who? me? thanks. that is nice of ya
Yeah, I didn't quote ya, sorry....
who? me? thanks. that is nice of ya
I saw Dave Rubin interview Tulsi Gabbard recently. He asked her a question about education and her answer started off with, to paraphrase, "Of course, the federal government must work this problem." I remember thinking "Why?" Much of her talk had to do with making sure education was adapted to the particular circumstances of the area where the person is being educated. You don't teach Connecticut history in Texas, for example. That made sense to me. However, the obvious solution of kicking the fed out of education and letting states handle it themselves simply wasn't on her radar in any way.it’s time to stop pretending that we as conservatives &/or constitutionalists have any advocates left in these ”gooberments”
That default attitude is why we don't feel represented.
...the notion "Y'know, maybe the federal government doesn't need to have any involvement in this" simply never occurs to 99.9% of the folks in D.C. It should at least be on the list of options you consider when contemplating any problem.
It's sad, really.
Now, I'm probably more tolerant of the federal government than most people here but I still find it shocking that the notion "Y'know, maybe the federal government doesn't need to have any involvement in this" simply never occurs to 99.9% of the folks in D.C. It should at least be on the list of options you consider when contemplating any problem.
It's sad, really.
If you really believe our tyrannical government would not impose and enforce unconstitutional laws for fear of losing tax revenue you are a fool.
Shelby Foote said that we went from saying "The United States are" to saying (postbellum) "The United States is"...It’s amazing how much has changed. We went from being the “United States” of America to the Landmass Ruled Over by the Federal Government of North America.
It’s not how the system was meant to work, and that’s why it’s not working.
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The use of a Universal Backround Check is in theory to keep the criminals and nutjobs from buying guns,. Since such people seldom buy guns that way they purchase them the same way they get anything else forbidden that they want-black market. Since you now have a thug with a gun that has no paper trail the government would of course go after the regular guy who works, pays taxes, raises his family, but holds opinions the government does not like-because they have a list of his guns! How many "gun raids" on criminals, gang bangers, drug dealers, suspected terrorists, and other worthy folks can be expected as opposed to John Q. Public who actually has something to lose?
YepUniversal background check won't be any more effective than current background checks for a criminal. Going to a guy selling guns with filed off serial numbers out of the trunk of a Lincoln will never be addressed by background checks. It will also never stop someone from selling a gun to their neighbor, friend, relative, etc.
Also, it seems the actual background check process works for what it is, it's more the people and organizations that are supposed to report something about a person's background but don't - that appears to be the problem. For instance, if the military reliably reported bad conduct discharges, then they would show up in the background check. When it isn't reported, the background check passes. So, isn't the government the actual problem?
The real gun problem at the street level (gangs, drug cartels etc etc) is not guns with filed down serial numbers but rather "Ghost guns". Ghost guns are guns that NEVER had a serial number, too begin with. These guns come from outside the US and are smuggled into the US and are worth a lot of money to those who have a use for them. Google it makes some very interesting reading!Universal background check won't be any more effective than current background checks for a criminal. Going to a guy selling guns with filed off serial numbers out of the trunk of a Lincoln will never be addressed by background checks. It will also never stop someone from selling a gun to their neighbor, friend, relative, etc.
Also, it seems the actual background check process works for what it is, it's more the people and organizations that are supposed to report something about a person's background but don't - that appears to be the problem. For instance, if the military reliably reported bad conduct discharges, then they would show up in the background check. When it isn't reported, the background check passes. So, isn't the government the actual problem?
The real gun problem at the street level (gangs, drug cartels etc etc) is not guns with filed down serial numbers but rather "Ghost guns". Ghost guns are guns that NEVER had a serial number, too begin with. These guns come from outside the US and are smuggled into the US and are worth a lot of money to those who have a use for them. Google it makes some very interesting reading!
Guns prior to 1968 did not need a serial number.Found nothing but articles on 80% guns. Do tpu have a particular link?
There used to be (don't know about now) an active counterfeit firearms industry in the Philippines. Those guns were serialized, though.I saw a tv program concerning production of clone 1911s in some foreign country.
Yeah, I figured. I was really surprised that they were literally churning out fake 10mm Delta Elites, complete with knock-off packaging, paperwork, and accoutrements, for export all over the world. I wonder if any made it into the U.S.?That's what I saw
Yeah, I figured. I was really surprised that they were literally churning out fake 10mm Delta Elites, complete with knock-off packaging, paperwork, and accoutrements, for export all over the world. I wonder if any made it into the U.S.?
Armscor?