Give me your guns
Comments
-
Yes I used the term assualt rifle as a generic term. I'm referring to high capacity guns that can do more damage than an average rifle. Most mass shooters are not skilled shooters and can't reload a weapon quickly like a trained military officer or cop.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell. -
@Swaye gets it.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell.
-
Sure, but a repeal is a repeal. The government wouldn't have to continue chipping away at 2A rights, as it's done with all the rest, when that right is no longer guaranteed. Neat & tidy.2001400ex said:
Do you understand what Stevens said when he called for repealing the second amendment? He wasn't saying anything about gun confiscation. It has to do with a 2008 supreme Court decision and semantics.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Sounds like a preemptive infringement of rights. In First Amendment cases, that's called prior restraint, and civil libertarians rightly lose their minds over it. Assault rifles as a product distinction is almost completely arbitrary. It a bureaucratically driven set of rules.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
I disagree with his goal profoundly, but I respect John Paul Stevens' chintellectual honesty to call for a repeal of the Second Amendment. -
I love you man.GrundleStiltzkin said:
@Swaye gets it.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell. -
It's a political marketing term.2001400ex said:
Yes I used the term assualt rifle as a generic term. I'm referring to high capacity guns that can do more damage than an average rifle. Most mass shooters are not skilled shooters and can't reload a weapon quickly like a trained military officer or cop.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell.
Which holds more rounds?

-
Well the one on the bottom has a silencer. So there's that.GrundleStiltzkin said:
It's a political marketing term.2001400ex said:
Yes I used the term assualt rifle as a generic term. I'm referring to high capacity guns that can do more damage than an average rifle. Most mass shooters are not skilled shooters and can't reload a weapon quickly like a trained military officer or cop.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell.
Which holds more rounds?

-
Hondo doesn't have the guts to call for the repeal of the 2nd Ammendment. He just starts dozens of threads about grabbing guns
Take a fucking stand. None of these half measures will do anything -
2001400ex said:
Yes I used the term assualt rifle as a generic term. I'm referring to high capacity guns that can do more damage than an average rifle. Most mass shooters are not skilled shooters and can't reload a weapon quickly like a trained military officer or cop.Swaye said:
My take. They aren't assault rifles, they are sporting rifles. People actually hunt with them. Mostly feral hogs, but sometimes deer, though rarely chambered for .223. Point, the only thing that distinguishes an AR (ARmalite NOT Assault Rifle) is that you can buy large magazines for them, and they look scary to city boys who have never chopped firewood, cleaned and gutted a fish, or changed their own oil. In fact, Browning (sucks) makes a very famous hinting rifle called a BAR. Stands for Browning (sucks) Automatic Rifle. Hundreds of thousands sold I'd imagine, and used all over the world to take game - box mag fed. Pretty much an AR only with wood furniture. Trying to make AR's something they aren't is silly. If you have a problem with AR's, then go after the magazine capacity - which I would still disagree with but at least makes more sense then banning an entire class of weapons because of a made up name and they look scary to the aforementioned girly men.2001400ex said:
Great, we agree and are getting somewhere. All I have said, along with most gun control fanatics, is for background checks on all sales. I think we should allow assualt rifles with a registry, similar to fully automatic weapons, but not nearly that intense. Maybe something like after a lame gun control class or demonstrating 5 years of gun ownership, you can own one. The vast majority of mass shooters are not people who have owned guns for a long period.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Semantics, but both are absolutely infringement of rights. The issue is whether justifiable and legal. I don't know the legal means for depriving convicted but released felons from owning firearms. Felons also lose their right to vote in most states. Both constitutionally protected civil rights stripped as a consequence of a felony, for which a penal sentence has been served. I'm fine with both as a means of risk reduction if there is a reasonable appeal process to regain those rights.2001400ex said:
Serious questions.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Lost me there. Rights are rights and immutable, not subject to the state of contemporary technology. The free press in 1791 was laboriously manually. It's doubtful the Framers could imagine a HP LaserJet turning out—automatically—a thousand pages in a day, much less the Internet. Yet the principal right protected, not granted, remains.2001400ex said:...
But with any proposed gun restrictions automatically being deemed "unconstitutional" by factions, I'm curious what self-proclaimed patriots think is "constitutional" regarding an amendment written when muskets fired once or twice followed by bayonet and close quarter physical fighting was the rule in 1791—not like when the Tucson killer expended over 30 rounds in a brief terrifying moment and received 19 charges of murder and attempted murder for the minimal effort of twitching his finger.
...
Do you consider a background check on a private sale an infringement on your rights?
Do you consider the fact that felons can't legally by a guy an infringement on rights?
Ostensibly, your first question depends on the second, in that background checks are supposed to prevent felons and other restricted classes from legally purchasing firearms. For that purpose, it seems fine.
What do you think about those measures and infringement on rights?
FFS I can go get a BAR in 243 and do just as much damage, but they look like a regular old huntin' rifle your grand pappy had so it's hard to get people stirred up with that one.
Also, fuck registries. Registration = confiscation. Think I'll go back to pressing out rounds now. And Taco Bell.
Bullshit. It takes less than 3 seconds for even an idiot to drop the spent mag and reload a fresh one.
-
I'm all for it if it's what the people want.RaceBannon said:Hondo doesn't have the guts to call for the repeal of the 2nd Ammendment. He just starts dozens of threads about grabbing guns
Take a fucking stand. None of these half measures will do anything
Repeal the 2nd amendment (which I'd be okay with) or don't and shut the fuck up.
Either way it will not be interesting because I don't give a shit. -
First they came for my Chalupas, and I said nothing, then they came for my Crispy Gordita Crunch, and I still said nothing....Pitchfork51 said:
I'm all for it if it's what the people want.RaceBannon said:Hondo doesn't have the guts to call for the repeal of the 2nd Ammendment. He just starts dozens of threads about grabbing guns
Take a fucking stand. None of these half measures will do anything
Repeal the 2nd amendment (which I'd be okay with) or don't and shut the fuck up.
Either way it will not be interesting because I don't give a shit.





