• Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    No. Dems for some reason can’t figure out that they will never win against the 2nd amendment. A dem that supports the 2nd would be able to easily win in any purple district.

    Honestly if they don’t understand their potential constituents they deserve to lose.

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I’ve always held this belief as well, if dems dropped the gun control issue, they’d basically wipe out the republican party.

    • Thunderbird4@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      It’s like he watched Beto O’Rourke commit political suicide over guns and thought “I bet I can do that on a national scale.”

    • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      supports the second amendment

      I think we should have a well-regulated militia. But I don’t think that every school child should be able to wield an AR-15. I guess that makes me anti-2nd?

      • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yes, because you call out the ar15. Most pro-2nd people see that gun as being the same as any other rifle and find the regulations around it to be ineffective.

        • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Well, those people are fucking stupid, and I don’t intend to adjust my worldview to accommodate their stupidity. Same as the majority of Americans who believe in a magical man in the sky: The majority of people believing an obvious lie will never make the lie true, or the vile things they justify with that lie truly just.

          If the AR-15 is the same as every other gun, someone needs to explain the reason why it is overwhelmingly the weapon of choice for mass shooters if they want that argument to be taken seriously.

          • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            It’s cheap and plentiful and shoots cheap ammo. That’s it. It’s the Honda civic of guns.

          • shalafi@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            You’ve bought the hype. Only something like 4% of guns deaths are from long guns, of which the AR-15 is a subset. The Virginia Tech shooter got most of his kills with a .22 handgun. Shouldn’t you be railing against pistols?

            Also, the AR-15 has been around for civilian purchase since 1964. Isn’t it odd how quickly, and how suddenly, it became popular? Maybe because the Democrats banned it? And if there’s anything people want, it’s what they can’t have. Remember Columbine? Funny how mass shooters suddenly discovered the weapon at that time. And that leads us to…

            AR-15s make headlines. Remember that nut in Maine last year or so? Isn’t it odd that none of the headlines mentioned the sort of gun used? I mean, if it had been an AR-15, that fact would have been splattered everywhere, because it always is. Took me a minute to find it when the story came out, but it was an AR-10. Huh. Guess that doesn’t get people’s juices flowing.

            I’m sure you’re aware that most media in the US is owned by a couple of corporations and billionaires. Could it be that the oligarchs want us disarmed? Too much tinfoil on my hat?

        • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          same as any other rifle

          I’m sure the use of AR-15s in shootings has nothing to do with its magazine capacity, firing rate, and deadliness at relatively short out to intermediate range. Not a lot of kids in elementary schools getting killed by people wielding muzzle loaders.

          • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Poor argument. Rate, capacity, range are not unique to the ar15. Muzzle loaders aren’t common.

            • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              Okay, then. I guess I’ll ignore the muzzle loaders my dad and all his friends used to hunt with until the AR-15 became such a symbol of the “cold dead hands” crowd that they all went ahead and got one. And then a few more.

              I think the AR-15 should be banned because I think any semiautomatic rifle and pistol with a magazine capacity of more than a few rounds should be banned. That’s enough for the “guns are easier than getting medicated for anxiety” crowd to feel like they can engage in deadly personal defense without making it easy for someone to walk into a school or church or business and just unload.

              • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                What? Are you saying you dad and all his friends used to use muzzle loaders before the ar-15? We’ve had bolt action at least since WW1 and semi-automatics have been common since WW2. There is no way you dad and his friends had muzzle loaders and only changed to AR-15 because of the popular crowd.

                Or are you trying to say bolt action, but don’t know firearms? Because most of the old hunting rifles were old military surplus rifles largely made popular by familiarity of those who used similar in military service and the high availability of rifle rounds in common calibers.

                Things like the Civilian Marksmanship Program that got old M1 Garands into civilian hands and the ubiquitous amount of 30-06 ammo that was easily accessible to hunters all over the country lead the previous era of gun owners. The current era of vets are familiar with the m4a1, but thats not available to civilians. But the ar-15 is similar so veterans tend to pick up the ar-15.

                The ar-15 is also highly module. It can be rechambered in almost any caliber, has many attachments for accessories, can have the barrel, muzzle, and stock changed making it a favorite of anyone that finds a hobby in firearms. If you picked up a complete ar-15, you can change essentially everything but the lower receiver and have it be the “same” gun.

                That’s why it’s popular and why so many people have one. Since it’s so popular and so common, it gets used in shootings. Not because of the traits you listed, but because the most dangerous gun is the one the criminal already has.

                • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  Yes. Muzzle loaders. Shoot once, then spend a few minutes loading a powder charge and a bullet down the barrel. They weren’t flintlock muskets like it was the 1700s, they were modern rifles. Just loaded through the muzzles. It gives the deer a fighting chance. You have to hit on the first shot. Did you know that people also hunt with a bow and arrow? Those have been around since the Neolithic. Sometimes not using the most advanced tech is the point.

                  It’s funny that you typed all that stuff trying to explain firearms to someone who you assume knows nothing about them. I’ve shot everything from pellet guns to the aforementioned muzzle loader to a .30-06 to, yes, an AR-15. I can pick up most guns and check to see if the chamber’s clear. I can disassemble and clean and put them back together.

                  I want these things to go away. Not just AR-15’s. Anything semiautomatic with a magazine that can hold more than, let’s say, six rounds. Anything beyond a revolver is over the top for personal protection, and if you think that’s not true you’re a lunatic or just want to cosplay army guy. Duh, AR-15’s are the most commonly used firearm in shootings because there’s a lot of them. How about we make there be less of them and other guns that can kill so many people so quickly?

      • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        The laws as they are now prevent just about every school child from buying a rifle of any kind. The cops simply hate enforcing gun laws against people they feel are just like them. How many shootings now have you read something like ‘The alleged shooter was known to police’ or someone had already complained or asked for wellness checks?

        • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          I mean depending on who the wellness check is for, the answer may be “they are not well, because they were shot by a cop for no reason, and whoops that was their neighbor, and also the cop shot the neighbor’s dog too”

          • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            Correct, and im no fan of the cops in general but my point mainly focuses on how so many perpetrators of these kinds of crime tend to make themselves known ahead of time so it really looks like we had enough information, and in a lot of cases we even have the law’s jurisdiction too, but still failed to take the action required. If the laws that are already there arent being enforced I struggle to think we can just keep adding laws assuming those will be enforced.

            • becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              Enforcement at fewer points (manufacturers, distributors) is much easier than at each individual person with a gun being evaluated.

    • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      If endorsing the heaps of dead children that the current interpretation of the 2A produces annually is how we “win”, are we really winning?