Kelly Roskam of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions discusses a Supreme Court case that will decide if a federal law prohibiting possession of firearms by people subject to domestic violence protection orders is constitutional
Kelly Roskam of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions discusses a Supreme Court case that will decide if a federal law prohibiting possession of firearms by people subject to domestic violence protection orders is constitutional
Tell me you didn’t even skim the article without actually saying it.
Wow!
It’s a good thing therapist are far from the only piece of the solution to such a problem, as highlight by the article you didn’t even bother to skim.
You’re so close to getting it.
How likely do you think a different purely-partisan firearms ban would be?
Perhaps the constitutional amendment to revoke 2A?
For any action to proceed, there needs to be a point of compromise and departure from the wedges. Both parties are going to have to give.
Blue team is going to have to eat crow and address actual underlying issues (e.g. those you didn’t bother to read) and, to gain buy-in, is going to have to give something in, say, pushing for deregulating suppressors or otherwise delivering things the firearms enthusiast crowd would want.
Fortunately, as they’d be actually addressing the underlying pressures to violence, rates are very likely to drop.
But hey - keep pretending actual problem solving is somehow a bandaid. It fits right in with your commenting on things you haven’t even bothered to skim, let alone complex problems you haven’t bothered to understand.