• Home
  • Reviews
  • Articles
  • News
  • Tools
  • GamingHeaven
  • Forums
  • Network
 

Go Back   DriverHeaven.net > Forums > DriverHeaven's Heaven > Political and Religious Debate

Notices

Poll: Are current US gun controls satisfactory?
Be advised that this is a public poll: other users can see the choice(s) you selected.
Poll Options
Are current US gun controls satisfactory?

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old Apr 22, 2007, 12:05 PM   #1
I'm dangerous but cute...
 
cozumel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Under the waves...
Posts: 3,283
cozumel has a spectacular aura aboutcozumel has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

Gun Poll

Another DH member requested me to start a poll on the probability of gun deaths being reduced or increasing if the law was changed. So I have obliged. Please don't turn this into a thread on the US system vs the world!!

I would like to see changes in the law - maybe something along the lines of:

All States must follow Federal law. IE Every State must apply and enforce the law in the exact same way.
All firearms sales (within every US state) would be prohibited without a valid permit.
Permits must be renewed annually.
The following conditions must be met before a permit can be issued.
All checks and assessments would be carried out by relevant State or Federal agencies.
All administrative costs would be paid by the Firearm Permit Applicant
  1. Official proof of ID, address and all other permanent members of the household
  2. Full written criminal checks on all household member with 'markers' being placed against anyone with history of violence.
  3. Full written medical records on all household memeber with 'marker' being placed against anyone with a forensic history, current diagnosis or suspected diagnosis of an an enduring mental health illness.
  4. If members of the household fall within the criteria of parts 1&2 then a permit will only be issued to the applicant once a home visit has been made by Federal Authorities to assess against a Risk Matrix System. If the household fails to pass the matrix then a firearms permit will not be issued to anyone who lives in that property.
  5. The applicant must pay a Federal approved agency to install and maintain a secure storage area for all firearms and ammunition. A valid yearly inspection certificate must be supplied for renewal of a permit

Last edited by cozumel; Apr 22, 2007 at 12:14 PM.
cozumel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 12:41 PM   #2
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: norcal
Posts: 5,800
mike2h will become famous soon enoughmike2h will become famous soon enough
System Specs

the 2 problems with your idea(s) that i have is that this country does not need another beuracracy. & 2nd the amount of money you are talking about people having to spend to have a gun will mean that only rich people & poor people(because laws will be passed to give them federal assistance)& of course criminals will have guns.
i agree that gun control should be standardised across the country. i also agree that people with diagnosed mental disorders should be placed on a database just like felons. a lot of this already in place & just needs to be standardised & implemeted.
every individual that purchases a handgun should be required to show proof of purchase of a gunsafe before recieving the handgun. there should be basic reqs for theses safes.
but having the government running around in peoples houses is not viable or desireable imo.
i also beleive that any person that purchases a handgun, or rifles/shotguns for that matter, & has children., should have to send those children to a gun safety course.
mike2h is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 12:53 PM   #3
I'm dangerous but cute...
 
cozumel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Under the waves...
Posts: 3,283
cozumel has a spectacular aura aboutcozumel has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

Yup the costs could be a problem. But hell, I'm just trying to start a debate on what I think is massive problem.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mike2h View Post
but having the government running around in peoples houses is not viable or desireable imo.
I'm saying that this should only happen when a risk has been identified due to a history of violence or mental health within the household. This would allow a risk assessment and final decision on whether a permit should or should not be issued based on current level of risk.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mike2h View Post
i also beleive that any person that purchases a handgun, or rifles/shotguns for that matter, & has children., should have to send those children to a gun safety course.
That's a damned good idea
cozumel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 03:02 PM   #4
VETUS INFLATIO
 
Falstaff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Red Lodge UK
Posts: 15,734
Falstaff has a spectacular aura aboutFalstaff has a spectacular aura aboutFalstaff has a spectacular aura about

I carried a gun in highschool but I never used it, we all did, and I got it from my father, who carried one when he was in school. I would shoot bottles and such off of fence posts and plink cans. All of us in school respected the fact that we each had something besides pointed sticks to poke things with.
Gun Laws are a joke pure and simple. I remember when they tried to stop whiskey from being made or imported, etc etc.
Death from weapons is inevitable, it is up to our society and each other to put away our sword and pickup our plowshares.
In the world at large, big guns, big money and sugar and oil drive the world markets, I certainly dont think any law will make it guns safer or reduce the number of gun deaths.
Guns laws are a farce, and mental masturbation for liberals and socialists.
Falstaff is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 03:32 PM   #5
In Fedor We Trust
 
OmegaRED's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Ottawa , Canada
Posts: 3,853
OmegaRED has a spectacular aura aboutOmegaRED has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

Obviously there should be tighter gun control in America and it would result in less deaths. Guns should be respected more than they are, too many families own a gun legally and don't keep it safe from kids and results in a fatality. If there were extremely high fines for firearms ending up in the hands of unlicensed people I bet the gun owners would keep them locked up like family jewels. Also, people with histories of mental illness shouldn't be able to own guns.
OmegaRED is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 04:21 PM   #6
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: canada
Posts: 248
coldfrontt is on a distinguished road

I think everyone should carry a gun. It might deter a lot of crap if you know the other person carries, and may know how to use it better than you.
coldfrontt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 04:43 PM   #7
In Fedor We Trust
 
OmegaRED's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Ottawa , Canada
Posts: 3,853
OmegaRED has a spectacular aura aboutOmegaRED has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by coldfrontt View Post
I think everyone should carry a gun. It might deter a lot of crap if you know the other person carries, and may know how to use it better than you.
NRA needs to have a gun massacre prevented by a bystander armed with a gun, surprised this hasn't happened yet.
OmegaRED is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 06:26 PM   #8
I'm dangerous but cute...
 
cozumel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Under the waves...
Posts: 3,283
cozumel has a spectacular aura aboutcozumel has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

I find it quite interesting though. The right to bear arms is in the psyche of Americans and prohibition would not work (in the US). Anyone can buy a gun on the black market. Prohibition is satisfactory in other countries as their culture is a different one. Whenever there is a shooting in the US there is an argument about prohibition and everyone gets there back up. Buts its the wrong discussion imo. The real debate should be about what we are discussing here. imo a poll along these lines should be taken in every major US city.
cozumel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 10:18 PM   #9
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 185
Gabriel_Etranil is on a distinguished road

I find this humorous to say the least.

Motor vehicle deaths is a bigger problem then guns, you look at some statistics and car accident deaths always tower over guns deaths.

When a guy using a gun kills somebody in heinous act and immediately it's an attack towards guns, yet any time somebody plows a car into a crowd or similar nobody ever says that we should rethink our policies on vehicle control.

How many kids have gotten killed in a car accident by going joy riding after swiping their parents keys? I'd like to see that statistic compared with children killed by firearms.

How many crimes are commited with the use of a vehicle? Not one person would refer to a car as an the instument of the crime yet it is far more deadly than a firearm by far.

Firearms is not the worst problem around, if people want to kill people they can find other means to do so. I hate to bring 9/11 into this but those people were able to hijack some planes with boxcutters and we all know what happened with those 'vehicles' after that.

People are resourceful just be glad that these shootings(the Virginia Tech one) were just that shootings and he didn't do something like build a bomb and mail it every classroom or do something similar like arson(or an Oklahoma City recurrence). Then you probably would be calling for the regulation of education right now instead of guns. Let's just be thankful the only insident he decided to emulate was Columbine.

(I am in no way saying it was a good thing for him killing people, just that it could have been much worse if options were limited to him)

Last edited by Gabriel_Etranil; Apr 22, 2007 at 10:24 PM.
Gabriel_Etranil is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 11:37 PM   #10
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: canada
Posts: 248
coldfrontt is on a distinguished road

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gabriel_Etranil View Post
I find this humorous to say the least.

Motor vehicle deaths is a bigger problem then guns, you look at some statistics and car accident deaths always tower over guns deaths.

When a guy using a gun kills somebody in heinous act and immediately it's an attack towards guns, yet any time somebody plows a car into a crowd or similar nobody ever says that we should rethink our policies on vehicle control.

Depending on the circumstances (elderly or impaired driver) people often talk about stricter regulations and penalties.

How many kids have gotten killed in a car accident by going joy riding after swiping their parents keys? I'd like to see that statistic compared with children killed by firearms.

Self-inflicted...doesn't apply to this discussion.

How many crimes are commited with the use of a vehicle? Not one person would refer to a car as an the instument of the crime yet it is far more deadly than a firearm by far.

Firearms is not the worst problem around, if people want to kill people they can find other means to do so. I hate to bring 9/11 into this but those people were able to hijack some planes with boxcutters and we all know what happened with those 'vehicles' after that.

Still a weapon-based crime. If the passengers had been armed, none of it would have happened.

People are resourceful just be glad that these shootings(the Virginia Tech one) were just that shootings and he didn't do something like build a bomb and mail it every classroom or do something similar like arson(or an Oklahoma City recurrence). Then you probably would be calling for the regulation of education right now instead of guns. Let's just be thankful the only insident he decided to emulate was Columbine.

(I am in no way saying it was a good thing for him killing people, just that it could have been much worse if options were limited to him)
Yes, it could have been worse. We only have ourselves to blaim in creating a culture where we cannot defend ourselves against idiots waving a gun because we aren't allowed to carry them ourselves.
coldfrontt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 22, 2007, 11:53 PM   #11
DH's Youngest Mod
 
kris23's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 3,836
kris23 is a jewel in the roughkris23 is a jewel in the roughkris23 is a jewel in the rough
System Specs

if its tightened it MAY or may not go down, i mean if you prohibit the use of guns all together, then people will probably go with much more inhumane ways of killing each other that are relatively available, sharp pointy things, rope gasoline, pipe, and wrecking hammers people use to cut down walls. or a combination of the listed items......... a gas bomb propelled steak into the head of an annoying person, or a hammer and turning someone into a pile of mush,

guns just get the job done faster and more "painlessly"
kris23 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 08:47 AM   #12
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: East Coast, USA
Posts: 217
Dowaco is on a distinguished road

Completely banning guns does not work. In Brazil, gun ownership is prohibited, yet the death rate (#/100,000) from guns is in the top three countries in the world. In China, people make their own guns if they cannot get them otherwise. In the US, banning guns is unconstitutional since gun ownership is one of the basic founding concepts of the nation.

Restricting guns is sensible. The last time I bought a gun, I had to have an FBI background check, was fingerprinted, and had to wait several months. Theoretically, children, ex-felons, and mentally impaired individuals should not have access, but this is very hard to do in real life. There are laws in place to restrict gun sales and to prevent the carrying of a concealed weapon, but outside of places like airports and courthouses (and some schools) it is not practical or desirable to search every citizen for contraband.

I voted: things are OK as is, and we need to actually enforce the laws that we already have.

We live in a "close the barn door after the horse runs away" world. Every time an unforeseen incident happens, the world focuses attention on the issue and over-reacts.

We have strict seat belt laws in the state I live in. Cops can stop and ticket you just for not wearing one as a passenger. The governor of the state was recently in an accident with his car driven by a state trooper doing over 90 mph in a 65 mph zone and was not wearing his belt. He is expected to recover from a broken femur and ribs. Can we call for improved seat belt laws? They don't get any tougher than they are now and the head of the state ignores them with a police officer sitting right next to him.

Government intrusion into our lives and even more unenforceable draconian laws will not stop people from getting killed. Something that does seem to correlate with lower crime is a good economy. So just lower taxes, cut government waste and crime will go down.
Dowaco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 10:52 AM   #13
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,501
Sandok has a spectacular aura aboutSandok has a spectacular aura about

Here's a nifty site that does statisitcs based on anything you can choose out of the list. No bias, no nothing. It's simply gathers numbers and shows them.

NationMaster

The interesting thing is that out of the countries with offical numbers (published by the country or be independant groups), the US is ranked eight, so not too bad. Yet it's the first "First World" country to have such high gun murders per capita when the next "First World" country is all the way down in 17th is Portugal (and that's one of the poorer European countries, not counting Eastern Europe).

All the rest (before Portugal) are poor countries (or post-USSR) still in development. As for the "First World" countries, they all have tougher regulations and as a result, less gun murders in total. I think the numbers speak for themselves But oh well, its not my country and I really couldn't care less.

Last edited by Sandok; Apr 23, 2007 at 11:23 AM.
Sandok is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 11:34 AM   #14
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: East Coast, USA
Posts: 217
Dowaco is on a distinguished road

Yes, I found that site the other day. Interesting fodder for all sorts of discussions.

Other factoids from that site. The US has the highest percent of its population in prison (.7%). Making gun laws tougher will only add to that number.

Police per capita. The US is not even on the list of the top 50. The US is not a police state. Giving the police access to your home to "inspect" it is not something that will be embraced.

Switzerland, for example, has an ungodly high suicide rate. People can kill themselves or others with guns, drugs, pointy things, cars, you name it. Humans are very inventive.

Why do poor people get a pass for killing others and "rich" people are held to a higher moral standard?
Dowaco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 11:51 AM   #15
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,501
Sandok has a spectacular aura aboutSandok has a spectacular aura about

Switzerland has a high suicide rate because of guns and they want to stop that. My goverment apparently wants to protect its people, if yours doesn't too bad.

But let's stay on topic, when it comes to guns, they do kill, it's a fact. A machine gun can kill more people than a rock and anyone who says otherwise is either delusional or just I dunno, crazy? Now whether the american population wants to remove guns, wants to change its laws and wants less gun murders/crime, that's another thing but numbers don't lie.
Sandok is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 12:42 PM   #16
Mars
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Canada
Posts: 2,927
Zelig will become famous soon enoughZelig will become famous soon enough
System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gabriel_Etranil View Post
When a guy using a gun kills somebody in heinous act and immediately it's an attack towards guns, yet any time somebody plows a car into a crowd or similar nobody ever says that we should rethink our policies on vehicle control.
I think we should have stricter vehicle controls. Either way, it's a separate issue from the gun debate.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dowaco View Post
Other factoids from that site. The US has the highest percent of its population in prison (.7%). Making gun laws tougher will only add to that number.
Not if jail isn't a punishment. Progressive education and hefty fines wouldn't put anybody in jail.
Zelig is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 03:43 PM   #17
DriverHeaven Lover
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: East Coast, USA
Posts: 217
Dowaco is on a distinguished road

lol, hefty fines. We should talk about punishments.

What we are trying to avoid is crime. Sometimes, guns are used by people committing a crime. A robbery, rape, kidnapping, or murder. Many times, the perpetrator kills himself rather than be apprehended. What penalty would be appropriate for using a gun in a murder-kidnapping? I would say the electric chair. Maybe that's why the gunman often kills himself after committing this crime.

Sentences for a felony committed with a gun are much stiffer than the same crime without a gun. Making stricter gun laws will not do anything to deter a criminal from using a gun because they already get harsh penalties when they are caught or they simply kill themselves and save everyone the trouble. Are you advocating the death penalty for using a gun? Because having a fine that a petty thief cannot pay anyway will not be effective. If he had any money, he would not be stealing at gunpoint.

I know its cliche, but more gun laws will only hamper the rights of law abiding citizens. People who use guns to commit crimes are committing crimes after all and we have laws against committing murder, rape, kidnapping and theft. We even make the penalties worse if they used a gun. What more do you want? If you are saying death penalty for using a gun in a crime, then I support that.

What you are saying is if a citizen applies for a permit for a .22, after he gets fingerprinted, has a background check and waits three weeks, he buys the gun and keeps it in a metal box with a trigger lock, but his senile grandfather moves in the next month and when the gun police inspect his house and find he failed to report a mentally impaired individual in his home then he should be heavily fined and sent to a mandatory class to learn gun safety and that will reduce the incidence of gun crime.

Meanwhile, the thug on the street gets a 38 special with no serial numbers, no fingerprints, no age or sanity check, no home inspection, no waiting. He will be using his weapon to commit a crime and nobody knows he has the gun until he uses it. How do you stop that guy with tough laws and harsh penalties?
Dowaco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 03:50 PM   #18
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: norcal
Posts: 5,800
mike2h will become famous soon enoughmike2h will become famous soon enough
System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sandok View Post
Switzerland has a high suicide rate because of guns and they want to stop that. My goverment apparently wants to protect its people, if yours doesn't too bad.

But let's stay on topic, when it comes to guns, they do kill, it's a fact. A machine gun can kill more people than a rock and anyone who says otherwise is either delusional or just I dunno, crazy? Now whether the american population wants to remove guns, wants to change its laws and wants less gun murders/crime, that's another thing but numbers don't lie.
switzerland has a high suicide rate becuase of guns? is there people going down the street, seeing a gun, & going 'oh my god i cant take it anymore' & killing themselves? guns dont cause suicide. & the same thing as far as suicidal murderers applies here to, if somebody really wants to killl themselves...
& dont get me wrong, if switzerland can make hadguns illegal, more power to them.
why do you keep going on about what the american government/population wants to do about removal of guns? it aint going to happen so quit whipping a dead horse.
whats needed is standardisation of laws & 1 central database that everybody checks. the exisiting laws(with some mods concerning mental health) are more than adequate.
what is really needed is social reform.
mike2h is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 04:03 PM   #19
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,501
Sandok has a spectacular aura aboutSandok has a spectacular aura about

Quote:
Originally Posted by mike2h View Post
switzerland has a high suicide rate becuase of guns? is there people going down the street, seeing a gun, & going 'oh my god i cant take it anymore' & killing themselves? guns dont cause suicide. & the same thing as far as suicidal murderers applies here to, if somebody really wants to killl themselves...
& dont get me wrong, if switzerland can make hadguns illegal, more power to them.
why do you keep going on about what the american government/population wants to do about removal of guns? it aint going to happen so quit whipping a dead horse.
whats needed is standardisation of laws & 1 central database that everybody checks. the exisiting laws(with some mods concerning mental health) are more than adequate.
what is really needed is social reform.
Wow you seem to know my country better than me

Quote:
There is strict screening of army officers and ammunition is stored in sealed boxes and inspected regularly. Despite these controls, Switzerland has rates of gun suicide second only to the US among the countries
The suicide rate is high because of guns, the Swiss goverment knows it, the Swiss people know and it nobody questions it because its a fact. Why is it that only Americans bring out the argument, "But if somebody wants to kill himself he can." Do you know how much tougher it is to kill by slashing your wrists for example? People usually have to try three-four times before making a semi-lethal cut. A gun is simple, trigger and end of story.

I said the US isn't going to because the people don't want it, mike, read my posts please. And where did I say we are going to make handguns illegal? We might impose tougher regulations but guns will never be outright banned in this country, so stop reading things that I haven't even mentioned.
Sandok is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 04:09 PM   #20
I'm dangerous but cute...
 
cozumel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Under the waves...
Posts: 3,283
cozumel has a spectacular aura aboutcozumel has a spectacular aura about
System Specs

It is a funny old thing this. Personally I think that no-one should be allowed to possess a firearm except for law enforcement officers. However I also understand the right and freedom to choose is important so I can go with that even if I do think it is wrong.

I don't agree with seatbelt laws and that you have to wear a helmet on a bike and refuse to do either regardless of the fines I end up paying. I consider those laws an infringement on my personal liberties and takes away from my comfort in a car and my enjoyment on a bike. If I die enjoying these rights at least I was permitted to exercise my free will.

Where does this leave me in this debate? My example on seatbelts/helmets only effects my life and does not hurt or injure others whilst guns can kill anyone indiscriminately (including women, children etc)

Reluctantly I would say you can keep the legislation but tighten things up along the lines stated by mike2h. That would reduce the chances of people who pose a potentially high level of risk from being able to carry out outrages simlar to those recently. It may curtail the rights of a small minority (like anti-terrism legislation) but does make sense and hopefully would reduce the unecessary deaths that blight society.

Last edited by cozumel; Apr 23, 2007 at 04:38 PM.
cozumel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Apr 23, 2007, 04:34 PM   #21
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: norcal
Posts: 5,800
mike2h will become famous soon enoughmike2h will become famous soon enough
System Specs

Quote:
The suicide rate is high because of guns, the Swiss goverment knows it, the Swiss people know and it nobody questions it because its a fact. Why is it that only Americans bring out the argument, "But if somebody wants to kill himself he can." Do you know how much tougher it is to kill by slashing your wrists for example? People usually have to try three-four times before making a semi-lethal cut. A gun is simple, trigger and end of story.

I said the US isn't going to because the people don't want it, mike, read my posts please. And where did I say we are going to make handguns illegal? We might impose tougher regulations but guns will never be outright banned in this country, so stop reading things that I haven't even mentioned.
you have got to be kidding. you claim your government & your whole population thinks suicide is going to drastically decline if you make guns harder to get? i beleive that about you but not the rest. i can see a small decline, due to people killing themselves that werent really 100% but it is NOT going to stop anybody that really wants to die. & your wrist slashing thing is just pathetic. very few suicides are succesful from wrist slashing, this is almost always a cry for help rather than a full on suicide attempt. as far as you getting bent out of shape over me misreading your comments on switzerlands gun control, im sorry, but then again, i thought it was good thing & said as much if that is what they were actually doing. so chill.
maybe im missing something on your whole switzerland gun control/suicide thing. does everybody there own a gun? cause in my 13+ years of working in surgery i have seen 9 succedful suicide attempts come through(obviously they werent dead at scene) only 1 was with gun. now i got curious & called a freind whose dad runs the coroners office. i did this cause you got figure the succesful suicides we didnt see would be gun related. turns out this isnt true either, though it is higher than my 8-1. the highest was pills/alchohol, wich really does make sense(this was 2-3 years ago s othings might be skewed a little different now).
while better gun control laws are a good thing(to a point), it is the underlying issues that really matter. & im surte your government & most swiss realise this.
bty guns arent a guarantee either, people fk that one up fairly often. at least over here they do.
mike2h is offline   Reply With Quote