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US Politics Mass Shootings and Gun Debate 2021

Get ready for your gun rights to be taken away from you after the recent shootings, only criminals will have guns.

Remember only law abiding citizens apply for permits, criminals just buy them off the street.

Get ready for war, Americans will never give up their gun rights.

People have been saying this for decades. We had almost 1 mass shooting for every day of the year in 2019, and no increased gun control at all. Why would this one be special? It's just one of the issues the conservatives on control use to scare people into blind support.

Every shooting, some democrats say we should increase gun control, and some conservatives say "they're taking our guns!!!!". And nothing ever changes. In fact the only change that has happened since the 90s is that the assault weapons ban expired, so now you can own assault rifles again. Less gun control. Not more.
 
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I don't see how funding mental health better will fix things on this respect. Even if you seek mental health treatment those records generally won't end up affecting a NICS check.
Well, while we are reforming stuff we could make psychiatric admission, or certain kinds of psychiatric admission, reportable and stored in NICS. People will howl about privacy but I think such a measure might stand a chance if approached the right way. This is not to be conflated with red flag laws, which often are very broad and vague about circumstances under which your guns can be taken from you (and how to appeal, or get them back.)

For now, it'd have to be a state thing. New York State's SAFE Act did a lot of things I disagree with and one I can get behind: mental health providers filling out forms on their patients as to dangerousness. I was still working with psych patients in NY at the time and agreed with that measure. (Now I live in a jurisdiction with much more relaxed gun laws.)

Generally, though, handgun—but not long gun—purchases still have to go through the State Police. If I'm not mistaken this is so because of an artifact of the pre-NICS, post-Brady Act background check system, which can take substantially longer than NICS, even days, if they are busy.

States with more restrictions on gun ownership have purchases of long guns go through this, too. Among other things, they, at least in some jurisdictions, during this state background check if you've been a patient in the state psychiatric system.

This doesn't do much if you don't have a state system worth mentioning, though, which is what I mean by saying that the mental health system has to get better in order for gun laws already on the books to work.

Even if you somehow fixed the NICS system and closed off non FFL/private purchases/the gun show loophole I don't see that making an enormous difference given the sheer quantity of guns in circulation.
You obviously are reasonably educated on this matter, so I'm a little surprised to hear you use the "gun show loophole" snarl-word.

That being said, requiring transfers to go through an FFL is something that I think will get passed eventually. Part of the problem is this view among second amendment people:
Illustrated-Guide-To-Gun-Control.png

There's not a lot of trust that any "common sense" gun control measures aren't a stepping stone to worse ones. A common sentiment among gun control advocates is "making it harder to get guns," which is a very different thing than "making sure the wrong people don't get guns." Also, people just like their private sales.

But I'd argue that's about as far as you can realistically expect to get with gun control in America until there's a massive cultural shift or something.

You're right though that there's not a great deal that can be done. The next leap in this thought process, though, is exactly why people fear compensation. We may see action on a federal level if the Democrats eliminate the filibuster and make just a few gains, or do something else nuclear like D.C. statehood. I see that, and not just on the issue of gun control, taking us as a nation to a very dark place however. Droops and I were discussing this in some posts that were hidden due to being tangential to the topic and maybe deserving their own thread.
 
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You obviously are reasonably educated on this matter, so I'm a little surprised to hear you use the "gun show loophole" snarl-word.

I did actually think about putting it in quotation marks since it's such a politically loaded term. :D

Yeah it's something of a political buzzword. Like assault weapon. But like it or not it's probably the most widely understood term for the underlying concept of purchases outside the FFL system.
 
I did actually think about putting it in quotation marks since it's such a politically loaded term. :D

Yeah it's something of a political buzzword. Like assault weapon. But like it or not it's probably the most widely understood term for the underlying concept of purchases outside the FFL system.
Even worse is when ignorant people talk about buying guns off the internet. Nobody's getting guns shipped to your house (and you're crazy if you order 80% uppers. Your name is going on a list.) For regular purchases your still have to go through an FFL, and the very few sites with classifieds for personal sales are fading fast and many will want to go through an FFL anyway (as they increasingly will at gun shows, too.) I'd wager that the vast majority of private transfers are between people who know each other anyway. And most people who do private sales are anxious to avoid the attention of the ATF so it's common to ask for a CC permit or something like that, and certainly a driver's license and do a bill of sale. It's not an FFL, but it's really not the free for all people imagine it to be.
 
Something I'll quickly say is bullshit about that cake meme though. The gun rights side has frequently gotten pieces of cake back.

There is far more CCW availability now than there was around the 80s. DC v heller was won on the side of the 2A. The Clinton AWB expired. Etc.

They have gotten pieces of cake back. I'd argue that gun freedoms now are about as "good" as they've ever been. The only exception being the gca and nfa. And automatic weapons are still legal, just really expensive and you need a class III.
 
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Something I'll quickly say is bullshit about that cake meme though. The gun rights side has frequently gotten pieces of cake back.

There is far more CCW availability now than there was around the 80s. DC v heller was won on the side of the 2A. The Clinton AWB expired. Etc.

They have gotten pieces of cake back.
I agree. For instance constitutional carry state used to be unheard of outside sleepy little Vermont, now like a dozen states have it or something. There is a lot of movement in both directions, though. I used the cake meme to refer to how gun rights advocates feel. I also think it is not at all far off from what gun grabbers would like to do, though. Bans on private sales aren't being pushed because they will satisfy the people pushing them. The first gun control bill introduced in the house this term (not that it will pass) wanted to strike the language about the feds not retaining 4473 info. IIRC that bill didn't introduce a database, but in so doing they paved the way. With a database, an AWB can escalate to going house to house. Thus do certain people want to kill the second amendment by a death of a thousand cuts.
 
I don’t pay much attention anymore, but it sounds like the establishment press really stepped in it. They thought this last shooter was a white guy giving it strong coverage, and to top it off he was noted as despising trump. If right leaning social media influencers were clever they would claim all shooters are white trump supporters, right when it happens, so the media front page covers stuff that potentially hurts their narrative. I am certain this last shooting will be memory holed by Thursday.
 
What they want doesn't matter.

You will NEVER be able to do gun confiscation in america in the foreseeable future. It won't happen. It's political suicide. And it's completely impractical even putting aside the civil war problem.

For decades now, ironically because of the original clinton assault weapon ban, every mass shooting has whipped the pro-2a types into a buying frenzy of 'assault weapons'.

They're all unregistered and there's god knows how many in circulation.

Even if you introduce registration, A huge portion, probably most of the owners, won't register them.

It's not gonna happen. You can pass another assault weapon ban without confiscation, and you can close the 'gun show loophole' and try and get everyone or almost everyone having to use the NICS system, and expand what information has to be reported to it.

But that's it, that is the absolute upper limit of how much gun control is feasible in America right now. And there's no telling if it'll pass scrutiny from the SCOTUS right now.

And even that much is not gonna get past the senate. The majority isn't big enough.

Serious gun control in the United States is dead for the foreseeable future. Only a major cultural shift will change that. And there's no telling when that might happen or even if it will ever happen. Especially when any effort to introduce any gun control whatsoever causes more pushback and more mass buying of 'assault weapons'.
 
What they want doesn't matter.

You will NEVER be able to do gun confiscation in america in the foreseeable future. It won't happen. It's political suicide. And it's completely impractical even putting aside the civil war problem.

For decades now, ironically because of the original clinton assault weapon ban, every mass shooting has whipped the pro-2a types into a buying frenzy of 'assault weapons'.

They're all unregistered and there's god knows how many in circulation.

Even if you introduce registration, A huge portion, probably most of the owners, won't register them.

It's not gonna happen. You can pass another assault weapon ban without confiscation, and you can close the 'gun show loophole' and try and get everyone or almost everyone having to use the NICS system, and expand what information has to be reported to it.

But that's it, that is the absolute upper limit of how much gun control is feasible in America right now.
True, but a lot of the inertia against drastic gun control measures is maintained by being absolutely fanatical against less drastic ones IMO. I'm not saying that we could have the latter implemented overnight, like New Zealand, which was fairly permissive at least on long guns before the incident at Christchurch, or Canada, which recently banned a long list of weapons by executive fiat after a much less publicized incident. I am saying that implementing such restrictions here is the end goal of gun control advocates, even though it would be a gradual, even generational, push. Thus neither side wants to give an inch, perceiving (rightly) that the other desires a mile.

And there's no telling if it'll pass scrutiny from the SCOTUS right now.
That's a very open question. They have been reluctant to take gun related cases, including some they really should have, but have been, in a moderate way, fairly pro-2A when they do. What will happen with ACB will be interesting. She wrote a dissent in a lower court arguing for the second amendment rights of at least some nonviolent felons! (Sorry, bluelighters, not you. More like crooked accountants and such. I was lucky to make it out of the drug scene felony-free.)
 
@Xorkoth,

Less gun control?

The thing I don't get about the gun control argument is the same thing I don't get about the election denial crowd and the anti-vac people. You seem like such a reasonable, level-headed person. How can you ignore the evidence that gun control works? Just look at Australia... I get deja vu saying this, because I say the same thing to the anti-lockdown people and so do you.

I guess nobody is perfect. (There's a compliment in there somewhere.)
 

Boulder, Colorado mass shooting suspect known to FBI: report​

Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 21, has been charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder​

By Stephen Sorace | Fox News
image.jpg

The suspected gunman who killed 10 people in a mass shooting at a Boulder, Colo., grocery store this week was previously known to the FBI, according to a report.
Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, a 21-year-old from the Denver suburb of Arvada, was linked to another individual under investigation by the bureau, The New York Times reported Tuesday, citing law enforcement officials. No further details were reported.
BOULDER GUNMAN YELLED TO POLICE, 'I SURRENDER, I'M NAKED,' AFTER MASSACRE: WITNESS


[Rest of article rehashes stuff we know already.]

This is interesting. "Linked to another individual under investigation by the [FBI]." Now, that sounds like radicalism/terror connection, doesn't it? Plus that they are playing it so close. I struggle to think what else it would be with that phrasing. Definitely implies more than just mental illness. Also just associations with someone aren't enough to be an NICS issue.

I also wonder if they will use this opportunity to try to go after pistol braces. This is the first high profile crime I can think of committed with one (below is, I think, a stock image of the model he used, the Ruger AR-556 pistol. Or "pistol.") The ATF already tried to go after some models of brace this year but backed out of it. It's something that they seem to be able to do by administrative fiat. Just like they changed up rules about which ones are allowed whether you can shoulder them etc.

I always thought the poor man's SBR straddled the line between dumb and cool and a lot of the cool factor is just sticking your finger up to the ATF. But they're on borrowed time anyway. Always have been. Whether they are in any way more dangerous—they are less powerful—is very questionable but they are easier to conceal and to maneuver with indoors.

Rifles under 16" barrel aren't allowed without special federal permission—that's been the rule since 1934—but most are actually technically pistols if and only if they don't have a stock. Braces, which were invented only recently, aren't considered stocks because they are meant to wrap around your arm rather than be placed on the shoulder. They are made to be dual use in a wink wink way though. It's more complicated than this and the history of ATF rulings on the subject is more nuanced but that's the basic gist: they are not as good as a stock but people use them this way because short barrel rifles (SBRs) are cool and using the brace can approximate one.


Ruger-Pistol-1024x683.jpg
 
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@Xorkoth,

Less gun control?

The thing I don't get about the gun control argument is the same thing I don't get about the election denial crowd and the anti-vac people. You seem like such a reasonable, level-headed person. How can you ignore the evidence that gun control works? Just look at Australia... I get deja vu saying this, because I say the same thing to the anti-lockdown people and so do you.

I guess nobody is perfect. (There's a compliment in there somewhere.)

What doesn't help is different people have different ideas of what constitutes a success with gun control.

By my own definition I would call Australian gun control relatively unsuccessful. I mean, I think you can make an argument that it reduced the frequency of mass shootings (although I am positive another big one is inevitable). I think you can probably argue that it may have had a modest impact on the suicide rate in some areas.

But uhh, that's about it. And statistically speaking that's not what I'd call an impressive impact.

What I would call a success is if it had reduced the frequency of homicides or robberies. My research leads me to believe that wasn't the case though.

For the record before anyone says it. I don't give a shit what the rates of gun homicides did. It's worthless if those decline while other causes of homicide just increase by the same or greater amount.

I'm not impressed. Which is not to say that I don't think America needs gun control. It's to say there are gun control concepts I support and concepts I do not support.
 
@Xorkoth,

Less gun control?

The thing I don't get about the gun control argument is the same thing I don't get about the election denial crowd and the anti-vac people. You seem like such a reasonable, level-headed person. How can you ignore the evidence that gun control works? Just look at Australia... I get deja vu saying this, because I say the same thing to the anti-lockdown people and so do you.

I guess nobody is perfect. (There's a compliment in there somewhere.)

I'm not sure which post of mine you were responding to, but I'm not saying I think there be less control... I was trying to respond to the guy saying that this latest mass shooting will result in all the guns being taken away, by saying that the main gun control difference I see since the 90s is that the assault weapons ban actually expired, so there is less gun control. I don't think there should be less gun control. I think high-capacity magazine, semi-automatic weapons shouldn't have ever been available to the public. The fact of the matter is that weapons like that allow people to surprise groups of people with extremely rapid-fire shooting. Someone with a 6 shot handgun can do a whole lot less damage than someone unloading dozens of rounds in the blink of an eye. I think it's madness that there are so many of them so easily available.

I don't think European-style gun control would work in America, though, not now. There are just too many guns. Making it illegal for law-abiding people to have them would just make criminals know that no one else had guns. But, IMO, you don't need a high-powered, high magazine assault weapon to defend against the same, unless you're talking government takeover stuff but in my mind it is nonsense to think that the American people could stop the military from a hostile takeover, anyway, assault weapons or not.
 
@Xorkoth

They moved my post. I was responding to you in another thread (the Biden thread, I think). I agree with most of what you've said. An American amnesty would be less successful than Australia/NZ. But, a lot of deaths are not caused by criminals. As for the criminal argument, it would have to be approached differently. I'm not sure how to approach it exactly, but what you said is a good start. Rather than taking away guns, they need to chip away at it. Take away the guns you mentioned first, but also massively increase criminal charges if you're caught with that type of weapon after the amnesty. Australia still has guns. There was a shooting recently where some asshole killed his son and future daughter-in-law with a shotgun. Guns aren't illegal. They are just restricted. The fact that you agree certain types of guns should be restricted means you agree (at least to some extent) about an amnesty in the USA.

I agree it is ridiculous to argue that the American people could do anything against a co-ordinated attack from the US military. Handguns don't work very well against tanks.

@JessFR

You think an argument can be made about mass shootings? There hasn't been a mass shooting since the amnesty. There should have been about 20 by now, according to the rate that they were occurring before.

As for suicide, I don't think anybody ever expected a gun amnesty to significantly reduce the suicide rate. It's pretty easy to kill yourself. Killing a room full of people is another story. The Australian amnesty was introduced as a response to the Port Arthur massacre in the same way the NZ amnesty was introduced as a response to the Christchurch massacre.

JessFR said:
What I would call a success is if it had reduced the frequency of homicides or robberies. My research leads me to believe that wasn't the case though.

For the record before anyone says it. I don't give a shit what the rates of gun homicides did. It's worthless if those decline while other causes of homicide just increase by the same or greater amount.

After researching it, I concluded the opposite. There is a similar argument in the UK, that stabbing rates replaced the shootings. You would expect that to happen to some extent, but it is illegal to carry a knife (or any weapon) in Australia and most people follow that law. So you have a population that isn't armed to the teeth all the time. I thought this resulted in considerably less homicides. Maybe I'm wrong. Happy to look at your research.
 
@JessFR

You think an argument can be made about mass shootings? There hasn't been a mass shooting since the amnesty. There should have been about 20 by now, according to the rate that they were occurring before.

Incorrect, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monash_University_shooting
Only 2 dead fortunately plus another 5 injured but that was luck, there's no reason whatsoever it couldn't have been a lot worse.

The capacity for another mass shooting is there. People just cheat the statistics by using expansive definitions for before 96 and much narrower ones after.
I'm not saying the mass shooting rate hasn't been reduced, but it most definitely has not been eliminated and mark my words another mass shooting is going to happen.

I would have said this before christchurch and people would have mocked that too. But it's true of australia as well. I promise you that at some point there will be another mass shooting, in australia, the weapon will be a semiautomatic pistol. Probably a 9mm. I guarantee it. The laws aren't so expansive as to prevent such a crime, and between that and growing extremism, such a crime is inevitable.

And when it happens australians will be completely shocked, they will wonder how on earth someone could get such weapons in australia. They will however NOT conclude that the 96 gun controls are a failure. They will conclude they didn't go far enough. And they'll try yet again. :P


As for suicide, I don't think anybody ever expected a gun amnesty to significantly reduce the suicide rate. It's pretty easy to kill yourself. Killing a room full of people is another story. The Australian amnesty was introduced as a response to the Port Arthur massacre in the same way the NZ amnesty was introduced as a response to the Christchurch massacre.
Regardless of if it was expected, many years ago I did quite extensive research wanting to answer the question of how effective Australian gun control was out of my own curiosity. My recollection is I determined that suicide rates were one area where a statistically significant correlation may exist with the 96 howard gun control laws.

After researching it, I concluded the opposite. There is a similar argument in the UK, that stabbing rates replaced the shootings. You would expect that to happen to some extent, but it is illegal to carry a knife (or any weapon) in Australia and most people follow that law. So you have a population that isn't armed to the teeth all the time. I thought this resulted in considerably less homicides. Maybe I'm wrong. Happy to look at your research.

I haven't done the same research regarding the UK, so I can't really comment on how successful it has or has not been.
I believe you are wrong. I freely admit its been a long time since I researched this, I researched it very extensively many years ago as I said, came to a conclusion, and haven't ever gone into it as thoroughly since.

My conclusion was that there was no question that the 1996 had had no measurable impact on the statistical measures I checked other than perhaps suicide. I checked homicide, armed robbery, and suicide if I recall correctly.

Australia never had the kind of gun culture america had. People weren't armed to the teeth even before 1996. That's likely why it had so little impact.

Which is why I say that IF your measure of success is a reduction in overall homicide and armed robbery, the Australian gun controls were not in any way a success. My recollection is I found they may have been a modest success in reducing suicide, mainly in rural areas. Places where there already were more guns to start with.

And as for mass shootings, in truth I didn't extensively look into them. At the time I wasn't particularly concerned with the emotional impact mass shootings have on society, and was only looking for if gun control saved a statistically significant number of lives, and frankly at the time I deemed mass shootings, having only maybe a couple dozen deaths every couple years at the most (at the time in australia) not statistically significant enough to use as part a definition of successfulness in gun control.

Over time, and especially as there have been more and more horrific mass shootings in the US, my opinion has evolved, if I were doing such research now I would be including mass shootings. I suspect mass shootings, by most definitions, have decreased in probability because of the howard gun controls. But I do not believe they've been eliminated.

There weren't many mass shootings before 96 going by how I would usually define them, and using a more expansive definition I would say there have been a few since 96 as well.

The biggest success of Australian gun control is probably the fact that people believe that it has worked. Because it is believed to have worked, people aren't as worried about being shot, police are disinclined to preemptively shoot people.

I'm not saying the howard gun controls were a total failure, but I don't really consider them very successful either. My general feeling is that they did a lot of damage to private gun enthusiasts and didn't provide much benefit to show for it. Did it provide enough to have still been worth it? I don't know..

What I think, is that there are better methods of gun control that people fail to consider. They always go for gun focused gun control. I don't think that's the right approach. I think we should have people focused gun control. Don't worry so much about banning this type of gun or that type of gun, but rather implement a very strict system by which people have to be trained and evaluated to be licensed to own guns. But once they have that license, for the most part they can generally buy whatever guns they want.

I think that would be a far better and more successful system striking the ideal balance between liberty and safety.

Of course the second amendment types would hate it, and in fact you probably couldn't implement my system without either modifying or eliminating the second amendment. So it'll never happen saddly.
 
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@JessFR

Be wary of biased sources.

australia-homicide-rate-before-after-gun-ban.jpg



For example, this page from "gunfacts.info" provides extremely misleading and distorted information.

I didn't use pro gun or anti-gun websites to gather my data (as you correctly point out, both sides blatantly lie using the data and can't be relied upon) when I did my research years ago. My source was the australian bureau of statistics, so about as solid as you get.

And I covered a lot more time than just back to 82 (As I recall data prior to the early 80s was collected in a different way and was harder to track down so I'm not surprised that's as far as that graph goes). My recollection is there was no denying that homicides and robberies had fallen since 1996, but they had been falling for a long time before that and didn't appear to have accelerated in any meaningful way.

I accounted for the trend going well back before 1996 up to approximately present date at that time, which woulda been late 00's.

I am not perfect, but I assure you I was very careful to try and come to an honest answer. I wanted to know the truth. Whatever it would turn out to be. Admittedly I was very pro gun at the time, much more so than I am now, but I was still careful to try and ensure I got a truthful answer rather than what I might have wanted to hear.
 
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