Agreed that mental health needs A LOT more funding.
Since that's never going to happen, some common sense restrictions on how one accesses firearms should be passed into law. None of the simple proposals I've seen would limit YOUR personal stash. And no, I don't think they would have prevented this disaster. But it's a start, and sends the message that we care.
I do appreciate your calm and reasoned and compassionate approach to the issue, though there are a few areas here where I think you're wrong.
You said that improving mental health care is something that's "never going to happen" - why is that more implausible than somehow getting rid of 100s of millions of existing firearms in private law-abiding hands? Why
couldn't we do that? We used to have a pretty extensive network of government run mental health facilities, and psychiatry has come a long way since we were doing lobotomies and chaining crazy people up in loony bins.
The devil is always in the details. I don't want to address an argument you don't mean to make, so if you could clarify -
some common sense restrictions on how one accesses firearms should be passed into law
What
specific restrictions would you like to see? What specifically do you think would help?
None of the simple proposals I've seen would limit YOUR personal stash
Ultimately, this isn't really about ME, but this statement is incorrect in many CURRENT and easily predicted future ways, should any of these "simple" proposals pass
- The passed (and now expired) fed AWB would limit or prohibit many of my firearms. If it hadn't expired, I wouldn't have been able to buy many that I currently own and lawfully use.
- California's "simple" and "commonsense" laws limit or prohibit quite a few of my firearms (and suppressors) to the point that I'm forced to store them in another state
- The firearms that California's "simple" and "commonsense" laws do permit me to possess require me to mechanically alter them so they do not function as intended
- Californias "simple" and "commonsense" magazine capacity limit forced me to leave a number of handgun and rifle magazines in another state, and purchase (to the tune of $10-60 each) <10rd versions to use
- Feinstein's proposed re-introduction of a federal AWB would either ban many of my firearms outright (forcing me to surrender them) or ban the transfer/sale of my property to another person (forcing me to give up a basic property right) or ban the acquisition of certain new firearms, which obviously limits me
- I could go on and on, but I hope you see my point: that previous and proposed laws have and will restrict me, a law abiding citizen.
Gun control advocates LOVE California and Chicago and NYC and DC, but don't seem to like to talk about what horrific abject failures all of those places are when it comes to violent crime and "simple" / "commonsense" regulation.
And no, I don't think they would have prevented this disaster.
Then what's the point? So gun control advocates can feel good about themselves and pretend they're making a difference, while ignoring root causes?
Why should any free person tolerate a restriction of the basic civil right of armed self-defense? As I've mentioned before, we have not yet had a ruling from SCOTUS on what level of scrutiny must be applied to 2A issues, but my personal opinion is that it should and will be strict, meaning any such regulation would have to
- serve a compelling government interest (debatable, given the ineffectiveness of gun control)
- be the least restrictive means for serving that interest
- be narrowly tailored
Most gun control fails all three.
A few examples of reasonable gun control that meets that standard includes (IMO)
- effective, accurate, and rapid background checking (which is unfortunately a very hard problem)
- prohibition for persons who are violent felons (presently the law prohibits ALL felons)
- prohibition for mentally ill persons, or those addicted to unlawful drugs
You won't find many gun owners who object to this kind of gun control. I don't.
The problem we have is that the gun control we get is largely feel-good scary-feature driven bans composed by people who think a barrel shroud is a "shoulder thingy that goes up."
But it's a start, and sends the message that we care.
Yes it's a start. And history has taught us that the "start" is just that ... the "start" of ever-more restrictive laws, registration requirements, transport limitations (did you know I have to file a form and ask the ATF's permission, which takes 4-6 weeks to get, to move two of my rifles across state lines? Two rifles that are indistinguishable from other unregulated rifles, except that their barrels are 1.5" and 5" shorter, respectively?), usage limitations ...
Gun control "started" long long ago, "started" to take a nice racist turn in the post Civil War years, then "started" a nice classist turn during the Great Depression (with the 1934 NFA), then "started" again with the 1968 GCA, "started" some more with the 1994 AWB. Consider all of the other "starts" sprinkled in the years between those points, and maybe you'll start to see why gun owners are so wary of people who just want to "start" something reasonable and simple and commonsense.
Since NO gun control ever works, the natural response a gun control advocate gives when their latest control fails (predictably) is that more control is needed. No matter how much of a failure a control policy is, the gun control advocate always answers that it failed because it didn't go far enough.
It's like watching Republicans lose elections and then hearing Fox News guests conclude that the problem was that they weren't far right
enough.
And if you want to send a message that you care, send a card or send flowers, or ask why this apparently mentally ill person wasn't diagnosed and treated before today.