Common Sense Gun Control
Well, yeah, I’m
going to dive into the gun control deep water, and here’s a heads up. I was
eight when I received my first gun, a Mossberg .20-gauge bolt action, three
shot clip, and four years later a Browning Sweet 16. Along the way, toward
college, I acquired a .22 riffle and a .22 pistol. When I headed to the
University, I took all of them with me, and when I checked into Razorback Hall,
carrying my guns, with a pistol tucked in my belt, a faculty member opened the
dorm door for me. So, don’t try to paint me as a liberal, anti-gun activist.
That won’t fly. I’ve spent more time in the woods and on Arkansas lakes and
rivers than 95% of the folks who are whining about someone trying to take away
their guns and Second Amendment rights. Okay?
Now, let’s look at
a key part of the problem. The problem is not Richard carrying guns into
Razorback Hall. It’s really very simple: It is allowing guns that are designed
strictly for the purpose of killing as many people as possible in the shortest
period of time to be in the hands of someone who wants to terrorize a school,
concert, or a city street. That deranged person’s goal is to create havoc and
kill as many people as possible. That’s the problem, and certain guns are a key
part of the problem.
Of course, if you
are in a Special Forces Squad trapped in a Middle Eastern remote village and
are about to be attacked by 50 ISIS fighters, a gun that will kill as many of
the terrorist as possible in the shortest amount of time is the weapon you want
to have in your hands. However, that same weapon in the hands of a school
terrorist almost guarantees a huge number of causalities. When a gun is capable
of firing astounding numbers of high caliber rounds in a very short period of
time and the person using the gun is intent upon killing as many people as
possible, you can insert the name of all the school massacres and that weapon
is 90% of problem. Remove that weapon from the mix, and you reduce the number
of deaths.
All guns are
designed with a purpose in mind, and shotguns and other weapons of that nature
are designed to kill small game. Of course, rifles that are used for deer
hunting are made with that in mind. Weapons that are made to kill people have
two different identifying characteristics. They are automatic, rapid fire,
enabling the shooter to inflict as much damage as possible on the human target
or targets, and the ammunition is of sufficient caliber to do as much physical
damage to that target as possible. That’s why there are so many causalities.
The high caliber specially designed rounds are to kill and rip into the human
body, and what would be a minor flesh wound with a .22 caliber bullet, becomes
a fatal shot when the round comes from a military weapon.
If we are honest,
with our evaluation of the problem, we will realize that even with the toughest
gun laws imaginable, we can never completely eliminate gun related deaths.
However, we can reduce them. I know you can hunt deer with an AR-15, but you
can also hunt deer with hand grenades. Yes, I am proposing we eliminate the
ownership of weapons specifically designed to kill humans. Those weapons belong
in the military, and not in the hand of a mentally ill shooter, and don’t give
me the old guns don’t kill people kill people kill people crap, because that’s
the biggest lie in the Second Amendment argument.
Guns that are made
with the premise that they will be used to kill humans should be in the hands
of the military, and unless we make that a mandate, we will never stop the
massacres of our school children. Hunting rifles that haven’t been modified and
other weapons used for hunting and sports of that nature can kill, but because
of the time it takes to reload, and, if the weapon is not a modified, automatic
firing weapon, the deaths in any encounter with a person who is intent upon
killing innocent people will drop. No, the killing of school children won’t
stop, but the number of deaths will drop significantly.
After the horrific
Sandy Hook School killing of first and second graders in Connecticut, the state
enacted some strict gun ownership laws. The gun related deaths dropped
dramatically. So that blows the idea that gun control doesn’t work.
Now, a few words
to our congressmen and senators: If you can vote against removing military
weapons from the hands of the terrorists who kill school children, then you
have sold your soul to the NRA, have the spine of a jellyfish, and have the
blood of hundreds of innocent victims on your hands.
No, we can’t realistically stop all the
school shooting, but we can reduce the number of deaths. Does the Second
Amendment give you the unrestricted right to have any weapon? Can you carry a
bazooka or ring your vest with hand grenades, or put howitzers in your front
yard or drive a tank through your downtown? No, of course you can’t! Those
weapons are restricted to the military, thank God! Are your Second Amendment
rights more important than the deaths of hundreds of innocent individuals? What
if one of those students were your child?
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