Author Topic: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff ) Second Amendment  (Read 986137 times)

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1950 on: March 10, 2019, 05:42:45 PM »
Sanctuaries where the Second is defend are great, but I suspect willingness to go shooting and stay sharp with your skills declines.  Also, there will be concerns about getting on to the radar screen due to ammo purchases.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1951 on: March 10, 2019, 06:10:08 PM »
Sanctuaries where the Second is defend are great, but I suspect willingness to go shooting and stay sharp with your skills declines.  Also, there will be concerns about getting on to the radar screen due to ammo purchases.

Colorado has no way of tracking ammo purchases, unlike the PRK. This is still true of most states.



Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1955 on: March 13, 2019, 11:31:30 AM »
Second post

"The ultimate authority ... resides in the people alone. ... The advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation ... forms a barrier against the enterprises of ambition, more insurmountable than any..." —James Madison (1788)

Also see

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/09/opinion/sunday/gun-ownership-blacks.htm

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
WSJ: Suprem Court of CN rules maker of AR-15 can be sued over Sandy Hook.
« Reply #1956 on: March 14, 2019, 11:06:31 PM »




    U.S.

Manufacturer of AR-15 Can Be Sued Over Sandy Hook Massacre, Court Rules
Connecticut Supreme Court allowed victims’ suit to move forward over its marketing of the gun
A Bushmaster AR-15 gun found at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in photo provided by the Connecticut State Police
A Bushmaster AR-15 gun found at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in photo provided by the Connecticut State Police Photo: Connecticut State Police/Reuters
By Jacob Gershman and
Cameron McWhirter
Updated March 14, 2019 6:31 p.m. ET

The gun industry suffered a potentially significant legal setback Thursday when the Connecticut Supreme Court said a leading maker of AR-15 rifles could be held legally responsible for marketing practices that allegedly made the semiautomatic gun the weapon of choice for mass shooters.

The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that Remington Outdoor, the maker of the AR-15 style rifle used in the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting, can be sued over the deaths of children killed there. In this video from March 2018, WSJ’s Spencer Macnaughton explains how parents of the victims are using a 1977 lawsuit about a slingshot to argue that gunmakers are liable. Photo: AP

In a 4-3 ruling, the court overturned the dismissal of a wrongful-death lawsuit brought by families of victims killed in 2012 at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The suit was brought against Remington Outdoor Co., the maker of the weapon Adam Lanza used to kill 26 people, most of them young children.

The ruling allows the plaintiffs to move forward with claims that Remington’s marketing campaigns violated Connecticut’s consumer-protection law, which prohibits advertising and marketing that is “immoral and unscrupulous.”

The plaintiffs alleged that Remington unlawfully promoted the rifle to young, civilian men as a weapon with awesome power and ideal for combat.

A representative for Remington didn’t respond to requests for comment. Remington had argued the claims were barred by a 2005 federal law that grants the gun industry expansive immunity from liability claims over gun violence. That law, however, has an exception, under which manufacturers may be liable for injuries resulting from violations of state laws dealing with the marketing of their products.

The trade association for the firearms industry called the ruling a disappointment. “The majority’s decision today is at odds with all other state and federal appellate courts that have interpreted the scope of the exception,” the National Shooting Sports Foundation said in a statement.

Legal experts said the outcome could have broad ramifications. The decision could give victims of other shootings a legal road map for establishing liability against an industry that has faced little legal threat for more than a decade.

“This ruling has basically blown a very large hole in federal immunity for firearms manufacturers in lawsuits against them that arise out of the criminal misuse of the weapons they sell,” said Georgia State University law professor Timothy Lytton, author of a book about gun litigation.

The plaintiffs might now also be able to use the lawsuit’s discovery process to pull the curtain back on Remington’s internal marketing strategy. In recent years, courts have largely thwarted such efforts.

Josh Koskoff, a lawyer for the Sandy Hook families, said Thursday’s decision was a “critical step” toward shedding light on “Remington’s calculated and profit-driven strategy to expand the AR-15 market and court high-risk users.”

In its ruling, the court upheld the dismissal of several claims brought by the plaintiffs, finding them barred by the 2005 Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act. But the court found the marketing claim to fall outside the reach of the law.

“[T]here is no indication…that Congress intended to restrict the power of the states to regulate wrongful advertising, particularly advertising that encourages consumers to engage in egregious criminal conduct,” wrote Connecticut Justice Richard Palmer for the majority; Justice Palmer was nominated to the court by former Republican Gov. Lowell Weicker.

Barring an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, the case now goes back to a trial court to determine the merits of the lawsuit’s wrongful marketing claims.

Lanza, who acquired a Bushmaster XM15-E2S from his mother, killed 20 school children and six educators in the shooting at the school on Dec. 14, 2012.

He shot himself to death as first responders arrived at the school.

AR-15-style rifles have been used in several mass shootings in recent years, including Las Vegas, Sutherland Springs, Texas, Parkland, Fla., and Pittsburgh.

First developed in the 1950s, AR-15-style rifles are light, gas-powered, semiautomatic weapons that can be fired rapidly with ease. The gun was marketed initially as a military weapon, and the military renamed it the M16, which can fire automatic and semiautomatic.

While no one keeps records of exactly how many AR-15 and similar rifles are sold in the U.S., the National Shooting Sports Foundation estimated that from 1990 to 2016 more than 11.4 million were produced to be sold domestically.

Plaintiffs alleged that Remington’s marketing campaigns were geared toward young video-game playing, military-obsessed young men and linked the AR-15 to macho vigilantism and military-style insurrection.

The company, the lawsuit claims, touted the gun’s “military-proven performance” and declared it “the ultimate combat weapons system.”

“Remington may never have known Adam Lanza, but they had been courting him for years,” a lawyer for the plaintiffs told the Connecticut high court during oral arguments in November 2017.

Legal experts say the most controversial part of the decision is the judges’ interpretation of the 2005 immunity law.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, particularly after the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., the gun industry faced a wave of lawsuits from shooting victims and municipalities alleging criminal misuse of its products.

Gun groups who lobbied for the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act trumpeted its passage as a death knell for such lawsuits.

But the Connecticut high court concluded that the immunity spelled out in the law wasn’t broad enough to throw out the Sandy Hook lawsuit.

Central in the dispute is an exception in the statute that says manufacturers can be liable for actions that violate state statutes “applicable to the sale or marketing of the product.”

The Connecticut Supreme Court said the immunity exception can cover a general consumer-protection law that’s not specifically about firearms.

Judges also rejected defendant arguments that the lawsuit was time-barred by statute of limitations and that the plaintiffs lacked standing to sue because they lacked a business relationship with Remington.

Connecticut Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard Robinson, nominated to the court by former Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy, wrote a dissenting opinion.

He said Congress intended for the exception in the 2005 law to cover state laws that “relate specifically to the sale and manufacture of firearms.”

Other states have consumer-protection laws like Connecticut’s. Mr. Lytton, the Georgia State University law professor, said the precedent in Connecticut could help victims of other shooting sprees persuade courts that the manufacturing, distribution, advertising and sales practices of firearms manufacturers constitute unfair trade practices.

Remington’s lawyers had argued that plaintiffs’ interpretation of the 2005 law would “severely undermine congressional intent.”

“The crimes that occurred at Sandy Hook Elementary School were horrific, and the losses suffered by the plaintiffs were immense,” the company argued in a brief. “But basic principles of law should not be discarded simply to serve the exigencies of particular cases.”

Write to Jacob Gershman at jacob.gershman@wsj.com and Cameron McWhirter at cameron.mcwhirter@wsj.com

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19445
    • View Profile
"plaintiffs alleged that Remington unlawfully promoted the rifle to young, civilian men as a weapon with awesome power and ideal for combat"

Doesn't that almost perfectly describe the words and intent of the constitution, for defensive purposes, or do they still think it was a hunting amendment?  Isn't that rifle exactly what you wished a security officer, janitor, teacher or principal would have pulled out on him before his first shot at the children?

If a terrorist intentionally drives a Mercedes delivery van into a crowd of innocent people do we sue Mercedes if ads say awesome power and acceleration.  If fertilizer is used in bomb, sue the fertilizer maker?  Ads say high nitrogen content.  Hostages tied up with rope, sue the rope manufacturer? Ads say 1000 pound test strength. How could they not foresee that misuse?  Require a warning label, do not duct tape over mouth and nose simultaneously, breathing could cease.

Meanwhile govt and big corps steal and read all the innocent people's communications and movements and seem to connect the dots on none of the bad ones.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sandy Hook shooter:  https://www.thedailybeast.com/we-already-know-what-adam-lanzas-real-motive-was-at-sandy-hook

Lanza’s equivalent of kiddie porn was a five-second dramatization of children being shot that was found among this things at home.

He also had a POV video game called School Shooter that allows the player to gun down students with gruesome results.

In the game, the shooter wears fingerless black gloves, just like Dylan Klebold did at the Columbine High School massacre that the report says Lanza was fixated on.

Only Lanza went after much younger victims at Sandy Hook, a choice the report indicates cannot be easily explained by any particular unpleasant experience, real or imagined, that Lanza seems to have had when he was at student there.

In preschool before he arrived at Sandy Hook, Lanza is said by the report to have exhibited such worrisome signs as “repetitive behaviors, temper tantrums, smelling things that were not there, excessive hand washing and eating idiosyncrasies.”

But of his time at Sandy Hook, the report says: “The early school years have him portrayed as a nice kid, though sort of withdrawn. He loved music and played saxophone.”

“He would attend play groups and parties,” the report says.

The report—which calls Lanza “the shooter,” just like in his game—adds, “The shooter indicated that he loved the school and liked to go there.”

One thing that seems notable in retrospect is the book Lanza made as part of a class project in the fifth grade. He titled it Big Book of Granny. The hero has a cane that is really a gun and uses it to shoot numerous people, children among them.

As he proceeded on to sixth grade and middle school, he was said by a teacher who was interviewed by the detectives to have gotten As and Bs, done his homework, and had at least some friends. He was never in any trouble of note.

The big change seems to have come in the seventh grade. A teacher described him as “intelligent but not normal?” He was said to have had “antisocial issues,” withdrawing and refusing to participate in class. He appeared to have a violent nature. His writing assignments were filled with “a disturbing level” of mayhem, war, and death.

During this same period, his mother, Nancy Lanza, noted that her son had given up sports and stopped riding his bike and climbing trees and playing the saxophone in the school band. He did join the tech club in high school and even had a LEN (pizza and computer games) party at his home.

And while he continued to write about violence, the report notes that he also wrote about “human nature, perception, judgment, morality, lack of control, prejudice, empathy, suicide, mental illness, existential crisis, urban exploration of abandoned areas, hiking and cookies.” He turned unexpectedly lyrical when he was asked to write a poem.

But school was becoming ever more a struggle, and he was becoming ever more withdrawn. The report waxes clinical as it says: “His school issues related to his identified emotional and/or Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) spectrum behaviors. His high level of anxiety, Asperger’s characteristics, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) concerns and sensory issues all impacted his performance to a significant degree, limiting his participation in a general education curriculum. Tutoring, desensitization and medication were recommended.”

The report goes on, “The shooter refused to take suggested medication and did not engage in suggested behavior therapies.”

He was extremely picky about what he ate and insisted that foods be arranged in a particular order on his plate. He would only eat certain things with certain utensils. He washed his hands again and again, just as he had in preschool, and he repeatedly changed clothes, leaving his mother to do his laundry every day. Nobody was allowed in his room, where the windows were covered with black garbage bags secured with duct tape.

Deliverymen were asked not to ring the doorbell lest the noise disturb him. He required others to open doors for him because he so abhorred touching the knobs or other metal objects.

“Often going through a box of tissues a day to avoid contact,” the report says.

He also did not like birthdays or holidays, and he refused to let his mother put up a Christmas tree, which she took as a sign that he lacked emotion. He did not like the family cat, so the mother gave it away.

“When the shooter had his hair cut, he did not like to be touched and did not like the sound of clippers, so they were not used much,” the report says. “He would sit with his hands in his lap and always look down, giving one-word answers if the cutter tried to engage him in conversation.”

The mother told people that because her son had Asperser’s he was unable to experience emotion. She asked him if he would feel badly if something happened to her.

“No,” he said.

He had a cell phone, but he neither made nor accepted calls, apparently using it only for emails and texts. He ceased speaking to his mother in person, communicating with her only by email even when they were both in the house.



Somewhere in there was a warning sign.  Maybe don't give this kid a gun instead of shutting down the constitution and all self defense products.

I don't know what was known about the New Zealand shooter(s).  Trying to avoid the misinformation phase of the reporting. 
« Last Edit: March 15, 2019, 08:26:58 AM by DougMacG »












Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
« Last Edit: May 19, 2019, 08:31:33 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1970 on: May 20, 2019, 10:57:53 AM »
From my FB page:

"In 2017, there were an estimated 1,247,321 violent crimes. The estimated number of robbery offenses decreased 4.0 percent, and the estimated number of murder and non negligent manslaughter offenses decreased 0.7 percent when compared with estimates from 2016. The estimated volume of aggravated assault and rape (revised definition) offenses increased 1.0 percent and 2.5 percent, respectively. The combined violent crime rate fell 0.9 percent when compared with the 2016 rate.

https://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/fbi-releases-2017-crime-statistics?fbclid=IwAR28hqKL331dlfjUX39iWPkK5slQzLqnnalclUQt04MCcMBXiA7WOkDO73g


"Death by guns continues to climb, but what isn't known by the majority is that the largest numbers of gun deaths in the US comes from self inflected gun shots, not crimes. So, do nations with fewer firearms have lower rates of suicide. Well, the US ranks better than nations like Poland, Finland, Switzerland, Belgium, France, Russia, India and Japan."





ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19758
    • View Profile
question for GM
« Reply #1975 on: July 04, 2019, 06:17:38 AM »
https://www.yahoo.com/news/las-vegas-police-fire-officer-044941448.html

What is your take?  I presume he had a glock and would be up against at least semi automatic rifles .
    I don't know if the security guards with him were armed or not.

Is it too much to ask all law enforcement people to be willing to die on a seconds notice?

And of course only fire back if the criminal is white...............

And remember while the moment of truth comes to think to turn on the camera!

This is getting crazy if you ask me .   

« Last Edit: July 04, 2019, 06:22:13 AM by ccp »

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: question for GM
« Reply #1976 on: July 04, 2019, 02:05:32 PM »
Being a cop means being willing to run to the sound of the guns. It means that when innocents are being murdered, you engage the threat, even if that results in a flag draped coffin and bagpipes. If you are willing or able to do that, you need to do something else.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/las-vegas-police-fire-officer-044941448.html

What is your take?  I presume he had a glock and would be up against at least semi automatic rifles .
    I don't know if the security guards with him were armed or not.

Is it too much to ask all law enforcement people to be willing to die on a seconds notice?

And of course only fire back if the criminal is white...............

And remember while the moment of truth comes to think to turn on the camera!

This is getting crazy if you ask me .   

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19758
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1977 on: July 04, 2019, 02:38:03 PM »
"Being a cop means being willing to run to the sound of the guns. It means that when innocents are being murdered, you engage the threat, even if that results in a flag draped coffin and bagpipes. If you are willing or able to do that, you need to do something else."

fair enough.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
On El Paso
« Reply #1978 on: August 05, 2019, 07:25:49 PM »
https://thelawdogfiles.blogspot.com/2019/08/let-me-stop-you-right-there-scooter.html

Let me stop you right there, Scooter ...
Over the years I have picked up some ... fans?

These are folks what don't like me for various reasons -- because I'm a cop, or I'm conservative, or a gun-owner, or former military, or whatever -- but who don't have the common courtesy to sod off to someplace else that they'll be more appreciated.

Most of these folks catch the ban-hammer and expire quietly in my spam-box and an IP block with no fanfare, but a couple of them have slipped through the cracks.

Mostly because I don't hear from them until some deviant no-account little pismire decides to cash in his voucher for 15 minutes of fame, said voucher being backed and guaranteed by the US Mainstream Media.

Sure enough, some pathetic little scrote-scraping decided to be famous in El Paso, and sure as the gods made little green apples the Media oiled up their stiletto-heeled leather blood-dancing boots and squeezed into their Christian Dior hair-shirt corsets and Made Him Famous. Just like the contract promises.

And -- again, gods and little green apples -- my inbox comes up with emails starting with: "It's time for ..." or "Common sense ..." or "You have to agree ..."

Let me stop y'all right there.

The answer is "No."

No, I'm not going to give up my guns.

I don't care. I'm not giving up my guns.

I didn't murder anyone. My guns didn't murder anyone. My friends haven't murdered anyone. My friends guns haven't murdered anyone.

80 million American gun owners didn't murder anyone.

I am not going to be punished for some pustulent little bridge-troll deciding to vomit his evil into a Wal-Mart in El Paso.

And, yes, taking my guns away is punishing me. I will not be punished for the evil of someone else; evil that I had NOTHING TO DO WITH.

This is not up for debate. We've tried debate at the national level and the only thing debate got us was incremental chunks of our gun rights taken away by you faithless dacoits.

I am no longer going to engage in a debate in which I lose every time. Sod that for a game of soldiers.

So, let me stop you right there, Scooter. The answer is "No."

Done.

LawDog

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19758
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1979 on: August 06, 2019, 04:55:09 AM »
guns are only the first thing the LEFT wants to take away.

our gasoline vehicles,  health care choice,  what words we can and cannot use , our beliefs, our religion , make us pay for others free stuff all day long, reparations, illegals , others education ,
and more.

Frankly *some* of the stuff in the murderer's written piece IS EXACTLY RIGHT but by making it famous through cold blooded murder he made his points something to be ignored and impugned and allowed  attention to be focused away from his points and on to "guns" "hate" and "white supremacy".

What is actually in his essay is not even discussed.  (yes I get it we can't let his blood shed allow his views to be aired as it promotes more people doing the same thing etc)

Now more than ever anyone who is angry about the hoards of invaders from all over the world flocking here illegally is now more easily called all the LEFT'S favorite attack names.




G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Dan Crenshaw: The AR 15 for self defense
« Reply #1983 on: August 08, 2019, 07:51:13 PM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=AJW5fB8xOG4

Exactly. And a 5.56 HP or SP or ballistic tip round is much less likely to overpenetrate and become a threat in a densely populated area.



ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19758
    • View Profile
1,196 people killed in US from mass shootings
« Reply #1986 on: August 13, 2019, 01:39:52 PM »
(whisper - over 50 yrs)

https://www.conservativereview.com/news/wapos-mass-shooting-numbers-wont-tell-murders-america/

Tucker's point is valid though I think he could have gone one step further in qualifying it.




G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: FEE: No eividence that assault weapon bans reduce homicide rates
« Reply #1989 on: August 20, 2019, 08:16:51 PM »


https://fee.org/articles/studies-find-no-evidence-that-assault-weapon-bans-reduce-homicide-rates/?utm_source=zapier&fbclid=IwAR26KThtRYq6VTk62M_rtajUSVGUZYDePTdEovuU9R-RTva2Gy1oLOkeEh8

The left knows that. It’s not about fighting crime, it’s about disarming traditional Americans so we can be easily rounded up for re-education camps and/or mass graves.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19445
    • View Profile
Re: FEE: No eividence that assault weapon bans reduce homicide rates
« Reply #1990 on: August 21, 2019, 06:30:35 AM »


https://fee.org/articles/studies-find-no-evidence-that-assault-weapon-bans-reduce-homicide-rates/?utm_source=zapier&fbclid=IwAR26KThtRYq6VTk62M_rtajUSVGUZYDePTdEovuU9R-RTva2Gy1oLOkeEh8

The left knows that. It’s not about fighting crime, it’s about disarming traditional Americans so we can be easily rounded up for re-education camps and/or mass graves.

I hate to use or misuse Nazi analogies.  It isn't that we will become them but it is because there are reasons we won't, one being the Second Amendment.  If the purpose of the amendment guaranteeing that right is that a government can never become oppressive because the people are armed, then it makes no sense to give the potential oppressors the exact numbers and locations of the arms.

Even if we agree to take away from the dangerously mentally ill, that should not diminish the right of anyone else other than those being adjudicated for their dangerous mental state.
---------------------------
https://www.nationalreview.com/2013/12/how-nazis-used-gun-control-stephen-p-halbrook/



G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
« Last Edit: September 01, 2019, 08:06:20 PM by G M »


G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: We're already fuct
« Reply #1995 on: September 01, 2019, 09:38:25 PM »
https://www.alloutdoor.com/2016/08/31/democrats-will-never-confiscate-guns-instead-youll-hand/?fbclid=IwAR1ZFFlgYVdz_Z8PQpppweuIjLQl5iHf7KOlaKbNKlNGyWgCLsEp15I7DgQ

Hardly.

It's called massive non-compliance.

https://hudsonvalleyone.com/2016/07/07/massive-noncompliance-with-safe-act/

Fredo's big brother has the NY State Police and other state law enforcement agencies under his direct control AND the NY Army and Air National Guard. Their fusion centers have a damn good idea who isn't complying. Where are the mass raids and arrests?

« Last Edit: September 01, 2019, 09:46:46 PM by G M »

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19445
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1996 on: September 04, 2019, 08:13:55 AM »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19758
    • View Profile
Left's next move
« Reply #1997 on: September 04, 2019, 03:12:18 PM »
https://www.infowars.com/trump-administration-considering-social-credit-score-system-to-determine-who-can-buy-a-gun/

to consider anyone who is not a liberal or Democrat to be dangerous and not deemed "fit" to buy a gun.

thus we get disarmed and they do not.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Left's next move
« Reply #1998 on: September 04, 2019, 04:19:15 PM »
https://www.infowars.com/trump-administration-considering-social-credit-score-system-to-determine-who-can-buy-a-gun/

to consider anyone who is not a liberal or Democrat to be dangerous and not deemed "fit" to buy a gun.

thus we get disarmed and they do not.

This is how this works:

"Turn in your guns"

"No. Your move".



Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72258
    • View Profile
Re: We the Well-armed People (gun and knife rights stuff )
« Reply #1999 on: September 04, 2019, 11:50:25 PM »
The source there is Infowars, IMHO a thoroughly scurrilous site.  Let's look for and use other confirming sources instead of them please.