ponderingturtle
Orthogonal Vector
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2006
- Messages
- 54,545
Well, looks like the NRA is nothing more than a device to transfer dues and donations to an advertising and lobbying firm.
Also funnel foreign money to politicians of course.
Well, looks like the NRA is nothing more than a device to transfer dues and donations to an advertising and lobbying firm.
VOX said:
Rumors of the NRA's death have been greatly exaggerated.
Well, looks like the NRA is nothing more than a device to transfer dues and donations to an advertising and lobbying firm.
Reflects well on the morality of the lobbying and advertising industry.
The lobbying industry's only goal is to subvert democracy. That's literally the reason lobbyists exist. There should be none.
You consider conclusions reached by comprehensive research conducted by UC Davis, UC Berkeley, RAND corp, and Johns Hopkins as "bitching?"I did a search for National Rifle, National, and NRA and didn't see a single mention at all. To save me the time of going through the whole article, want to link the relevant part?
ETA: Nevermind, I scrolled through it and it's just a long article bitching about background checks and how useless they think they are...
You consider conclusions reached by comprehensive research conducted by UC Davis, UC Berkeley, RAND corp, and Johns Hopkins as "bitching?"
Your observations align with my intent, which was that my two posts were meant to be processed separately.No, I consider it a non sequitur to what you posted. You said that the NRA dying was an exaggeration and then linked to a piece about background checks.
The two have ******* nothing to do with each other.
Your observations align with my intent, which was that my two posts were meant to be processed separately.
I accept uncontested that you may not agree that the NRA is dying/dead.
Do you accept that there is an increasing amount of evidence that back ground checks have a negligible impact on reducing homicides?
I don't know if there's real evidence that background checks have a *negligible* impact on homicide rates. Perhaps not notable, but I doubt negligible. In any event, does your dismay at the perceived ineffectuality of such mean that you desire to enact more meaningful measures to curb this ongoing tragedy of Americans slaying themselves at a rate *many* times that caused by all foreign terrorists and wars put together?
Or does your 'reasoning' have it that if no tepid measures are deemed to make a meaningful dent in the bloodshed then we mustn't strive for anything more firm and resolved. Like was done in Australia after Port Arthur? Or New Zealand right after Christchurch? You know, stuff civilized people eventually recognize as solutions staring themselves in the face and requiring just a measure of common sense and a bit of backbone to enact.
If background checks saved one life that would make it negligible compared to the other thousands of lives that were not saved as a result of back ground checks. A different perspective is that one life saved would be very meaningful to the family of that person. This is a gray area. That is why I used the weasel word.I don't know if there's real evidence that background checks have a *negligible* impact on homicide rates. Perhaps not notable, but I doubt negligible.
I'd like to see the math that verifies American's are slaying themselves at a rate many times that caused by all foreign terrorists and wars put together.In any event, does your dismay at the perceived ineffectuality of such mean that you desire to enact more meaningful measures to curb this ongoing tragedy of Americans slaying themselves at a rate *many* times that caused by all foreign terrorists and wars put together?
My reasoning is to recommend solutions that are proven or at a minimum reasonably believed to be effective while simultaneously considering other aspects of society.Or does your 'reasoning' have it that if no tepid measures are deemed to make a meaningful dent in the bloodshed then we mustn't strive for anything more firm and resolved. Like was done in Australia after Port Arthur? Or New Zealand right after Christchurch? You know, stuff civilized people eventually recognize as solutions staring themselves in the face and requiring just a measure of common sense and a bit of backbone to enact.
I cannot reason why you would discuss back ground checks in the context of local law enforcement because the NICS back ground check program is a National system that is overseen by the Federal BATFE.That actually depends on locality and implementation. Any tool used poorly will be ineffective. However, in some places they have actually even arrested people who show up to 'pick up their new gun' because of outstanding warrants, or trying to buy the gun knowing it is illegal for them to.
And as in many cases, yes, local GOP trying to break something does actually break it. No surprises.
I cannot reason why you would discuss back ground checks in the context of local law enforcement because the NICS back ground check program is a National system that is overseen by the Federal BATFE.
Perhaps you have specific examples of GOP members circumventing laws the national government is responsible for enforcing and prosecuting. Are you aware that the BATFE prosecutes a very very small percentage of individuals who attempt to purchase a firearm who are felons? Again, nothing to do with 'local GOP.'
And I can't figure out why you think that because the check system itself is run at the federal level that local authorities have no ability to act on that information (I have some hypotheses though).
They are known as 'lie and try' laws, which seek to actually punish people who lie on forms, and similar laws which inform local (well, actually state, just local in relation to federal) about people with outstanding laws seeking firearms.
The specific example I have is how the GOP in Washington fought against such laws, despite the obvious advantages of them. Eventually they relented. It has worked very well in the last two years.
There is also of course going to be limited effect on background checks that are only locally required as moving guns between states is really pretty easy and hence selling guns legally to some guy in a state that it is legal and that guy then transports it into a state that it needs a background check to transfer and doesn't bother with the law.
But actually registering and tracking firearms so that you can find the guy who first sold it into the illegal market is right out for any real gun owner of course.
The howling from the 'lawful' gun owners about the bad guys always being able to get weapons is a self-fulfilling state of affairs when they oppose even the least intrusive measures to try and make it harder for guns to get into the wrong hands. To say nothing (Lawd forbid) of measurably effective policy.
Are you of the opinion that state governments should always enforce federal law? What about immigration? The fight of responsibility usually comes down to funding.And I can't figure out why you think that because the check system itself is run at the federal level that local authorities have no ability to act on that information (I have some hypotheses though).
They are known as 'lie and try' laws, which seek to actually punish people who lie on forms, and similar laws which inform local (well, actually state, just local in relation to federal) about people with outstanding laws seeking firearms.
The specific example I have is how the GOP in Washington fought against such laws, despite the obvious advantages of them. Eventually they relented. It has worked very well in the last two years.
The former head of the National Rifle Association and his wife went to great lengths to ship parts of the elephant they killed in Botswana back home—and to keep their names far removed from it. According to The New Yorker, Wayne LaPierre and his wife, Susan, had elephant feet repurposed for stools, umbrella stands, and a trash can, all while trying to make sure the shipment couldn’t be traced back to them. A 2013 email from Susan LaPierre to a manager asked that the shipment to be sent to a taxidermist and for the company to “not use our names anywhere if at all possible.” Aside from explicitly violating NRA rules on contractor gifts greater than $250, the two were afraid of a backlash over their hunt after seeing the pushback from an episode of hunting show Under Wild Skies, in which the host shot and killed an elephant. New York’s Attorney General’s Office, which has sought to disband the gun-rights organization over corruption claims, said the gifts were worth thousands of dollars and “in excess of authorized amounts pursuant to NRA policy to LaPierre and his wife.” An NRA spokesperson told the outlet the hunting trip was perfectly legal and that the NRA donated some of the other animal prizes from that trip.