What kinds of firearms should citizens allowed to purchase and possess?

Cynanthrope

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I overheard a discussion that a pro-gun control friend of mine was having with his brother and some of the questions he asked included:

- Should every type of firearm be available for sale and possession?
- Should we allow chain guns, heavy machine guns, and fully automatics to be available for sale and possession?
- Should only semi-auto firearms be legal?

I'm not very knowledgeable on this matter so can some of you provide your insights?
 
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If our government somehow (how, I don't know) actually respected the 2nd Amendment, I should be able to purchase WITHOUT HASSLE an AT-4 Anti-Tank disposable recoilless rifle (rocket launcher for the less technical). I should be able to defend my place of residence with the latest military-grade automatic weapon. THAT is the ONLY thing that would keep the government in-line. They wouldn't dare send troops/police into a neighborhood to stomp on people if they knew that most of their goons would be coming back in body bags.
 
To me it depends on where you live.

Accidental discharge of a bomb in an apartment complex could harm your neighbors. But if you live in a rural area, no problem.
 

OK, what if genuinely I believe that any citizen should be legally allowed to own whatever weapon without restriction -- just like your quote describes -- and would never ever vote for any form or fashion of gun control whatsoever, but that I would rather avoid the subject of automatic weapons altogether on account of the fact that I believe I can do more good in the House than I can on the street, and the idea of legal machine guns would just scare the hell out of way too many people in my slightly blue-leaning district?

(not people who oppose machine guns mind you, but people who will just assume that anybody who favors legalization "could never win" and will therefore vote for a worse candidate so he "doesn't waste his vote.")

Someone asks me about machine guns, I am going to be noncommittal. I don't have much of a choice in that, because I'm dealing with reality here.
 
They wouldn't dare send troops/police into a neighborhood to stomp on people if they knew that most of their goons would be coming back in body bags.

Yes they would.

The thing that scares them is the thought of their car, or one of their children's cars exploding because of a pipe bomb.
 
At one time in this country a person could buy any type of weapon in the avarage hardware store or order one through the mail.
It was not a problem.

It did not become a problem till the police state was created.

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I overheard a discussion that a pro-gun control friend of mine was having with his brother and some of the questions he asked included:

- Should every type of firearm be available for sale and possession?
- Should we allow chain guns, heavy machine guns, and fully automatics to be available for sale and possession?
- Should only semi-auto firearms be legal?

I'm not very knowledgeable on this matter so can some of you provide your insights?


I personally believe that every type of firearm and ordnance should be permitted to use and possess. You can report that to your corporate masters.
 
Like many things, I see this as mostly solvable by the existance of private property and the protection of those entities' rights to decide what goes on there. For instance, in the example of the apartment complex, the complex owner has a right to regulate what goes on within their building(s). Let's say we legalize all drugs. Does that mean a landlord should suffer tenants putting up meth labs? No. They're fairly dangerous, and they ruin property values (you really can't get the stink out). A restaurant that wants to run "gun-free" should be able to, just like restaurants should be able to run "smoke-free" or "meat-free" if the gimmick suits them.

Out on the streets? I really don't think it would be that huge of an issue. You aren't suddenly going to have people shooting one another with anti-aircraft weaponry for fun. First off, such things would still be expensive. Not everyone is going to be able to afford a tank, even if you can buy one. Second, why? I mean, what's the point? If you want an enemy dead, you can already do this any number of ways, many of them far less messy and traceable than some huge weapon. Remember, I'm not saying to abolish punishment for crimes. What I'm saying is to abolish the assumption that someone with a big gun is going to shoot it at people unsafely like some kind of James Bond super-villain.
 
To me it depends on where you live.

Accidental discharge of a bomb in an apartment complex could harm your neighbors. But if you live in a rural area, no problem.

'Potential' accidental discharge should not be a crime, but accidental discharge which hurts others should result in action toward justice.

Nothing wrong with living in an apartment complex that bans certain types of munitions you don't want to live around.

But guns don't kill people, people kill people.

All munitions should be decriminalized. Government laws don't solve problems - personal responsibility does.

Why Government Doesn't Work
by Harry Browne Why Governmen't Doesn't Work PDF

Like many things, I see this as mostly solvable by the existance of private property and the protection of those entities' rights to decide what goes on there.

+1
 
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What people don't realize is that a semi automatic battle rifle can be just as deadly in the hands of a skilled shooter as any automatic weapon. I think as long as we have them we are alright in the firepower category.

And if someone were theoretically running for a state representative, I wouldn't touch the issue with a ten foot pole!:)
 
What people don't realize is that a semi automatic battle rifle can be just as deadly in the hands of a skilled shooter as any automatic weapon.

Not to mention a fork and and big rubber band. Or box cutters loll
 
What kinds of firearms should citizens allowed to purchase and possess?


Well, let me put it this way:

What kinds of firearms should citizens not be allowed to purchase and possess?

Answer: None

That was easy.
 
What kinds of weapons were available and legal before the Unconstitutional National Firearms Act of 1934?
 
Answer

OK, what if genuinely I believe that any citizen should be legally allowed to own whatever weapon without restriction -- just like your quote describes -- and would never ever vote for any form or fashion of gun control whatsoever, but that I would rather avoid the subject of automatic weapons altogether on account of the fact that I believe I can do more good in the House than I can on the street, and the idea of legal machine guns would just scare the hell out of way too many people in my slightly blue-leaning district?

(not people who oppose machine guns mind you, but people who will just assume that anybody who favors legalization "could never win" and will therefore vote for a worse candidate so he "doesn't waste his vote.")

Someone asks me about machine guns, I am going to be noncommittal. I don't have much of a choice in that, because I'm dealing with reality here.


If I were you, my response would be that it is up to the STATES to decide that question. The States specifically prohibited the Federal government from making that decision. It is a State issue, not a Federal issue. Allowing the Federal government to exercise that power results in people from New York City making firearms laws for people in rural Alaska, among other idiotic results.
 
I overheard a discussion that a pro-gun control friend of mine was having with his brother and some of the questions he asked included:

- Should every type of firearm be available for sale and possession?
- Should we allow chain guns, heavy machine guns, and fully automatics to be available for sale and possession?
- Should only semi-auto firearms be legal?

I'm not very knowledgeable on this matter so can some of you provide your insights?

Legally, assuming the Constitution is the supreme law. There should be no restrictions.
 
All should be available, which they are. The only thing I'd like to see is the "licenses" and taxes go away.

No more paperwork - it should be treated as any other good in the market. What's next? Forks and knives?
 
Hey - and seriously now..

should we be allowed to have forks? I mean, multiple prongs are a potential threat to public safety... I think we should replace them with sporks. The world would be a much safer place=)

(hint, sarcasm)
 
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