Free: Contests & Raffles.
I would invite you to do the same Wood. You go back and show me where it says that if you hand a gun over to a buddy (while in your garage or whatever) to look at that that is breaking the law and an arrestable offense. To your other point about the prosecutors. I honestly cannot attest to King county as I have no experience with them. I can say that on this side of the state I don't believe there are many if any that would touch it unless it was a clear violation as described in the initiative. Don't get me wrong, I in no way support this. I just don't see it being so black and white as you do.
Quote from: woodswalker on August 28, 2014, 09:43:56 AMQuote from: hughjorgan on August 27, 2014, 09:33:49 PMI bet you would be guilty on both. There is an exception if you are at an ESTABLISHED SHOOTING RANGE, which a gravel pit is not. And as far as loaning a gun to a friend their is no exemption listed for that. Guilty on both incidents.Hughjorgan, Turkeyfeather, Bradslam et alThat is EXACTLY what I am getting at. I'm CERTAIN that in King Co. with a VERY anti-gun prosecutorial staff, you would be at the very least CHARGED with. Do a VERY cold and calculating reading with an eye to WHAT YOU CAN, again CAN charge someone with. Turkeyfeather...if you think for one cold second that certain prosecutors wouldnt charge you in the scenarios listed above, you have NOT been paying attention. Seattle has more than once bucked ESTABLISHED law in trying to override both the state and national Constitution. You want to take the ride on that bronco?As i mentioned earlier...I sure as heck do not want to be the test case, as i think it will be LONG and UGLY...and what guns you DO have at the outset...will be LONG gone by the time its settled, along with your career, income and retirement. THEN you can sue TPTB to try to have a life again. No thank you. I'd rather make you all a bit uncomfortable NOW when there is a ghost of a chance to NOT have to do it thorugh the courts. As an aside...looking at the Supreme Courts does not give me a warm fuzzy either. In sum, the recent rulings seem to go the way that "if its NOT an EGREGIOUS 2nd A violation, but a paperwork/process violation, we will not step in or overturn. 2A is NOT on solid ground with this court and I'm not willing to bet my career, family heirlooms and the possibility of not being able to hunt/shoot/defend myself with a firearm to prove that some rich liberal are wrong.Turkeyfeather...go back and re-read what i posted and find the the places where it is WRITTEN that the described scenarios are LEGAL or EXEMPTED. If its not WRITTEN its not THERE. Look again at the revised definition of transfer and then look from a cold, legal standpoint...not the "they REALLY DONT MEAN THAT" standpoint, because I assure you that the deep pockets sponsors REALLY DO MEAN THAT. Do your research. See what Hanauer et all have supported in the past....read between the fine and high-minded lines and see what they really mean. READ the regislation with a jaundiced and skeptical eye.Since you mentioned my name, I thought I would respond. All over this thread, I see people complaining how poorly written and full of flaws this initiative is. That is exactly what I am talking about. If you are not part of the process, this is what you will end up with. I guess I'm a realist, but we are in the minority and as more and more of these shooting incidents happen, the public will want some kind of change. I will say it again: I would rather be at the table and have some input on the changes that are inevitable, than have poorly written laws that are crammed down our throat and cause a greater inconvenience for gun owners.
Quote from: hughjorgan on August 27, 2014, 09:33:49 PMI bet you would be guilty on both. There is an exception if you are at an ESTABLISHED SHOOTING RANGE, which a gravel pit is not. And as far as loaning a gun to a friend their is no exemption listed for that. Guilty on both incidents.Hughjorgan, Turkeyfeather, Bradslam et alThat is EXACTLY what I am getting at. I'm CERTAIN that in King Co. with a VERY anti-gun prosecutorial staff, you would be at the very least CHARGED with. Do a VERY cold and calculating reading with an eye to WHAT YOU CAN, again CAN charge someone with. Turkeyfeather...if you think for one cold second that certain prosecutors wouldnt charge you in the scenarios listed above, you have NOT been paying attention. Seattle has more than once bucked ESTABLISHED law in trying to override both the state and national Constitution. You want to take the ride on that bronco?As i mentioned earlier...I sure as heck do not want to be the test case, as i think it will be LONG and UGLY...and what guns you DO have at the outset...will be LONG gone by the time its settled, along with your career, income and retirement. THEN you can sue TPTB to try to have a life again. No thank you. I'd rather make you all a bit uncomfortable NOW when there is a ghost of a chance to NOT have to do it thorugh the courts. As an aside...looking at the Supreme Courts does not give me a warm fuzzy either. In sum, the recent rulings seem to go the way that "if its NOT an EGREGIOUS 2nd A violation, but a paperwork/process violation, we will not step in or overturn. 2A is NOT on solid ground with this court and I'm not willing to bet my career, family heirlooms and the possibility of not being able to hunt/shoot/defend myself with a firearm to prove that some rich liberal are wrong.Turkeyfeather...go back and re-read what i posted and find the the places where it is WRITTEN that the described scenarios are LEGAL or EXEMPTED. If its not WRITTEN its not THERE. Look again at the revised definition of transfer and then look from a cold, legal standpoint...not the "they REALLY DONT MEAN THAT" standpoint, because I assure you that the deep pockets sponsors REALLY DO MEAN THAT. Do your research. See what Hanauer et all have supported in the past....read between the fine and high-minded lines and see what they really mean. READ the regislation with a jaundiced and skeptical eye.
I bet you would be guilty on both. There is an exception if you are at an ESTABLISHED SHOOTING RANGE, which a gravel pit is not. And as far as loaning a gun to a friend their is no exemption listed for that. Guilty on both incidents.
I seem to recall a lot of celebrating when the legislature passed on handling this issue and many of us saw the handwriting on the wall. At least with the legislators you would have some input with your locals to help write this type of bill. In the future when gun issues come up we're far better off lobbying and working with the legislators than we are forcing a referendum. Latest info I've seen shows 594 passing comfortably and I suspect when the ads on TV/Newspaper are done 591 will get killed. It's suicide to let these issues go to a referendum vote in the state of Washington.
woodswalker and pianoman, When I am referring to being at the table, I am talking about well before these initiatives came around. I think that the attitude of digging your heels in and refusing to give an inch leads to initiatives like this. Like I said, we are in the minority, and it places issues completely out of our control. Sometimes the pendulum can swing pretty far.
Im willing to bet it may raise theft of firearms. I know it sure as hell wont stop felones from getting firearms
"No one's going to be safer with universal background checks. Even the proponents have admitted that."Um, I think you are going to have to site your source on that one. Making your arguments based on conspiracy theories does not help our cause.