Hermit wrote:Seth wrote:Sorry, perhaps I was unclear, the point of the legislation, whatever the judges might be thinking, was as I have explained it. Whether or not that legislative intent is constitutional is of course for the courts to decide. I was simply explaining how and why the legislation came into being in the first place.
You explained your point clearly enough, and you are clearly wrong. If "the point here", as you put it, were "primarily about children and their relationship with their doctor", "child" or "children" would have appeared in Florida's Firearm Owners Privacy Act at least once. It doesn't so that's not the primary point. Instead, the act is exclusively about firearms owners' privacy. The very title of the act is a bit more than a hint, don't you think?
It doesn't have to say that in either the title or text of the bill. The Act protects firearms owners and their privacy. The threat comes from pressures put on doctors by the feds to interrogate patients about guns in the home. The patients who pose the greatest risk of inadvertently or unknowingly revealing that information are children, who are the most likely to answer any question a doctor asks without considering the impact of doing so. It is also true that adults may not perceive the threat that revealing such information might cause but the primary target
of the federal government and anti-gun zealots is children, precisely because they are vulnerable and don't understand notions of family privacy. Those who wrote the law knew and understood this based on the actions and statements of anti-gun lobbyists and anti-gun federal legislators, and anti-gun federal administrators, and anti-gun federal bureaucrats, all of whom constantly use the "do it for the children" canard in their anti-gun rhetoric, and from actual events where children have been taken from parents based on a child telling some anti-gun government functionary, from a teacher to a social services worker to a doctor that there is a gun in their home.
The law, however, is written more broadly than just covering children in order to address the other potential sources for government abuse of individual gun rights so that it forestalls and prevents other privacy leakage points that anti-gun forces might try to exploit.
Seth wrote:Besides, you might want to read the references you cited, in which the court upholds the statue,
I cited three references, of which I read two in full and the third in good part. Before reading all that I also read several news articles in which the fact that the injunction was lifted in 2014 and remained lifted on appeal in 2015 was made crystal clear. And I never argued, or as much as implied that this was not the case. In any case, that is not relevant to my argument. What you don't realise is that even the majority of judges that lifted the injunction against enforcement of the Act agreed that this act, and I quote the text of their decision again, "requires physicians to refrain from broaching a concededly sensitive topic when they lack any good-faith belief that such information is relevant to their patients' medical care or safety, or the safety of others." That, to reiterate, what I said in my first post on about the privacy act, "If initiating conversations with their patients about the safe storage of guns in the home contravenes the second amendment, the prohibition of initiating such conversations contravenes the first."
Except it doesn't because, as the court ALSO said, "...
we find that the Act is a legitimate regulation of professional conduct. The Act simply codifies that good medical care does not require inquiry or record-keeping regarding firearms when unnecessary to a patient’s care. It is uncontroversial that a state may police the boundaries of good medical practice by routinely subjecting physicians to malpractice liability or administrative discipline for all manner of activity that the state deems bad medicine, much of which necessarily involves physicians speaking to patients."
There is nothing in your rant about gun control and tyranny that you have not ranted about too many times before.
And about which I will expound at length again, every time you present a fallacious argument in favor of gun control.
And no, the grab bag of piecemeal laws leaves the gate for obtaining a firearm without a prior security check wide open.
How so? I've explained already that no "gate" you (fail to) propose as a "security check" will have any practical effect on achieving the goal you (allegedly) wish to achieve.
Criminals who want to obtain firearms criminally for criminal purposes can and will do so regardless of any sort of "security check" you might propose. Therefore, the ONLY people a "security check" will affect are law-abiding citizens who have no intention of obtaining or using their firearms for criminal purposes. And those are the people the government shouldn't be too concerned about. Thus, the ONLY reason for such "security checks" is to try to obtain transaction records that can be used later for the purposes of gun confiscation. This is a fact proven conclusively by the several times the BATFE has been caught red-handed archiving NICS checks in direct, deliberate and knowing violation of federal law explicitly prohibiting them from doing so, ever.
There is no reason other than a completely illegal agenda of eventually using those records for gun confiscations for them to archive that data. None whatsoever.
That's why Congress made it unlawful to do so and mandated that ALL such transaction records be permanently and completely destroyed within 3 days of the completion of the check and made it a federal offense not to do so. And yet no one at the FBI or BATFE has ever faced criminal prosecution for blatantly violating the law.
So, what we see is that these "security checks" you seem to support are largely ineffective and pose a grave danger of facilitating future actions by a government hostile to gun ownership (like this administration) in identifying gun owners and seizing guns once they have been banned. This dishonesty is why we refuse to allow gun registration, despite the protestations of gun-banners like you that it's "common sense gun safety" to do so. We would rather deal with criminals who have guns on a case-by-case basis than allow the potential tyranny that results from gun registration schemes, something that has been seen in actual historical practice time and time again.
Perhaps if gun-banners weren't universally lying sacks of shit things might be different, but they are, so it's their fault if we resist their lies.
If you can't buy one in a private transaction without such a check in one location, you just go to another, interstate if necessary.
Which, in the case of handguns, is a criminal offense...two of them actually...soliciting unlawful interstate transfer of a handgun and unlawful interstate transfer of a handgun. This sort of activity being illegal already it means that for such an unlawful transaction to take place it must take place between two criminals,
neither of whom would submit the transfer to a "security check" in the first place, even if the law could actually require them to do so, which it can't, because that would require an admission of a criminal act to get the "security check", which is a violation of the right against self incrimination.
In order to LAWFULLY transfer a handgun to a resident of another state the law ALREADY requires that the transfer take place through TWO licensed FFL holders, and it requires a NICS check.
Another easy way to obtain a gun without the necessity of any paperwork whatsoever, is to steal one that lies around unsecured. Even cops have their privately guns stolen while they are at work.
Which is a crime that no "security check" or "paperwork" is going to prevent. Your implication seems to be that guns should be banned because criminals might steal them, which makes as much sense as banning wristwatches, wallets, purses and automobiles because criminals might steal them.
Should we advocate proper storage of firearms? Of course we should. Should we educate children on proper gun safety and what to do should they encounter a gun somewhere? Of course, and we already do in many places, largely through the efforts of the NRA and it's educational programs. Should we prosecute parents who leave guns lying about where a child is harmed as a result? We already do because doing so is already a crime...several of them actually. So what good would another "safe storage" law do that the present child endangerment and criminal negligence laws do not already do? If you screw up with a gun, pretty much in any way at all, and someone is injured or killed, or even subjected to an imminent THREAT of being injured or killed, our "grab bag of piecemeal laws" deals quite well with such incidents
when, where and if they occur. "Safe Storage" laws therefore would have little to no effect on preventing gun accidents, which are increasingly rare each year due in main to the NRA and its gun safety education programs because people who handle their guns properly and safely
already secure them against theft and unauthorized access, and those who do not handle their guns properly
do not do so in spite of the many tools and reasons to do so, which includes severe criminal penalties for misuse. Thus, such laws are nothing more than burdensome on people who don't need to be further burdened and pretty much utterly useless at preventing theft or misuse.
Responsible gun owners don't want their guns stolen for the obvious reason that they don't want their guns stolen. Responsible gun owners don't leave their guns loaded and lying about where children can find them. Responsible gun owners teach their children gun safety and what to do, and what not to do, if they encounter an unexpected firearm. Responsible gun owners know that misuse or negligence with their guns is a very serious criminal and civil matter so they take pains to handle their guns safely and properly. Responsible gun owners comprise the vast, vast, overwhelming majority of gun owners.
Irresponsible gun owners are irresponsible in spite of all the laws and regulations that will bite them in the ass if something bad happens, so more laws will not make them responsible gun owners. Education might, if it's started early enough and is consistent enough as children grow up and mature, but pointless and useless new gun control laws won't do a damned thing more than the laws we already have on the books nationwide.
Therefore, the ONLY reason you can possibly have for demanding more pointless and useless gun control laws is not to reduce either crimes with guns, gun accidents or negligent use/storage of guns, it can ONLY be that you want to make it harder for law-abiding citizens who own guns to have, use and enjoy those guns. This is demonstrated by, for example, the laws in the UK that require what guns there are in private hands to be disassembled and locked in an "approved" gun safe with the ammunition stored in a completely separate place and subject to random, invasive (and in this country entirely unconstitutional) search and seizure by the police.
Such laws are not "safe storage" laws at all, they are laws intended to obstruct the ability of the gun owner to access and use his gun quickly for the purposes of self-defense and they are intended to intimidate people into not owning guns by threatening them with unannounced, random, warrantless, invasive searches by the police, which is something we EXPLICITLY outlawed as the result of
precisely the same behavior on the part of British soldiers prior to the Revolutionary War.
The habit of British soldiers of kicking in people's doors and searching their houses and papers for whatever they thought might be incriminating, and for the purposes of
confiscating arms was one of the primary reasons we rebelled against the King and kicked their puny asses out of the United States.
We're not about to let that happen again here, under any circumstances whatsoever.
And the latter is the sort of thing medical practitioners are no longer allowed to talk about.
Not true. As the law says, it's only "irrelevant inquiry and record-keeping by physicians regarding firearms" that's prohibited.
I guess you'll say that all medical practitioners are communists or at least useful idiots whose ultimate motive is to turn freedom loving Americans into defenceless victims of tyrannical governments next.
That's exactly what the gun-banners in the federal government were trying to turn them into and what the State of Florida is determined to prevent. Florida acted to prevent the federal government from turning doctors into compulsory political informants for the anti-gun movement.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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