A serious question for gun control advocates: effect of loosening gun laws

See my posts #'s 91 and 96. Also use the search function to see how many times variations of “keep fucking that chicken” have been used at this board over the years without warnings.

Not sure this is a relevant analogy, but I’ll think about it.

Is this true? Honestly asking because I have no idea of the percentage of people in CA who can’t bear arms. Any cites for this?

My question was “if you meet certain criteria, can you buy a handgun in CA?” and it seems like the answer is “Yes. Yes you can” Therefore, I don’t personally feel that the rights of people who are able to meet the criteria are infringed. If you feel the criteria are too stringent, as to infringe on a large percentage of people, then that is another conversation to have.

Here is the Wiki about gun laws in California.

Canada, Australia and England also drink more alcohol than we do, which is a predictor of suicide. (I’m pro-alcohol, so not arguing for more strict alcohol control, quite the contrary, but that probably pushes the rates up quite a bit). Canada and England also have climates (short winter days, etc.) that contribute to suicide.

(Canada also has a lot of guns, mostly used for hunting, albeit fewer than we do).

We are talking about a fundamental enumerated constitutional right. There are not that many apt comparisons.

CA is a “may issue” state. CCW issuance is controlled at the county level. The majority of the population in CA live in counties that will not issue permits. The county sheriff has complete discretion to allow or deny a permit application. For regular folk who aren’t celebrities or who don’t make large campaign donations, if you live in a county that does not issue you will never get a permit. Here is the population by county in CA*:


Rank	County	 Population 	Issue:
1	Los Angeles County	 10,170,292 	No issue to regular citizens
2	San Diego County	 3,299,521 	No issue to regular citizens
3	Orange County	 3,169,776 	May issue with outstanding "cause"
4	Riverside County	 2,361,026 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
5	San Bernardino County	 2,128,133 	Virtual shall issue
6	Santa Clara County	 1,918,044 	No issue to regular citizens
7	Alameda County	 1,638,215 	No issue to regular citizens
8	Sacramento County	 1,501,335 	Virtual shall issue
9	Contra Costa County	 1,126,745 	No issue to regular citizens
10	Fresno County	 974,861 	Virtual shall issue
11	Kern County	 882,176 	Virtual shall issue
12	San Francisco County	 864,816 	No issue to regular citizens
13	Ventura County	 850,536 	Virtual shall issue
14	San Mateo County	 765,135 	May issue with outstanding "cause"
15	San Joaquin County	 726,106 	Virtual shall issue
16	Stanislaus County	 538,388 	Virtual shall issue
17	Sonoma County	 502,146 	No issue to regular citizens
18	Tulare County	 459,863 	Virtual shall issue
19	Santa Barbara County	 444,769 	No issue to regular citizens
20	Solano County	 436,092 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
21	Monterey County	 433,898 	Virtual shall issue
22	Placer County	 375,391 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
23	San Luis Obispo County	 281,401 	May issue with outstanding "cause"
24	Santa Cruz County	 274,146 	No issue to regular citizens
25	Merced County	 268,455 	May issue with outstanding "cause"
26	Marin County	 261,221 	No issue to regular citizens
27	Butte County	 225,411 	Virtual shall issue
28	Yolo County	 213,016 	No issue to regular citizens
29	El Dorado County	 184,452 	Virtual shall issue
30	Imperial County	 180,191 	No issue to regular citizens
31	Shasta County	 179,533 	Virtual shall issue
32	Madera County	 154,998 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
33	Kings County	 150,965 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
34	Napa County	 142,456 	May issue with outstanding "cause"
35	Humboldt County	 135,727 	Virtual shall issue
36	Nevada County	 98,877 	Virtual shall issue
37	Sutter County	 96,463 	Virtual shall issue
38	Mendocino County	 87,649 	Virtual shall issue
39	Yuba County	 74,492 	Virtual shall issue
40	Lake County	 64,591 	Virtual shall issue
41	Tehama County	 63,308 	Virtual shall issue
42	San Benito County	 58,792 	Virtual shall issue
43	Tuolumne County	 53,709 	Virtual shall issue
44	Calaveras County	 44,828 	Virtual shall issue
45	Siskiyou County	 43,554 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
46	Amador County	 37,001 	Virtual shall issue
47	Lassen County	 31,345 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
48	Glenn County	 28,017 	Virtual shall issue
49	Del Norte County	 27,254 	Virtual shall issue
50	Colusa County	 21,482 	Virtual shall issue
51	Plumas County	 18,409 	Virtual shall issue
52	Inyo County	 18,260 	Virtual shall issue
53	Mariposa County	 17,531 	Virtual shall issue
54	Mono County	 13,909 	May issue for "reasonable" cause
55	Trinity County	 13,069 	Virtual shall issue
56	Modoc County	 8,965 	Virtual shall issue
57	Sierra County	 2,967 	Virtual shall issue
58	Alpine County	 1,110 	May issue for "reasonable" cause


Riverside and San Bernardino are the biggest counties that issue, and next in line is Sacramento County. Sacramento County only started issuing after a lawsuit. When you total it up by population it looks like this:


 20,893,122 	53%	No issue to regular citizens
 4,627,223 	12%	May issue with outstanding "cause"
 3,567,280 	9%	May issue for "reasonable" cause
 10,056,083 	26%	Virtual shall issue
 39,143,708 	

Outstanding good cause is extremely unlikely for a regular citizen - so 65% or so folks cannot carry. Starting at the Bay Area, if you live along the coast you will not get a permit. This is most people. Places like San Francisco with a population of 800K, has 2 permits. One of them used to be Diane Feinstein. In Los Angeles County where there are over 10M people, there are just over 500 permits. Just under 20% of those are judges. Overall CA has about 0.2% of its population with carry permits. That’s dramatically lower than the rate across the nation. More than 1/2 of the permits in CA stem from just 7 of the 58 counties.

My application which was submitted certified mail receipt requested was returned, without any communication, unprocessed. Twice.

It’s not just that you can buy a handgun in CA. It’s that you can only buy one that is approved by the state. And the State isn’t approving any more semi auto handguns. Because they have implemented a requirement that is not currently possible to meet. Think of it this way - you want to publish a book. If you’ve already published it, that’s okay. But if you want to publish a new book for the first time, you need to be able to demonstrate that the book can levitate. If it can’t do that, you are not allowed to publish that book. Plenty of old books can be published though. Non-fiction books are exempt. Or if you are law enforcement, then you are exempt too.

Does the number of people who’s rights are infringed matter? Shouldn’t no one’s rights be infringed? Do you feel the same way about Voter ID laws, where a small number of people may be disenfranchised, but most people are unaffected?
*i can’t make this table look good.

The ability to purchase a book is a fundamental enumerated constitutional right?

This seems to change your argument from “Ability to buy a handgun” to “Ability to get a CCW”

This seems to imply that there are at least 2 manufacturers that can do micro stamping. Is that not the case?
Certification of Microstamping Technology Bureau of Firearms pursuant to Penal Code section 31910 subdivision (b)(7)(A)

No, it doesn’t matter. But you stated that a majority of Californians could not bear arms. Just wondering where you got that information.

You asked for a cite - I presented evidence.

It is not the case. While the AG declared the hurdles met, there are no firearms for sale that meet this requirement.

True, you did present evidence. Was it evidence of the percentage of people who cannot bear arms in CA? Not so much.

Well, good thing I didn’t ask if there were firearms for sale that meet that requirement. Are there manufacturers that can make firearms that meet that requirement, as my link seems to suggest?

After all, you compared the requirement to have micro stamping to levitation, meaning to me something that doesn’t exist. In fact, you said “they have implemented a requirement that is not currently possible to meet” The link I provided states that it IS possible to meet it, and more than one manufacturer can meet it. Do you believe this to be true? why or why not?

Are you serious? Majority of people by population live in counties where they are not permitted to carry. What type of evidence were you thinking of?

None are available.

No. The link you provided does not state it is possible to meet. Your link says that the technology is unencumbered by patent. It may be theoretically possible as it is theoretically possible for the molecules in my hand to align to allow my hand to pass through a table.

Wasn’t that a table showing statistics about CCW? Is your opinion that unless a person can get a CCW permit, they don’t have the right to bear arms? If a person buys a handgun and keeps it in their home for defense, isn’t that bearing arms?

You may be correct here. However, various articles I’ve found show gun manufacturers are not including it because it is stupid (my word) and serves no purpose, which is true, but not that it is impossible.

Keep is distinct from Bear. Bear = carry. Since open carry is illegal in CA, the only way to bear is with CCW.

My original statement is true. No new model semi auto firearms may be sold by an FFL in CA. It is currently impossible for me to purchase **any **new model semi auto firearm from an FFL.

So? There are thousands of "old model"guns being sold every day.

yeah, but they only shoot old bullets that kill old bad guys.

Do you concede the statement is true? And yes, I acknowledge you think this is acceptable. I do not think it is acceptable. What number must the “thousands” be reduced to for you to consider this a problem?

Think of it this way - you want to publish a book. If you’ve already published it previously, that’s okay - but only if you pay a periodic fee to maintain your ability to publish that book. But if you want to publish a new book for the first time, you need to be able to demonstrate that the book can levitate. If it can’t do that, you are not allowed to publish that book. Plenty of old books can be published though. Non-fiction books are exempt. Or if you are law enforcement, then you are exempt too. Would your response be as sanguine in this scenario?

Look, the law is really fucking stupid, yes. I said as much. Still, by no means are guns “banned” in California.

How many guns must be banned for you to construe that as guns being banned in California? Or alternatively, how many guns must be available for you to consider guns not being banned in CA?

Do you dispute any of these facts: Some guns are banned in CA. Not all guns are banned in CA. The guns that are banned in CA include all new model semi auto firearms may be sold by an FFL.

So does that mean if you can’t carry a handgun in all places at all times, you feel that is unacceptable?

And my original statement is true - So what? As noted above, there are 1000s of OTHER models for sale.

How about ALL? Second question - Some. Maybe more than one, i don’t know. How many do you think must be available for you to consider guns not being banned in CA? Every single make and model of handgun ever produced by any manufacturer ever until the end of time?

Can’t you just publish it electronically?

How detailed are the parameters for the levitation? I can’t answer your question unless you give a detailed review of the 2025 Book Levitation Act. Please cover all exceptions and the various forms, applications, and interviews one would need in order to publish a book after the effective date of said Act. Then I will be able to answer on how I felt about it.

No - it means you were wrong. You confused “keep” with “bear” and I corrected you. You asked about the percentage of people in CA who couldn’t bear arms. I provided it to you. You thought the CA DOJ memo indicated that at least 2 manufacturers could do microstamping and I corrected you.

And to continue this trend - no, this is wrong too. There are not 1000s of other models for sale. There are 767available models for sale by FFLs.

I’ll be satisfied if the number includes all of the ones the police are able to purchase. Because under CA law, police are able to purchase handguns determined to be “unsafe”.