NY passes new gun law
Comments
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Cliffy6745 wrote:DS1119 wrote:Cliffy6745 wrote:
You had plenty of opportunity to post it. You just posted "common sense"
Nice try though.
I was too busy trying to figure out your correlation between the stats you posted and gun control in NYC via google seeing if there are some laws I missed down there or something. I guess I gave you too much credit.
Ahhhhhh.....That's what you were doing...got it. Thanks. :?
Did you know violence in NYC started on the decline When the Lion King started. I think that was the tipping factor.0 -
EdsonNascimento wrote:Cliffy6745 wrote:EdsonNascimento wrote:
I actually do for the most part. Cleaning up 42nd street, etc. had nothing to do with gun laws.
Don't get me wrong. I don't see how folks can be against background checks for ALL sales of guns (are they also against driver's licenses to use one of the favorite "analogies"), but I'm not sure NYC (or any major city) is a good example on either side (Chicago - I'm looking at you).
If you don't take care of the underlying problem (crime, squallor, mental health, etc.), the gun bans, etc. aren't going to do a whole lot. I will repeat again - all the guns in these incidents were LEGALLY owned.
And, yes, Bloomberg has reduced NYPD, and you can see the city slipping back into some of it's old "habits." I am a bit scared that the lag issue is comforting folks into feeling ok with what can only be termed a mistake on his part.
I am not talking about TImes Sqaure. Manhattan as a whole is a very different place than it was. You can argue that the violence is going other places but the city as a whole has changed, which I do think has played a factor in the gun violence.
I don't disagree with you at all on the mental health aspect of it and I have point out Chicago myself. It is obviously not just taking guns away from people, which in reality is not what the New York law is doing. LIke I said, responsible gun owners shouldn't have a problem with this law.
Like I said, I get that there are many other factors and I guess the point that we will disagree on is that I see the less guns out and about as a good thing and less likely to get in the wrong hands. I am very much in favor of the right to own guns, I just don't think it should be a free for all where anyone can buy any gun they want.
You don't think there is any correllation between the number of guns people are carrying illegally but may own legally and the number of homicides in New York?
Don't take everything so literally. 42nd Street was used as a microcosm of what Rudy did for the ENTIRE city (not just Manhattan).
And to your last question: No. See: Town, Chi
Fair enough.
So it is strictly that the size of the police force was increased 10 years ago?0 -
BinauralJam wrote:How about drug testing for gun owner's, random once a year drug testing. Good idea yes/no?
Terrible idea.Sorry. The world doesn't work the way you tell it to.0 -
JimmyV wrote:DS1119 wrote:Mark my words. Quote my post. Gun crime at this time in NY state will be the exact same next year as it is this year. I'm actually embarrassed as a NYS resident that trash like this can get passed and people applaud it. Way to posture governor cuomo in your "big stand". This was nothing more than the democratic run government of NY helping cuomo build his resume for a presidential run. He can now say he was the first governor to make a stance against gun control when if fact he did nothing.
Paper legislation that does zippo to actually help with the issue. :fp:
You are of course hoping you are wrong, right?
Because we all want to see gun related crime go down, right?
Because that is far more important than the politics, right?
I think the fact that these questions were ignored is quite telling.___________________________________________
"...I changed by not changing at all..."0 -
Jason P wrote:
Getting rid of 30 round clips isn't an inconvienience, but making standard clip sizes illegal is a huge inconvenience and cost to an owner.JonnyPistachio wrote:To me, magazine limits are worth a try, and it hardly puts gun owners at an inconvenience.
Not really. I have to re-find the exact language, but if you have a larger magazine, you can still use it, but you can't put more than seven rounds in it. If you are caught with more rounds in it, then it's a misdemeanor.
So no one has to go out an buy smaller magazines.My whole life
was like a picture
of a sunny day
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.”
― Abraham Lincoln0 -
acouple states willing to fightthe good fight
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/01 ... -in-texas/0 -
DS1119 wrote:Did you know violence in NYC started on the decline When the Lion King started. I think that was the tipping factor.
So again, you have nothing to add to this thread? Carry on...0 -
Cliffy6745 wrote:
Fair enough.
So it is strictly that the size of the police force was increased 10 years ago?
No, it was how they changed the way laws were enforced, how the police were viewed. It was a NUMBER of things that Rudy did to make it good to be good, again.
If you want to link it to the gun thing - yes, enforcement of existing gun laws helped as with all law enforcement. But, there was no siginificant change in gun law (or ownership for that matter) when Rudy cut violent crime in HALF in his first year in office.Sorry. The world doesn't work the way you tell it to.0 -
USARAY wrote:acouple states willing to fightthe good fight
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/01 ... -in-texas/
King Obama? Protecting guns is important. Respecting election results is apparently not.___________________________________________
"...I changed by not changing at all..."0 -
JimmyV wrote:JimmyV wrote:DS1119 wrote:Mark my words. Quote my post. Gun crime at this time in NY state will be the exact same next year as it is this year. I'm actually embarrassed as a NYS resident that trash like this can get passed and people applaud it. Way to posture governor cuomo in your "big stand". This was nothing more than the democratic run government of NY helping cuomo build his resume for a presidential run. He can now say he was the first governor to make a stance against gun control when if fact he did nothing.
Paper legislation that does zippo to actually help with the issue. :fp:
You are of course hoping you are wrong, right?
Because we all want to see gun related crime go down, right?
Because that is far more important than the politics, right?
I think the fact that these questions were ignored is quite telling.
Didn't see this post. Of course I want crime to go down. Who doesn't. This isn't the way though. Far from it.0 -
Cliffy6745 wrote:DS1119 wrote:Did you know violence in NYC started on the decline When the Lion King started. I think that was the tipping factor.
So again, you have nothing to add to this thread? Carry on...
As much relevance as the article you posted.0 -
EdsonNascimento wrote:Cliffy6745 wrote:
Fair enough.
So it is strictly that the size of the police force was increased 10 years ago?
No, it was how they changed the way laws were enforced, how the police were viewed. It was a NUMBER of things that Rudy did to make it good to be good, again.
If you want to link it to the gun thing - yes, enforcement of existing gun laws helped as with all law enforcement. But, there was no siginificant change in gun law (or ownership for that matter) when Rudy cut violent crime in HALF in his first year in office.
And yes, how the laws were being enforced is largely my point. There were already fairly strict gun laws on the book but the enforcement of them became a much bigger priority.0 -
listening tohalf the population and statevoices is importantand yeah Obama isacting like a kingJimmyV wrote:USARAY wrote:acouple states willing to fightthe good fight
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/01 ... -in-texas/
King Obama? Protecting guns is important. Respecting election results is apparently not.
love the bill he signed forhimself the king will have armedguards protection therest of his life
howironic0 -
DS1119 wrote:Cliffy6745 wrote:DS1119 wrote:Did you know violence in NYC started on the decline When the Lion King started. I think that was the tipping factor.
So again, you have nothing to add to this thread? Carry on...
As much relevance as the article you posted.
I'm actually at a loss for words.0 -
USARAY wrote:
listening tohalf the population and statevoices is importantand yeah Obama isacting like a kingJimmyV wrote:USARAY wrote:acouple states willing to fightthe good fight
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/01 ... -in-texas/
King Obama? Protecting guns is important. Respecting election results is apparently not.
love the bill he signed forhimself the king will have armedguards protection therest of his life
howironic
Did you and the spacebar get into an argument or something?0 -
Cliffy6745 wrote:EdsonNascimento wrote:Cliffy6745 wrote:
Fair enough.
So it is strictly that the size of the police force was increased 10 years ago?
No, it was how they changed the way laws were enforced, how the police were viewed. It was a NUMBER of things that Rudy did to make it good to be good, again.
If you want to link it to the gun thing - yes, enforcement of existing gun laws helped as with all law enforcement. But, there was no siginificant change in gun law (or ownership for that matter) when Rudy cut violent crime in HALF in his first year in office.
And yes, how the laws were being enforced is largely my point. There were already fairly strict gun laws on the book but the enforcement of them became a much bigger priority.
And how we're those laws enforced? More police. Stiffer penalties. Accountability.0 -
DS1119 wrote:JimmyV wrote:JimmyV wrote:
You are of course hoping you are wrong, right?
Because we all want to see gun related crime go down, right?
Because that is far more important than the politics, right?
I think the fact that these questions were ignored is quite telling.
Didn't see this post. Of course I want crime to go down. Who doesn't. This isn't the way though. Far from it.
Good. Too easy to lose sight of what is really important.___________________________________________
"...I changed by not changing at all..."0 -
DS1119 wrote:
And how we're those laws enforced? More police. Stiffer penalties. Accountability.
Ahhh. Yeah, stronger enforcement (which included more police for a period of time) and prosecution of gun laws where an incredibly small percentage of civilians are allowed to carry a weapon. Exactly my point.0 -
I'm glad !!!
At least the families of the victims can see that something is being done even if people feel it's nothing to be howling about ..jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
Cliffy6745 wrote:You can point to Chicago and I certainly think that would be a very interesting case study into why two areas with strict laws are seeing the murder rates go in opposite directions, but something is working in NYC and you can't necessarily say that it isn't the gun laws because they are taking a lot of guns off the street and if that article is correct, only 10% of the 8,000 they have taken are illegally owned.
i tend to stay away from shit slinging threads, but i'll throw in my two cents on this once since i have lived in both cities....
comes down to police presense for me. there is simply not enough in chicago. i am actually astounded at how invisible the police are in the downtown/high volume areas. i have NEVER felt unsafe in NYC, walking alone at all hours of the day and night simply because there are a handful of cops on every corner you turn. the sense of security you have there is incredible. you just can't help to find yourself more at ease.
chicago, i find myself looking over my shoulder more than i ever had in NYC.0
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