What's new

Gun Control

I have to admit that I enojoy reading your posts Babe. Very ... provacative. I was just reading about the Spring City "recomendation". They are also trying to arm and train the 20+ elementary school teachers/officials.

As for the UN angle. If the UN (foreign troops) came onto US soil to confiscate guns there would be war. Send a UN platoon into a place like Cold Water MS to take peoples guns away and the next time you see those troops is when their bodies are dumped off at the morgue.

The only thing about babe's posts, is they're always going to be guarenteed to be waaaaaay long and drawn out.

On a side note.... Joe Biden now says the president will explore using executive orders to deal with gun control.

https://www.cnn.com/2013/01/09/politics/gun-control-battle/?hpt=po_c1
 
What do you guys think about ordering large quantities of ammo online?

I've done it. It's a huge money saver and often the only way to get very specific types of ammo.

Just to put things in perspective for those who never shoot, ammo is expensive. I don't go to the range to fire 10 rounds and go home. I'll usually fire a few hundred rounds, often around 100-200 rounds per gun I bring. For a 100pk of something like .40 it's close to $40, and that's for the value pack at walmart. It's often about $25 or so for a 50pk, but again, for range type ammo. For "personal defense" ammo, specifically the same exact ammo the local police use, it's around $20-$25 for 20 rounds. Buying in bulk makes it much easier and more affordable to practice with your firearms. The fun of owning firearms in my opinion is in firing them. I think it is very important to be extremely familiar with the firearms you own. The only way to do that is to use the firearm.

I imagine bulk online ammo sales are going to be targeted by any executive order. To me that is a move intended to make the hobby/sport of shooting and firearms ownership more difficult, more expensive and less enjoyable/accessible. It has nothing to do with crime and everything to do with attacking "gun culture" itself.
 
What do you guys think about ordering large quantities of ammo online?

I've done it. It's a huge money saver and often the only way to get very specific types of ammo.

Just to put things in perspective for those who never shoot, ammo is expensive. I don't go to the range to fire 10 rounds and go home. I'll usually fire a few hundred rounds, often around 100-200 rounds per gun I bring. For a 100pk of something like .40 it's close to $40, and that's for the value pack at walmart. It's often about $25 or so for a 50pk, but again, for range type ammo. For "personal defense" ammo, specifically the same exact ammo the local police use, it's around $20-$25 for 20 rounds. Buying in bulk makes it much easier and more affordable to practice with your firearms. The fun of owning firearms in my opinion is in firing them. I think it is very important to be extremely familiar with the firearms you own. The only way to do that is to use the firearm.

I imagine bulk online ammo sales are going to be targeted by any executive order. To me that is a move intended to make the hobby/sport of shooting and firearms ownership more difficult, more expensive and less enjoyable/accessible. It has nothing to do with crime and everything to do with attacking "gun culture" itself.

well a couple hundred rounds is pretty different than a couple thousand rounds. How many do you average using when you go shooting?
 
Ok. So lets do nothing then. Just let it keep happening and say o well what do you do

This is actually what we pretty much should do. I`m tired of people and this country freaking out cause a couple idiots went off the deep end.

It`s always going to happen, no matter what.
 
well a couple hundred rounds is pretty different than a couple thousand rounds. How many do you average using when you go shooting?

Right, but I buy a 4-6 month supply of TP at Costco because it saves me money. No one "needs" a 6 month supply of TP all at one time, but it makes sense economically. And, if a big storm hit and the stores were out of TP for a long time I'd be covered.

I usually shoot 300-500 rounds when I go to the range. It usually costs me around $100 in ammo. If I bought ammo at the range it'd cost about 20% more. If I was smarter and I bought ammo online it's cost me maybe 10-15% less than what I pay at WalMart.
 
Right, but I buy a 4-6 month supply of TP at Costco because it saves me money. No one "needs" a 6 month supply of TP all at one time, but it makes sense economically. And, if a big storm hit and the stores were out of TP for a long time I'd be covered.

I usually shoot 300-500 rounds when I go to the range. It usually costs me around $100 in ammo. If I bought ammo at the range it'd cost about 20% more. If I was smarter and I bought ammo online it's cost me maybe 10-15% less than what I pay at WalMart.

This reminds me that I need to go get some more ammo. I am out of .22 shells entirely.
 
Right, but I buy a 4-6 month supply of TP at Costco because it saves me money. No one "needs" a 6 month supply of TP all at one time, but it makes sense economically. And, if a big storm hit and the stores were out of TP for a long time I'd be covered.

I usually shoot 300-500 rounds when I go to the range. It usually costs me around $100 in ammo. If I bought ammo at the range it'd cost about 20% more. If I was smarter and I bought ammo online it's cost me maybe 10-15% less than what I pay at WalMart.

Well TP. That's a basic need. So a trip to the range runs $200 in ammo?
 
Well TP. That's a basic need. So a trip to the range runs $200 in ammo?

Yeah, give or take a little depending on what type of ammo I'm shooting. Again, it costs less if I buy in bulk. Bulk ammo sales haven't been linked to a single violent gun crime that I've ever heard of yet it's in the cross-hairs of recent gun regulation talk.

So do you think it should be prohibited?
 
What do you guys think about ordering large quantities of ammo online?

I've done it. It's a huge money saver and often the only way to get very specific types of ammo.

Just to put things in perspective for those who never shoot, ammo is expensive. I don't go to the range to fire 10 rounds and go home. I'll usually fire a few hundred rounds, often around 100-200 rounds per gun I bring. For a 100pk of something like .40 it's close to $40, and that's for the value pack at walmart. It's often about $25 or so for a 50pk, but again, for range type ammo. For "personal defense" ammo, specifically the same exact ammo the local police use, it's around $20-$25 for 20 rounds. Buying in bulk makes it much easier and more affordable to practice with your firearms. The fun of owning firearms in my opinion is in firing them. I think it is very important to be extremely familiar with the firearms you own. The only way to do that is to use the firearm.

I imagine bulk online ammo sales are going to be targeted by any executive order. To me that is a move intended to make the hobby/sport of shooting and firearms ownership more difficult, more expensive and less enjoyable/accessible. It has nothing to do with crime and everything to do with attacking "gun culture" itself.

I am not necessarily against it. Perhaps have a background check required to buy it. If you pass then you are able to buy the ammo. Maybe a 5 day waiting period. Just throwing out ideas.

What size of "bulk" are we talking about? 500 rounds or 10,000?
 
A case is usually 500-1000 rounds I believe. But some people store several thousand rounds "in case of emergency." We can laugh at them and call them nut jobs all we want but none of them are stockpiling ammo so they can hold up a liquor store. If you want to go on a shooting rampage it's unlikely you're gonna carry any lose ammo. You'll load as much as you can into whatever magazines you have and carry that. If you've got an AR-15 and several 30rd magazines maybe you carry 200 rounds with you. Easy enough to buy that much ammo at WalMart. Bulk online ammo sales have nothing to do with crime. Nothing.

Man I was just looking at online prices and ammo prices are considerably higher than what I suggest in my post. It's been a while since I've bought ammo.
 
I am very much in favor of term limits.
I see term limits as a way to protect voters from themselves. Besides, if we ever truly get a great person in office, someone who is perfect for the job I don't want them to have to leave because of term limits. I want the freedom to elect the person I think is the best candidate.

Term limits are contrary to freedom, imo.
 
Like I said I am not against it. I'd be fine with people buying a case or two of ammo online. I am sure that vast bulk purchases of say 10,000 rounds would set of red flags int he government though.
 
I see term limits as a way to protect voters from themselves. Besides, if we ever truly get a great person in office, someone who is perfect for the job I don't want them to have to leave because of term limits. I want the freedom to elect the person I think is the best candidate.

Term limits are contrary to freedom, imo.

I get where you are coming from but I also see it as a way to partially protect me from other voters that simply do not have my best interest at heart. A check and balances on mob rule so to speak. Plus I see it as a way to help fight the dynasties of people like Hatch that have been a Senator for 7 terms.

I do not think that evey position needs term limits but I am in favor of them for the President, congressmen and senators. Some judge positions as well.
 
Yeah, give or take a little depending on what type of ammo I'm shooting. Again, it costs less if I buy in bulk. Bulk ammo sales haven't been linked to a single violent gun crime that I've ever heard of yet it's in the cross-hairs of recent gun regulation talk.

So do you think it should be prohibited?

I don't think gun control would help do much. Plenty of data to support that. We do live in a violence friendly society that can have a powerful impact on those who aren't mentally well.
I think we need to help address people who are mentally sick rather than start taking people's guns away.
I think people who have guns need to take extra special care of them especially if they feel they could fall into the wrong hands.


Correct me if I am wrong but wasn't the Colorado theatre shooter was buying ammo in bulk online?
 
Even if the Colo shooter bought ammo online it didn't play a role in the shooting. How many rounds did he fire? It's not like he would have been stopped if only he would have had to pay more and go into a Wal-Mart to buy his ammo.
 
With all of the recent gun violence, what is the sentiment on the board about Gun Control? I personally am beginning to think there is some merit to it.

I just wanted to bring up the OP as a sort of reminder of what this thread is about. It is not about demonizing guns or people who value them, or about demonizing the mentally-ill or those using prescription drugs. I may be off topic to point out the associated facts of the most horrific things in our news with those way-beyond the norm people who have done the evil deeds. We have millions of guns, and millions of people who for some fairly ordinary reasons are on medications which have in less than a hundred instances combined, and been factually associated with the horrific killings we as a society should do something about.

If you're going to think more regulations on guns will solve the problem, I have suggested that you will need to think again someday, when all the regulations you could imagine or ask for are in place, and something like this still happens. I don't think hundreds of laws regulating prescription drugs will solve the problem, either.

what will solve the problem in cost/benefit efficiency to a greater extent than gun regulation, is actually having competent, trained people on hand with the equipment it takes to stop a shooter. It wouldn't even have to be another shooter. I have said that even a little old lady with the guts to rush the shooter could precipitate the final act these shooters universally have in mind. . . shooting themselves to avoid any possibility of having to be held accountable in public courts.

tasers would do the job if someone was close enough, but the most effective thing we can do is make it a possibility that there will be a rapid takedown of the shooter somehow, preferably a non-lethal one.

I have made my point. I don't carry guns, but I would rush a shooter like this screaming like a banshee. If he had to swing his rifle to take aim, I could do about forty feet of rush before he could hit me. If four or five others would do the same, the killings would be stopped at about three plus the four he could shoot as they rushed him.

If we as society had this mental toughness in our culture, our kids would be substantially protected from this specific threat.

And after all I've read in this thread, I've come to the conclusion that the very idea of regulating individuals in ways that incapacitate them in the defense of their own lives, or the lives of their family, or of their property, is morally reprehensible. The consequences of laws of this nature will be tens and hundreds of more lost lives, if not thousands and millions, than leaving things as they now are.

The only way we are going to improve life in this world is by empowering people to protect themselves from whatever threats they can perceive to their own well-being. No government, no bureaucrat, no police force can reliably "be there" to do the job for them.

we do need laws making it criminal to kill, and we need to enforce those laws credibly enough that the ordinarily-sentient perps will believe they will be caught and punished. And the perps who would do any wrong to us should know they face a substantial risk of effective self-defense response on the spot.
 
Back
Top