
Originally Posted by
Alphys
And y'all seem to have been ignoring what I will be stating for the third time, I'm okay with gun regulation. Quit acting like I'm not because I have said that now three times. I just don't want that regulation to get out of hand. Probably the best example for this I can give is that during a simulation of the statehouse that the state does every year, this year the sheer amount of bills on the Confederate flag and gun laws were astounding, but not unexpected given that one of the people who died in the Charleston shooting was a member of the state congress. We ended up voting most of the gun laws down because we felt they breached the second amendment in one way or another, but someone brought up a very good point the counter the common argument of "it'll prevent things like charleston from happening." He said that we shouldn't restrict people from getting access to guns, we need to make the process of obtaining one more difficult. As I stated before, it's relatively easy to obtain a gun since there's only one permit required (permit to carry a handgun) and as long as you meet the four qualifications you're free to buy as many as you would like. So nearly everyone in my state owns a gun, that's just something we deal with. Now look at the voting process. In my state, it's not difficult to get a voting license, but it can be depending on where you go to get one, especially with the new photo ID laws and stuff. It's becoming extremely difficult to get a voting license, so less and less people are going out to vote in my state. So, imagine for a second, if gun laws worked like that. Imagine if we made the process so hard that it would deter people from getting guns. Sure, there'd be riots all over the place in my state because almost everyone here owns a firearm, but still, it would decrease how many people own and use a gun, making it less accessible to people, like the Charleston shooter, to screw things up for the rest of us.
It's also worth noting that in my school, not the school district, not the county, not the state, not the country, my school, hearing about break ins and rapes is not an uncommon thing at all. I'm not "seriously overestimating crime" when I hear from teachers, students, and parents about how so and so was raped the other week or so and so's house was broken into. Heck, we had at least one student die a year at my school due to break ins. This was not an uncommon thing and it was terrifying for everyone because you never knew if you were going to be the next one to bite the dust. So, no, this isn't due to repeated exposure to the media, this is due to the repeated witnessing of the effects of what break ins have done to these people.
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