Too late, you have already registered it, we will find it and come take it from you!!Purplehood wrote:I have a black car. Perhaps I should bury it in the back yard.
Gun Control Vs DWI
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 5
- Posts: 329
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:10 pm
- Location: Manvel, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
Steve
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 2322
- Joined: Wed Dec 21, 2005 1:15 pm
- Location: Sachse, TX
- Contact:
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
I've actually used the sports car analogy with varying success before.
(What do you need a sports car for, all it's good for is speeding which is illegal, etc)
(What do you need a sports car for, all it's good for is speeding which is illegal, etc)
.השואה... לעולם לא עוד
Holocaust... Never Again.
Some people create their own storms and get upset when it rains.
--anonymous
Holocaust... Never Again.
Some people create their own storms and get upset when it rains.
--anonymous
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 4
- Posts: 4638
- Joined: Thu May 29, 2008 3:35 pm
- Location: Houston, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
Can't I just say that I sold it to a guy at a car show?hheremtp wrote:Too late, you have already registered it, we will find it and come take it from you!!Purplehood wrote:I have a black car. Perhaps I should bury it in the back yard.
Life NRA
USMC 76-93
USAR 99-07 (Retired)
OEF 06-07
USMC 76-93
USAR 99-07 (Retired)
OEF 06-07
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 5
- Posts: 329
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:10 pm
- Location: Manvel, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
you could, but then we can just inact legislation that requires the private sale of vehicles to go thru a licensed car dealer. That way it would comply with the 3 day waiting period for the purchase of a car and we will have a recod of it's sale for later confiscation.Purplehood wrote:Can't I just say that I sold it to a guy at a car show?hheremtp wrote:Too late, you have already registered it, we will find it and come take it from you!!Purplehood wrote:I have a black car. Perhaps I should bury it in the back yard.
Steve
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 2099
- Joined: Tue May 05, 2009 9:19 pm
- Location: Houston Northwest
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
Personally, I've put the conversion kit on my car to make it "Brandy Law" ( Double Pun! ) compliant.
-It can only increase 1 mile per hour every time I push the pedal to the floor, after which I need to return it fully to the top of it's travel before I can put it to the floor again to increase by one more mph. This prevents me from 'rapid acceleration'
-It only has a 1 gallon gas tank, giving me 10 miles range, before I have to stop and relo... err refill.
-The FBI had to come inspect & certify my house and garage to make sure it would be 'secure'.
-In addition to this, I have to put a pedal lock on it whenever I'm not actively driving it.
Somehow, I still am not allowed to drive it in public.
I can only drive it where noone else will see me driving it, or on my own property, or the property of a friend or relative who has given me consent.
I really think this makes it all the more safe tho, so it's worth it.
-It can only increase 1 mile per hour every time I push the pedal to the floor, after which I need to return it fully to the top of it's travel before I can put it to the floor again to increase by one more mph. This prevents me from 'rapid acceleration'
-It only has a 1 gallon gas tank, giving me 10 miles range, before I have to stop and relo... err refill.
-The FBI had to come inspect & certify my house and garage to make sure it would be 'secure'.
-In addition to this, I have to put a pedal lock on it whenever I'm not actively driving it.
Somehow, I still am not allowed to drive it in public.
I can only drive it where noone else will see me driving it, or on my own property, or the property of a friend or relative who has given me consent.
I really think this makes it all the more safe tho, so it's worth it.
IANAL, YMMV, ITEOTWAWKI and all that.
Re: School events, NOT on school property
Re: Parking Lots, 30.06, and MPA
Re: School events, NOT on school property
Re: Parking Lots, 30.06, and MPA
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 5
- Posts: 329
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:10 pm
- Location: Manvel, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
dicion wrote:Personally, I've put the conversion kit on my car to make it "Brandy Law" ( Double Pun! ) compliant.
-It can only increase 1 mile per hour every time I push the pedal to the floor, after which I need to return it fully to the top of it's travel before I can put it to the floor again to increase by one more mph. This prevents me from 'rapid acceleration'
-It only has a 1 gallon gas tank, giving me 10 miles range, before I have to stop and relo... err refill.
-The FBI had to come inspect & certify my house and garage to make sure it would be 'secure'.
-In addition to this, I have to put a pedal lock on it whenever I'm not actively driving it.
Somehow, I still am not allowed to drive it in public.
I can only drive it where noone else will see me driving it, or on my own property, or the property of a friend or relative who has given me consent.
I really think this makes it all the more safe tho, so it's worth it.
Steve
-
- Junior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Tue Mar 31, 2009 6:30 pm
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
I am curious why DWI/DUI are such big issues. Why is .08 the magical number to determine if you are drunk? Back when drinking and driving was OK or at least not enforced, there weren't crashes due to drunk drivers clogging the streets. All I have ever heard from MADD and other anti-drinking groups are stories about some guy at absurdly high BAC levels killing some teenagers, which is tragic, but not a problem you can legislate away. And if you wanted to try, why not increase penaltys for accidents, this could also help slow people down to the speed limit.
This issue has the same problems as gun control, the government does not believe people will act in a responsible manner when they do anything. They also believe they can force everyone to follow there arbitrary rules, when it just becomes a hassle for people who are already responsible.
This issue has the same problems as gun control, the government does not believe people will act in a responsible manner when they do anything. They also believe they can force everyone to follow there arbitrary rules, when it just becomes a hassle for people who are already responsible.
-
- Junior Member
- Posts in topic: 2
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Fri Apr 10, 2009 10:04 pm
- Location: Waco, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
If I understand Texas law correctly, if you are convicted for DWI you will lose your drivers license for 1 year max (first offense), and you will also lose your CHL for 5 years. It makes no sense to me that you will be allowed access to the tool used to break the law in the first place long before you regain your right to carry a gun which was not used in the commission of the original crime.
If I were a cynical person, I'd say DWI conviction is just another excuse that the statists will use to infringe upon one's Second Amendment rights.
If I were a cynical person, I'd say DWI conviction is just another excuse that the statists will use to infringe upon one's Second Amendment rights.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 1118
- Joined: Thu Jan 19, 2006 3:58 pm
- Location: Prison City, Texas
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
But DUI/DWI isn't the only conviction for which you will lose your CHL for 5 years (or is it 7?). Any misdemeanor conviction will cost you your CHL. You write hot checks and are convicted of a misdemeanor, your CHL is going to be revoked, even though no firearm was involved in your crime. That is the cost of being a CHL holder. We are expected to keep our noses clean. It doesn't mean we can't own firearms. It doesn't mean we can't carry in our vehicle via the MPA. It means we can't carry everywhere a CHL holder can carry, because we disqualified ourselves.plannuier wrote:If I understand Texas law correctly, if you are convicted for DWI you will lose your drivers license for 1 year max (first offense), and you will also lose your CHL for 5 years. It makes no sense to me that you will be allowed access to the tool used to break the law in the first place long before you regain your right to carry a gun which was not used in the commission of the original crime.
If I were a cynical person, I'd say DWI conviction is just another excuse that the statists will use to infringe upon one's Second Amendment rights.
It's not a perfect system, but it is what we have. And we're not going to change that system by fighting it from an inferior position.
Remember, in a life-or-death situation, when seconds count, the police are only minutes away.
Barre
Barre
-
- Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 103
- Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2008 11:43 am
- Location: Fort Worth
- Contact:
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
Purplehood wrote:Actually that really offends me, because I really don't.Oldgringo wrote:Neither does Ted Kennedy.Purplehood wrote:I don't drink.Oldgringo wrote:You reckon that the liberals are more prone to experience a DWI than a trip to the gun range?
Good for you, I don't either....
"WARNING: Driver only carries $20 Dollars worth of ammunition"
Springfield XD.40 subcompact
Remington 597 .22
NAA .22 Long Rifle Mini-Revolver w/holster grip
Clint- Fort Worth
Tx-CHL Holder
Springfield XD.40 subcompact
Remington 597 .22
NAA .22 Long Rifle Mini-Revolver w/holster grip
Clint- Fort Worth
Tx-CHL Holder
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
What if I say I lost it in a boating accident?hheremtp wrote:you could, but then we can just inact legislation that requires the private sale of vehicles to go thru a licensed car dealer. That way it would comply with the 3 day waiting period for the purchase of a car and we will have a recod of it's sale for later confiscation.Purplehood wrote:Can't I just say that I sold it to a guy at a car show?hheremtp wrote:Too late, you have already registered it, we will find it and come take it from you!!Purplehood wrote:I have a black car. Perhaps I should bury it in the back yard.
THE SECOND AMENDMENT IS NOT ABOUT DUCK HUNTING
-
- Junior Member
- Posts in topic: 2
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Fri Apr 10, 2009 10:04 pm
- Location: Waco, TX
Re: Gun Control Vs DWI
I understand completely. And for the record, I'm not arguing that convicted drunk drivers should or shouldn't be allowed to hold a CHL. Nor is this a personal thing with me -- I rarely consume alcoholic beverages, and certainly never do while driving or while handling firearms!barres wrote: But DUI/DWI isn't the only conviction for which you will lose your CHL for 5 years (or is it 7?). Any misdemeanor conviction will cost you your CHL. You write hot checks and are convicted of a misdemeanor, your CHL is going to be revoked, even though no firearm was involved in your crime. That is the cost of being a CHL holder. We are expected to keep our noses clean. It doesn't mean we can't own firearms. It doesn't mean we can't carry in our vehicle via the MPA. It means we can't carry everywhere a CHL holder can carry, because we disqualified ourselves.
It's not a perfect system, but it is what we have. And we're not going to change that system by fighting it from an inferior position.
I just think it is ludicrous that if you commit a crime with a car and lose both your driving privileges and CHL rights*, you will regain your driver's license 4 years before your CHL. If it is ostensibly done under the guise of "public safety", and the public is kept safe by denying a convicted drunk driver from carrying a gun legally for 5 years, how is public safety served by allowing the same person to get behind the wheel of a car after just 1 year?
I ask this rhetorically, of course, because I know there is no reasonable answer to this question; it is just another example of government hypocrisy when it comes to gun ownership and public safety -- just like the flawed logic used by politicians who tell us that you and I will be safer once they ban civilian gun ownership and leave guns solely in the hands of criminals who seek to do us harm.
Clearly the system is not perfect.
(* Yes, I consider concealed carry a 'right', not a 'privilege', even though the politicians may think otherwise.)