Bradley To Offer Gun Control Plan

DHH

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As bad as things seem, they can get worse.

<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Sen. Bill Bradley, Al Gore's sole rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, is considering including a ban on the sale of handguns in an aggressive gun control plan that he will unveil later in his campaign.
``I'm considering all the alternatives,'' the former New Jersey lawmaker said Monday in an interview with The Associated Press. He already has endorsed a ``handgun card'' - a photo identity card required of anybody carrying a handgun.
Propelled by school shootings in Colorado and Georgia this spring, the Senate passed measures last week to require background checks at gun shows and gun safety locks. Gore cast the tie-breaking vote for one of the measures, a moment of drama aides hope will give his campaign some badly needed momentum.
Bradley said the action was not enough. He supports other initiatives of the Clinton-Gore administration: limiting handgun purchases to one per month and forbidding the sale of handguns to children under 18.
Bradley said he also would seek to ban the possession of handguns by minors.
``These events have come at regular intervals now and they have a shocking effect on people,'' Bradley said.
He said the political influence of the National Rifle Association is on the ebb. ``My sense is that the NRA or the gun lobby ... is where the tobacco lobby was eight or nine years ago. People are beginning to wake up (to see) there is a better way to do this and this is a really threat to our culture.''
In the Senate, Bradley supported a 30 percent federal tax on handguns, assault weapons and ammunition. He could not recall that position Monday, but voiced no reservations.

Asked whether he would go beyond incremental measures and seek a ban of handguns, Bradley said: ``I don't have any comment on that now.''

Do you support banning handguns?
``I have not supported it up to this point,'' he replied.

Is that something you hope to do?
``I'm considering all alternatives.''

Including banning handguns?
``Until I decide, I haven't decided.''

Asked again, he smiled and said, ``If I was going to do it, why would I want to step on my own story now?''

A Bradley adviser confirmed that he is considering calling for a ban on the sale - not possession - of handguns as part of a broad plan to reduce the number of weapons on the streets. There also are ways to do that short of banning sales of guns, the official said, such as targeting manufacturers with a heavy tax.
In 1993, Bradley was asked why he proposed taxes on guns and not a ban. ``I would be glad to have no guns to tax, but having fought the NRA before, I am realistic,'' Bradley answered.
On Monday, Bradley was asked the same question; this time, he didn't say it was unrealistic. ``I think things have changed - the (political) climate.''
With Gore pushing restrictions on guns, Bradley did not argue that this was an issue that distinguishes him from the vice president. But he repeatedly mentioned a 1994 Senate speech in which he laid out his solutions to the problems of violence in society.
``The point here in terms of violence and guns violence is this is not something that I've come to in the last two weeks,'' Bradley said.
Gore spokesman Chris Lehane said the vice president has been taking action to curb gun violence while Republicans ``and others seem to still be thinking through what is needed.''
On the prospect of a handgun ban, Lehane said, ``Sweeping simplistic approaches are not what is needed. The vice president is talking about specific steps to limit the availability of guns getting into the hands of children. Moreover and beyond that, he believes that guns is only one part of the solution. He also believes that parents, teachers and the entertainment industry all have a responsibility and a role to play.''

In the AP interview, Bradley reaffirmed his support of gun control initiatives dating to his Senate days, including:

-Requiring the registration of handguns as they transfer from one owner to the next, much like the title to a car.

-A uniform gun license and photo identification, obtained after a handgun owner passes a background check to make sure he or she is not a felon. The owner would carry the ``handgun card'' when carrying the weapon.

-Raising license fees on gun dealers, in part so there would be fewer of them.[/quote]

Definitely not my candidate.


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Dave
 
Nor mine. Heck, I dunno who I'll vote AGAINST, much less for...

However, the thought occurs that, when faced with the proposal to register, license, etc., it may be as well to respond with: "Yes. And we should also require anyone carrying a handgun to have testable skills, and then, since we have registration, and licensing, and proof they're a good citizen and skilled with their weapon, there is no barrier to a nationwide CCW clause being included in that "handgun card", right?
THAT oughta run the loons off!
Downside is the testing, of course, we'd have to be sure it remained passable... And fees affordable...
A compromise that benefits only one side is no compromise.

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Shoot carefully... swifter...
 
Man this is really starting to jerk my chain!!! The anti's are getting bolder and bolder. It is all about power and $$$. I'm heading out to by another weapon and place it in the family cache. History is repeating and our nation is being polarized. I and my family will fight it with our votes while we can, but when it comes down to it, we will not abandon the Constitution and we'll fight for it.

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To own firearms is to affirm that freedom and liberty are not gifts from the state.
 
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