Washington State's I-594 is seriously flawed from our perspective. Could at least the worst of those flaws have been avoided if the matter were handled through the legislative rather than the initiative process?
Could things have been handled through the legislative process? Wouldn't we be better off doing it that way?
Yes, absolutely.
WE DID, and
WE WERE!!!!!
This issue
WAS handled by the legislative process, and was defeated in the legislature. But, they didn't give up, nor go away.
If I recall correctly, we defeated the UBC idea (and all the wonderful things they tacked on to it) once, as an initiative some time ago. Our Legislature defeated the idea again, when it came around as a nationally sponsored idea after the Sandy Hook mass murders.
Apparently the backers of the idea decided that given their money resources, they could fool the underinformed public where they could not fool the legislators.
And, that's what they did. Using the initiative process, they brought UBC back up again (and added some more crap to it in the fine print) and sold it to the people via advertising as something quite different that what it actually was.
The 5 county voting "block" of the metro Puget Sound area (Seattle & etc.) is what passed 594. Their numbers were enough to steamroller over the rest of the state.
Originally Posted by 44 AMP
Too bad there isn't something that they like to do that we could get legislation against, because they like to do it...
How about a Constitutional Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibiting unfunded or underfunded mandates from Federal, State or local governments?
While I do agree with something like that (its just good government), what I meant was some kind of law restricting/making more expensive something that the lawmakers (and gun control supporters) personally like to do. Something that hits them where they live, in response to, if not equality of effect, the way their laws hit us.
Perhaps if the golfer had to go through a UBC before being able to buy a club? If they got put on a watch list if they bought 3 clubs in a week?
or how about they had to get a check, and pay a fee at a location on the other side of town from the golf course, (and only open regular business hrs) before they could tee up?
Some time back, WA put in "sin taxes", adding to the cost of soda pop and beer (among other things), but NOT COFFEE!!!! (note that Starbucks began in the Seattle area)
All the coffee drinkers were fine with the idea, the rest of us, well we just got to shut up and pay!
I know its a pipe dream, but if there were some way to
personally inconvenience the people who pass these laws, it would at least partially appease my sense of fairness.
(the real world drawback to holding lawmakers personally responsible (beyond getting the chance to vote them out the next election cycle) for the laws they pass, is that if we did that, they wouldn't pass anything, for fear of being held accountable.)