Gun Control & RKBA
In reply to the discussion: 14-year-old boy dies after West Homestead shooting [View all]Atypical Liberal
(5,412 posts)We've discussed these "common sense measures" countless times.
Here we go again:
Limiting the number of firearms that a private citizen may keep in one place
What, exactly, would be the limit you had in mind?
And how, exactly, does preventing a person from having more guns than he can use at one time actually contribute to public safety?
and requiring them to be kept under lock when not in use,
I agree that people, at least people with children in their homes, should keep their firearms locked up. But you need to understand, as I have explained to you before, that the kinds of safes currently required by places like California do not offer much protection against theft. This is the one that I own:
http://www.stack-on.com/categories/security-cabinets-gun-cabinets/products/67
It meets the requirements of law set by the California Department of Justice for safe firearm storage. I bought it for about $150. It is nothing more than a lockable filing cabinet. Anyone with a crowbar could get into the safe within minutes. All it is really good for is keeping my children away from the firearms.
Is this sufficient for you?
having local police department ensure this basic safety requirement has been met before allowing someone to buy a firearm.
This is pretty much a waste of time. Anyone who wants a firearm who doesn't want to lock them up will simply lock them up for the police visit, and then unlock them again after the police visit. A better option is to simply have penalties for people who don't secure their firearms and then something bad happens with them as a result.
Limiting ammunition sells to only those who have passed a mental health screen and received license.
I don't have a problem with licenses so long as they preserve firearm ownership anonymity. I have explained how to achieve this before. Simply have a licensing system similar to what Illinois does, except make it opt-out, rather than opt-in.