RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
The fact is that you're focusing on this idea of stopping obtainment of firearms by irresponsible persons at the point of purchase, and the assumption that the point of purchase, or that obtainment of the firearm at all is through purchase, simply doesn't hold water.
So your argument is that closing the easiest path to obtaining a firearm will have zero impact on the number of deranged/homicidal people who obtain firearms because it's just as easy to steal a gun or buy one on the black market as it is to walk into Walmart and plunk down your Visa?
I said nothing about "zero impact". Zero impact means even less than statistically insignificant impact, or even impact that is not worth the burden.
The simple fact is that showing that it has "some impact" or "a percentage" is worthless. People have a right to own a firearm without undue government interference, and in order to show that mental health screenings are not "undue", you need to show they have a very significant impact. Merely statistically significant would even be enough.
As for closing the "Easiest" path, given the cost of a gun and the fact that mental health screenings do not "close" it at all but merely make it harder to an unspecified degree, you can't make either of those claims as necessarily true. In point of fact, mental health screenings wouldn't "close" the path at all without establishing some unreasonably high standard of stability that a person must meet to pass it.
For that matter, how are these screenings to be conducted? Who bears the cost? What protections are there to be to ensure that people are not screened out simply because of "suspected" mental health problems? How about people with past problems that exhibit no current signs of problems, and most important of all, what makes you think that people who develop mental problems and buy guns necessarily buy the guns at a time when the problems are readily detectable?
The simple fact is that you're pushing this idea on the assumption that it will have some non-zero effect on mass shootings, suicides, and spousal killings. Aside form the questionable practice of singling out certain shootings, or even murders by gun in general, as somehow in need of special societal attention, the simple fact is that the burden is not on those against gun control to prove that the effect is zero, it's on those advocating control to prove that these controls are so effective that they are worth the burden on something we, as a society, regard as a
fundamental right. Furthermore, the bar for where it's worth it is not where gun control advocates think it's worth it, but where society in general thinks its worth it. That means the aggregate of everyone, and while that doesn't mean you have to prove it to the most die-hard gun advocate out there, it does mean that their opinion counts in the aggregate as much as yours does.
Yes, people can walk into Wal-Mart (not sure why you keep talking about Wal-Mart) and buy a gun easily. That's frankly a lot better than having to go to a psychologist, get evaluated, and hope he decides you can buy a gun under standards that are subject to A) the inexactitude of mental science B) the political whims of the locality and the Congress and whatever regulatory body and C) that psychologist's personal viewpoints.
A mental health screening is a significant burden and it relies on a lot of happy assumptions to be of reasonable value. You keep trying to construct assumptions to make it work in a best-case scenario. In a worst-case or even middle-case scenario it's practically worthless. Doctor-shopping alone could render it irrelevant.