Active Users:1202 Time:22/11/2024 09:42:23 PM
Re: Outside of legislature people do it all the time, its called negotiation and bargaining moondog Send a noteboard - 21/03/2013 07:16:57 PM

View original post
You sit down with someone and say 'look, I want cars to have properly inflated tires, for the sake of safety, the economy, and the environment... what will it take to make it law to have gas stations have to have sensors that can detect a low tire and to refuse to dispense gas to a car with low pressure? We calculate the conversion will cost 2 billion' and then they tell you, and maybe the price is too high, they say 'we'll give you the 2 billion if it comes from green energy subisdies' and you say 'how about if 1 billion comes from there?' and they decline and offer 1.9 from there and .1 from new funds, and you say 1.2 and so on. Maybe you never strike a deal on that and instead come back and say 'hey, I've got it, we give a tax rebate to buy the sensors so long as the gas station agrees to offer a 5 cent per gallon discount to people with properly inflated tires, that 5 cents to come out of the gas tax share.' and now the others nod and agree to 1.2 because the voluntary incentive aspect is more palatable to them.

That's negotiation, we could use more of it. People constantly scream for it but the screamers either are apathetic moderates who don't know/care about the issues or they're raging partisans who think 'negotiate' means 'you give us most or all of what we want, and we give you nothing'


again, what is there to give up? or more importantly, what it is it you feel is so threatened that you require concessions to make it happen? i don't see any legislator on either side giving up a core constituency for a fringe exchange (i.e. -- cut PBS/NEA funding in exchange for limited capacity clips), so i'm not sure what is so dire about such a law passing that has you so fearful for your future as a gun advocate. i guess what i'm saying is: help me understand why clip size is so important to you that you are saying it requires a concession which has been a pet issue of the right for decades (the de-funding of NEA/PBS).


View original postIt think you seriously over estimate the impact of Public TV and the national endowment for the arts, especially the former in modern times. But it's just an example inspired by me viewing magazine capacity as mostly feel good whereas the right wanting to kill PBS/NPR is much the same, in terms of the amount it costs versus the attention it gets. Slashing a hundred million out of the NEA's budget has a higher 'dollar value' with the right then a hundred million out of welfare or green subsidies, it represents a better bargaining chip for the left. It's not a 'ploy', and you revert to demonizing the right in your head way to easily.

it's probably a lifetime of listening to republicans complain about PBS "pushing the homosexual agenda", or the NEA funding anti-American artists, or whatever the rage-du-jour is these days. I can agree in principle that a limit on magazine capacity is not going to deter mass shooters from going on a killing spree. what it is designed to do is limit the carnage they can inflict before having to reload. if the goal is to reduce the number of deaths caused by shootings, this is a small step that does not infringe on the 2nd amendment and has been proven to work in countries which impose a similar limit. i highly doubt it could pass on its own, and i'm suspicious of it passing at all, even in these days when more Americans want to see such restrictions passed at the federal level.


View original post
Saying a CCW doesn't make a person safer is, to me, identical to if you said saying a first aid kit and a cell phone don't make you safer.

probably because in both cases -- CCW or first aid kit -- they are meant to be used in a reactionary way. i.e. -- after you are already in danger.


View original postAs to a federal policy on CCW I believe that is legit, the existence of the 2nd amendment combined with modern travel make a solid case for it being in federal rather than state or municipal purview. My objection would be the 'mandatory repeat testing' part, I actually have no problem with requiring training for guns, I happen to think it should be done in schools like history or gym or sex ed, opt out style. I would want the phrasing on 'repeat' very carefully worded though to avoid abusive attempts to discourage CCW by making it inconvenient, expensive, or unnecessarily restrictive. You shouldn't need to do it yearly, it should cost much, and I'm way more interested in ensuring people know where the safety is and why you never touch a trigger until you squeeze it then whether they can hit the broadside of a barn. The big issue on that is that many anti-gun sorts will try to stick extra layers on it with the intent of discouraging acquisition, if I see legislation that makes that impossible or reasonably improbable I'd be okay with it.

i think if such legislation passed, it would require a lot of wheeling and dealing to get the core of the law changed in any meaningful fashion. once we agreed to the principle of how it would work, i honestly don't see how it would be tweaked without some external pressure forcing it to be revisited. thankfully for everyone involved, i don't think there are enough powerful "anti-gun sorts" to be able to put riders on a bill which would discourage legitimate gun ownership. most of the gun control crowd are ok with responsibility on the part of gun owners, there are actually very few that i am aware of who want an outright ban. even the Brady Center is aware that people have the right to own guns, even if they want larger limits to ownership than you are willing to concede.

having gun training in schools runs into the problem of bringing guns into a school, and there are enough parents who would prefer not to have such a situation that i don't see how it could be standardized as a national/federal or even state level policy. i took my first gun safety class at age 10, but it was on an Army base where we could go directly to the range and demonstrate our knowledge in an environment which was designed for such a purpose. i don't see schools giving the green light for such a setup, although i could see creating some kind of after-school and/or weekend field trip for it.

as to mandatory testing: you are required to re-take your eye exam every couple of driver's license renewals. this is a pretty non-invasive way to make sure you are still legally able to properly operate a vehicle. surely such a simple requirement is not too onerous to CCW holders, or a similarly appropriate test administered to renew the license. if you like, we could make "hit the broad side of a barn" the actual renewal test. at least then the operator is able to demonstrate they can still handle their weapon properly and responsibly.


View original postIt is a societal issue, yet you argue it in terms of individual tragedy. Rightly so too, since as societal issues go you are essentially arguing that even though most guns will never be used to commit a crime or inflict an accidental injury we should restrict access. You may as well say porn inclines some people to commit rape so we should ban it. All the worse, the left raises the specter of crime and accident, yet it principally focuses on legislation that has minimal practical effect on crime and hysterically resists common sense approaches to minimizing accident. To most of the left, if I proposed high schools had opt-out classes on gun safety and basic marksmanship, they'd throw a fit, even while insisting we should have mandatory classes on how to use a condom. Such an attitude is irrational to me. Now you personally have been shown to approach the issue more rationally but even you, IMO, display very contradictory tendencies when it comes to personal freedom and safety.

my personal view is that when something becomes such a problem that EVERYONE is quite literally affected by it, then individual freedom is reduced to preserve public safety. just as you can't yell "FIRE" in a crowded theater because of the risk of injuring people on a mass scale, there is plenty of room under the 2nd amendment to take public safety into account. and it can be done without taking away anyone's guns, or putting draconian restrictions on access. if a link could be drawn between specific types of porn and criminal activity, then yes a restriction should be put in place to limit the creation or viewing of such porn. doing so should not violate the 1st amendment, but i am not a constitutional lawyer so i can't say that with any certainty.

also, most of the arguments coming from the right on the current proposed set of laws are the same ones that people once used to protest mandatory seat belt laws. "The numbers on preventable deaths is exaggerated"; "This limits my personal freedoms"; "This is another example of the nanny state".

yet, i highly doubt you get into a car without putting that seat belt on, and you probably don't even think twice about it, if you ever did. since the laws were established, car accident fatalities have gone down very steadily from their all-time high. but yet, we are not allowed to study ways to make guns safer to use, own and operate. the number of deaths by guns is reaching a point which requires us to act, but the right insists that everything is fine and we should just buy even more guns to make it all better. at some point America must grow up and take responsibility for its actions and agree that we have a need as a society to limit the dangers involved so that we can reduce the fatalities.

this is the ultimate goal of gun control laws: to limit fatalities as much as humanly possible. just as we have not eradicated murder or drug dealing with stricter laws and penalties, we will never fully stop people using guns to kill each other. but what we can do is to limit the access to guns for people who only want to kill someone with them, and also keep them out of the hands of people whose only reason for owning them is criminal in nature, or those who pose a danger to themselves and others because of their mental capacity/faculty.


View original postBoneheaded implies it was stupid, which is true, but misses the more important point that it was terribly unethical. As to the data you refer to, I'm not clear on how it would benefit us. I can almost always find a use for data but it has to be a pretty big and valuable use coupled to an inability to acquire a reasonable approximation through other means to get me to accept violating other people's privacy. Again, to me a gun is no different then a blender or hammer.

and no doubt there are academic studies of how hammers are used, and ways to make them less injurious to their operators. similar studies for making guns safer to use and operate are not allowed under current federal laws, because they might be used to propose a law that could cause fewer guns to be bought.


View original postThey kill each other with knives, we don't track those. The ability to use something for a violent purpose doesn't make it much different to me. A gun can be used to hunt, or protect, and Perrin's axe/hammer moral quandary always seemed very damn silly to me, since a hammer designed for combat isn't much good for forging whereas a war axe is actually just fine for cutting wood. Shooting someone with a gun is not a crime, injuring/killing someone deliberately without reasonable provocation is, be it by shooting them or bludgeoning them to death with a doorstopper fantasy novel. A gun is not a nuke, like a chainsaw it is decidedly dangerous but it does not represent an item of unacceptably high danger with minimal reasonable use like a privately owned nuke or box of hand grenades.

that's all correct, but it still sidesteps the problem that we've made it incredibly easy for criminals to get guns that we don't think they should have. the fact that over 50% of all guns used in crimes can be traced back to roughly a dozen shops should tell us that our current policies are not working and we need to try something else.


View original postHaving read the article, I find it lacks sufficient detail, it sounds like the reporter is presenting a narrative based on deliberately vague facts. There is one very big fact in there, Michael Allan is not his brother or father. He not only deserves to be judged on his own actions, ethics and law demand he be. I'll not say a certain extra wariness and observation is unwarranted, but we do not throw away the fundamental concept of presumption of innocence or accept guilt by association, and guns don't merit some exemption from that.

the basic gist of the article is that it is too easy for rogue shops to stay in business. dealers who skirt the law and deliberately sell to questionable characters deserve their day in court. but it should also not take 2 years to determine whether or not a shop has broken (or bent) federal law, and it should not be possible for a shop to continue operations with the previously cited owner still having a hand in the daily operations. in theory, a bank president convicted of wire fraud will never work in the financial industry again. but a gun dealer with a record of selling to criminal elements is not only allowed to continue selling guns to criminals, he is not punished by being kept out of the business of the gun trade.


View original postIf you don't want to trade for it, then since we clearly do see it as taking away from our rights we will oppose it, and it will fail. Fair enough, you are not wrong to do so but you are wrong to use terms like compromise, when you are unwilling to offer any. My way or the highway isn't a great attitude for public policy but my way or my way is even worse. You categorically reject any bargain, rather than actually bargaining at all. I suggest defunding PBS and the NEA and you reject it out of hand rather than saying, say "Maybe a 10% cut". Well just to remind you, the left has no monopoly on morality, frankly I find the modern left fairly lacking in that quality, but negotiation doesn't require you to recognize the other side to have equal morality just to recognize that somethings are important enough to pay a price for, and with most things one can find a mutually agreeable price.

If these things are so important to you, and will save so may lives, surely there is some program the left would be willing to trade part or all of in exchange for it. This isn't a hostage situation, I very clearly do not believe such legislation will save lives, and since you can't convince me otherwise and I doubt are willing to claim I am irrational and unsound of mind, you can either try to get sufficient support from other sources or offer me and my ideological kin something we consider to offset what we will lose. This doesn't mean mutually agreeable things can't be found, but when none seem to appear after prolonged talk it changes compromise to exchange or conflict rather than discussion of principles and method.


i think it helps me approach this idea of compromise if i understand why you think a compromise is required. i think my position is quite reasonable and does not put any kind of restriction on your freedoms, but you are telling me that you don't want your freedom restricted, so your arguments make little sense to what i think we're discussing. so, in all honesty and with all due respect, please help me understand why the following are so restrictive to your freedom to own a gun. i realize this post got kind of long, so if you feel the need to pick and choose a response to what i've said, this is the one i'm most interested in hearing about. please tell me why the following pose such a threat to your individual freedom to own a firearm that they require concessions and compromises:

  • magazine capacity
  • background checks for all purchases, no exceptions
  • better enforcement of existing laws
  • prosecution of gun dealers with a history of selling to criminals
"The RIAA has shown a certain disregard for the creative people of the industry in their eagerness to protect the revenues of the record companies." -- Frank Zappa

"That's the trouble with political jokes in this country... they get elected!" -- Dave Lippman
Reply to message
US Senate Democrats - already cave-in on the gun control bill - 19/03/2013 10:44:55 PM 1319 Views
right wingers are always point out there is no point legislating cosmetics - 19/03/2013 11:52:28 PM 734 Views
Late Term Abortion, Terry Schavio? *NM* - 19/03/2013 11:57:25 PM 369 Views
You know, what you are hoping for will not make any difference whatsoever..... - 20/03/2013 01:07:58 AM 584 Views
"if at first you don't succeed..... fuck it...." - 20/03/2013 04:10:47 AM 607 Views
I can agree with some of what you stated, though I prefer "logical" to "right winger" - 20/03/2013 01:56:34 AM 638 Views
you are correct. i forget sometimes that there **is** some common ground here.... - 20/03/2013 04:19:13 AM 563 Views
There'd be more common ground if anything were ever offered in exchange for concessions - 20/03/2013 02:20:26 PM 602 Views
Ben Franklin said it best... - 20/03/2013 04:14:45 PM 601 Views
interesting how that quote always applies to so many things, isn't it? - 20/03/2013 05:14:30 PM 563 Views
Absolutely - 21/03/2013 12:20:45 AM 639 Views
if there have to be concessions, what do you recommend? - 20/03/2013 05:10:53 PM 668 Views
That would depend, something of equal value - 20/03/2013 09:13:23 PM 563 Views
when very little is being given up, how do we determine equal value? - 20/03/2013 10:31:59 PM 837 Views
Outside of legislature people do it all the time, its called negotiation and bargaining - 21/03/2013 10:53:22 AM 590 Views
Re: Outside of legislature people do it all the time, its called negotiation and bargaining - 21/03/2013 07:16:57 PM 640 Views
Re: Outside of legislature people do it all the time, its called negotiation and bargaining - 21/03/2013 08:53:20 PM 730 Views
some answers - 21/03/2013 10:04:45 PM 964 Views
Re: some answers - 21/03/2013 11:33:21 PM 733 Views
Re: the NRA - 22/03/2013 07:44:06 PM 581 Views
This is a matter of POV bias - 22/03/2013 09:04:25 PM 524 Views
we will have to agree to disagree then - 22/03/2013 10:12:02 PM 569 Views
I already knew we disagreed, that's why I suggested bargaining - 22/03/2013 11:11:04 PM 548 Views
i am merely taking the NRA at their word(s) - 23/03/2013 12:13:18 AM 528 Views
Re: i am merely taking the NRA at their word(s) - 23/03/2013 02:04:39 AM 778 Views
i am not trying to sway, just come to an understanding - 23/03/2013 03:03:14 PM 744 Views
I think you've actually managed to widen our gap - 23/03/2013 03:53:55 PM 758 Views
I can see the argument for limiting magazine capapcity but it would be hard to enforce - 20/03/2013 05:11:51 PM 568 Views
It would be a stupid meaningless "feel good" law as changing magazines takes almost no time. *NM* - 21/03/2013 01:05:34 PM 315 Views
I can't argue that - 21/03/2013 06:14:09 PM 587 Views
canada's magazine restrictions are credited with reducing fatalities in a mass shooting - 21/03/2013 07:22:45 PM 651 Views
what is high capacity? - 21/03/2013 11:09:09 PM 546 Views
according to the law, whatever is larger than the legal limit - 21/03/2013 11:31:08 PM 575 Views
There is no gun control, only gun *centralization* - 20/03/2013 05:32:59 PM 620 Views
Regarding guns sold which are used in crimes - 20/03/2013 10:41:21 PM 558 Views
Your specified legal requirements already exist. *NM* - 21/03/2013 02:05:12 AM 312 Views
So what other stipulations would you put into effect? *NM* - 21/03/2013 02:42:53 AM 300 Views
none- I'd simply actually punish criminals instead of trying to "reform" them. *NM* - 21/03/2013 01:13:29 PM 327 Views
Criminals need to be punished AND reformed for their inevitable release back into society *NM* - 21/03/2013 11:58:20 PM 298 Views
I've always been rather partial to the criminal justice system in Heinlein's Starship Troopers novel - 22/03/2013 02:42:09 AM 671 Views
Yeah you're right. Let's just kill everybody who commits a crime - 22/03/2013 02:46:49 AM 583 Views
*NM* - 22/03/2013 10:55:36 AM 323 Views
That's not in Starship Troopers - 22/03/2013 12:51:44 PM 586 Views
Yeah, there was a small number of capital offenses (13 I think), most not specified. - 22/03/2013 05:27:11 PM 563 Views
14 then, he lists stupidity as one in another book - 22/03/2013 07:35:13 PM 609 Views
That's why we NEED to reform prisoners - 22/03/2013 10:33:08 PM 546 Views
It is probably an option we should work harder to develop - 23/03/2013 12:38:33 AM 603 Views
Out of curiosity. Is anyone against background checks at gun shows, and if so, why? *NM* - 21/03/2013 09:38:59 AM 305 Views
Not in principle but somewhat in practice - 21/03/2013 11:25:25 AM 706 Views
For what its worth.... - 21/03/2013 03:13:44 PM 552 Views
Personally, I am worried about criminals with guns. BUT... - 22/03/2013 03:44:47 PM 844 Views
What you are not factoring into your though process is that most criminals feels the same way. - 24/03/2013 12:56:04 PM 859 Views
I realize that can be the case. But... - 25/03/2013 03:32:59 PM 753 Views
Twice I was almost robbed, and my parents were robbed several times. - 26/03/2013 01:35:11 PM 470 Views

Reply to Message