Matt Collins
Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2007
- Messages
- 47,707
Actually I did. Me and 2 other people were involved.No you didn't.
Actually I did. Me and 2 other people were involved.No you didn't.
Good. That's what I thought. Some of your earlier remarks made it sound like you thought I was misrepresenting how bad this law is.
I would be much more comfortable with this law if the benefit of the doubt were given to me as a gun purchaser during that 3-day period, rather than the government. I should not be prevented from buying a gun until after the establishment of probable cause that I shouldn't. Until then, no infringement of my rights should be permitted.
I wont agree that watch lists should exist, which is different from an investigation.
If they are investigating someone then they should prove their case one way or the other and move on.
The no fly list (with 47,000+ people) has a presumption of guilt as does the political dissident, I mean "terrorist", watch list (with 1.5 million+ people).
That would defeat the whole purpose, of course, as you'd have already bought the gun.
You guys who are defending this list, youre being really naive if you think this list wont be abused or incrementally used to chip away at 2A rights.
This list, the brainchild and spearheaded by Rahm Emmanuel, has the Left frothing at the mouth to get it passed.
As if they actually care about violence.
No it wouldn't defeat the whole purpose. They can take the gun away after I have been proven guilty (which I won't be--so my right shouldn't be violated in the first place like this law does), just like they already do for convicted criminals. Giving the benefit of the doubt to me, rather than the government, would still mean that the attempt to purchase a gun would alert the government and put on the fast track their attempt to prove my guilt.
Besides, do we need more laws?
Where is the due process for being placed on a list which shouldnt exist in the first place?
This isnt the DU or Hotair.
These are the Ron Paul forums.
Here we believe in rights and freedom.
[FONT="]AYN RAND said:[FONT="]Forbidding guns or registering them is not going to stop criminals from having them; nor is it a great threat to the private, non-criminal citizen if he has to register the fact that he has a gun.
[/FONT][FONT="]Handguns are instruments for killing people -- they are not carried for hunting animals -- and you have no right to kill people. You do have the right to self-defense, however. I don't know how the issue is going to be resolved to protect you without giving you the privilege to kill people at whim[/FONT]
So, if the FBI finds someone who they think may be a terrorist (or whatever kind of criminal), and isn't able to convict them of a crime within some arbitrary period of time, they should delete their records of that person and forget about them? That would be the logical implication of not keeping watch lists, though it's rather absurd wouldn't you say?
As I said, it's not the keeping of names of persons of interest on a list that's a problem; that violates no ones rights, ever.
The problem lies in restricting the rights of people on that list without due process - as by preventing them from getting on a plane.
So, just because I communicate with someone that the government calls a member of ISIS (how do they go about determining who is a member of ISIS anyway?), I lose my right to keep and bear arms? It doesn't even matter what the content of that communication is?
These arent investigations (that we know of), these are bonafide "watch lists", which have to be rejected on principle alone.
But firearms and "terrorism" aside, for how long will/do they investigate someone before they determine that theyre satisfied and that there is or isnt enough to justify moving forward (rhetorical question)?
So they should just be allowed to keep compiling a never ending list of people in perpetuity who cant fly (in addition to who knows what else) and now cant buy a firearm until our generous caretakers allow it?
Actually I did. Me and 2 other people were involved.
AYN RAND said:Forbidding guns or registering them is not going to stop criminals from having them; nor is it a great threat to the private, non-criminal citizen if he has to register the fact that he has a gun.
Handguns are instruments for killing people -- they are not carried for hunting animals -- and you have no right to kill people. You do have the right to self-defense, however. I don't know how the issue is going to be resolved to protect you without giving you the privilege to kill people at whim
You guys who are defending this list, youre being really naive if you think this list wont be abused or incrementally used to chip away at 2A rights.
This list, the brainchild and spearheaded by Rahm Emmanuel, has the Left frothing at the mouth to get it passed.
As if they actually care about violence.
Well if your communication is innocent under the Cornyn bill you get a chance to make that case in court. The standard being proposed is probable cause that you are planning an attack. It doesn't matter whether you or anyone you are communicating with is a member of ISIS. As written if you were Terry Nichols communicating with Tim McVeigh about blowing up the Murrah Federal Building in OKC the Cornyn amendment would apply.
Haven't we learned if you give these Critters an inch they'll take a mile.
Good point. What an authoritarian I am thinking it is reasonable for a person on a terrorist watchlist to have to wait three days to buy a gun. And I think it is even reasonable for the FBI to put people on terrorist watchlists.
And look at what this slaver said. I guess she must have been a Hot Air poster.
Originally Posted by AYN RAND
Forbidding guns or registering them is not going to stop criminals from having them; nor is it a great threat to the private, non-criminal citizen if he has to register the fact that he has a gun.
Handguns are instruments for killing people -- they are not carried for hunting animals -- and you have no right to kill people. You do have the right to self-defense, however. I don't know how the issue is going to be resolved to protect you without giving you the privilege to kill people at whim
Who's defending the list? And for the record it's not the brainchild of Rahm Emmanuel. Not unless Bush got the idea from him. Using it to take away gun rights, yeah that's Rahm's idea. (Maybe). That said, this particular amendment is the first time I've seen anyone attempt to apply due process to the list. It was wrong to tell people they couldn't fly without due process.
The amendment should include language specifying how to get off the list period.
Why is anyone taking these lists at face value.
And these are horrible examples which couldnt get more extreme.
Who here actually believes that the near 2 million people on various lists are plotting these kinds of attacks and if they were, I would imagine that is reason enough to arrest them.
Of-course and everyone here is well aware of it despite their defending these anti-liberty watch lists.
Couldnt ask for a better real life example. No fly list. "Terrorist" list. KILL list.
I'll take this as an affirmative answer to my rhetorical question.
...apparently you really do think the FBI should delete their investigative records after some arbitrary period of time.
To my mind, on the other hand, it makes perfectly good sense to keep a list of previous subjects for future reference.
For the third time, keeping a list of possible terrorists =/= violating the rights of anyone on that list.
It's perfectly possible to have a watch list, and only take any action against people on that list through due process.
...as the Cornyn amendment proposed.
Who said I'm taking the list at face value? I'm not. Certainly senators and congressmen have been put on the list as have toddlers. But if the FBI has to go to court to defend the list, why is that not a step in the right direction? I think this hearing idea should be applied to the no-fly portion of the list. Then you would see the list itself shrink dramatically.
So wanting the government to have to go to court to defend putting someone on this list is defending the list?![]()