And if Town were free to actually carry /bear his seven round lever action rifle, and saw what the killer was trying to do with his truck, he could have shot him and saved innocent lives.
Likely, unless he saw me first and shot me before I could identify his purpose.
No idea why you'd believe that.But Town doesn't actually believe we have a right to bear arms, he just believes we have a right to own ("keep") them, but not bear them.
What hill? I hadn't heard that. More than a few of these nuts flee the scene.No kidding. This is the hill you want to die on, that he wasn't suicidal? My goodness.
I wrote: I know he was an angry white kid with a supremacist mindset who seemed determined to kill a number of people and managed a bit of it. I think it's a good idea for people to know that. And after that, to forget he ever existed.
Why should we know anything more than some people died in California? Because knowledge is power that can be used to inform how we respond to something like this.Why, exactly?
I don't know why you believe that, but attempted murder isn't the same as murder and all you do by mixing the two is rob the incident of clarity that matters.And I mentioned the 15 murders, attempted murder being legally equivalent to deliberate unlawful homicides.
Okay, my mistake then. Meanwhile, I've set out fairly clearly exactly what I'm speaking to, for, and why.Show where I said that the dispute concerns the abolition of the Second Amendment?
I'm not opposed to lawfully carrying arms. I'm also not opposed to there being limitations on where you can do that. Around here, most people had rifles and shotguns in racks in their trucks, especially during hunting season, when I was a kid. Few do it these days because it would be an invitation to window repair and an insurance claim. I wouldn't want to see firearms in a bar.What's your position on actually bearing arms then?
So, I believe you have the right to do more than possess them in your home. I also believe that right isn't absolute. That is, you can't bear it in my home if I don't want it, or in my bar if it strikes me as a bad idea.
It helps if you ask a question and then wait on the answer first. I think it's a different angle on the same balancing/exercise question.You won't answer this.
If that's what you were trying to communicate, why put it among other weapons, in less clear language and, most importantly, why did you say it again? It wouldn't be a point in contention.That's what I said.
Rather, it's a, "You're trying to distract by creating a litmus with no actual value," answer. Nothing in my note is actually disputed by you or it.So that's a big, fat, 'No' to my question then.
I don't need one. It's in the function of the weapon, what distinguishes it from other rifles.You don't have a citation.
There's nothing wrong about noting that if bump stocks had still been legal when this guy bought his gun the carnage could have been much greater. In fact, it underscores the potential impact of stronger gun laws.Yeah there's lots to be thankful for here. What an awful thing to say at this point, trying to make a political point.
There are too many kids being buried to worry after offending people who would have defended the very thing that could have raised that body count. Those who wouldn't understand why "a more appropriate time" has largely been the mantra of the status quo crowd.