I I mean, it's just an idea. Clearly, armed guards and thoughts and prayers are less effective than we'd like to see, and I think there's a strong argument to be made that freedom is not necessarily the thunder dome either. I think that sensible nationwide legislation that somewhat throttled immediate access to certain weapons might help mitigate some of the worst tragedies, particularly if it's coupled with carrots, like nationwide concealed carry reciprocity in constitutional hard stops to protect the right to bear arms, ammunition, and ensure that states or municipalities cannot creatively use laws to remove weapons.
Same as every other gun control argument – the absolutists on both sides will ruin everything for everyone because they will take a maximalist approach and refuse to even consider the consequences of their desires.
We gun people have had it pretty good for the past 10 years. A relatively 2A friendly government has been in power, we've had some court cases go our way, and the American public is largely become frustrated, and given up on the more grandiose streams of the baby boomer generation with regards to gun control. But, our community has largely squandered those victories. We have no far reaching legislation to protect them, just court cases that can be overturned by law or by a different court. We have not codified national protections for gun owners in any meaningful sense via legislation, and we have allowed ourselves to become distracted by novelty toys like binary triggers. Our community squanderers political capital by trying to defend the stupidest and most gratuitous excesses of gun owners. Then we double down on hard-core partisanship by largely choosing the Republican Party and dismissing any prospect of Democrat support for gun rights, even as the social and political pendulum slowly swings away from Donald Trump and the Republicans. It's exactly like a championship team blowing most of the salary cap on an aging running back when half the defense just hit free agency.
And someday, that recalcitrant defiance and failure to actually win is going to hurt us badly. The kids who grew up with school shootings as a real possibility are now voters, the elders who remember the student rifle club are hitting nursing homes and disappearing from the public. Our community has done very little to foster any non-military positive connection with firearms for the vast majority of America's youth for my generation onward. And because we have so foolishly put gun rights as a partisan litmus test, and so steadfastly refused to even consider any sort of address for the legitimate grievances of our fellow citizens, we is a gun community are eventually going to reap the consequences of our stubborn behavior. And we will deserve it.
I'm in my mid 30s. I have a fairly decent collection of firearms, and I like to think of myself as a responsible gun user. Plenty of us are out there, but we are also not immune to the pressures of society, and at the end of the day, we do have a tomorrow that we need to accommodate for. If some political and legislative horse trading can get me the legislative wins for the things at the core of the second amendment, I think there is ample room for compromise to introduce things that are scientifically demonstrated to reduce the incidents of misuse and limit the accessibility of weapons to people who objectively should not have them.
I'm not talking about gun bans, or registrations or licenses, or confiscation. I'm talking about rationed access to firearms that are objectively capable of putting out far more fire power than is needed for any conceivable hunting or self-defense need. Just like how we don't allow untrained people to get behind the wheel of a truck going down the freeway, we as a society don't necessarily benefit from a 23 year-old mentally ill person buying a rifle mechanically capable of firing hundreds of bullets in 2 to 3 minutes into a crowded building. Sad fact of the matter is, that doesn't happen with a manually actioned firearm, not to the same extent.
Descriptions of the scene from the first responders to Sandy Hook described the bathroom at the class that got annihilated as a "blender", where the shooter had dumped magazines into densely packed kindergartners. That's a terrible demonstration of the lethal efficiency of modern firearms design. And I'm not saying that we should ban those as a society. I'm just pointing out that the performance offered by weapons platforms like that is in the public interest to regulate, just like how we is a public regulate, our freedom to travel by banning bicycles from interstate freeways and keeping commercial jet liners from the hands of the untrained while flying over our homes.
I fully expect the mods to delete this because it's not along the lines of conventional orthodoxy on this board, and I apologize if it does seem political. To reiterate, I think that striking down the New Mexico waiting Period is a bad
idea, because I think the state was on to something.