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<blockquote data-quote="soberups" data-source="post: 1333741" data-attributes="member: 14668"><p>This entire tragedy is a case study of why warm-and-fuzzy feel good gun laws <strong>don't stop crime.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>The murders occurred in California, the state that is the utopian wet dream of the gun ban crowd. California has the strictest and most ridiculous gun laws in the nation, and they didn't do a damn bit of good in this case.</p><p></p><p>Universal Background Checks? The killer passed one <strong>three times.</strong></p><p></p><p>Waiting periods? The killer bought his first gun a <strong>year and a half ago </strong>in 2012.</p><p></p><p>High capacity magazine bans? The killer had California-legal 10 round magazines for his guns and all the time in the world to reload during his rampage.</p><p></p><p>Assault weapon bans? 2 victims were stabbed, 3 were shot with a <strong>handgun, </strong>and 4 of them got <strong>run over by his car.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Gun free zones? The killer spent a year and a half planning his massacre and since he had formed a<strong> premeditated intent to commit murder </strong>the only people who obeyed the "gun free zone" rule were his <strong>unarmed victims.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>I don't know what the answer is. I don't know what could have prevented this tragedy. I <strong>do </strong>know that it wasn't the fault of the NRA, it wasn't the fault of the Second Amendment, and it want the fault of the 200-million law abiding Americans like me who own guns. As best as I can tell, what failed in this case was a mental health system that failed to intervene and a family who coddled this little turd instead of making him grow up and be a big boy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="soberups, post: 1333741, member: 14668"] This entire tragedy is a case study of why warm-and-fuzzy feel good gun laws [B]don't stop crime. [/B] The murders occurred in California, the state that is the utopian wet dream of the gun ban crowd. California has the strictest and most ridiculous gun laws in the nation, and they didn't do a damn bit of good in this case. Universal Background Checks? The killer passed one [B]three times.[/B] Waiting periods? The killer bought his first gun a [B]year and a half ago [/B]in 2012. High capacity magazine bans? The killer had California-legal 10 round magazines for his guns and all the time in the world to reload during his rampage. Assault weapon bans? 2 victims were stabbed, 3 were shot with a [B]handgun, [/B]and 4 of them got [B]run over by his car. [/B] Gun free zones? The killer spent a year and a half planning his massacre and since he had formed a[B] premeditated intent to commit murder [/B]the only people who obeyed the "gun free zone" rule were his [B]unarmed victims. [/B] I don't know what the answer is. I don't know what could have prevented this tragedy. I [B]do [/B]know that it wasn't the fault of the NRA, it wasn't the fault of the Second Amendment, and it want the fault of the 200-million law abiding Americans like me who own guns. As best as I can tell, what failed in this case was a mental health system that failed to intervene and a family who coddled this little turd instead of making him grow up and be a big boy. [/QUOTE]
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