Leshani wrote:
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They generally know how to shoot,
uh No, the vast majority of police officers have very little experience, or practice with their weapons. Most of them only know how to use them well enough to pass qualifications. The average CCW holder spends considerably more time at the range practicing, and learning, then almost any police officer.
The average CCW holder spends more time at the range than the average police officer, not almost any police officer. CCW holders include plenty of people that are not shooting enthusiasts and who do not shoot with any regularity.
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Not to call you out DE, But Honest Questions for you. Since January first this year how much range time have you spent? How many rounds fired? how many different weapons? and no I'm not going compare your stats to mine, or the muppet's.
I'm not going to answer that except to say that it's not as much as I'd like, what with having 4 kids, and 2 of them being babies. I still shoot "expert" every time though - which is 4 times more often than as a local police officer. As for the number of weapons, we qualify with 3. I have 3 more I regularly shoot at the range. The number of weapons is limited by my personal budget for guns and ammo which is close to zero right now. I wouldn't be able to afford to shoot on my own at all right now if I hadn't inherited an appalling amount of ammo when my dad died.
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This law does have it's place, if nothing else it will ensure due diligence on the part of the officers, accurate fact checking, accurate address information (no knock raids on the wrong address).
I haven't read the text of the law.
This law has no place. Even if it does ensure those things, they're already required. All this law will do is give nutjobs the idea that they personally can start shooting because their personal idea of what's legal or constitutional has been violated. There might be some benefit there, though. A lot of them will no doubt get killed.
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Ideally the law should include that the officers are criminally, and civilly liable for their actions. Too many times they screw up and walk away, people are dead, property destroyed, and pets killed with out cause or justification other than we made a mistake.
Officers can be criminally and civilly liable for their actions already. What we see too many times is not officers screwing up, but people rushing to judgement based on incomplete facts and biased accounts.
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With out a warrant the officer better be able to articulate a very good reason at time of entry, not some anon tip.
That's already the case. An officer cannot simply enter (barring consent) based on an anonymous tip and expect it to hold up in court as it is.
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Sorry DE dis agree with you on the constitution. The Second Amendment exists Specifically to ensure the that We The People have recourse to irresponsible or tyrannical government.
False. In fact, that's perfectly silly. If the government were tyrannical, it would simply ignore the Second Amendment. The idea that you can use force of arms to deal with "irresponsible" government is laughable. There's no point in even having a coherent nation then. You may as well just say "anyone can start shooting as soon as they lose an election".