Several States Ease Restrictions on Gun Laws

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  • MALIBU12

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    slidell
    Several States Ease Restrictions on Gun Laws

    AP

    In many states across the United States, it's getting easier to carry a gun -- and many say it's the result of a campaign by the National Rifle Association.

    In many states across the United States, it's getting easier to carry a gun -- and many say it's the result of a campaign by the National Rifle Association.

    A nationwide review by The Associated Press found that over the last two years, 24 states, mostly in the South and West, have passed 47 new laws loosening gun restrictions.

    Among other things, legislatures have allowed firearms to be carried in cars, made it illegal to ask job candidates whether they own a gun, and expanded agreements that make permits to carry handguns in one state valid in another.

    The trend is attributed in large part to a push by the NRA. The NRA, the leading gun-owners lobby in the U.S. which for years has blocked attempts in Washington to tighten firearms laws, has ramped up its efforts at the state level to chip away at gun restrictions.

    "This is all a coordinated approach to respect that human, God-given right of self defense by law-abiding Americans," says Chris W. Cox, the NRA's chief lobbyist. "We'll rest when all 50 states allow and respect the right of law-abiding people to defend themselves from criminal attack."

    Tennessee and Montana, for example, have passed laws that exempt weapons made and owned in-state from federal restrictions.

    Tennessee is the home to Barrett Firearms Manufacturing, the maker of a .50-caliber shoulder-fired rifle that the company says can shoot bullets up to 5 miles (8 kilometers). The rifle is banned in California.

    There have been gun-friendly law changes in other states. Arizona, Florida, Louisiana and Utah have made it illegal for businesses to bar their employees from storing guns in cars parked on company lots. Some states have made handgun permit information confidential and others have allowed handgun permits to be issued to people who have had their felony convictions expunged or their full civil rights restored.

    The AP compiled the data on new laws from groups ranging from the Legal Community Against Violence, which advocates gun control, to the NRA.

    Public attitudes toward gun control have shifted strongly over the past 50 years, according to Gallup polling. In 1959, 60 percent of respondents said they favored a ban on handguns except for "police and other authorized persons." Gallup's most recent annual crime survey in October found 71 percent opposed such a ban.

    The NRA boasts that almost all states grant handgun permits to people with clean criminal and psychological records. In 1987, only 10 states did. Only Wisconsin, Illinois and Washington, D.C., now prohibit carrying concealed handguns entirely.

    "The NRA has a stranglehold on a lot of state legislatures," said Kristin Rand, legislative director of the Violence Policy Center, a gun control group in Washington. "They basically have convinced lawmakers they can cost them their seats, even though there's no real evidence to back that up."

    Tennessee's new laws came after the Republican takeover of the General Assembly this year, but most other states that loosened restrictions didn't experience major partisan shifts.

    Most of the states where the new laws were enacted have large rural populations, where support for gun rights tends to cross party lines.

    While some states have tightened gun laws during the same period, the list of new restrictive laws is much shorter. In 2009 alone, more than three times as many laws were passed to make it easier on gun owners.

    New Jersey's 2009 law limiting people to one handgun purchase per month is the most notable of the more-restrictive laws. Other examples this year include Maryland's ban on concealed weapons on public transit and Maine's vote to give public universities and colleges the power to regulate firearms on campus.

    The most contentious of Tennessee's new gun laws was one allowing handguns in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol. It took effect in July after lawmakers overrode a veto by the governor. Last month, a Nashville judge struck down the law as unconstitutionally vague, but supporters have vowed to pass it again.

    A similar Arizona law that took effect in September allows people with concealed-weapons permits to bring their guns into bars and restaurants that haven't posted signs banning them.

    While Tennessee's law was in place, many bars chose not to let customers bring guns in. Likewise, more than 70 communities have opted out of allowing guns in parks.

    "People go in there and start drinking and then they want to start a fight. What are they going to do if they got a gun in their hand?" said Larry Speck, 69, who works at an auto repair shop in Memphis. "I've got a gun permit and I'm not carrying mine in there, even if they have a law."

    Supporters of expanding handgun rights argue that people with state-issued permits are far less likely to commit crimes, and that more lawfully armed people cause a reduction in crime.

    Opponents fear that more guns could lead to more crime.

    Academics are divided on the effects of liberalized handgun laws, and determining the impact is complicated by the move in several states to close handgun permit records.


    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/12/12/states-ease-restrictions-gun-laws/
     

    crewdawg

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    Don't you just love how people spout off that if someone has a gun, they are more likely to get into a fight,

    "People go in there and start drinking and then they want to start a fight. What are they going to do if they got a gun in their hand?" said Larry Speck, 69

    But they can never point to any proof of those things happening in states where the activity they are against is legal. Same thing with CCW on campuses. Morons come out of the framework speaking of how there will be more gun violence on campuses with these Concealed Handguns allowed, but in the states and individual campuses where CCW is allowed, there have been no gun "incidents" with CCW holders. But don't let the facts get in the way of their arguments. Liberals aren't capable of understanding facts that don't jive with the way they "feel" :rolleyes:
     

    XD-GEM

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    A companion article seems to imply that tighter gun control may lead to more LEO deaths.

    Full article: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_POLICE_GUN_DEATHS?SITE=WABEL&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

    Significant part: In a story about the number of police officers killed in the line of duty in 2009,

    The availability of guns compounds the problem, criminologists say. But Pennsylvania, the state with the most gun-related officer deaths so far this year, has among the strictest gun laws in the country, according to a ranking by the pro-gun-control Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. Other states, like Louisiana, Oklahoma and Kentucky, have very little oversight and had few, if any, officer gun deaths this year.
     

    charliepapa

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    Don't you just love how people spout off that if someone has a gun, they are more likely to get into a fight,

    "People go in there and start drinking and then they want to start a fight. What are they going to do if they got a gun in their hand?" said Larry Speck, 69.

    I think their point was that the alcohol in their brain was what makes them want to fight, not the gun on their person...

    IMO, A bar is no place to be with the cross section of idiots that patronize them carrying weapons. I wouldn't want to be there. Now, if you could check them at the door and just get drunk and finger-bang each other, THAT might be fun. Maybe like laser tag for adults.
     
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    dzelenka

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    I had a date with a liberal socialist last month, she found out that I was carrying...she left, and I was :rofl: .

    That happened to me once in the early 80s. Most girls were more curious than anything. A number of them wanted to go shooting.

    You cannot reason with irrational fear.
     

    charliepapa

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    Several States Ease Restrictions on Gun Laws

    Public attitudes toward gun control have shifted strongly over the past 50 years, according to Gallup polling. In 1959, 60 percent of respondents said they favored a ban on handguns except for "police and other authorized persons." Gallup's most recent annual crime survey in October found 71 percent opposed such a ban.

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/12/12/states-ease-restrictions-gun-laws/

    Ironic? Not really... In 1959, what role did government play in everyone's lives? I wasn't born yet but I'm not sure that people were as scared of the government as we are (or should be) today. Crime was not nearly as rampant as it is today either.

    Although I'm a little surprised that people back then may have been in favor of infringing the second amendment, I can certainly understand the rationale given the circumstances more so than the circumstances of today. Very few people had deadbolts on their doors or ever took their car keys out of the ignition. Try to find THAT somewhere today.
     

    Manimal

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    Did she at least pay the tab before she left?!:D

    Nope, but she was alright really...like Dan says below, cant reason sometimes.

    That happened to me once in the early 80s. Most girls were more curious than anything. A number of them wanted to go shooting.

    You cannot reason with irrational fear.

    It's a shame how many people have irrational fears like that, hard to comprehend. Her brother accidentally killed himself with a gun, so I can understand to a large degree...but, at the same time, I could see something just click in her head when she found out that I had guns and carried...how she didn't know before our date I just don't know, we had talked a bit.

    Anyway, her eyes glazed and she was actually frightened of the physical object that is a gun, just knowing that it existed in proximity. No human element needed. So strange, she didn't even see it.

    I felt kind of bad for her, but it was clearly not going to work.
     
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    sraacke

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    Only Wisconsin, Illinois and Washington, D.C., now prohibit carrying concealed handguns entirely.
    Wisconsin's Governor stated that his state doesn't need a concealed carry permit since residents can legally carry their firearms openly. :p
     

    WILDCATT

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    carry

    i was born in 1924. when I went to high school I joined the rifle club,many schools and even church groops had rifle clubs.usually the church group sponser it and used a gun clubs range.I have an old rifleman mag listing the scores in a national postal match. my school was in first three position.by 1990 they did not even know there had been a club.and the top floor of the school had the range.8 positions.that was in Mass.how sickning it is to think how great we were to what we have turned into.my class went to war by 50 %.thats about the % of boys in class.
     

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