I am curious as to why gun owners are against a mandatory background check before the purchase of a firearm?
but since something will be done, like it or not, I would think doing this might keep guns out of some nuts hands. If we all take a head in the sand attitude it might get a lot worse. Nobody wants another assault weapon ban.
Something HAS been done, badly. Multiple times, with increasing requirements each time, and each time, badly.
Do understand that those of us who oppose
mandatory background checks are opposed to two different things.
Those things may be called the Principle, and the Practical. And while they are intertwined they are separate things.
"Keep guns out of the hands of people who should not have them"
It sounds fine, it actually is fine, it is the right thing to do. There absolutely ARE people who should not have guns. There are also people who should not have knives, matches, or control motor vehicles.
Now, how do you determine if someone is one of those people??? The only semi-reliable way is to look at what they have done. But it is only semi-reliable, because the mind of man is as trackless as a bog at midnight. The only way we have to know what a person is thinking, is by what they say, and you know what? People can, and do, lie.
So, right there, we have a huge flaw in the background check idea. Like they tell you about buying stocks, past performance is no guarantee of future results. Usually, and most often, it is, but not always every time...
Another issue is that no background check can stop an individual who has no background to check. It can do nothing to anyone who has committed no crime (or has never been caught..). Further complicating the matter is personal privacy of your records. Particularly medical records.
One of the reasons we oppose mandatory background checks is the principle they use, "presumption of guilt", which is completely the opposite of the way we are taught our legal system is supposed to work.
Another reason is the awareness that since it is a government run system, it WILL screw up. This is one of the Practical points. Other practical points are making us pay for the privilege of exercising an enumerated Constitutional right, and the ever expanding requirements.
If, as stated, the point is to keep guns from the hands of those who shouldn't have them (at this point in time it means people likely to do harm with them) how does that affect the guy buyer who ISN'T a first time buyer?
It doesn't, and it can't. If you already have a gun, or a couple dozen, a background check on your next gun purchase has zero effect on your ability to do harm, if you so choose. Period.
SO, a background check stopping an individual from committing harm with a gun, only applies to first time gun buyers who have a background with something in it that disqualifies them from legal purchase.
NO existing system or proposed system can get around those basic points. And yet, we are "sold" the idea as if it could.
Yet another reason I oppose mandatory check laws is that they remove my right to exercise my own judgement. AND in some places would make ME a criminal for using my own judgement.
Many states have background check laws far in excess of current Federal requirements. In my state, now, I can't sell a gun or give it to a friend of 20+ years, who held a government security clearance a couple levels above Top Secret, and who has more guns than some stores, without taking me, the gun, and him to an FFL dealer, and paying them to run a background check. Its rather irritating.
The subject is a big can of worms, and we've only looked at the very top layer here, so far. This is NOT as simple as the sound bytes and slogans make it seem.
Other points involved are the government's "reluctance" to prosecute people who are denied with cause, and the fact that even someone who passes all checks can do evil anytime they choose.
Wasn't the Pulse nightclub killer a licensed security guard, who not only passed all standard checks but also more in depth psychological exams??
We now have a clamor for more "in depth" background checks, yet I see no one stating exactly what those are, or how they could be any more effective then what we already have.
There's a lot more to discuss I tried to hit points not previously mentioned.
Here's a related point, about the complaint(s) of the various killers having bought their guns legally. The news bleats about how this is a bad thing, and implying (if not outright stating) that the background check system was inadequate, while conveniently and consistently leaving out the fact that these mass killers were NOT killers or even criminals UNTIL they started shooting people. The background check system actually WORKED, exactly as it was designed to. Just not the way we were told it would work....