Actually, in our State, the legal age to drive is 16.
Yep, read the whole thing. EEEEExxxxccceeellleeennnttt. Makes a great counter to the grabbers.
Lest the gun grabbers know, that Virginia Tech was a “gun free” school zone....you mean lunatics don’t follow the law?
And of course my fav - that those areas that have the strictest gun bans or laws - ususally have the highest crime rates, or a massive crime rate increase since the ban was enacted and the opposite is usually true too - those with the loosest gun ownership/carry laws have the lowest crime rates or no massive increase in crime rate.
BTW, we need to ask how in the country with the MOST STRICT gun laws/bans in the WORLD - had a Mayor shot dead - who did the shooting? Yes that is right a fine upstanding, lawabiding GANG member.
It would be laughable at how stupid and vapid these people are, except that these are serious issues.
I do have a gun permit, a Texas Concealed Carry permit.
I can drive my car most anywhere. Would they let me carry my pistol most anywhere?
If the Gun-Fearing-Wussies want to be sheep, that’s their decision. I’d rather be one of the sheep dogs.
Woof!
wardmama
glad you made mention of Japan’s strict gun laws. It did little to keep the gun out of the hand of the criminal (the wolf) and prevent the slaughter of the law abiding citizen (the sheep).
what gets underreported are the numerous home evasions that take place here in Japan. Ain’t a sheepdog around, so the thugs pretty much target a house, bust in at any hour of the day and take what they want. The evasions that end in murder get a little air time, but not enough to upset the sheep or soil the reputation of Japan abroad.
Driving cars isn’t a Constitutional Right, bearing arms is.
Amendment II
A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed
From Websters Dictionary
Main Entry: in·fringe
Pronunciation: in-’frinj
Function: verb
Inflected Form(s): in·fringed; in·fring·ing
Etymology: Medieval Latin infringere, from Latin, to break, crush, from in- + frangere to break—more at BREAK
transitive verb
1 : to encroach upon in a way that violates law or the rights of another <infringe a patent>
2 obsolete : DEFEAT, FRUSTRATE
intransitive verb : ENCROACH—used with on or upon <infringe on our rights>
synonym see TRESPASS
The word infringed is the key word in what makes any form of gun control or restrictions a violation of the Constitution.
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