That's a bit of a stretch. 2 reasons, easily accessible to anyone, and not easily accessible if you need right away. So basically, an idiot.
I kept mine under the pillow.
That's a bit of a stretch. 2 reasons, easily accessible to anyone, and not easily accessible if you need right away. So basically, an idiot.
If you were a Black parent to teenagers in London then you'd probably be having a very similar conversation. Ever heard of Operation Trident, old chum?
Vlad, you've not responded to my post, you bounder.
I think there are potentially madmen everywhere who can cause devastation at any public gathering should they wish. They don’t necessarily need guns so stricter controls are irrelevant. You missed off Borough Market in your list as a good example.
Call him what you will but apart from you, how many other gun-toting 'idiots' after a football game and beers, leave their gun safely in the nightstand (or even under the pillow of their bed) while they crash out on the sofa in the safety of their own home?
Satirical post of the day award goes to...tamarlane wrote: ↑October 11, 2017, 2:42 amjust a satirical clip from civilization...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-o9pwWUzz0
A Constitutional disorder caused by a dysfunction of the pre-frontal Second Amendment in the nonsensical cortex causing patients to shoot people.
I'm wounded, I need thoughts and prayers!
This happens automatically... or semi-automatically.
As has been mentioned previously, no mystery. When was the last time hotel staff asked you what was in your luggage?
Have you been to Vegas? Home of some of laxest gun ownership laws and thus the busiest gun shows in 'murca'.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/02/opin ... -york.htmlThe Supreme Court will soon decide whether Americans have a constitutional right to carry loaded concealed weapons in public and in public places, wherever and whenever they believe they might need their guns for self-defense. Practically, that could mean everywhere and at all times.
The announcement of such an absolute and unfettered right would be shocking and disquieting to most Americans, not just to Americans in the many states where the people, through their elected legislatures, have for centuries restricted the carrying of handguns in public. It would also be concerning to many Americans who support gun rights. They, too, would understandably be unsettled and frightened by the idea that everywhere they went, their fellow citizens might be carrying loaded guns.
At stake in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen is whether the Supreme Court will claim for itself the power to decide where and when Americans can carry loaded handguns in public — a power that the Constitution reserves for the people and their elected representatives.