Dave does another outstanding job with this article:
Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, will be in Seattle Monday as the keynoter at Washington CeaseFire’s Spring Luncheon event at the Washington Athletic Club, and Monday evening he will lead a panel discussion on “gun reform” at Town Hall Seattle.
The panel will also feature CeaseFire President Ralph Fascitelli,
Tony Gomez with Seattle/King County Public Health and State Rep. Cyrus
Habib (48th District). According to the Town Hall website, “the panel
will explore long-term solutions to reducing violence and changing the
cultural status quo. Sandy Hook and other mass shootings have raised
questions about gun legislation, prompting movements for change. This
conversation will offer tools to make informed decisions about gun
reform at all levels…”
Town Hall’s Civics series gathering will be moderated by veteran
Seattle P-I.com columnist Joel Connelly. The doors open at 6:30 p.m. and
tickets are $5.
“Gun violence prevention” and “gun reform” are, gun rights advocates contend, simply semantic alterations of the term “gun control.”
Ditto the term “gun safety.” Proposals in this realm invariably seem to
ratchet down on the rights of law-abiding gun owners who would not
likely commit a crime with a firearm, they argue.
In Connecticut, New York, Colorado and California, laws were passed
in the wake of the Sandy Hook tragedy that essentially turned
law-abiding people into criminals. Guns and magazines that they have
owned for years are now prohibited. So-called "assault weapons" must be
registered. Gun rights activists argue that registration is the
precursor to confiscation. KVI’s John Carlson has stated repeatedly on
the air that the only reason to register guns is to “tax them or to take
them.”
While the gun prohibition lobby characteristically offers an agenda
that includes bans on so-called “assault weapons” and “high capacity
magazines,” tighter restrictions on concealed carry, one-gun-a-month
schemes, a closure of the so-called “gun show loophole,” and expanded background checks
to include all transfers (not just sales) of firearms, it was the
firearms community that came up with two common-sense solutions to
violent crime that worked. Three Strikes and You’re Out, and Hard Time
for Armed Crime started here in Washington State and swept the nation.
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How not to test a bullet proof vest
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