m about to make; it’s the best I could quickly think of “on the fly” here at my keyboard.

The spree-killers are like children throwing a tantrum. The way I was brought up, a tantrum got you a few swift whacks on the hiney, then stood in the corner until one could behave themselves. For spree-killers: analogy FAIL.

Another school of thought for children throwing a tantrum is to ignore them; they’ll realize they aren’t getting the attention they desire, and try a different tack. Unfortunately, again, analogy fail. We can’t ignore a sree-killer in media res, hoping the next one will go, “Huh. They ignored him. Guess I oughta go talk to a shrink.”

But if we the public could turn our collective backs to them afterwards, by not tuning in to the incessant, erroneous-update-of-the-minute-endless-talking-heads-24-hour-media-cycle, we might, just maybe, slow these people down.

Not an effective solution, or a serious proposal on my part.

The current federal regulatory scheme controlling/prohibiting people with mental disorders from purchasing any gun is the Gun Control Act of 1968; a person has to be declared, abjudicated, mentally defective by a judge, for them to be prohibited from owning or transacting firearms.

The biggest problem America has is it can’t discuss gun control de novo, and we already have an insane amount of guns inside the country.

If we adopted a stricter licensing regime, focused more along what I consider “common sense” European lines like you find in the Scandinavian countries or etc, I think that’d be perfectly fine. I don’t have a problem with someone demonstrating competency to own a firearm anymore than I have a problem with them doing the same to drive a car. But the problem is, there are so many guns present now this gun control regime would not significantly impede access.

The gun involved in this shooting might not pass a psychological fitness exam to get such a license, but his mom already had guns that he obviously had no problem taking. So while I think European licensing regimes are reasonable and even desirable, something has to be done in addition to that licensing regime to deal with our current guns. I think gun storage laws would do the trick

Personally I’d say we have to get serious about gun storage. Basically:

  1. All guns must be stored in a locked safe other than a single weapon you can have registered as a “home defense weapon.” This weapon can be a pump-action shotgun with a maximum capacity of four shells, double-barreled shotgun or single shot shotgun, or it can be a revolver. You can only store it outside the safe while you are physically present at the residence.

  2. All ammunition purchases must be regulated. The individual licensing regime I mentioned has to come into play. You should require a license for each gun you own and the “master gun owner license.” You must present you owner license when buying ammunition and the specific firearm license, the specific firearm license must match the ammunition you are buying. So no buying a box of .357 rounds if the only firearm you are licensed to own is a .22LR target pistol.

  3. Ammunition storage requirements are that you must not have any ammunition not under lock and key in a certified gun safe. Aside from the rounds in your home defense weapon. With the home defense weapon, if it is a revolver you are not permitted to store extra ammunition outside the safe. If it is a single shot or double barrel shotgun you may store a maximum of 4 extra rounds. If it is a pump action shotgun you may not store extra rounds outside the safe.

  4. Penalties for violating the storage requirements (firearm or ammo) will be a very large fine on first offense, and a six month period during which you may not legally transport any of your firearms and any carry license you have is suspended one year. A second offense is a larger fine, impoundment of all your firearms with a court or police authority for one year, and all licenses to own or carry are revoked. You must satisfy various educational requirements relating to gun storage to get your ownership license back, and your carry license(s) may only be returned if you can convince a review board you deserve one. Third offense is permanent forfeiture of all owned firearms, and a lifetime prohibition on firearm ownership.

  5. If any of your weapons are ever found in the possession of another person, that is an offense equivalent to a third strike storage offense, and you will have a permanent forfeiture of all firearms and loss of right to own any firearms. The only exceptions will be theft of the weapon from your locked safe, that has been properly reported to police or certain “extraordinary circumstances.” (Basically a person uses compulsion of some sort to force you to give them one of your weapons, ex. they brandish a knife at you or etc.) Further, if any of your weapons are used in a crime and that weapon was not stolen from you or acquired through some extraordinary circumstance you will be criminally liable as if you actually participated in the crime the gun was involved in.

Over time, I think such storage laws would “fix” the gun supply problem. America would become more like other countries, guns are available but they’re a bitch to own bureaucratically. So only people that really want a gun will have them. The licensing process itself will do a decent job of making sure those people aren’t the sort we don’t want to have guns in the first place. Guns combined with the passions of young men are a disaster, for example, and the licensing requirements should be significantly higher for young men. I’d even go as far to say young men should only be permitted to own long rifles or shotguns and should only be permitted to use them as hunting weapons and should be barred from even a self defense weapon until they reach a certain age.

The day after such laws passed, they would not have significant impact. But over time, as more people grow up under such laws, most young people aside from avid hunters won’t bother getting guns. A few collectors will emerge and etc, but that’s fine. Make getting a license to own guns about as hard as it is to deal with the DMV (even my proposals are not any more onerous than the process of moving to a new State, and having to register your vehicle, get a new driver’s license, get a new title in your new state etc) and casual gun buyers will evaporate.

With the storage laws, a lot of the “undesirables” will slowly lose their guns. When police show up at a house for various calls (drug possession, domestic violence etc) the improper storage that goes along with people doing those things will result in them losing the guns they have. A few nationally covered cases of gun owners who chose not to follow the law, and their gun was taken by a relative and used in a serious crime, and the gun owner being prosecuted for that crime as if he were an accomplice will also result in even many of the most foolish gun owners getting serious about gun storage.

But Martin, that will take too loooong.

We demand a quick fix. :rolleyes:

Well, none of my guns can pass a psycholigical fitness exam; where are you buying yours??

Not a bad start; it’s my de facto “armed state:” everything unloaded and locked in a gun safe.

Instead of a sparate license for each gun, how about a license listing every firearm the holder owns? That way, when I goto buy a bulk box of .22L, and see that there a good deal on .38SP as well, I can buy both without digging through numerous cards or going DOH! :smack: I left my .38SP card at home.

Is “loose ammo” a crime problem that’s slipped below my radar?

No real problem with this.

Hmmm. I would amend this such that “anyone caught in criminal possession.” This way, a friend or family member (who is otherwise legally licensed to possess) can borrow one of my rifles for deer season.

Or you come home from a week long vacation and find tyour properly secured gun safe has been ripped out, or torched open, and all your guns are gone.

Again, no problem there.

Current federal law limits handgun possession to 21 y/o+. So what happens when a 22 y/o commits a crime? Bump the age? And so on until only 80 y/o people can own a gun?

Except that the very licensing proposals you put forth have been coopted by people politically averse to gun ownership, and such licensing offices have their budgets cut, are only open every other Wednesday in odd-numbered months, etc. I exaggerate, but not by much. You reduce a right to a politically expedient bureaucratic hurdle that can be moved at will by bureacrats.

IANAL, much less a prosecutor, but I believe that there are already laws on the books allowing prosecutors to go after such people. They typically don’t.

As full of despair and rage as I am, I am grateful to the gun advocates for voicing reasonable measures to be taken. Thank you.

Yeah, but think of the entertainment you are missing.

Exactly! And when you are raping little boys in the shower, you are appreciating the beauty and precision of your craft, which is very cool and fun to experience. The last thing most pedophiles are thinking of while fondling their goods is that they are hurting children.

Well it’s only a matter of time before those 20 kids grew up and had abortions or ended up on the public dole.

One question I haven’t heard an answer to: WTF is a kindergarten teacher doing with automatic weapons anyway? Throw a mentally ill son into the mix and it boggles the mind.

I haven’t read any other post since my post in this thread, so I have no idea if someone has spelled this out. It just occurred to me, and I wanted to post it before reading further.

In the cold light of day, I have realized that I was horribly unfair to Kimmy_Gibbler in this thread last night. I may not particularly like the guy, but it was my anger over this situation that clouded my judgment, making me think there was only one possible explanation for his posts. There is an obvious other reason for him to be acting like this. It’s specifically BECAUSE he has empathy that he is trying to do something about this, and he’s projecting his anger at other people that he sees as getting in the way. Thus he was genuinely trying to contain his anger and be nice to Olives, and not just saying it to make him look better.

He may not act the way I think he should in other instances, but there was nothing wrong here. I apologize wholeheartedly.

But Crafter Man can still go fuck a cactus.

Not automatic, as in *fully-*automatic.

“Auto” is typically, in gun-speak (and erroneous media reports), a semi-auto.

One pull of the trigger, one round dicharged. Trigger must be released (the amount varies) to “reset” before it can be pulled again, dicharging another round.

It is still possible to fire fairly rapidly; I’ve seen highly skilled and exceptionally well-trained military and police operators who get nearly full-auto rate of fire out of semi-auto firearms, and still maintain acceptable accuracy.

For the overwhelming bulk of most mere mortals (myself included), that rate-of-fire is attainable only if you don’t mind spraying bullets everywhere in a barely controlled, mostly unaimed (as in, “I’m inside the barn, aiming at the barn wall, and getting a couple of hits every now and then”) spray.

That was a typo, was supposed to be “guy” not “gun.”

Right, these regulations are based off what I consider to be reasonable European gun laws and most serious gun enthusiasts in the United States already practice many of them and also aren’t the ones causing problems with guns.

This is 2012+, no reason not to have one single card that can list all licenses or even no physical card at all and a fully electronic system which can let the merchant look you up as long as they verify identity. But the separate license is more a requirement that before you purchase any gun, you have to get an individual firearm ownership license granting you authority to buy that specific gun. That means you have to go through the individual gun licensing process every time you buy a gun. But no reason to make someone carry lots of physical paper licenses.

It’s part of the comprehensive reforms I was suggesting. So I’m stipulating a right to keep a “home defense” firearm out of a gun safe, but even a pump action shotgun can be used for grave harm if someone takes it out of your house. If you have a limit on how much loose ammo is laying around, then even if they steal your home defense weapon there is a limit on how many times they can fire it. If they steal it and 1,000 shells that’s a big problem.

I would not permit gun loaning. I’d stipulate you may allow someone to use your gun while hunting or sport/target shooting if you are physically present at the range or hunting with the person in question and that person is a licensed gun owner.

Right, I’m willing to put reasonable exceptions in place for holding people responsible whose guns are used for crime or whose guns are stolen. But the general concept is, you have a legal responsibility to immediately report when they are gone, and to keep them locked so someone can’t just take them out of a drawer.

I’d aim for age 25, not 21 or 22. Before age 25 is when most young men go to prison, for example. Prisoners are much less likely to reoffend as criminals when they are older. I don’t propose regulations in response to a spree shooting, but a lot of spree shooters are unstable and under 25 as well. Basically anyone under the age of 25 it should be much more difficult for them to get and use guns.

Sure, but even in countries like Germany, Switzerland etc that have adopted such laws it doesn’t appear the goal was an outright ban. So I don’t have a problem with anti-gun people as long as they aren’t going for outright bans of all guns or what I consider to be silly/stupid bans of “specific types of scary guns.”

If we had a gun culture in the United Sates based on hunting and target shooting it would be one thing, but we have a bunch of nuts who think that they need guns to protect us from the government, fight off UN troops, and protect their homes. All of these obsessions are related to human targets. They have created a society which accepts the premise that we need to have weapons around to kill people.

Are there any other first world countries that have this chilling, sociopathic mindset?