Colorado’s Democratic-controlled House on Sunday passed a bill that would ban the sale and transfer of semiautomatic firearms, a major step for the legislation after roughly the same bill was swiftly killed by Democrats last year.

The bill, which passed on a 35-27 vote, is now on its way to the Democratic-led state Senate. If it passes there, it could bring Colorado in line with 10 other states — including California, New York and Illinois — that have prohibitions on semiautomatic guns.

But even in a state plagued by some of the nation’s worst mass shootings, such legislation faces headwinds.

Colorado’s political history is purple, shifting blue only recently. The bill’s chances of success in the state Senate are lower than they were in the House, where Democrats have a 46-19 majority and a bigger far-left flank. Gov. Jared Polis, also a Democrat, has indicated his wariness over such a ban.

      • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        208 months ago

        You ever seen cops shoot?

        I’ve seen a bunch of 'em get DQ’d from matches for being unsafe, or drop out when it was clear their scores were trash.

          • @TopRamenBinLaden@sh.itjust.works
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            8 months ago

            They use hacks like ESP and wallhacks.

            In all seriousness, though, it’s only because they always outnumber and have more resources than the person/people that they are in a shootout with. Not because they are better with firearms than an average gun owner who also trains with their firearm.

            • @blazera@lemmy.world
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              -28 months ago

              and have more resources than the person/people that they are in a shootout with.

              Yeah, and that’s what you’re up against thinking your guns are keeping the government in check.

              • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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                48 months ago

                …And yet, when cops see protestors that are as heavily armed as they are, historically they suddenly get very, very respectful. When the Proud Man-Children discover that the BLM protestors are armed and disciplined, they suddenly lose all their courage. Cops suddenly get really, really nervous when they realize that if they start shit, they aren’t going to have a numerical advantage. When you’ve got one suspect and 20 cops though?

                Cops aren’t there to protect or serve the people; they’re there to protect and serve the status quo.

                But damn, people sure do hop on cops’ dicks whenever someone says they might want to be able to protect themselves rather than hoping that cops will do it.

                • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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                  48 months ago

                  Gun grabbers will say they don’t trust police and then say they’re the only ones who should be armed in the same paragraph. It’s wild.

                • @blazera@lemmy.world
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                  28 months ago

                  I think most examples of armed protests in the US are on the side of police. But US police are also an example of America’s problem with too many guns, they kill way too many people and should also have fewer guns.

              • @bastion@feddit.nl
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                18 months ago

                Not really. At the point where there’s consensus that we are, in fact, in a civil war, then:

                A) you’re not some nutjob holed up in his house using his neighbor as a hostage B) there are others, and organization is doable

                Yes, the government has organization and experience. Hopefully, it’ll just never be an issue. Likely, there would be internal divisions, as well. But being ready for it to be an issue can both help prevent it becoming one, and give one the capacity to have an impact if it does become an issue.

                • @blazera@lemmy.world
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                  28 months ago

                  If things get to an actual civil war where tyrannical government is willing to use its resources, i think you are severely underestimating the resources. The satellite and drone intel, the ability to destroy routes civilian vehicles can take, the aerial strikes. Civilians arent gonna get together no matter the heads they can put together and build competing anti air capabilities. Its not like a battle of damage numbers in a game, its ability to even play the games that they can. Like a well armored knight fighting against squirrels, the numbers dont matter, the little claws cant get through steel.

                  Likely, there would be internal divisions, as well.

                  Thats all you can hope for, thats the only way civilians in any developed country survives:having a government that doesnt want to kill them. Armed population or not, it really has no effect.

      • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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        68 months ago

        The goal isn’t to beat the cops. It’s to defend against neonazis.

        Do you think the cops are gonna disarm neonazis? Or will they just use gun bans as an excuse to murder more black people?

        • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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          8 months ago

          Do you think the cops are gonna disarm neonazis? Or will they just use gun bans as an excuse to murder more black people?

          You think black people with firearms are less likely to be shot by police?

          The goal isn’t to beat the cops. It’s to defend against neonazis.

          How’s that going? Because from the outside, it looks like this.

          image

          • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Do you not think cops are more likely to kill black people if there’s a gun ban regardless whether they are armed?

            Yes, I’m well aware of how it looks. They are trying to use public massacres to ignite a civil war. Of course it’s horrible.

            And yet we do almost nothing to prosecute their talking heads who incite those same shootings and the billionaires who fund their rallies. Because hate speech is still somehow free speech. We need to clean up the loopholes in the first amendment before addressing the second.

            Trump is campaigning to become the next fuhrer, not president, yet you dingalings are bound and determined to make sure that we’re disarmed in advance. How stupid is that?

            • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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              -48 months ago

              Do you not think cops are more likely to kill black people if there’s a gun ban regardless whether they are armed?

              That’s some wicked grammar there, but… no? Why would the cops kill less black people if specific firearms are banned?

              They are trying to use school shootings to ignite a civil war.

              What?

              Also, I feel Americans need to see this, and maybe consider that all these children dying isn’t necessary for their hobby or ‘self defense’ claims:

              USA has eight times the rate (as in percentage, not total_ of firearms deaths as Canada, which has more strict firearms rules. Canada has one-hundred times the rate of firearms deaths of the UK, which has more strict firearms rules.

              That means the USA has 800 times the rare of firearms deaths as the UK. So when this mysterious ‘civil war’ happens, how many children will have died so that you can have that semi-auto AR-15 to fight off the drones of the American military, or the armoured vehicles of your cops?

              Instead of pretending One Man With A Gun is going to do something, maybe try voting locally. Maybe try de-arming your cops?

              • @pokemaster787@ani.social
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                88 months ago

                Instead of pretending One Man With A Gun is going to do something

                I used to agree with this train of thought, why be armed when the government has tanks?

                But the realities of the past several years have shown us that an armed rebellion can be significantly more powerful. Look at Iraq and Afghanistan, look at Myanmar today where the rebel groups are literally 3D printing carbines. A guerilla group with small arms can put serious pressure on a modern military. Will lots of them die? Probably. Will they “win”? Probably not, but they could easily wear down the enemy with attrition. When you need to move a couple dozen men with rifles it’s an entirely different game than coordinating 12 tanks and 500 men, you can employ completely different tactics. Especially on your home turf that you know inside and out.

                Is an armed rebellion happening anytime soon? I sure hope not. But the threat that an armed populace can at the least put some serious hurt on a military/government is a deterrent to tyranny. Just the possibility of it is a huge deterrent, compared to authoritarian countries where citizens aren’t armed and get run over by tanks.

                I’m not saying gun violence isn’t a huge problem, but saying armed citizenry is zero deterrent is just factually untrue.

                • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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                  -48 months ago

                  But the realities of the past several years have shown us that an armed rebellion can be significantly more powerful. Look at Iraq and Afghanistan, look at Myanmar today where the rebel groups are literally 3D printing carbines.

                  Couple things, but mostly: 1. How free are people in Iraq and Afghanistan, exactly? 2. Rebel groups are illegally printing carbines. The legality of it is meaningless. They aren’t taking on the US military on it’s own soil.

                  If you guys are saying that making death-by-gun the most common form of death for children in the USA, even above cars is worth it for some maybe-one-day-we’ll-be-a-militia-group seems like the most sad and specious logic I’ve ever heard. I’m a parent and theoretically fighting some imaginary war (which we’ve been hearing about for decade after decade…) takes a definite backseat to my kids making it through school un-shot-at.

                  And virtually every armed rebellion that worked happened in a nation where firearms were heavily restricted, so the laws are meaningless. Hell you could only own a smoothbore shotgun at most in the soviet union, and last I checked a whole bunch of those countries had armed rebellions.

              • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Yes. Cops have always used gun bans as an excuse to kill more black people, regardless whether or not they are armed.

                Yes. They are trying to use school shootings to ignite a civil war. It’s in their manifestos they leave behind. They say so on their forums. The same talking heads who formented the insurrection are same ones who encourage incels to commit public massacres, then deny all culpability immediately after. They even claim the shootings never happened.

                • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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                  -28 months ago

                  Yes. They are trying to use school shootings to ignite a civil war. It’s in their manifestos they leave behind. They say so on their forums. The same talking heads who formented the insurrection are same ones who encourage incels to commit public massacres, then deny all culpability immediately after. They even claim the shootings never happened.

                  You think this is a push, from the NRA amongst others, to get people to… ban specific firearms? How exactly does banning semi-auto firearms prevent your Totally-Going-To-Work-Later uprising?

                  [Because congratulations, your efforts to keep your firearms only cost the lives of 4,357 children (ages 1-19 years old) in the U.S. in 2020.

                  By comparison, motor-vehicle deaths accounted for 4,112 deaths in that age range.](https://www.snopes.com/news/2023/03/29/guns-leading-deaths-children-us/)

            • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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              28 months ago

              Where did I say that?

              And none of these We Need Our Guns For Defense! comments are address that the main cause of death of your children is firearms. How many children have to die to prevent this theoretical tyrannical takeover? Where were all you guys with your guns when a coup was attempted?

        • @blazera@lemmy.world
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          -58 months ago

          Guns dont defend shit. We have all the guns, its not going well. A gun ban at least slows down supply. And starts a long path to becoming like developed countries that arent murderous gun nuts like we are.

          • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Tell you what. How about you pass a law to disarm people based on their hateful ideologies FIRST. Make Nazism illegal, then disarm, prosecute, and imprison the neonazis, by force of law. They are currently trying to ignite a new Civil War against America, yet you want to disarm the rest of us in the face of that.

            Fix that, then we can discuss disarming law abiding citizens.

            You gonna address the question I asked? Cops only use gun bans as an excuse to kill more black people.

            • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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              58 months ago

              Imagine trusting a neoliberal government to take the guns away from those leftists deem dangerous. You really don’t see how that might go awry?

            • @bastion@feddit.nl
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              28 months ago

              I could go for a law that states something like:

              To the degree that you attempt to control or suppress another person or group, you may be controlled or suppressed accordingly.

              This is magical law, but we may as well make it mundane law, too.

              • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                18 months ago

                Like I’m in a different category than the Nazis, who rounded up and murdered Communists and Trade Unionists during the Holocaust.

                Read a book dude. History is well-documented.

                • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  And yet you downvoted the suggestion of making Nazism illegal. You’ve read books, and despite that, still thought that banning Nazism was a bad idea.

            • @blazera@lemmy.world
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              -28 months ago

              I think youd have a hard time defining and identifying nazis in legal terms.

              And i dont trust any gun owner to be a law abiding citizen, we’re all animals that can get very emotional. And we have the results of that in our horrendous homicide rate.

              • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Really? Because Germany managed it. Nazism is illegal there. They prosecute anyone who professes Nazi ideas. I don’t care how hard it would be. You think confiscating all the guns is easier?

                I don’t care who you trust. I care that this nation is too foolish and cowardly to root out the cancer it has harbored since long before it was founded. Ban sympathy for the Confederacy. Ban Nazi ideology. Prosecute those who profess it. Ruin those who fund them. Cleanse the police departments of all the Nazi cops. We will never be free of them until the day we make their ideologies illegal.

                Until then, piss off trying to disarm the millions of people who only wish to defend their homes from exactly those people pushing for civil war.

                Gee whiz, you sure don’t want to address the fact that cops only use gun bans as an excuse to murder black people.

                • @bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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                  08 months ago

                  just a heads up, west germany famously integrated nazis into the government and still has them to this day.

                • @blazera@lemmy.world
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                  -38 months ago

                  I would love to do how Germany does, no one gets a gun.

                  Most of their nazi ban entails antisemitism, which i dont think covers a lot of people you wouldnt want to have guns. It also entails self labeling nazis, people wearing nazi uniforms, using swastikas, etc. Again, i dont think thats gonna cover most of the people youd want it to. Its better than nothing and id support it here, but its not gonna be very effective at keeping guns away from people with various nazi beliefs.

                  Gee whiz, you sure don’t want to address the fact that cops only use gun bans as an excuse to murder black people.

                  What gun bans?

            • bufalo1973
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              -38 months ago

              There a better way: if you don’t have a valid reason* to have a gun, you can’t have it. If you have a valid reason* but not to carry it, you can’t carry it and you can only use it in a target range.

              • Hunting, basically.
        • @blazera@lemmy.world
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          -68 months ago

          Im just always flabbergasted when ever someone thinks theyre keeping the government in line with their civilian arms. Like they suddenly dont know what kinda firepower the US government has.

  • @thantik@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This will get struck down, and it’ll be the one thing I agree with when it does. You can’t just make everything except bolt-action rifles illegal. Semi-automatic firearms encompasses 99% of what people use for self defense in America. This is a clear violation of rights.

    • @kobra@lemm.ee
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      548 months ago

      Right or wrong it’s a constitutional right for a reason, and that reason has nothing to do with hunting.

      Similar to GOP and abortion, dems need to drop this fight. Let’s fix healthcare and save/improve more lives than almost everything else you could spend time on.

      • @FilterItOut@thelemmy.club
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        I wish beyond wishing that O’rourke would have just shut the fuck up and deferred about coming after people’s guns in Texas. I really wonder if he could’ve squeaked a victory and Texas would be quite different today. Guns are a losing issue. Even more so than abortion or ‘the gays!’, guns bring single-issue voters out from everywhere.

        • @wjrii@lemmy.world
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          -18 months ago

          Yes, it was definitely a self-inflicted wound, or maybe a tacit acknowledgement that the campaign was doomed anyway, before the public numbers made it obvious. There is a career path to being on the record with that position, though not in statewide political office in Texas.

          I grew up in Florida and lived most of my adult life in Texas, and guns have always been a presence. I still own several, but they’ve been locked in my father-in-law’s garage for several years now; I’m ambivalent about what to do with them, and I don’t find any joy in “target practice” or fetishizing them as a hobby. Skeet shooting with cheap bird-shot might still be pretty fun, but my single-shot 12ga will be perfectly adequate for that if I ever take it back up.

          Chronic gun violence is a tragic, horrific thing that is a fact of life in the US, which is unique among stable democracies. It should be low-hanging fruit to regulate guns very heavily, but due to weird quirks of history and even fuckin’ grammar, it’s not. The only solace is that while gun violence in this country should be near zero, like it is in almost every other stable country in the world, it’s not actually a daily threat for most people. It’s a statistically significant cause of death for people who shouldn’t normally be dying, but it’s possible to overstate the impact of the actual numbers. It’s still rare, though unlike the other equally rare things on the list (e.g. cancer, heart attacks), it’s completely preventable, in theory, and therefore even sadder and more frustrating.

          So theory is nice, but the history and legal framework around guns in this country means anything beyond baby steps is a political nonstarter and very nearly as hard as “curing cancer”. While I acknowledge it literally costs lives not to act, it will cost more, including more from gun violence, over the medium term, to campaign in ways that lose close elections to people who would love to dismantle the already inadequate social safety net and encourage “old timey” open racists and even worse foreign policy than we have now. Those who feel passionately about guns should not be silent, but if you’re running a surprisingly competitive campaign in a stubbornly red state, you should consider the political implications before committing to unrealistic goals that piss off people who could be persuaded to vote for you if they don’t think guns are your priority.

          • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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            68 months ago

            in almost every other stable country in the world

            Yeah, except that’s also not the US.

            The other stable countries in the world have things like much lower rates of income inequality, single-payer health care, solid funding for education at all levels so that people aren’t going into eye-watering levels of debt, and so on. And the countries that do suck in many of the same ways that the US does also have staggeringly high rates of violent crime in general, if not an significant gun crime.

            • @bastion@feddit.nl
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              68 months ago

              Yeah, this is something I stand firmly behind. Fundamentally, our issue is social and cultural. We are armed, and so when we lash out, that has greater impact.

              That doesn’t mean we should disarm. We are armed for good reason. But we should address the underlying cultural issues.

      • @BallsandBayonets@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        I would prefer much stronger gun control laws and I still agree with you. There are better fights to fight and more likely to win. This feels like empty posturing in an election year.

        • @trafficnab@lemmy.ca
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          28 months ago

          People always want to make it more difficult to get a gun, but when it comes to them actually paying for it (extra taxes covering free licensing, free safety classes, whatever) it’s crickets

      • @BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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        -158 months ago

        It is my CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT to own a ROCKET LAUNCHER! You CAN’T Discriminate between Firearms! Also TRANS PEOPLE shouldn’t get Free Speech!

      • Neato
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        -178 months ago

        You’re right. It has to due with being able to call up a militia. I don’t see any of these gun stores asking for militia papers before selling.

        • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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          168 months ago

          Militia didn’t mean the same thing back then. It meant “any able bodied adult to be called up at a moments notice.”

          There’s also a (not surprisingly) racist background to the 2nd as well:

          https://www.npr.org/2021/06/02/1002107670/historian-uncovers-the-racist-roots-of-the-2nd-amendment

          “It was in response to the concerns coming out of the Virginia ratification convention for the Constitution, led by Patrick Henry and George Mason, that a militia that was controlled solely by the federal government would not be there to protect the slave owners from an enslaved uprising. And … James Madison crafted that language in order to mollify the concerns coming out of Virginia and the anti-Federalists, that they would still have full control over their state militias — and those militias were used in order to quell slave revolts. … The Second Amendment really provided the cover, the assurances that Patrick Henry and George Mason needed, that the militias would not be controlled by the federal government, but that they would be controlled by the states and at the beck and call of the states to be able to put down these uprisings.”

          • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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            -38 months ago

            Context also matters. The authors also thought that a standing army was part of the park to tyranny, opting for a militia system in place of it. The purpose of the Second Amendment, by its own words, is to ensure that nothing could legally stand in the way of regular and irregular militia being able to protect the fledgling nation.

            As it stands now, the Second Amendment is an anachronism that’s sole purpose for existing is no longer applicable. It needs to be re-evaluated and amended to fit the needs of a nation that has both a standing army and a problem with civilians shooting each other (police are civilians too).

            • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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              88 months ago

              The trick with amending it is the process is such a high bar, it can’t be done given current political divisions.

              290 Congressmen, 67 Senators, and 38 states all have to agree to the new terms to make it happen.

              The last time we saw that kind of unity in the House was the 311 votes to bounce George Santos. LOL!

              • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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                18 months ago

                This is also true. Would be better chances if there was actual proportionality in the House.

            • lives in an era where vast swathes of the underclass live in de facto military occupation under a standing army in blue uniforms, where there is frequent murder with impunity and framing of innocent people to cover it up

              “As it stands now, the Second Amendment is an anachronism that’s [sic] sole purpose for existing is no longer applicable.”

              Unreal.

            • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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              18 months ago

              No they knew an army was necessary to defend the nation, and therefore militias were to be allowed to counterbalance the army.

            • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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              18 months ago

              The constitution was specifically written to allow a standing army to exist. Not having one was a major failure of the articles of confederation. The second ammendment doesn’t exist for some obscure military purpose, it exists to give people the right to bear arms.

              • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                38 months ago

                Because of the army. They knew an army was required, so they knew the populace must be permitted to keep their guns, to balance the power of the army.

              • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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                18 months ago

                This is factually incorrect.

                To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

                • US Constitution Article I, Section 8, Clause 12

                Casual reading of contextual documents by the authors of the Constitution makes it very clear that the reason for the time limit is the belief that standing armies ought not to exist and are tools of tyranny. The context of the Second Amendment is not done obscure military one, it is blatant in the Amendment’s text that it concerns militia, which was the founders’ alternative to a standing army. In that context, yes, it does require that all people be able to bear arms because the irregular militia was basically anyone capable of shouldering a musket.

                However, as the country did move to have a standing army and police forces, the militia system is mostly obsolete. The closest thing to a militia in the country in modern times is the national guard but, they are closer to a “select militia” that was also looked upon unfavorably by the founders.

                I’m not placing a judgement on the Second Amendment as being right or wrong but that it was written for a context that is mismatched with our own. It needs to be re-evaluated and updated to account for the difference in context in order to have a logical place in the law of the country.

                • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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                  18 months ago

                  The US has always had a standing army, so even the people that wrote the constitution voted to keep a standing army. The notion that it was intended to not have a standing army is a wilful misrepresentation.

        • @kobra@lemm.ee
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          I don’t think that’s actually what we would want. Militias at this point would just be indoctrination machines.

          • @BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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            38 months ago

            Unless someone runs an LGBTQIA+ militia and pays for range days and safety classes every month, most militias people look to join are run by obese Right wing nutcases.

              • @FontMasterFlex@lemmy.world
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                08 months ago

                private schools have no government oversight. public ones do. therefore my (and your) tax dollars to go those schools. This is why i specified public schools over private. Not everyone can afford to send their kids to a private school and if they do and don’t like the curriculum, that’s easily changed. Public school not so much. Broaden your mind a little bit instead of just being instantly confrontational.

    • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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      288 months ago

      Agreed. The 2A is a right, full stop. Doesn’t matter if you or I like it, the courts agree, and have historically.

      You’ll get a dozen dumb arguments, but none will address the fact of the 2A. And there’s no way it gets overturned given our amendment procedures.

      This is actually a pretty dumb stunt. It’s going to lose in court, zero doubt. And now there’s more precedence.

    • Flying Squid
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      -248 months ago

      You can’t just make everything except bolt-action rifles illegal.

      Britain did.

      And if we’re going on the intent of the founders, they mostly had muzzle-loaders in mind. They certainly didn’t consider automatic weapons able to fire huge amounts of bullets extremely quickly.

      • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        218 months ago

        Britain doesn’t have a 2nd Amendment.

        Now, if you want to repeal it, sure, there’s a process for that…

        Start by getting 290 votes in the House. The same body that struggles to get a simple 218 vote majority to decide who their own leader is.

        Then you get 67 votes in the Senate. The same body that struggles to get 60 votes to overcome a filibuster.

        Then, assuming you get all that, you need ratification from 38 states. In 2020, Biden and Trump split the states 25/25. So you need ALL the Biden states (good luck getting Georgia!) and 13 Trump states. For every Biden state you lose, you need +1 Trump state.

        • Flying Squid
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          -178 months ago

          Unless you just have a sensible court that don’t claim to be “Originalists” while at the same time ignoring the fact that the arms the founders were think of were not ones that didn’t exist at the time.

          • @MorrisonMotel6@lemm.ee
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            208 months ago

            Email and Twitter didn’t exist at the time either, but they are still protected under the First and Fourth Amendments. Cell phones with unlock codes didn’t exist, but they’re still covered under the Fourth Amendment That’s a spurious argument that holds zero merit.

            The Second Amendment might not be something you like, but modern firearms are ABSOLUTELY covered. The second amendment must be altered or removed from the Constitution to come even close to what you’re asking. And that process was explained to you up the thread a little

            • Flying Squid
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              -128 months ago

              And yet “originalist” judges say that we need to consider what the founders meant. Except, apparently, when it comes to one half of one amendment.

          • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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            88 months ago

            Well, then you need to spend 50 years dedicated to changing the makeup of the Court the way the Republicans did with Roe… see you in 2074! Well, not me PERSONALLY, but you get the idea. ;)

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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        38 months ago

        Was discussing this recently. A big bit of context that is important is how the founders intended for the military to be organized for their fledgling nation. Their intent was that there be no standing army because all of the powers that they knew that had them used them for imperialism and tyranny. So, the intent was to prevent states from getting in the way of raising regular (trained and uniformed) and irregular (anyone who could shoulder a musket) militia, should it be necessary to defend the nation against an incursion from a hostile power.

        Now, it’s been well over a hundred years since the US has had a standing army. While that does not technically invalidate the Second Amendment, it does make it an anachronism that doesn’t fit in the context of the modern world. It should have been re-legislated as soon as a standing army became a thing.

        Now, if only there were a mechanism built into the US Constitution to allow it to be updated to fit the needs of the nation. Maybe they could have called them “Changements”. /s

      • They certanly did, as Thomas Jefferson owned two of them, each carrying 35 rounds of .29mm. One is on display at Monticello, the one he lent to the Lewis & Clark Expedition that was used to successfully defeat a 50-man raiding party, is kept at The Smithsonian.

    • @BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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      -278 months ago

      Agreed! It’s UNCONSTITUTIONAL to have ANY form of Regulation on Arms! Why is it ILLEGAL for me to not be able to own a Grenade Launcher? UNCONSTITUTIONAL!

      • kimjongunderdog
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        98 months ago

        Hey folks, this comment above mine is what’s called a ‘straw-man’ fallacy. It’s when you don’t have an argument against for the specific argument being stated, so you invent another similar but significantly different argument to argue against instead. The first comment states that it’s ridiculous to ban semi auto firearms when that’s the vast majority of guns you can buy, and the second commenter instead argues that they should be legally allowed to own a grenade launcher in sarcasm as an attempt to show how firearm legal restrictions are a good thing as they prevent the ownership of grenade launchers.

        Also, it’s legal to own a grenade launcher in the US. It’s just not legal to own the grenades. Plus, a grenade launcher is really just any 37mm chambered weapon. It could fire grenades, flares, or smoke bombs. They’re also single shot weapons, so a semi-auto ban isn’t going to cover them.

        • @BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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          -118 months ago

          I’m Pro Life and see NO PROBLEM with people with Mental Health issues having Grenade Launchers. After all ANY FORM OF Well Regulation is AGAINST the Constitution! And pointing out your Hypocrisy is OBVIOUSLY a Straw Man Fallacy!

      • @hightrix@lemmy.world
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        68 months ago

        Your use of randomly capitalized words does not, at all, make you look like a child screaming because his mom said no McDonalds. Definitely not.

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    408 months ago

    Supreme Court shoots it down in 3-2-1…

    The Heller ruling in 2008 already decided this.

    Washington D.C. had effectively banned pistols, the court ruled then:

    https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/554/570/

    “As the quotations earlier in this opinion demonstrate, the inherent right of self-defense has been central to the Second Amendment right. The handgun ban amounts to a prohibition of an entire class of “arms” that is overwhelmingly chosen by American society for that lawful purpose. The prohibition extends, moreover, to the home, where the need for defense of self, family, and property is most acute. Under any of the standards of scrutiny that we have applied to enumerated constitutional rights,[Footnote 27] banning from the home “the most preferred firearm in the nation to ‘keep’ and use for protection of one’s home and family,” 478 F. 3d, at 400, would fail constitutional muster.”

    So, no, you can’t ban an entire class of weapon.

    • Neato
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      138 months ago

      So, no, you can’t ban an entire class of weapon.

      You absolutely can. Full-auto weapons are banned for general purchase in pretty much every state. Things like explosive-based guns are also banned. Flame-throwers, etc.

      Heller is a clear violation of state’s rights to pass more-restrictive laws than the federal level. We’ve had tons of gun laws that restrict purchases and types of firearms for decades anyways on the state and local level.

      • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        228 months ago

        General purchase, yes, but you can still buy one if you fill out the appropriate ATF paperwork and pay the HUGE transfer fees.

        https://www.therange702.com/blog/can-you-legally-own-a-machine-gun/

        "To legally own a machine gun, you first have to apply for approval from the federal government. After purchasing the gun, you must fill out an ATF Form 4 application and wait for approval before taking possession of the firearm. The FBI conducts a thorough background check using fingerprints and a photograph required with your application, which could take 9 to 12 months to process. The gun will need to stay in possession of the previous owner until the process is complete.

        In addition, you will need to pay a $200 “NFA tax stamp” for each weapon transaction. If approved, you will receive your paperwork in the mail, including a permit with the listed lawful possessor of the firearm. Only then can you take the machine gun home and possess it legally."

        This Colorado ruling doesn’t allow for that.

        • @capem@startrek.website
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          To be fair, even if it did, I could still see it being unconstitutional to the supreme court.

          We don’t want to admit it, but we kind of weasled our way to ban automatic weapons which is why there is only a “practical” ban instead of an absolute one.

          i.e. You can legally own full-auto weapons if you spend the money to do so.

          I think it would be very interesting if some right-wingers tried to do something like this but frame it as though you can “only buy handguns/semiautomatics made before a certain date, gotta pay all these fees, etc.”

          That could force the supreme court to look at whether the original “ban” on automatics is actually constitutional.

      • According to Interstate Commerce and the Supremacy Clauses, the States actually do not have that right, they just haven’t been sued on those grounds directly.

      • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        Why? Does any other right depend on that?

        Maybe it isn’t a right and maybe it was a temporary provision for a frontier society to quickly setup a temporary army to deal with slave revolts.

    • Flying Squid
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      08 months ago

      So, no, you can’t ban an entire class of weapon.

      I don’t know about that. In general, rocket-propelled weapons and land mines are not legal for ownership. You even need special dispensation to own a fully automatic machine gun.

      • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        238 months ago

        Those are explosives, completely different deal from firearms. Supreme court ruled on that too, Caetano, 2016:

        https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/577/411/

        “The Second Amendment covers all weapons that may be defined as ‘bearable arms,’ even if they did not exist when the Bill of Rights was drafted and are not commonly used in warfare."

        Caetano is really my favorite of these rulings because it started out having nothing to do with guns.

        Woman, scared of her ex, bought a stun gun for protection. Massachusetts arrested her, stated “stun guns didn’t exist back then, no 2nd Amendment right to a stun gun.”

        Court “um, actually’d” them pretty hard.

        So, you can’t ban a class of gun (Heller, 2008) and you can’t ban a bearable arm just because it didn’t exist 200 years ago (Caetano, 2016.)

        And the court has only gotten MORE conservative since then, not less. :( This new ban is going to go nowhere fast, shame Colorado taxpayers are going to have to pay for a losing case.

        • astraeus
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          58 months ago

          Thank you for at least bringing the realistic approach to this conversation. It is by no means ideal, and sets us back from actually making streets safer. Anyone can purchase just about anything weapon-related in a country where political chaos and cultural divisions are a dime a dozen is really a cocktail for disaster. Of course people are going to lean on the argument that if the bad guys have the weapons than good guys shouldn’t be banned from having their own, because the number of untraceable weapons is already past critical mass.

          • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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            188 months ago

            State by state gun laws are SUPER weird too. As an Oregonian, I can own multiple weapons that are illegal in California. You can get in trouble just by crossing the border.

            For example, this little guy (Bond Arms Ranger II) is legal in Oregon, illegal in California:

            You might ask “What’s the big deal? It’s a pistol, not a rifle, it only holds 2 shots, it’s a breech loader, so not even semi-automatic… what’s the problem?”

            Problem is that it’s a smooth bore .45 that can also fire .410 shotgun shells. California classifies it as a short barrelled shotgun.

            • @dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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              58 months ago

              I’ve never fired one of those, but it sounds like the kick on it would be crazy. Very small weapon with very large ammo just seems like a recipe for wild kickback. I could be wrong, though. Maybe the grip design helps?

              • @nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                Shotgun shells come in many varieties and loads of poweder, you absolutely can make that a wrist snapper but if you pick the right shells, especially for .410 you won’t be too bad. .45 would probably have a lot of muzzle raise but I wouldn’t imagine that to kick too forcefully, definitely handle-able but you’re probably not ripping fast on target follow up shots with that.

        • Do stun guns use an explosive propellant? I never thought of it before, but it would make sense that they do. I only ask because I know that weapons that don’t aren’t classified as guns.

          Stuff like coil guns, rail guns, and compressed air rifles aren’t controlled by gun laws and are unaffected by bans like this because they’re not “firearms.” For example, some states have a ban on putting a silencer on a gun, but nothing about owning a silencer. So it’s perfectly legal to put one on a compressed air rifle, and with how quiet they are, that makes them whisper quiet. Plus, 80% lowers aren’t considered guns either, so unless this law specifically calls them out, it’s still legal for anybody to go online and have one shipped right to their door. You usually don’t even need an F-ID card for that. Hell, even gunpowder doesn’t require a license below a certain amount.

          Laws like this are, at best, a post hoc solution to a national and cultural problem, and more often than not just security theater.

        • Flying Squid
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          -78 months ago

          You said ‘weapons,’ not ‘guns.’ If you meant guns, that would be a different issue. However, even there, fully-automatic machine guns are not generally available with a simple background check like other guns. You have to apply for a federal license to get them. So they are treated quite differently.

      • You can own both of those things, you just need the explosives permit from the BAFTE, and they are very strict about the permitting and furthermore the storage, etc of those items. If you don’t mind the FBI examining your butthole and the buttholes of everyone you know, along with massive fees and regular inspections of the items and their storage facility, then have at it.

  • @quindraco@lemm.ee
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    408 months ago

    If it passes there, it could bring Colorado in line with 10 other states — including California, New York and Illinois — that have prohibitions on semiautomatic guns.

    Zero states ban semiautomatic firearms.

  • @Skyrmir@lemmy.world
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    278 months ago

    This just seems like a stupid time to be pressing legislation like this. I don’t even disagree with it myself. I just think it’s idiotic from a political perspective. The Dems can see the GoP struggling with the fall out of Roe v. Wade, and they still want to step into this fight now?

    • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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      158 months ago

      Step in and lose as it’s swiftly struck down by one of the most conservative courts in history.

      • @Manmoth@lemmy.ml
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        -38 months ago

        the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed

        You don’t have to be a conservative to recognize it’s a violation of the 2nd amendment.

        • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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          38 months ago

          Man people really love to drop off the first half of that sentence when quoting the second amendment.

          Who’s being denied access to arms? It doesn’t say you get any firearm you want and there’s plenty of precedent keeping certain firearms regulated.

          Also, which militia are you a member of, specifically?

          • @Manmoth@lemmy.ml
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            -58 months ago

            It doesn’t say you get any firearm

            It says shall not be infringed which means what it says. There is no prescription for what is allowed but instead the opposite. The government cannot and should not prevent the population from arming itself. If people think that’s disagreeable then they should amend the constitution not defy it.

            The constitution was written by people who had just overthrown a government. This amendment wasn’t written to protect the rights of hunters. It’s specifically to enable the people to take control if the government gets out hand.

            Also, which militia are you a member of, specifically?

            Do you think the US would allow a militia to exist when it’s entire purpose is to be a check on government power?

            • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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              28 months ago

              The amendment specifically states that it’s there to aid the common defense.

              You really aught to read the entire amendment.

            • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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              18 months ago

              Also the idea that the founding fathers wrote down the bill of rights, still battle weary with fear of future governments is completely false.

              The bill of rights was written ten years after the war had been settled, with a significant faction of the founders worried about another revolution.

              They had just come out of the Articles of Confederation, a government that had no authority to tax or raise an army. The second amendment was written to address specifically that issue. That we need a militia to defend the country since we really can’t do it any other way, and don’t want to. So might as well let farmers have guns, much to the dismay of the federalists.

    • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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      158 months ago

      The only 2021 protests where people weren’t getting their eyes shot out by pepperballs and beanbags were the ones where people were armed. Message fucking received.

    • Talaraine
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      138 months ago

      Are we reading the same link?

      A person in violation of the prohibitions will be assessed a first-time penalty of $250,000 and $500,000 for each subsequent violation.

        • Talaraine
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          8 months ago

          I read the link you posted, and is the summary of the actual text of the bill inaccurate? Not even trying to argue.

          • BlackRing
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            48 months ago

            I’m more concerned that something that important is only in the summary. Either I don’t understand how bills are written, granted in a state I don’t live in, or the text was changed but the summary not?

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          -18 months ago

          It might refer out to an already existing class of punishment. I will admit I don’t have the time to read it right now to see if that’s the case. I am severely disappointed though if it’s not actually all semi-auto weapons. Trying to divide military from civilian semi-auto rifles is ridiculous.

    • @BallsandBayonets@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      Like the “End Hedge fund ownership of residential properties” bill that is just a tax on hedge funds that own over 100 residences, a tax that they will happily pass on to their tenants (after adding another 25% on top to cover the emotional cost of being taxed by the evil government!).

      Laws don’t have teeth in this country because they are always designed to only punish the poor.

  • @capem@startrek.website
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    198 months ago

    This will never get past the Supreme Court because it is blatantly unconstitutional.

    Nice job wasting money posturing for your base, colorado democrats.

    You’re just like the grifters in florida.

  • @force@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Isn’t that like… most guns people actually use other than some shotguns and some handguns? And even then, why you would use a pump action over a semi-automatic shotgun is beyond me…

    • @bastion@feddit.nl
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      98 months ago

      Anything but revolvers, bolt-action, and pump-action. …well, there’s muzzle loaders, too… Kinda extreme.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          68 months ago

          Strictly speaking “one pull of the trigger, one round out of the barrel,” maybe. There is a distinction though.

          A double-action revolver gets the energy for moving the next round into firing position and cocking the action from the shooter’s trigger finger. This results in a rather long and heavy trigger pull, or you have to cock the hammer manually with your thumb, if the gun allows it. So with a double-action revolver, there’s an upper limit to rapid, accurate fire. You often get one or the other, seldom both.

          Semi-automatics use energy from the cartridge to eject the spent cartridge, strip a new one from the magazine and cock the action for another shot. Because the shooter doesn’t have to do all that work with their fingers, it is much easier to shoot rapidly while maintaining accuracy.

          Revolvers seldom hold more than 6 shots before requiring a fairly lengthy and fiddly reload, semi-automatics hold 7 shots minimum with some guns holding as many as 17 rounds before requiring a much simpler magazine swap.

          Because of the gap between the cylinder and the barrel allowing hot gases to escape, revolving rifles are rare, which is why they tend to go from a manual loading system like a bolt action to semi-automatic.

          Thing is, it doesn’t really matter. Firearm engineering isn’t the cause of shootings. President Kennedy was killed with a bolt action rifle. Columbine was a failed bombing, the murders were done with a shotgun and an open-bolt pistol which AFAIK has successfully been banned. Virginia Tech was done with handguns. A large number of them have been done with AR-15 patterned semi-automatic rifles.

          As much fun as it would be to ban all guns, if for no other reason than to hurt the Republicans’ feelings as punishment for being such thoroughly shitty “people”, it’s just not a thing that’s going to happen. Pandora has opened that box. There’s other things that need to happen, like, reality needs to contain the possibility for ordinary people to survive on wages they’ll actually be paid. But, recall that the Republicans are thoroughly shitty, they don’t want that to happen either.

          • @JamesTBagg@lemmy.world
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            78 months ago

            The Colt Single Action Army is likely one of the most iconic pistols in the US, “The gun that won the west.” You’ve seen them in many movies without realizing it.
            The term you’re looking for his “single action” or sometimes “cowboy action” though that will also include lever action rifles and shotguns, and break actions as well.
            Single Action is defined by the trigger having the single function of releasing the hammer (you thumb and cocks the hammer which rotates the cylinder separately). Double action trigger pull will rotate the cylinder and cycle the hammer.

              • @JamesTBagg@lemmy.world
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                1st, yes, single-action revolvers are analogous to bolt action rifles. 2nd, no single actions are not considered semi-automatic. Single Action or double action refers specifically to the trigger function(s).
                Semi-automatic or fully-automatic refers to functions after the hammer falls. Semi-autos automatically cock the hammer and load the next round, then waits for you to pull the trigger again. One trigger pull fires one round, and loads one round. Fully automatic will fire a round, cock the hammer, load the next round and automatically fire it, continuously until the trigger is released or source of ammo runs dry.
                A semi-auto pistol can be single-action (see:1911) or double-action (see: M9).

    • @xia
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      28 months ago

      It’s back to revolvers, boys! Yee haw!

  • @Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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    178 months ago

    Conservatives are demanding the widespread oppression and even slaughter of our nation’s most vulnerable groups and the best we can come up with is “let’s disarm ourselves”. FFS

    Why not outlaw far-right ideologies like nazism? The conservatives would oppose that too, but it’s something all the normal people can agree on.

    • @histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      48 months ago

      While not opposed to the last statement it would be a terrible idea in the real world with corrupt government

      • @JamesTBagg@lemmy.world
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        58 months ago

        I think you’re missing the hyperbole in their statement. They’re suggesting they’re both misguided ideas.
        We could also argue, but the 2nd Amendment protects the 1st.

    • @BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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      18 months ago

      If the government ever decides to take up arms against us, we are already screwed even with the massive oversupply of civilian weapons of war.

  • @mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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    68 months ago

    They can’t even report things correctly. If I’m not mistaken this bill bans semiautomatic rifles only. Otherwise it would ban most modern handguns. It would be almost instantly overturned.

    • @Wiz@midwest.social
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      28 months ago

      We’ve already established a line that some weapons are too dangerous for the general public. I wonder why states can’t draw the line of what weapons it considers are too dangerous.

      • @DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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        -48 months ago

        We have already established that some speech is too dangerous to be allowed in public. I wonder why states can’t decide what we are allowed to say or not.

        Oh wait, I don’t. If you have an issue understanding opposition to a gun control law, try replacing gun with speech and see if you see the problem. Both are equally constitutionally protected rights.

        • @Leg@lemmy.world
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          48 months ago

          But we have already established that some speech is too dangerous to be allowed? Yes, there is opposition to that notion, but it doesn’t change the reality that some people can and will kick up enough bullshit to start a Holocaust.

          • @AWildBeard@lemmy.today
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            28 months ago

            Allow me to help.

            A common take is that semiautomatic firearms are a privilege to have because they’re not necessary for self defense. As a privilege, States have the right to regulate said semi automatic firearms. Including outlaw them.

            The 1st ammendment reproduction here is

            Documents of more than 800 words are a privilege to write and dessiminate because on average it takes less than 800 words to convey an argument or point. Therefore, as a privilege, a state has the right to regulate said level of speech since it exceeds the level of protected and becomes a privilege. A state therefore can outlaw forms of speech exceeding 800 words.

            If that example doesng jive with you, another would be:

            It takes on average 1m30s for a TV News agency to tell a story. TV News and their ability to tell stories is protected 1st ammendment speech, but, since it only takes 1m30s to tell a news story, anything on the news taking longer than 1m30s is a privilege and therefore can be regulated by the state. Including outlawed by the state.

            A lot of people feel that regulation of the second ammendment is very scary because of the ramifications regulation like the ones proposed could have on other ammendments. Such as the like counterparts to regulating first ammendment speech I generated above.

            As a real world example; I imagine if she could, Mayor Tiffany A. Henyard would see regulation of speech such as ive described above perfectly legal and in the best interest of her community in order to stop missinformation of her mayorship and the political agendas of The News in her area.

            In a similar light, gun owners are seeing the regulation attempts of semi automatic firearms and are feeling very similar to how all of us would feel in the Henyard example above. For clarity, gun owners are feeling as though they are being told that the Government has the extreme authority to tell an individual citizen that has grown up with firearms, effectively and safely uses them, that said citizen doesn’t truly understand what it is they have and that an individual collective of politicians ultimately knows whats best and safest for them… Many dont feel OK with that idea of giving up personal freedoms to some weirdo on TV that says “it has to be done for your own best interest”. To those gun owners, it feels the same as Mayor Tiffany A. Henyard appearing on TV and saying “im regulating the local news agencies in the area based on average time to convey news that is not filled with political missinformation for the collective safety, progress, and betterment of our community and my ability to lead”.

        • @Wiz@midwest.social
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          -18 months ago

          The Supreme Court just this week made it much harder to collectively protest in three states, which is also in the First Amendment. So I think you’re argument is moot.

          You’re right, it’s bad to restrict speech rights, but the law should be applied equally to gun rights.

            • @Wiz@midwest.social
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              -18 months ago

              People’s free access to guns puts my life more at risk. I don’t own a gun because it’s a stupid hobby and it’s dangerous.

              So, in this specific instance, yes. It’s a good idea to revoke the second amendment completely.

              • @Blumpkinhead@lemmy.world
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                18 months ago

                Ok, so let’s imagine you’re able to revoke the 2nd amendment. What then? Your life was never at risk from law abiding gun owners to begin with. Now only the criminals have guns, and you and I have lost our right to bear arms. How does that help?

                Personally, I don’t have an issue with gun ownership being regulated (within reason). I live in a state with fairly strict gun laws, and while some of them don’t make sense, I do see the need for it overall. I’d rather fix the things that aren’t working than throw the baby out with the bathwater.

          • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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            38 months ago

            No they didn’t. They didn’t give blanket immunity to organizers. They still have considerable protection established in other cases of what is required to meet non-protected speech.