Setting aside the fact that "law-abiding citizen" means that you can be convicted of: indecent exposure, assault, theft, drug use/possession/trafficking, battery, criminal misconduct, disorderly conduct, public intoxication, filing false police reports, resisting arrest, stalking, prostitution, trespassing, fraud, forgery, various traffic offenses including DUI, harassment, domestic violence, burglary, etc. and various assorted misdemeanor crimes.
In fact, so long as you stay away from felony convictions--you are a "law-abiding citizen" in the eyes of the NRA and entitle to buy and carry just about any firearm you wish. And let's not forget that most DAs will accept plea bargains which reduce felony crimes to misdemeanors. It saves money, time, and preserves conviction rates.
So, we've established the "law-abiding" aren't as "law-abiding" as the gunloons would have you believe.
So...how is gun control "punishing" these so-called "law-abiding citizens?"
Well, apparently, gunloons believe background checks are just a horrible, terrible ordeal to be subjected to. IOW, gunloons who believe they could easily respond to and prevent mass murders believe a check into whether they are a convicted felon or mentally ill is simply beyond the pale of human endurance.
The mentally ill? Well, this, per NRA strictures, means someone who has been involuntarily committed to a mental institution. In some states, annual involuntary commitments are zero. Folks like Ted Kacszynski and John Hinckley and Seung-Hui Cho never made the cut to be involuntarily committed.
It's an embarrassing fact for gunloons: Their idea of "punishment" seems to be ascertaining whether of not they are a convicted felon (though they can have an extensive criminal background) and/or whether or not they so are so crazed as to be able to function--or semi-function--in society.
What a horrible, terrible "punishment."
Of course, this doesn't account for the makority of gunloons who are simply untrained and unqualified to use anything more than a spork.
It's so easy to spot an article by Jadegold. It starts out in idiocy and proceeds to deeper levels thereof.
ReplyDelete1. Many misdemeanors disqualify a person from owning a gun.
2. If someone hasn't been convicted of a crime of violence or adjudicated mentally unfit, that person is free to exercise basic rights. That's how American law works. If you want us to be North Korea, you've got a lot of work to do.