Giving away fundamental rights a piece at a time erodes them slowly but just as surely and plays into the hands of the enemies of liberty who are intelligent and patient to a point. They realize that chipping away at freedom a piece at a time while never giving anything back will escape the notice of many folks who will think each step is simply a reasonable compromise, and will fail to notice where the march of events is taking them.Stripes Dude wrote:No need to be condescending. Sometimes, people have different opinions on how problems should be solved. If in your life, there are no differing opinions, then congratulations on being able to surround yourself with like minded people. But don't be rude, asking rhetorical questions. Besides, paying for a BG check to transfer a gun to your daughter is no different than paying to transfer a car title. So do you have issues with FFLs doing a background check, because you clearly do when it comes to private checks? I don't understand your logic.baldeagle wrote:It doesn't infuriate me. It just makes me shake my head. Do you realize what you are saying? If I want to sell a firearm to my daughter, under that scenario, I would have to pay for a background check. Does that even make sense to you? Because it if does, I think you need to think about it a little more clearly. Would you mind if the government checked your background before you sold your house? Your car? Any other possession? NONE of those things are constitutionally protected. Guns are. Yet you would allow an intrusion that you would never think of allowing for mere possessions.Stripes Dude wrote:Reading this eased my fears a bit.
I personally have no issue with strengthening background checks, eliminating private sales without a BG check (that may infuriate some here)
It's no wonder America is in trouble when we've departed so far from an understanding of the Constitution.
Looks like I stirred the pot. What I am attempting to convey is that all sides need to come to the table with a solution, and my personal belief is that we won't fix the issue of firearms falling into the hands of criminals or the insane, but an attempt at doing so is what we should aim for. This is how politics work, compromise. The likelihood that things will remain as-is are slim to none. So time to think outside the box. It isn't about constitutionality, it's about being able to compromise with those who are creating legislation.
We can dig in our heels, not budge an inch, and lose a lot. Or we can compromise.
The topic of allowing CHL in 51% bars comes up a bit. And those connected to the TX legislature say it won't happen, and don't even ask for it because that would get a bill killed, and take with it all of the other things we are trying to pass. That's called compromise - lots of us want that, but won't take it forward in legislature because it has no chance of passing.
I don't want any of this. I wish it had never gotten to this point. But I'm being honest with myself and others - no one will end up in a good place by being bull headed.
A look at history reveals there have been many that came before where the approach you advocate was followed. These gave us the Gun Control Act of 1968, the Assault Weapons Ban of 1994, one gun a month laws, sexual groping of innocent citizens by the TSA, permits to buy a gun, warrantless monitoring of telephone calls and emails, registration of individual weapons in some states, prohibitions against carrying guns, gun, ammunition, and magazine possession prohibitions in places like Chicago and Washington DC, licensing laws that allowed newspapers to publish the names and addresses of all lawful gun owners in some areas, and laws that allow the president to order indefinite military incarceration of citizens without charges or trial.
Those "reasonable concessions" brought us to where we are today - with little remaining freedom and with the leftists demanding we give up what little remains - all in the name of reasonableness. The leftists are following the same step by step playbook as Hitler, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, and a host of others. Only those who haven't read history think what they're seeing is new.
The hard truth is that everyone must decide for himself or herself where, whether and how he will take his stand on fundamental God given rights and compromise no more. Earlier would have been better, but the present and the future are all we have to work with.
History is replete with lessons written in the blood of those who had no such a limit and didn't stand for anything in the name of being reasonable. They did nothing and found themselves defenseless, on their knees and at the mercy of totalitarian governments who had none.
It is folly to think we will not suffer the same fate if we continue to follow the same course.