Aizle wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Reasonable compromise is not possible, however, because the anti-gun crowd sees the process as merely steps to an eventual ban. This has been specifically stated by some of them in the past, and it has actually occurred. (See NYC).
I don't believe you are correct. Reasonable compromise is completely possible if BOTH sides are reasonable. I can certainly understand some trepidation considering NYC's past actions, however that scenario would be impossible on a country wide scale. It happened in NYC because you have an overwhelmingly liberal anti-gun city and the appropriate timing for legislation. Neither of these are true for the whole of the US. Were the faintest whiff of such a tact to be taken by congress, the ~50% of the population that own guns would be in an uproar, myself included. Additionally, the SCOTUS has already made it clear that total bans are unconstitutional, so in effect it's off the table.
Frankly it's because of these micro scenarios on both ends of the spectrum that I feel the only way to resolve this in a reasonable fashion would be through federal law.
You don't understand. Yes, the political situation that occurred in NYC is impossible on a country-wide scale, but that does not change the fact that the ani-gun crowd is still trying for it, and that position plus the history of things like NYC's gun registry are what make the image of the anti-gun crowd in the mind of the average gun owner.
Yes, both sides have to be reasonable, but the fact of the matter is that the people whose guns are threatened are hundreds of millions of average people; people who in many cases rely on their guns for food, protection, or both because they're poor, rural-dwelling, and often both, and even if neither, for whom the right to hunt and defend yourself is deeply ingrained in who they are as Americans.
Meanwhile, the other side is controlled by the Brady organization and Handgun Control, people with long histories of never being satisfied with the gun control that
does exist.
The average gun owner really does not care if they can't, for example, own a fully automatic weapon. Nor does banning of full-auto weaponry really mean much of anything; full auto is effective only with crew-served weapons and just wastes ammunition elsewhere. This is just one example. Yet the gun-control advocates constantly clamor for ever more restrictions, with the aim of, if not a ban, at least restricting things down to single-shot-rifles and shotguns only, and only with absurd ownership requirements.
Before there can be effective debate and/or compromise, the anti-gun crowd simply must give up their demands for massive restrictions because, while total lack of restriction is unreasonable, the restrictions most anti-gun people want, even if it's only "no semi-auto weapons for civilians" are even
more unreasonable.
Vastly more.
Anti-gun organizations like the ones I mentioned are the fundamentalists of the gun debate. They are just like Jack Chick or the WBC. In order for people in favor of some form of gun control to be taken seriously, you need to start telling the Bradys and HGIs to sit down and shut the **** up and accept that ownership of weapons is a
fundamental right, just like I tell people like Beryllin to shove it beause they make other Christians look stupid. The middle ground isn't between "total ban" and "no restrictions", it's between something like what we had in the Clinton era and no restrictions.