[quote="Azdgari"]I don't know much about the assault weapons ban (I am inclined to think it is not a terribly effective gun control measure), but I believe that the background checks were not passed as well? Was that a rider on the assault weapons ban or separate legislature? In any event,
that bill not being passed does worry me, considering it had the overwhelming support of our public. My opinion on the issue itself aside (and in my opinion how can you say no to background checks), clearly our democracy is not working particularly well if our elected officials do not remotely reflect public opinion.[/quote]
I don't know about "overwhelming support of our public", because at the end of the day, what can cause 15 democrats and all but 1 republican to vote against the bill (the only independent also voted "no", to a final of 60-40 against)? Maybe the big cities are largely in favor of gun control, but there is still a very large percentage of people not living in big cities who don't support gun bans. When you say "overwhelming support", speak for yourself or provide proof. Az, you of all people struck me as someone who should know this. I'm sorry to say this, but this comment struck me as very naive and quite childish.
Most moderates don't support gun bans. The midwest often threatens secession should one be implemented (my brother lives there, and he knows the local politics). Generally speaking, if you color code the US in terms of gun support, it's the coastal areas vs. everyone else. At the end of the day, the majority of Americans, while supporting things such as better BG checks (even the NRA likes this), an outright ban is a flat "no".
sourceAs for how come the background checks didn't get passed and all that: That's what you get when you combine the reasonable with the unreasonable. At the end of the day, if you try to get a small good law passed, but it's embedded into a larger, bad, law, don't expect to get your good law passed.
My personal opinion: When I see bills to "ban military-style guns", I see this clear distinction: A plastic
AR-15 with a scope is a murder weapon. A wooden-stock
Ruger Mini-14, with scope, is a hunting rifle. And yet, both fire the same round and are both semi-automatic. This meaning that for most practical purposes, they are the same gun. This is the lack of logic that I see all too common in these types of laws that really makes me question why we even allow congress to make laws in the first place, no matter the subject.