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   co.politics      Nice state sadly overrun by libtards      50,863 messages   

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   Message 50,785 of 50,863   
   Biden's nuts to All   
   EDITORIAL: New gun law stands to backfir   
   06 Jul 24 10:21:40   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.usa.constitution.gun-rights,   
   sac.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: falling@from.trees   
      
   About 25% of Colorado gun deaths since 2016 involved someone shooting in   
   “justifiable self-defense,” based on data from the Colorado Department of   
   Health and Environment. Each incident means someone survived a rape,   
   murder, armed robbery or another life-threatening crime.   
      
   Going forward, teachers and students in schools — and anyone in a   
   “sensitive” space where conflicts and tensions run high — won’t have the   
   option of self-defense with a gun. They won’t have the chance of a   
   trained, vetted person — licensed by a sheriff — saving them from a deadly   
   attack.   
      
   We hope to be wrong, but public safety probably took a hit the moment Gov.   
   Jared Polis signed Senate Bill 131 into law this month.   
      
   The bill was among eight gun-control bills the governor signed but is far   
   worse than the others. One bill, which increases standards for obtaining a   
   concealed carry permit, makes sense. Anyone licensed by law enforcement to   
   secretly carry a gun should be held to a reasonably high standard.   
      
   Concealed-carry permit holders are adults who subject themselves to   
   training and background checks when seeking a sheriff’s imprimatur. They   
   pay money in an expressed effort to prove themselves stable, law-abiding   
   adults essentially deputized to carry for the defense of themselves and   
   others.   
      
   Data show that concealed carry permit holders commit crimes at rates   
   substantially lower than others. Studies show the country’s 30 million   
   concealed-carry permit holders commit misdemeanors and felonies at a lower   
   rate than law enforcement officers, as documented in a 2021 amicus for the   
   Supreme Court of the United States.   
      
   None of Colorado’s horrific mass shootings have involved predation by a   
   concealed-carry permit holder. All of Colorado’s mass killers in modern   
   times have benefited from the lack of a trained, licensed shooter to stop   
   the killing in its tracks.   
      
   A survey of empirical academic literature for the amicus footnotes 25   
   studies that show right-to-carry concealed laws reduce violent crime. We   
   don’t see it in headlines, because a crime stopped in its tracks has the   
   news value of a plane that lands without crashing.   
      
   The new law, effective Jan. 4 of 2025, prohibits concealed carry in   
   courthouses, K-12 schools, college campuses, polling locations, childcare   
   facilities and any government building which may contain elected   
   politicians.   
      
   “Twenty-five years after the mass shooting at Columbine High School,   
   Colorado lawmakers continue to honor all the victims and survivors of gun   
   violence by taking action to prevent future tragedies,” said John   
   Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, after Polis signed the   
   bills into law.   
      
   He and other could only say SB 131 “honors” victims, who are dead. What   
   the students and teachers at Columbine needed — like the victims in other   
   mass shootings — was someone on site licensed to carry a gun, not   
   desperate adults using fire extinguishers in futile attempts to save   
   lives.   
      
   “Colorado ranks 11th in gun-law strength in the nation,” said a statement   
   from Moms Demand Action, celebrating the signing of SB 131 and other gun   
   laws enacted over the years.   
      
   In the wake of a slate of new gun regulation, Colorado’s gun-death rate   
   has steadily climbed, and put the state among the 20 most dangerous for   
   gun deaths. That means these laws aren’t working. If anything, they may   
   have contributed to making Colorado the third-most dangerous state in the   
   country, as ranked by U.S. News & World Report this year.   
      
   We need reasonable regulation of guns to ensure they are in the hands of   
   stable, law-abiding adults. SB 131 does exactly the opposite, and Polis   
   should have vetoed it. The law will keep people licensed to save lives out   
   of “sensitive” spaces, while doing nothing to stop cold-blooded killers   
   who pay no attention to gun laws.   
      
   Coloradans are left to hope and pray this law does not get more people   
   killed.   
      
   https://gazette.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-new-gun-law-stands-to-   
   backfire/article_c879f41c-29ce-11ef-9d34-4b2f082fdfea.html   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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