Colonel Hogan
Madness
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2005
- Posts
- 18,372
Regarding your projection about what "posters" like me would say if the Vegas shooter had been a Moslem, my belief is that ready access to weapons of war has become a national health crisis, especially with a bunch of paranoid people running round and getting revved up in virtual reality. I don't care if it is a religious nut (of any type), an ideological nut (of any type), or if you just lump all of these mass killers into the category of the mentally ill.
To begin with, gun control proponents like yourself should give more thought to how much of the problem is due to "ready access" and how much is due to mass killers being religiously, ideologically or generically mentally ill.
Since I don't think there is much evidence that MOST (or even a few) mass killers have traditionally committed their crimes within brief periods of having first procured their weapons, whether legally or illegally, I'm going to go with "mentally ill."
And if we could agree that that is the problem, how do you suggest we go about solving it? But before you respond, let me tell you what you're up against.
You're up against a legal right to own a firearm. And in the case of the mentally ill, that right can only be taken away if the person is legally adjudged to be mentally ill or involuntarily confined to a mental institution or found not guilty of a crime by reason of mental incompetency, etc. In short, there has to be an official legal process by which the mental illness is demonstrated.
Isn't that what you would want for yourself before YOUR rights are taken away?
Most treatment for physical disability, including mental illness, is responsibly handled within families. People get treatment. Measures are taken. Children take car keys from parents no long able to drive. Few people wait for the DMV to step in at license renewal time.
The problem is how do you expect or wish for the government to act where adequate family care is either non-existent or dysfunctional? A myriad of private and public social welfare programs are designed to do exactly that and, for the most part, appear to function largely as they are designed to function. How would you improve on their number and efficiency to treat mental health care issues that are not being adequately treated, and how many, if any, cases that slip through the cracks and result in a tragic homicide, including a mass shooting, would you nonetheless be willing to recognize as NOT a legitimate indictment of our having DONE all that we can be reasonably expected to do?
These are the questions I almost NEVER hear gun control proponents attempt to answer.
Perhaps you'll give it a go.
