NATION

PASSWORD

Gun Control

For discussion and debate about anything. (Not a roleplay related forum; out-of-character commentary only.)

Advertisement

Remove ads

Am I right?

Yeah, mostly, seems agreeable.
223
22%
Dunno/Not sure/Not American and I think that matters
68
7%
Nah, you're crazy. Guns should be more restricted.
204
20%
Nah, you're crazy. Guns should be less restricted.
436
44%
JC Christ CM come back when the meds wear off
71
7%
 
Total votes : 1002

User avatar
Senkaku
Postmaster of the Fleet
 
Posts: 26722
Founded: Sep 01, 2012
Corrupt Dictatorship

Postby Senkaku » Wed Sep 20, 2017 6:22 pm

Conserative Morality wrote:-le snip-

So? Agree? Disagree?

All seems pretty reasonable to me, but I'm a commie fag of some variety so it doesn't really matter. :p
Am I just rambling?

Mhm. But nice to see you back anyways.
Last edited by Senkaku on Wed Sep 20, 2017 6:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Biden-Santos Thought cadre

User avatar
The Parkus Empire
Post Czar
 
Posts: 43030
Founded: Sep 12, 2005
Ex-Nation

Postby The Parkus Empire » Wed Sep 20, 2017 7:06 pm

Sovaal wrote:
The Parkus Empire wrote:If ex-cons can't have guns, then that shouldn't be in the Constitution.

Never said ex-cons, said violent offenders.

That is a kind of ex con. If you can permanently lose a right from criminal behavior, even after serving all your time, then that is not really a constitional right.
American Orthodox: one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church.
Jesus is Allah ن
Burkean conservative
Homophobic
Anti-feminist sexist
♂Copy and paste this in your sig if you passed biology and know men and women aren't the same.♀

User avatar
Telconi
Post Czar
 
Posts: 34903
Founded: Oct 08, 2016
Ex-Nation

Postby Telconi » Wed Sep 20, 2017 7:10 pm

Costa Fierro wrote:
Conserative Morality wrote:Registration and tracking of firearms is all-important, as is licensing for individuals. I'm not sure that there are many circumstances I would support a full ban on a person's right to own firearms, but restricting ownership of certain firearms for certain individuals is probably useful.


The ones I can think of which would be essential for banning people owning firearms includes convicted criminals, specifically those that have had convictions for physical violence like assaults, battery, domestic violence, robbery, theft etc., and those suffering from mental illnesses and other mental trauma, such as PTSD. I would also think those with severe mental disabilities would be other candidates for firearms bans too.

Acquiring a license to own handguns in particular, I think, is a good idea. Criminal activity is overwhelmingly reliant on concealment of weaponry.


That is how it is done here in New Zealand. Anyone wishing to own a firearm must hold a firearms licence by law. Having a licence requirement would also mean that the state or federal government could require mandatory practical courses on firearm use and gun safety, and require that firearms be kept inside a secure storage facility such as a safe in order to keep them away from children.

I do think a limitation on different 'classes' of weapons is useful - but the current definitions of 'assault' weapons are asinine and borderline useless.


New Zealand has a different term called a "military style semi-automatic weapon", which essentially is considered to be any long firearm that isn't a rifle, shotgun or fully automatic.

Silencers is a question I struggle with. Any policy on silencers has to be Federal, not piecemeal state-by-state, but... on one hand, the use of silencers to lessen hearing loss and damage is perfectly legitimate and silencers don't work like Hollywood 'plink plink' kind of bullshit. It turns a roar into a bark. It's not exactly a sneaky-beaky murder weapon. On the other hand, turning a roar into a bark is sometimes enough combined with background ambiance to conceal the firing of a gun in circumstances where a gun should not be fired, which is... problematic.


Limiting silencers to those with hunting permits might be a good suggestion.

Open carry is an issue that I think should mostly be regulated by the individual states, with some exceptions. There is no fucking reason you need to open carry a fully automatic weapon in public, full stop. Keep that shit on private property. I'd prefer it if people didn't carry their AR-15 dick replacements into the local department stores with tactical webbing and camo from head to toe either, but I guess that's more a personal preference.


Personally I think open carry is stupid. There's absolutely no need for it other than "muh second amendment rights".


A long gun that isn't a rifle, shotgun, or fully automatic...

So a musket?

Also, open carry is impractical, it has no functional purpose, it's just the gun rights folks' equivalent of the pride parade.
-2.25 LEFT
-3.23 LIBERTARIAN

PRO:
-Weapons Rights
-Gender Equality
-LGBTQ Rights
-Racial Equality
-Religious Freedom
-Freedom of Speech
-Freedom of Association
-Life
-Limited Government
-Non Interventionism
-Labor Unions
-Environmental Protections
ANTI:
-Racism
-Sexism
-Bigotry In All Forms
-Government Overreach
-Government Surveillance
-Freedom For Security Social Transactions
-Unnecessary Taxes
-Excessively Specific Government Programs
-Foreign Entanglements
-Religious Extremism
-Fascists Masquerading as "Social Justice Warriors"

"The Constitution is NOT an instrument for the government to restrain the people,it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government-- lest it come to dominate our lives and interests." ~ Patrick Henry

User avatar
Sovaal
Postmaster-General
 
Posts: 13695
Founded: Mar 17, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby Sovaal » Thu Sep 21, 2017 4:51 am

The Parkus Empire wrote:
Sovaal wrote:Never said ex-cons, said violent offenders.

That is a kind of ex con. If you can permanently lose a right from criminal behavior, even after serving all your time, then that is not really a constitional right.

Fine, let me restate that; Not all ex-cons should lose the right, just ines that abuse it. Those aren't the only rights lost to ex-cons today, nor is the IS the only country to do it, The UK and Canada do it as well.
Most of the time I have no idea what the hell I'm doing or talking about.

”Many forms of government have been tried and will be tried in this world of sin and woe.
No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is
the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried from time to time." -
Winston Churchill, 1947.

"Rifles, muskets, long-bows and hand-grenades are inherently democratic weapons. A complex weapon makes the strong stronger, while a simple weapon – so long as there is no answer to it – gives claws to the weak.” - George Orwell

User avatar
Alvecia
Postmaster of the Fleet
 
Posts: 20367
Founded: Aug 17, 2015
Democratic Socialists

Postby Alvecia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 5:06 am

I think America would be a much safer place without all the guns, but I don't think there's any action you can take at this point that will meaningfully impact them. They're too pervasive. Too entrenched.

User avatar
Ifreann
Post Overlord
 
Posts: 164078
Founded: Aug 07, 2005
Iron Fist Socialists

Postby Ifreann » Thu Sep 21, 2017 5:23 am

The Parkus Empire wrote:
Sovaal wrote:Never said ex-cons, said violent offenders.

That is a kind of ex con. If you can permanently lose a right from criminal behavior, even after serving all your time, then that is not really a constitional right.

Don't people regularly lose their right to vote, even after serving their time?


Alvecia wrote:I think America would be a much safer place without all the guns, but I don't think there's any action you can take at this point that will meaningfully impact them. They're too pervasive. Too entrenched.

We could order an artillery bombardment on their trenches.
He/Him

beating the devil
we never run from the devil
we never summon the devil
we never hide from from the devil
we never

User avatar
Albrenia
Post Marshal
 
Posts: 16619
Founded: Aug 18, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby Albrenia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 5:31 am

I don't think the US will have decent gun control for a very long time. The combination of the 2nd Amendment and the prevailing idea that if you don't have guns the government will "take over" means it's basically a lost cause until something major shifts in American culture.

Gun control works a treat where I live though. Also has had an odd side effect of the vast majority of gun deaths being criminal-on-criminal violence.

User avatar
Alvecia
Postmaster of the Fleet
 
Posts: 20367
Founded: Aug 17, 2015
Democratic Socialists

Postby Alvecia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 5:39 am

Ifreann wrote:
Alvecia wrote:I think America would be a much safer place without all the guns, but I don't think there's any action you can take at this point that will meaningfully impact them. They're too pervasive. Too entrenched.

We could order an artillery bombardment on their trenches.

It'll soften them up for sure. Maybe enough for a forward advance....

User avatar
Zeclil
Spokesperson
 
Posts: 193
Founded: Apr 13, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby Zeclil » Thu Sep 21, 2017 6:02 am

Conserative Morality wrote:Registration and tracking of firearms is all-important, as is licensing for individuals. I'm not sure that there are many circumstances I would support a full ban on a person's right to own firearms, but restricting ownership of certain firearms for certain individuals is probably useful. Acquiring a license to own handguns in particular, I think, is a good idea. Criminal activity is overwhelmingly reliant on concealment of weaponry.

I do think a limitation on different 'classes' of weapons is useful - but the current definitions of 'assault' weapons are asinine and borderline useless. Restrictions on semiautomatic long guns should be based primarily on ease of concealment - 'tactical' attachments, bayonet lugs, that shit doesn't matter. Collapsing stocks and shortened barrels and extended magazine capacity is more important, and even then I don't believe in a complete ban on such things.

Private and government property, naturally, can restrict what comes onto their property. Your rights end where another's begin. If the city doesn't want your glock in the local social services department, leave it at home and quitcher bitchin'.

Silencers is a question I struggle with. Any policy on silencers has to be Federal, not piecemeal state-by-state, but... on one hand, the use of silencers to lessen hearing loss and damage is perfectly legitimate and silencers don't work like Hollywood 'plink plink' kind of bullshit. It turns a roar into a bark. It's not exactly a sneaky-beaky murder weapon. On the other hand, turning a roar into a bark is sometimes enough combined with background ambiance to conceal the firing of a gun in circumstances where a gun should not be fired, which is... problematic.

Open carry is an issue that I think should mostly be regulated by the individual states, with some exceptions. There is no fucking reason you need to open carry a fully automatic weapon in public, full stop. Keep that shit on private property. I'd prefer it if people didn't carry their AR-15 dick replacements into the local department stores with tactical webbing and camo from head to toe either, but I guess that's more a personal preference.

So? Agree? Disagree? Am I just rambling?


Frankly, I agree with a decent percentage of your thoughts on the matter. But, just a few things.

They are called suppressors, not silencers; just semantics, sure, but a pet peeve.

Today I learned that the AR-15 is fully automatic.

Civilians who want to obtain a fully automatic weapon must have a metric fuckton of documentation for licenses, permits, etc. The license for a fully automatic weapon is heavily regulated by the federal government and is further influenced by state laws. Only the clean of record and sound of mind can own fully automatic weapons.

The AR-15 cannot, legally, be made into a fully automatic, either. The Auto-sear, receiver machinings, etc. are very difficult for anyone without a fully fledged machine shop. If you were to make a fully automatic conversion yourself, you would probably kill yourself before anything else. The AR-15 is a civilian weapon and was not designed for the capability of full-auto.
Heraldry and Vexillology are quite interesting
I like both receiving and sending Telegrams
I do NOT get involved in politics in public and I doubt I will here. I am from the South of the US of A
Breakdown of Sanity, Demon Hunter, Fit For A King, Impending Doom, Revocation, Rings of Saturn, Tremonti, Volbeat

User avatar
Baalkistann
Spokesperson
 
Posts: 195
Founded: Sep 06, 2016
Democratic Socialists

Postby Baalkistann » Thu Sep 21, 2017 6:03 am

MERIZoC wrote:(Image)


What did that horse ever do to you?
Please disregard all my pre-2020 forum posts. As in all of them. Teenage hormones are one hell of a drug.

User avatar
The Parkus Empire
Post Czar
 
Posts: 43030
Founded: Sep 12, 2005
Ex-Nation

Postby The Parkus Empire » Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:52 am

Ifreann wrote:Don't people regularly lose their right to vote, even after serving their time?

Is a couple of states, but not most and that doesn't affect Federal voting. But whether or not the right to vote is actually guranteed by the Constituion (as opposed to just taking it away on the wrong grounds) is challenged by Republicans (voter ID laws would be unconstitutional if so).
Last edited by The Parkus Empire on Thu Sep 21, 2017 7:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
American Orthodox: one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church.
Jesus is Allah ن
Burkean conservative
Homophobic
Anti-feminist sexist
♂Copy and paste this in your sig if you passed biology and know men and women aren't the same.♀

User avatar
Conserative Morality
Post Kaiser
 
Posts: 76676
Founded: Aug 24, 2007
Ex-Nation

Postby Conserative Morality » Thu Sep 21, 2017 8:15 am

Zeclil wrote:Today I learned that the AR-15 is fully automatic.

Civilians who want to obtain a fully automatic weapon must have a metric fuckton of documentation for licenses, permits, etc. The license for a fully automatic weapon is heavily regulated by the federal government and is further influenced by state laws. Only the clean of record and sound of mind can own fully automatic weapons.

The AR-15 cannot, legally, be made into a fully automatic, either. The Auto-sear, receiver machinings, etc. are very difficult for anyone without a fully fledged machine shop. If you were to make a fully automatic conversion yourself, you would probably kill yourself before anything else. The AR-15 is a civilian weapon and was not designed for the capability of full-auto.

Those two sentences are separate; "No reason to carry fully automatic weapons" + "I would prefer it if people didn't carry around AR-15s and the like"
On the hate train. Choo choo, bitches. Bi-Polar. Proud Crypto-Fascist and Turbo Progressive. Dirty Étatist. Lowly Humanities Major. NSG's Best Liberal.
Caesar and Imperator of RWDT
Got a blog up again. || An NS Writing Discussion

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:02 am

A Rational Anarchist wrote:
Galloism wrote:Then, when you consider the history of such firearm registries (how, in Chicago, it was used as a precursor and method to take away pretty much all the guns later), it would make anybody nervous to have their name and firearms in a database somewhere. Add on top of that how governments and corporations are losing confidential information at crazy levels, and I want to be in as few databases as possible. I have a LOT of concerns with firearm registries. I would have fewer concerns of such if the McDonald v. Chicago and DC v. Heller were decided by thicker majorities (7-2 or 8-1 perhaps), instead of a 5-4 in both cases, but still with concerns about data breach.


Balancing the rights of peaceful individuals in their own homes versus Sandy Hook/Pulse-type public atrocities wasn't hard enough. Now I have to worry about privacy disasters as well.

Egads.

Although, just to clarify -- what difference does the thickness of the SCOTUS decisions make concerning "data breach?" Even if both decisions were 9-0, a concentrated database of personal information is still a breach disaster waiting to happen. Or does "data breach" just mean "SCOTUS eventually reverses and now the 'gun grabbers' know where all the guns are?"

EDIT: fixed quote to quote the person I meant to quote.

The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:04 am

Zeclil wrote:
Conserative Morality wrote:Registration and tracking of firearms is all-important, as is licensing for individuals. I'm not sure that there are many circumstances I would support a full ban on a person's right to own firearms, but restricting ownership of certain firearms for certain individuals is probably useful. Acquiring a license to own handguns in particular, I think, is a good idea. Criminal activity is overwhelmingly reliant on concealment of weaponry.

I do think a limitation on different 'classes' of weapons is useful - but the current definitions of 'assault' weapons are asinine and borderline useless. Restrictions on semiautomatic long guns should be based primarily on ease of concealment - 'tactical' attachments, bayonet lugs, that shit doesn't matter. Collapsing stocks and shortened barrels and extended magazine capacity is more important, and even then I don't believe in a complete ban on such things.

Private and government property, naturally, can restrict what comes onto their property. Your rights end where another's begin. If the city doesn't want your glock in the local social services department, leave it at home and quitcher bitchin'.

Silencers is a question I struggle with. Any policy on silencers has to be Federal, not piecemeal state-by-state, but... on one hand, the use of silencers to lessen hearing loss and damage is perfectly legitimate and silencers don't work like Hollywood 'plink plink' kind of bullshit. It turns a roar into a bark. It's not exactly a sneaky-beaky murder weapon. On the other hand, turning a roar into a bark is sometimes enough combined with background ambiance to conceal the firing of a gun in circumstances where a gun should not be fired, which is... problematic.

Open carry is an issue that I think should mostly be regulated by the individual states, with some exceptions. There is no fucking reason you need to open carry a fully automatic weapon in public, full stop. Keep that shit on private property. I'd prefer it if people didn't carry their AR-15 dick replacements into the local department stores with tactical webbing and camo from head to toe either, but I guess that's more a personal preference.

So? Agree? Disagree? Am I just rambling?


Frankly, I agree with a decent percentage of your thoughts on the matter. But, just a few things.

They are called suppressors, not silencers; just semantics, sure, but a pet peeve.

Today I learned that the AR-15 is fully automatic.

Civilians who want to obtain a fully automatic weapon must have a metric fuckton of documentation for licenses, permits, etc. The license for a fully automatic weapon is heavily regulated by the federal government and is further influenced by state laws. Only the clean of record and sound of mind can own fully automatic weapons.

The AR-15 cannot, legally, be made into a fully automatic, either. The Auto-sear, receiver machinings, etc. are very difficult for anyone without a fully fledged machine shop. If you were to make a fully automatic conversion yourself, you would probably kill yourself before anything else. The AR-15 is a civilian weapon and was not designed for the capability of full-auto.

Meaningless pedantry that offers nothing of substance to the discussion and doesn't convey any actual ideas.

Except, perhaps, that you need a trigger warning for "wrong words". Sounds like PC culture to me, but hey ho.
I was one of those once. It's no good look.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
Sovaal
Postmaster-General
 
Posts: 13695
Founded: Mar 17, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby Sovaal » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:05 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:
A Rational Anarchist wrote:
Balancing the rights of peaceful individuals in their own homes versus Sandy Hook/Pulse-type public atrocities wasn't hard enough. Now I have to worry about privacy disasters as well.

Egads.

Although, just to clarify -- what difference does the thickness of the SCOTUS decisions make concerning "data breach?" Even if both decisions were 9-0, a concentrated database of personal information is still a breach disaster waiting to happen. Or does "data breach" just mean "SCOTUS eventually reverses and now the 'gun grabbers' know where all the guns are?"

EDIT: fixed quote to quote the person I meant to quote.

The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.

http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/25/us/new-york-gun-permit-map/index.html
Most of the time I have no idea what the hell I'm doing or talking about.

”Many forms of government have been tried and will be tried in this world of sin and woe.
No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is
the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried from time to time." -
Winston Churchill, 1947.

"Rifles, muskets, long-bows and hand-grenades are inherently democratic weapons. A complex weapon makes the strong stronger, while a simple weapon – so long as there is no answer to it – gives claws to the weak.” - George Orwell

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:07 am

Sovaal wrote:
Imperializt Russia wrote:The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.

http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/25/us/new-york-gun-permit-map/index.html

Certainly distasteful, but it's apparently not a data breach. That was - it seems - publicly available information already.
That is a matter for New York State to resolve.

Also, "star of david" jokes, that's super classy.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
A Rational Anarchist
Envoy
 
Posts: 209
Founded: Aug 08, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby A Rational Anarchist » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:09 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.


Folks probably were not expecting the Equifax breach either (which has apparently affected a lot of people in the UK). I'd imagine any kind of large scale registry would contain a lot of the same sort of information, too.

User avatar
Sovaal
Postmaster-General
 
Posts: 13695
Founded: Mar 17, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby Sovaal » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:14 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:

Certainly distasteful, but it's apparently not a data breach. That was - it seems - publicly available information already.
That is a matter for New York State to resolve.

Also, "star of david" jokes, that's super classy.

The Poynter Institute, a school for journalists, notes that some other news agencies have published various types of databases as well.
"Publishing gun owners' names makes them targets for theft or public ridicule. It is journalistic arrogance to abuse public record privilege, just as it is to air 911 calls for no reason or to publish the home addresses of police or judges without cause," Al Tompkins, a Poynter senior faculty member, said in a statement Wednesday. "Unwarranted publishing of the names of permitted owners just encourages gun owners to skip the permitting."

Maybe not a data breach, but still idiotic and doesn't make me or other gun owners trust such a system any more.

And people always like to compare themselves to oppressed groups, both sides do it.
Most of the time I have no idea what the hell I'm doing or talking about.

”Many forms of government have been tried and will be tried in this world of sin and woe.
No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is
the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried from time to time." -
Winston Churchill, 1947.

"Rifles, muskets, long-bows and hand-grenades are inherently democratic weapons. A complex weapon makes the strong stronger, while a simple weapon – so long as there is no answer to it – gives claws to the weak.” - George Orwell

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 9:31 am

Sovaal wrote:
Imperializt Russia wrote:Certainly distasteful, but it's apparently not a data breach. That was - it seems - publicly available information already.
That is a matter for New York State to resolve.

Also, "star of david" jokes, that's super classy.

The Poynter Institute, a school for journalists, notes that some other news agencies have published various types of databases as well.
"Publishing gun owners' names makes them targets for theft or public ridicule. It is journalistic arrogance to abuse public record privilege, just as it is to air 911 calls for no reason or to publish the home addresses of police or judges without cause," Al Tompkins, a Poynter senior faculty member, said in a statement Wednesday. "Unwarranted publishing of the names of permitted owners just encourages gun owners to skip the permitting."

Maybe not a data breach, but still idiotic and doesn't make me or other gun owners trust such a system any more.

And people always like to compare themselves to oppressed groups, both sides do it.

In Switzerland, your car is not issued a licence plate but you are issued a licence number which must be fitted to all your vehicles. A public record of licenceholders is easily available.

In Norway, elements of the tax registry is publicly available. It lists the name of the person, their recorded income, recorded wealth and recorded taxes paid that year. You can go look it up for yourself online. I believe another Nordic country has a similar system, but you must be a resident of the country and pay a fee to access the registry.

So, there is no fundamental issue with registries, even of personal information.
Either there is a specific cultural problem here in the Anglosphere for some reason; it's resistance to change because we don't have these registries now and therefore do not want them for few rational reasons (if any); or it's bullshit, whether intentionally or not, spread partly by people with presumably vested interests in not having them published as public record.

The issue here wasn't that names and addresses were in the publicly available record, but that they were published. But it's public record, so isn't it readily available anyway? I don't know of this registry.
Anyone truly motivated to burgle the home of a known weapon-owner, or attack them for being one (for... some reason???) would already know of the registry, be able to look it up, and select targets. But I doubt Norway's tax registry incites any more instances of burglary against wealthy than the Forbes Rich List does.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
Telconi
Post Czar
 
Posts: 34903
Founded: Oct 08, 2016
Ex-Nation

Postby Telconi » Thu Sep 21, 2017 10:53 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:
A Rational Anarchist wrote:
Balancing the rights of peaceful individuals in their own homes versus Sandy Hook/Pulse-type public atrocities wasn't hard enough. Now I have to worry about privacy disasters as well.

Egads.

Although, just to clarify -- what difference does the thickness of the SCOTUS decisions make concerning "data breach?" Even if both decisions were 9-0, a concentrated database of personal information is still a breach disaster waiting to happen. Or does "data breach" just mean "SCOTUS eventually reverses and now the 'gun grabbers' know where all the guns are?"

EDIT: fixed quote to quote the person I meant to quote.

The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.



Having a full gun registration database is the privacy disaster. It's already happened to you.
-2.25 LEFT
-3.23 LIBERTARIAN

PRO:
-Weapons Rights
-Gender Equality
-LGBTQ Rights
-Racial Equality
-Religious Freedom
-Freedom of Speech
-Freedom of Association
-Life
-Limited Government
-Non Interventionism
-Labor Unions
-Environmental Protections
ANTI:
-Racism
-Sexism
-Bigotry In All Forms
-Government Overreach
-Government Surveillance
-Freedom For Security Social Transactions
-Unnecessary Taxes
-Excessively Specific Government Programs
-Foreign Entanglements
-Religious Extremism
-Fascists Masquerading as "Social Justice Warriors"

"The Constitution is NOT an instrument for the government to restrain the people,it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government-- lest it come to dominate our lives and interests." ~ Patrick Henry

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 10:56 am

Telconi wrote:
Imperializt Russia wrote:The United Kingdom has a full gun registry for all registered firearms and I'm not currently aware of it being some privacy disaster waiting to happen.



Having a full gun registration database is the privacy disaster. It's already happened to you.

uh-huh.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
The East Marches II
Post Marshal
 
Posts: 18033
Founded: Mar 11, 2017
Ex-Nation

Postby The East Marches II » Thu Sep 21, 2017 11:07 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:
Sovaal wrote:
Maybe not a data breach, but still idiotic and doesn't make me or other gun owners trust such a system any more.

And people always like to compare themselves to oppressed groups, both sides do it.

In Switzerland, your car is not issued a licence plate but you are issued a licence number which must be fitted to all your vehicles. A public record of licenceholders is easily available.

In Norway, elements of the tax registry is publicly available. It lists the name of the person, their recorded income, recorded wealth and recorded taxes paid that year. You can go look it up for yourself online. I believe another Nordic country has a similar system, but you must be a resident of the country and pay a fee to access the registry.

So, there is no fundamental issue with registries, even of personal information.
Either there is a specific cultural problem here in the Anglosphere for some reason; it's resistance to change because we don't have these registries now and therefore do not want them for few rational reasons (if any); or it's bullshit, whether intentionally or not, spread partly by people with presumably vested interests in not having them published as public record.

The issue here wasn't that names and addresses were in the publicly available record, but that they were published. But it's public record, so isn't it readily available anyway? I don't know of this registry.
Anyone truly motivated to burgle the home of a known weapon-owner, or attack them for being one (for... some reason???) would already know of the registry, be able to look it up, and select targets. But I doubt Norway's tax registry incites any more instances of burglary against wealthy than the Forbes Rich List does.


It's another episode of "I live in a bubble", come back when you hit the real world fam.

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 11:15 am

The East Marches II wrote:
Imperializt Russia wrote:In Switzerland, your car is not issued a licence plate but you are issued a licence number which must be fitted to all your vehicles. A public record of licenceholders is easily available.

In Norway, elements of the tax registry is publicly available. It lists the name of the person, their recorded income, recorded wealth and recorded taxes paid that year. You can go look it up for yourself online. I believe another Nordic country has a similar system, but you must be a resident of the country and pay a fee to access the registry.

So, there is no fundamental issue with registries, even of personal information.
Either there is a specific cultural problem here in the Anglosphere for some reason; it's resistance to change because we don't have these registries now and therefore do not want them for few rational reasons (if any); or it's bullshit, whether intentionally or not, spread partly by people with presumably vested interests in not having them published as public record.

The issue here wasn't that names and addresses were in the publicly available record, but that they were published. But it's public record, so isn't it readily available anyway? I don't know of this registry.
Anyone truly motivated to burgle the home of a known weapon-owner, or attack them for being one (for... some reason???) would already know of the registry, be able to look it up, and select targets. But I doubt Norway's tax registry incites any more instances of burglary against wealthy than the Forbes Rich List does.


It's another episode of "I live in a bubble", come back when you hit the real world fam.

I gave you four real world examples. "Fam".
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

User avatar
Telconi
Post Czar
 
Posts: 34903
Founded: Oct 08, 2016
Ex-Nation

Postby Telconi » Thu Sep 21, 2017 11:40 am

Imperializt Russia wrote:
Telconi wrote:

Having a full gun registration database is the privacy disaster. It's already happened to you.

uh-huh.


You see no issue with a government, hostile to the exercise of a human right, in keeping a comprehensive database of all of it's people who exercise said right?
-2.25 LEFT
-3.23 LIBERTARIAN

PRO:
-Weapons Rights
-Gender Equality
-LGBTQ Rights
-Racial Equality
-Religious Freedom
-Freedom of Speech
-Freedom of Association
-Life
-Limited Government
-Non Interventionism
-Labor Unions
-Environmental Protections
ANTI:
-Racism
-Sexism
-Bigotry In All Forms
-Government Overreach
-Government Surveillance
-Freedom For Security Social Transactions
-Unnecessary Taxes
-Excessively Specific Government Programs
-Foreign Entanglements
-Religious Extremism
-Fascists Masquerading as "Social Justice Warriors"

"The Constitution is NOT an instrument for the government to restrain the people,it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government-- lest it come to dominate our lives and interests." ~ Patrick Henry

User avatar
Imperializt Russia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 54847
Founded: Jun 03, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Imperializt Russia » Thu Sep 21, 2017 12:22 pm

Telconi wrote:
Imperializt Russia wrote:uh-huh.


You see no issue with a government, hostile to the exercise of a human right, in keeping a comprehensive database of all of it's people who exercise said right?

This isn't a human right.

Please don't demean the many actual human rights abuses in the world by trying to put this on par with it kthnx.
Not to mention, that's just a meaningless non-argument. It can't be argued against, not because it's some beautifully simple truism but because there is nothing to argue against.

What is the alleged issue?
Indeed, when I pointed out that the UK has a full firearms registry that is presumably the matter of some form of publicly available record, I was given an example from New York State - notably, in the immediate aftermath of the Sandy Hook massacre - of a journalist outlet publishing the addresses of registered gun owners.
Warning! This poster has:
PT puppet of the People's Republic of Samozaryadnyastan.

Lamadia wrote:dangerous socialist attitude
Also,
Imperializt Russia wrote:I'm English, you tit.

PreviousNext

Advertisement

Remove ads

Return to General

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Burgerslandia, Google [Bot], Hwiteard, Neu California, Saint Kanye, Turenia, Umeria, Unmet Player

Advertisement

Remove ads