by Dick Unger on Thu Jan 20, 2011 6:48 am
Back on the interview, it's hard to defend something like the magazine limit because it is an issue completely invented by opponents. I don't think any gun manufacturer would see a mag limit as a safety feature, it's not like we're talking about a safety or a proof test or something like that. The folks that came up with the concept are not gun folks. The NRA is all about education and gun safety, they never proposed such aconcept as a mag limit. It's never even been tested.
The opponents have formulated this debate. Their game their rules, their timing, their choice of field. They win or they don't. We can only play with defense in this game. We can lose or tie with a zero to zero score.
For example, if I propose a law requiring air bags on the bumpers of cars to reduce the injuries to bycyclists cars might run over, (as far as I know that has never been proposed anywhere) and then require the car people to respond to my "reasonable" idea on tonight's news, what could they say that would not sound callous? ( Everyone has a car and doesn't want to have that, but I bet I could get a bunch of folks to support that for snowmiobiles, dirt bikes or jet skis.)
The mag limiters don't REALLY want mag limits, they want no guns at all. They can't have that so they'll start with little things, of which this is the smallest. A fair debate requires both parties to have a good faith discourse, we don't have that. And any real chance for a real advance in public gun safety is wasted because we're debating things which won't make any difference to safety. Because mag limits won't affect hunting, it's a good way to target a small minority of America. And we wasted many millions of collars and lots of talent with this crap.
Last edited by
Dick Unger on Thu Jan 20, 2011 6:55 am, edited 1 time in total.