brandon
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I believe all states require gun dealers to perform a federal background check. Now, a private sale of a firearm is a different story.Well, Maine wanted it, and they're reaping what they sow. I'll never understand states not requiring background checks for all gun transactions, let alone licensing and training which really should be mandatory.
Yesterday was the 24th anniversary of the Columbine shootings. At the time it was shocking, now it would have been just another Tuesday.Frequent shootings put US mass killings on a record pace
Data maintained by The Associated Press, USA Today and Northeastern University shows 88 people have died in 17 mass killings since Jan. 1.apnews.com
Maybe I'm looking in the wrong places, but I haven't noticed much gun advertising lately.Maybe we can outlaw advertising for guns - similarly to the way they outlawed cigarette advertising? It would be a start - and gun advertisements are just obscene these days (having recently seen some real doozies).
Outlawing gun ads wouldn’t infringe on anyone’s rights.
Meaning, so long as a militia of citizens is necessary (and a well-regulated one, at that), then what follows is true. But only if that first part pertains.A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
I dropped the prefatory clause, since everyone ignores it anyway. And that word "militia" has gotten especially confusing of late. Now the thing is up to date.The right of the people to serve in the armed services or the National Guard, or to serve as law enforcement officers if duly qualified, shall not be infringed.