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  • #16

    Originally posted by EricCartmanR1
    when i share my displeasure i get of a lot of these:

    - home state
    - my maturity level
    - the weather in my state
    - my troll-fu skills
    - the trailer park that i may come from
    - my family
    - my modest gun collection
    - my states proccess for marrying ones own sister
    - call me a yankee, which is an insult here in Red Sox country. Insult me and insult my mom no problem, but call me a yankee and dem fightin werds :-)
    - accuse me of being an attention seeker
    - how the welfare people in CA are better than me

    etc etc etc
    and still you come back for more.

    at this point, we can only conclude that you like it.

    Comment

    • #17
      EricCartmanR1
      Banned
      • Jun 2006
      • 119

      Originally posted by glen avon
      and still you come back for more.

      at this point, we can only conclude that you like it.
      i quite enjoy it actually

      as u can see i have very heavy shoulders.

      Comment

      • #18
        zefflyn
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2005
        • 537

        Originally posted by five.five-six
        comon sence but the gun grabbers just don't get it
        Or, they simply don't care, and have other priorities.

        Comment

        • #19
          zefflyn
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2005
          • 537

          By pure coincidence, I just came across this article:

          Armed Populace More Able To Prevent Crime Than Police Departments

          By Jason Trippet

          Readers should be aware that law enforcement officials are under no legal or constitutional obligation to endanger themselves to protect the lives of citizens. There are California appeals court decisions (Hartzler v. City of San Jose, 1979), D.C. appeals court decisions (Warren v. District of Columbia, 1981), and U.S. Supreme Court decisions (DeShaney v. Winnebago County, 1989) that affirm this. A 1990 U.S. appeals court decision (Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Dept.) interpreted DeShaney as ruling that even an existing restraining order did not create the "special relationship" between law enforcement and an individual citizen that would actually oblige police officers to protect that citizen. In every police department there are those who put their lives on the line to do just that, and those officers are rightly praised as heroes. But the public should be aware that as an institution, law enforcement is under no legal requirement to protect them - even if a ! restraining order has been issued.

          Where does that leave an average citizen in fear for her safety, once she realizes that the police will not be held liable for failing to serve an order, enforce it, or protect her from its object? Who is then responsible for her safety? The only answer is that each individual citizen is responsible for his or her own safety - and each person should take every precaution they deem necessary to exercise their natural, God-given right to defend their own lives and those of their families. In more and more cases people are finding that the best and most effective step is to own a firearm and learn how to use it properly and safely.

          Unfortunately, California's highly-regulated environment includes some of the toughest firearm restrictions in the nation, and these restrictions make it very hard for a law-abiding citizen to defend himself. One of the criticisms of the restraining order process is that sometimes the system doesn't work fast enough to issue, serve, and enforce a restraining order. Consider the law requiring a waiting period before a law-abiding citizen can take home a newly-purchased handgun: who does it affect more, the criminal who likely obtains his guns from illegal sources, the aggressive abuser who can bide his time premeditating his actions, or the restraining order complainant who is in daily fear for her life? Why would we keep a person in such a state from being able to protect herself in a timely fashion?

          Consider also the restrictions on the carrying of concealed weapons (which California severely restricts with a "may-issue" law, leaving the issuance or denial of such permits at the discretion of each county or city, whereas 36 other states have more open "shall-issue" laws): who does this affect more, the criminal who likely has an illegally-owned gun already, the aggressive abuser planning a murder-suicide, or the restraining order complainant who must leave the protection of her lawfully-owned firearm at home?

          True, an applicant with a restraining order on file is probably likely to be issued the concealed-carry permit, but where does that leave the rest of the citizenry? Are those people with restraining orders entitled to more freedom of self-defense than those without?

          California should reconsider its restrictive firearms laws, especially given the academic studies that are continually showing that a law-abiding, armed populace is more able to prevent crime than are police departments. The lives saved would go above and beyond those saved with a restraining order.

          Comment

          • #20
            SLB
            Junior Member
            • Oct 2005
            • 40

            thomas jefferson owned slaves too.
            Yes, and that also shows how much of a visionary he was. Slavery exists to this day. It's called "minimum wage".

            Just to add a little bit more weight as to how right he is in regards to his arms comments..

            - N

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