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The
Below Comments Relate to this Newslink:
CT: Mentally Ill Should Not Have Guns
Submitted by:
Mark A. Taff
Website: http://www.marktaff.com
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In an irrational rush to defend the Second Amendment, the Republican-led U.S. House and Senate voted this week to do away with a simple, reasonable rule that allows the Social Security Administration to inform the attorney general of severely mentally disabled people who, by law, are forbidden from owning or buying guns.
The rule is in perfect compliance with existing law, and getting rid of it to please the powerful gun lobby will be a mistake, as Connecticut can attest. It was written to protect society from the kind of violence that happened here in 2012, when a mentally ill young man used legal weapons to massacre 20 children and six women at Sandy Hook Elementary School. |
Comment by:
dasing
(2/17/2017)
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FAKE NEWS ! |
Comment by:
Sosalty
(2/17/2017)
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X's 2 |
Comment by:
AFRet
(2/17/2017)
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Most of these people are not mentally ill. They are just old and nothing more. I wonder, why are we not having a crime wave now, based on the reasoning of this bill.
It's like a solution in search of a problem. Since they have firearms now, and we are not having any problem, WHY THE BAN???
Dam gun banners, any port in a storm. |
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QUOTES
TO REMEMBER |
"Some people think that the Second Amendment is an outdated relic of an earlier time. Doubtless some also think that constitutional protections of other rights are outdated relics of earlier times. We The People own those rights regardless, unless and until We The People repeal them. For those who believe it to be outdated, the Second Amendment provides a good test of whether their allegiance is really to the Constitution of the United States, or only to their preferences in public policies and audiences. The Constitution is law, not vague aspirations, and we are obligated to protect, defend, and apply it. If the Second Amendment were truly an outdated relic, the Constitution provides a method for repeal. The Constitution does not furnish the federal courts with an eraser." --9th Circuit Court Judge Andrew Kleinfeld, dissenting opinion in which the court refused to rehear the case while citing deeply flawed anti-Second Amendment nonsense (Nordyke v. King; opinion filed April 5, 2004) |
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