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And you ever think that what you have searched for with dates going back to 1929 to 2102 to try and justify your gun laws is ever going to happen in countries like Australia, England, New Zealand in 2019?
Are you suggesting that everybody here carries a gun?
Might be safer if you did. Criminals will always have guns. The law abiding need to be able to protect themselves. The CDC said there are around 2 million defensive gun uses per year in the US.
 
A quote from the shooter in New Zealand

"Won’t your attack result in calls for the removal of gun rights from Whites in the United states?
Yes, that is the plan all along, you said you would fight to protect your rights and the constitution, well soon will come the time."
 
"In the face of rising knife violence rates in the UK, supermarket chain Asda will no longer be selling individual kitchen knives. This comes on the heels of the company's decision in 2016 to securely package all knives after a customer was stabbed inside a Poundland, another British grocery chain. For their part, Poundland stopped selling knives altogether last year. The grocery chains aren't entirely incorrect — England does have a growing knife violence problem. However, regulating knives won't stop the violence. And, boy, does England have a growing knife violence problem.

Over the first three months of 2019, England, with a population of just under 56 million, has seen 41 people killed by a knife based on this BBC report. According to the LA Times, "There were 285 knife homicides in England and Wales from April 1, 2017, to March 31, 2018, the highest number since comparable records began in 1946............"

Pick your poison, source-wise:

https://pjmedia.com/trending/amid-su...s-off-shelves/

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...kitchen-knives
 
Basic laws on knives

It’s illegal to:
  • sell a knife to anyone under 18, unless it has a folding blade 3 inches long (7.62 cm) or less
  • carry a knife in public without good reason, unless it has a folding blade with a cutting edge 3 inches long or less
  • carry, buy or sell any type of banned knife
  • use any knife in a threatening way (even a legal knife)

Even multi tool with locking blade is illegal:


Quote:
Lock knives
Lock knives are not classed as folding knives and are illegal to carry in public without good reason. Lock knives:
  • have blades that can be locked and refolded only by pressing a button
  • can include multi-tool knives - tools that also contain other devices such as a screwdriver or can opener
 
A crazed person within ten feet of you can stab you faster than you might be able to pull your gun out and shoot them.
 
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Knitting needles, pencils, screwdrivers, ice picks. Heaven forbid if some screwball buys a bench grinder and owns table knife or some scrap steel or re-bar.
 
The constitutional-carry movement began to gain ground in 2003, when Governor Frank Murkowski of Alaska signed House Bill 102 into law. That law marked the first time a state rescinded its laws requiring a permit to carry a concealed weapon. No other state followed suit until 2010, when Arizona passed Senate Bill 1108.

The trend began to catch on, slowly at first, then picking up the pace more recently, with Wyoming (2011), Kansas (2015), Maine (2015), Mississippi (2016), Idaho (2016), Missouri (2016), West Virginia (2016), New Hampshire (2017), North Dakota (2017), Arkansas (2018), Oklahoma (2019), South Dakota (2019), and now Kentucky passing constitutional carry in one form or another.
source: https://www.thenewamerican.com/usnew...oncealed-carry
 
The Trump bump stock ban is in effect.
It's now illegal to own, buy or sell a bump stock, which is used to turn a semi-automatic rifle into a fully automatic rifle. Owners have 90 days to either turn bump stocks over to federal agents or melt, shred or crush them or possibly face felony charges and a $250 fine.
They're going to come and get yours.
Good ole Trump, saviour of the second amendment. LOL Not so much



https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http...Zn_FkUH0BL7zOSfnilfvqyXPrrrW1zhOKFt63_NZufQyA
 
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a request by gun rights activists to put on hold the Trump administration’s ban on “bump stock” attachments that allow semi-automatic weapons to be fired rapidly, a rare recent instance of gun control at the federal level.
 
From my Ruger.net forum "if you are measuring ammo inventory by number of rounds instead of how many pounds you need to go shopping" So true, so true
 
https://www.nraila.org/articles/2019...cond-amendment

Quote:
Judge Benitez rendered his opinion late Friday afternoon and handed Second Amendment supporters a sweeping victory by completely invalidating California’s 10-round limit on magazine capacity. “Individual liberty and freedom are not outmoded concepts,” he declared.

In a scholarly and comprehensive opinion, Judge Benitez subjected the ban both to the constitutional analysis he argued was required by the U.S. Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller and a more complicated and flexible test the Ninth Circuit has applied in prior Second Amendment cases.

Either way, Judge Benitez ruled, the law would fail. Indeed, he characterized the California law as “turning the Constitution upside down.” He also systematically dismantled each of the state’s purported justifications for the law, demonstrating the factual and legal inconsistencies of their claims
 

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