Tom Cotton, a Second Amendment Champion, Proposes a 5-Year Mandatory Minimum for Violating Arbitrary Gun Bans
Although the Arkansas senator claims to be targeting "violent felons," his draconian bill would affect many people who pose no threat.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R–Ark.), who apparently has never encountered a criminal penalty he thought was too severe, wants to create a five-year mandatory minimum sentence for illegal gun possession. Cotton and the eight Republican senators who are cosponsoring his bill present it as an effective way to reduce violent crime, in contrast with the harebrained gun control schemes favored by Democrats. But the so-called Stop Gun Criminals Act doubles down on longstanding firearm restrictions that were never just or sensible.
"Violent felons commit the vast majority of gun crimes and should be held accountable for their actions," Cotton says. "Instead of releasing criminals onto the streets to commit more crime, our bill will establish mandatory minimum sentences for repeat offenders." That gloss is more than a little misleading, since the five-year mandatory minimum would apply to millions of Americans who are not "violent felons," many of whom have done nothing to suggest they would pose a danger to public safety if they were allowed to own guns.
Federal law prohibits gun possession by several broad categories of people, including anyone with a felony record, whether or not the offense involved violence and regardless of how long ago it was committed; anyone who has ever been subjected to involuntary psychiatric treatment, whether or not he was deemed a threat to others and no matter how many years have elapsed since then; and "unlawful user[s]" of "controlled substances." That last category includes cannabis consumers, even if they live in states that have legalized marijuana, and anyone who takes pills prescribed for someone else or uses a medication contrary to a doctor's instructions.
Under current law, the maximum penalty for violating these bans is 10 years in prison, and there is no mandatory minimum. Cotton's bill would keep the same maximum while requiring that any disqualified person caught with a gun be "imprisoned not less than 5 years." That person could be someone who got into a bar fight, committed tax fraud, or sold drugs 20 years ago; someone who underwent court-ordered psychiatric treatment three decades ago because he was depressed and possibly suicidal; someone who smokes marijuana for medical or recreational purposes; or even someone who takes a relative's unused hydrocodone to relieve pain caused by a back injury.
Cotton not only thinks all those people deserve to lose their Second Amendment rights. He thinks they all deserve to spend five years in prison if they dare to defy that decree by keeping a gun for self-defense.
On this issue, Cotton is even more hostile to gun rights than the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which maintains that the Second Amendment does not protect an individual's right to arms. The ACLU nevertheless recognizes that "the categories of people that federal law currently prohibits from possessing or purchasing a gun are overbroad, not reasonably related to the state's interest in public safety, and raise significant equal protection and due process concerns."
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett has expressed similar concerns. In a 2019 dissent as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, Barrett concluded that the "wildly overinclusive" ban on gun possession by people with felony records violates the Second Amendment.
That case involved a Wisconsin businessman, Rickey Kanter, who had pleaded guilty to mail fraud after he was accused of shipping shoe inserts he falsely claimed were approved by Medicare to a podiatrist in Florida. Barrett noted that people can permanently lose their Second Amendment rights based on a wide variety of criminal convictions, including "everything from Kanter's offense, mail fraud, to selling pigs without a license in Massachusetts, redeeming large quantities of out-of-state bottle deposits in Michigan, and countless other state and federal offenses."
In 2014, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit saw a similar problem with the blanket disqualification of people who were ever committed to psychiatric facilities. "The government's interest in keeping firearms out of the hands of the mentally ill is not sufficiently related to depriving the mentally healthy, who had a distant episode of commitment, of their constitutional rights," the appeals court ruled, noting that the government said it "currently has no reason to dispute that [the plaintiff] is a non-dangerous individual."
Cotton clearly has no such qualms. In his mind, anyone who illegally possesses a gun is ipso facto a public menace, even when there is no evidence to support that characterization. As far as Cotton is concerned, all such individuals are "violent felons" or might as well be.
In addition to cracking down on illegal gun possession, Cotton wants to increase the mandatory minimums for people who use guns "in furtherance of" a "crime of violence" or a "drug trafficking crime." Here, too, the defendants are not necessarily "violent felons," since using a gun includes merely possessing it for self-defense while selling drugs. In that scenario, where no one is injured or even threatened, Cotton would increase the mandatory minimum from five to seven years, which would be on top of the penalties for illegal gun possession and drug dealing.
Cotton's bill also would expand the criteria for the 15-year mandatory minimum that applies to defendants charged with illegal gun possession when they have three prior convictions. Currently, those convictions have to involve "a violent felony or a serious drug offense." Under Cotton's bill, three "serious felony convictions"—meaning crimes that carry maximum terms of 10 years or more—would be enough to trigger the mandatory minimum.
That change would further expand the penalty beyond the "violent felons" Cotton claims to be targeting. Someone who was convicted of two nonviolent drug felonies and was later caught with a gun twice, for example, would automatically go to prison for 15 years.
Republicans frequently complain that the gun laws Democrats support turn otherwise law-abiding people into felons and punish conduct that violates no one's rights, such as private gun sales or unregistered possession of certain firearms. Yet Cotton, who presents himself as a champion of the Second Amendment, is doing essentially the same thing by demanding the imprisonment of people who violate arbitrary restrictions on gun possession.
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Cotton is worse than that. He is a fool.
"I wish Cotton was a monkey"
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If they aren't incarcerated, they have constitutional rights.
Actually, in many states, recently release felons do not get their rights back immediately; including gun ownership and voting. Usually, those rights are returned after their parole is completed.
And, of course, some states never give felons back their voting rights!
"And, of course, some states never give felons back their voting rights!"
And this is wrong. Especially in a country where so many of our "crimes" are victimless.
I agree, see below.
R's claim to be champions of rights but they agree 100% with the democrats that the government should get to decide who gets what rights. They aren't actually arguing that rights may not be infringed, they're just arguing over what the infringements should be. As long as any person can have their right infringed for the "right" reason there will always be a dump truck full of the "right" reasons lined up around congress waiting to be used.
So, "both sides"?
One more mental cripple.
And don't forget "compelling government interests".
crimes, by definition, always have victims. there are no victimless crimes.
Crimea against the crown are usually victimless, unless you think the crown owns everything and everyone.
Prostitution, gambling, illegal drug sales come to mind.
at a minimum those crimes harm the person's family and friends. also all illegal drug sales involve violence at every level -- there are many victims for any given illegal drug sale.
Agreed. I'm not defending it. Just responding to LongtobeFree. I can understand not allowing a recently paroled felon the right to bear arms immediately after getting out of prison. As long as, once the parole term is completed, they get that unalienable right restored.
Not restoring voting rights is 100% Democrats being racists. This was done through most of the south as a way to disenfranchise blacks and other deplorables. Of course, even if a progressive acknowledged this, they'd just blame it on Dixie-crats, who are all Republicans now.
"And, of course, some states never give felons back their voting rights!"
This is not strictly true. While there are states that have no automatic restoration of rights for felons, there is one path for a felon to get their right back in all 50 states. A pardon by the governor.
There are also four sure paths for a governor to lose their job - pardon a felon or be caught in bed with a dead girl or a live boy or a dead or live animal.
The first is simply not true. Almost all gubernatorial pardons issued are of felons. In fact many states have a policy of rejecting pardon applications based on claims of innocence and/or wrongful conviction and such pardons are exceedingly rare.
At the state level, pardons are almost exclusively used to resort rights to felons who are deemed to be reformed.
I'm pretty sure the dead animal would do it, too.
It comes as a shock to correctional officers/workers; those who are incarcerated have constitutional rights, with some restrictions. Not to imply that you work corrections.
"Republicans frequently complain that the gun laws Democrats support turn otherwise law-abiding people into felons and punish conduct that violates no one's rights, such as private gun sales or unregistered possession of certain firearms. Yet Cotton, who presents himself as a champion of the Second Amendment, is doing essentially the same thing by demanding the imprisonment of people who violate arbitrary restrictions on gun possession."
Sigh. Sullum, I appreciate your mostly consistent support for 2A. All Libertarians should dislike Tom Cotton, because he's a statist asshat that only respects the Constitution when it's convenient; among his many shitty qualities. But this is a bullshit conclusion.
Republicans and Libertarians complain that Democrats and Progressives want to take our guns away entirely! Let's not fucking ignore that Democrats in the last couple weeks have shown, quite clearly, that their intention is take away not only "assault rifles" but also common handguns, like 9mm. The President of the US actually said this!
You can complain about Tom Cotton idiocy without the bullshit "both sides" arguments. Tom Cotton is wrong, but Democrats/Progressive are more wrong.
So both teams are piles of shit, but you insist on trying to pick through one of the piles of shit in order to try to find a nugget of something that isn't shit?
See this is what I have a hard time understanding. Both teams are awful. Demonstrably, empirically, awful. Why bother with either one?
No I actually agree with the "Both Sides is Bullshit!" argument here.
Cotton may be an asshole, and his law may need voting down. But the proximate threat to gun rights in this current day is led by democrats. Fine, fuck off Tom. But let's save most of our powder for the people that are trying to disarm whole swaths of the public.
I absolutely agree that Team Blue is far more hostile to gun rights than Team Red. No question. Demonstrably empirically so.
But the point, though, is that we don't have to settle for either one. They are both bad enough! That Team Red is better than Team Blue on gun rights is the "nugget" in the pile of shit. Yay, there's a nugget! It's still surrounded by a giant pile of shit.
If we get rid of the democrats, the threat to constitutional rights largely goes away. Then the focus should be on purging RINO’s. I have a pretty long list of republicans that should be pushed out of public life.
If we get rid of the democrats, the threat to constitutional rights largely goes away.
HAHAHAHA
Team Red just represents a different type of threat to constitutional rights.
As a collectivist, you see Team Red and Team Blue, favoring the blue. We need to look at individuals.
Tom Cotton is one we would like to get rid of based on his view of gun rights among others.
Are there any Team Blue Senators who whole-heartedly support gun rights? Those we can keep, the rest should go.
Which constitutional right would those be?
R's are like Stalin in WWII. He was helpful in defeating Hitler, but only with the knowledge that once Hitler was gone Stalin would be the new Hitler.
That’s, pretty apt actually.
D's are like Hitler. We can work with the Stalins to get rid of them.
if you oppose "arbitrary restrictions on gun possession" the the proper response should not be outrage against the sentencing, but outrange against the law itself. if the laws are wrong then the correct response is to change them. if, however, we have a law then strict enforcement is always warranted. a law that is not enforced is worthless and should be eliminated. as for sentencing i'm always in favor of harsh sentences. no sympathy here. if you don't like prison then don't violate the law. pretty simple.
in terms of allowing felons to possess guns it seems like really bad idea. nearly all felons reoffend and end up back in prison so allowing them to have a guns is not wise.
What is unfortunate is the number of laws that are listed as "felonies".
In the case described, where Amy Coney Barret dissented, one should ask; Why is mail fraud, a non-violent offense, listed as a felony?
Similarly, in some states, passing a bad check is also so listed.
Too many laws are called felonies, when such a designation isn't warranted.
It ain't just Tom Cotton who introduced that bill. Include (so far) as co-sponsoring Senators on the first day:
Marsha Blackburn (R-TN)
John Cassidy (R- LA)
Tom Cotton (R- AR)
Steve Daines (R - MT)
Josh Hawley (R- MO)
John Kennedy (R - LA)
John Thune (R- SD)
Thom Tillis (R - NC)
Todd Young (R - IN)
And, that makes all of them as equally wrong as Tom Cotton. Still, not as WRONG as Democrats and Progressive that was to take ALL of our guns. Listen man, we can criticize either party for their sins. But pretending their sins are equal, is ignoring THE ACTUAL WORDS COMING OUT OF THEIR FUCKING MOUTHS!!!
No one on the national stage has advocated for taking "all of our guns" Jason. If you believe that, no wonder you're so far off base in your comments.
https://www.quora.com/Has-any-democratic-candidate-ever-really-said-they-are-going-to-confiscate-guns?share=1
Nope, not a single person at the National level….
Not to defend them, but how many of them are up for re-election and think they need to show that they’re “doing something” about gun violence?
And of course, a handful of R’s is hardly enough for a true “both sides” argument. It’s more of a “one side, and some assholes from the other side” thing.
That's why the Republicans are known as the stupid party.
Oner more mental cripple.
He's right, the Heffalumps are the stupid party. Look how often they snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
The Donkeys are the evil party.
With the understanding that the Evil party is also stupid, and the Stupid party is also evil.
yep
Tom & Sleepy Joe would have been best buds c.1994
So much in common. Tom & Joe were both voted "Most likely get caught signaling under the bathroom stall in an airport restroom" by their inaugural class in the Senate.
They can't help it that they have a wide stance.
I didn't know middle schoolers posted here.
Sounds like there's two issues here. One, the question of what should be the consequence of owning a gun when it is illegal for one to do so. I don't like his solution because minimum mandatories are not great law to begin with. I also think it doesn't handle the issue that most strawbuyer and illegal gun ownership cases are not brought to court because they're hard or because the person is sympathetic ( i.e. the criminals girlfriend buys the gun for the criminal). Who cares what the consequence is if the cases are never brought anyway? It just opens up prosecutors for bad discretionary abuses.
Second dimension is that of is under what cases should a person's second amendment rights be removed? This is a much bigger question.
C'mon BUCS, your knee-jerk reaction is supposed to be BUT DEMOCRATS ARE WORSE and ignore the substance of the issue and just turn everything into a tribal food fight. You're slipping!
But seriously, you bring up two important issues.
the question of what should be the consequence of owning a gun when it is illegal for one to do so.
Well, the concept of an "illegal gun" is problematic from the start. I would ask, from a purely libertarian perspective, in what other context would it be illegal for an individual to own a piece of property that the individual rightly paid for and possessed? Maybe nuclear weapons and that's about it, and that would be strictly from a utilitarian point of view - an individual possessing a nuclear weapon could blackmail the entire government. So before we think about the penalties for illegal gun ownership IMO I think we ought to first consider what guns, if any, ought to be illegal from a libertarian perspective.
As to the second question:
Second dimension is that of is under what cases should a person's second amendment rights be removed?
I would answer by first going back to the foundation of liberty in the first place. Why are individuals presumed to possess the liberty to control their own affairs? Because individuals, for the most part, possess the mental faculties and logical reasoning abilities to have the capability of doing so. And if an individual is capable of running his/her own life, by what authority should anyone else stand in the way? That is the essence behind the moral reasoning behind natural rights.
So a person's right to own guns could justly be taken away if the assumption behind all of liberty is no longer valid. For example, children. We recognize that children don't possess the mental faculties (yet) to be able to control their own affairs, so they do not possess the ability to be entrusted with the presumption of liberty. So kids should not be recognized as having the right to own guns. Similar reasoning applies to, say, individuals in a coma, or individuals who are severely mentally ill. If they lack the capacity to exercise liberty broadly, then they surely lack the capacity to exercise the liberty to own a gun.
Based on this reasoning, ex-felons released from prison should absolutely have the right to own a gun. If a person is so dangerous that he/she cannot be entrusted with basic liberty, then that person should not be out of prison in the first place. A corollary to this viewpoint, however, is that prisons must do a much better job at actually trying to rehabilitate prisoners, rather than simply to warehouse them, unless we want a situation where every prisoner incarcerated for a violent crime faces an effective prison sentence of life in prison because they are never rehabilitated to a sufficient degree to be entrusted with liberty again.
Anyway, that's my $0.07 on the matter (considering inflation and all).
The democrats are worse. On 99% of everything. They are against the constitution unless they can use it as a weapon. They have no regard for the suffering of Americans and are actively bankrupting the country at a record pace. Now we also have the idiot Biden trying to start World War 3.
We can’t survive the democrat party. They have to go. It’s just that simple.
I continue to be amazed people as delusional as you can operate electronic devices.
Yet. Y intellect is vastly superior to yours. It doesn’t speak well of you. But then, you’re a Marxist.
I agree that Democrats suck. But, when you think you are describing Team Blue, you are also describing Team Red.
They are against the constitution unless they can use it as a weapon.
Tell us how Team Red strictly adheres to the Fourth Amendment and doesn't defer to cops at any chance that they get.
Tell us how Team Red values freedom of expression, except when it's "offensive".
They have no regard for the suffering of Americans
Tell us again how Team Red treated the coronavirus pandemic.
and are actively bankrupting the country at a record pace.
Tell us again about Team Red's record spending every time when they are in charge.
Now we also have the idiot Biden trying to start World War 3.
Tell us again about Team Red's military adventurism in Afghanistan, Iraq, etc.
If the Democrats have to go, then the Republicans have to go too.
Why are individuals presumed to possess the liberty to control their own affairs? Because individuals, for the most part, possess the mental faculties and logical reasoning abilities to have the capability of doing so.
Blue state governors had the most severe lockdowns, mask mandates, and vaccine requirements; how is that respecting people's abilities to manage their own affairs?
Blue Congresscritters, university administrators, and even 'journalists' decry free speech (see Twitter and Musk) if they think they will lose their grip on the megaphone of social media.
Team Red has flaws; Team Blue has lethal flaws.
Every one of the things you listed the Democrats are as bad or worse on.
Except for Covid, which Team Red generally got right.
Incidentally. Your comment didn't even address the substance of my comment. Do you have any thoughts on that?
" I would ask, from a purely libertarian perspective, in what other context would it be illegal for an individual to own a piece of property that the individual rightly paid for and possessed?"
I'd assume plenty of circumstances, where the prohibition is related to a criminal conviction. Like, get convicted of counterfeiting currency, part of the sentence could be that you could never own a printing press. Convicted of burglary? Illegal for you to own lock picks.
The problem is that the prohibition of gun ownership is indiscriminately applied to basically ALL felonies, and 'felony inflation' has made a lot of minor crimes into "felonies".
In fact, I'd venture to guess that the prohibition on gun ownership is a significant motivation for felony inflation!
"A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall be contingent upon permission of the State and a vow to uphold the Constitution, to which they shall have immunity if they fail to uphold it, but in any case shall have no duty to defend the people."
Let's just change it and get it over with.
While I don't agree with his prescription, I understand his motives. It's frustrating as a law abiding gun owner to see people fragrantly ignoring gun laws (which I may not agree with but still follow) get away with it (Hunter Biden). Then, when tragedy strikes, the politicians don't focus on the people breaking the laws, instead they insist that I jump through even more hoops, which will do nothing to stop the criminals, but will punish me and mine. There is something like 5500+ gun control laws in this country, and while gun arrests have increased in cities like Philadelphia and Chicago, along with rising gun violence, prosecution of these crimes has actually dropped, while the same prosecutors who refuse to enforce existing laws call for more laws to curtail my rights.
Fragrantly ignoring gun laws? What, exactly, does a violation smell like? (Sorry, I really try not to make fun of typos, but some are just too damn funny.)
like napalm in the morning?
soldier, the crime bill signed by Trump early in his presidency which had bi-partisan support, made it more difficult to prosecute convicted felons caught with a gun, a common tool used by prosecutors until then to throw repeat offenders in jail caught in much harder to prove drug and gang activities. I have a very close relative in that business (prosecuting gang and other criminals) who alerted me to this fact.
Don't matter if its heroin, cocaine or hash
you gotta carry weapons
'cause you always carry cash
Most of Sullum’s arguments make sense but trying to defend the guy selling drugs who has a weapon ignores that this is a big chunk of “gun violence”. He is more likely to be robbed because he can’t go to the cops. He has the gun because he knows this and wants to be able to protect his criminal enterprise by shooting the would be robber. He or the robber become “victims of gun violence” more often than a legal business. Screw ‘em.
In a right-minded society, you should be able to buy whatever you want at a pharmacy, but that doesn’t mean we have to support the violent gangs killing one another while making money off of our stupid drug laws.
I've seen a hundred Reason articles this week on why every solution to the "gun problem" is a bad idea. Is there anything that Reason thinks is worth doing to solve it, or do they not think it's a problem?
I shouldn't say "solve it", but at least make it less of a problem in some capacity.
doing nothing works for me.. in most things we have to suffer government doing "something"
You realize you're on a Libertarian website right? We actually believe what the 2A says; not simply ignore it when something bad happens and every progressive and Karen in the country demands we "do something".
There's better solutions to the gun problem than "gun control".
Of course Republicans, right-Libertarians, and the "Libertarians" in comment section oppose those too.
Anyway, most gun control schemes like these and the common proposals by the anti-gun left are feel good measures that have no plausible means by which they'd make a significant impact, let alone a significant enough impact to justify the infringement on rights. No, we should not be passing those, even in the absence of a better idea. Because doing nothing to solve the problem but taking away rights anyway is insane.
Oh great sage of wisdom, please do share your better solutions to the "gun problems" in our country.
It’s not a problem.
Mass shootings ARE a problem. They are a problem that probably cannot be fixed with more gun control, but just because we don't support more gun control doesn't mean we have to deny the existence of a problem in the first place.
School incidents can be severely curtailed by having a single, fortified entrance during hours when students are on site.
They had that in Robb Elementary, but some idiot left the side doors unlocked. Those administrators who let that happen should be held accountable.
No, mass shootings are not a problem. They are simply too rare to qualify as a "problem".
The chance of getting killed in a mass shooting is well below 1 in a million annually. That risk is too small to qualify as a "problem".
The problem is the sensationalism that causes everyone to think they are much more common, and much more of a threat, than they really are.
Indeed. The USA is a huge country, nearly 340 million people. Sadly, mass shootings will happen. But believe every single mass shooter likely violated some gun law in the process. Maybe if the MSM, hungry for content, didn't go into orgasms of coverage of mass shootings, perhaps people may not go after their fifteen minutes of infamy. Just don't cover such events.
I’m not saying it’s not tragic when it happens, but no, statistically it is not a problem.
You might be able to make the argument that gun violence is a problem. But even that is very localized in certain communities and mostly due to the drug war (much like it was issue in certain communities during Prohibition).
"Tom Cotton, a Second Amendment Champion..."
No, he isn't.
Neocons gonna neocon. Most of them would be more comfortable in the Democrat party these days anyway.
He's even taking public transportation in the picture.
Make it applicable to convicted violent and gang/drug related felons only and I'm in.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults.
Not a one of his posts is worth refuting; like turd he lies and never does anything other than lie. If something in one of Joe Asshole’s posts is not a lie, it is there by mistake. Joe Asshole lies; it's what he does.
Joe Asshole is a psychopathic liar; he is too stupid to recognize the fact, but everybody knows it. You might just as well attempt to reason with or correct a random handful of mud as engage Joe Asshole.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults; Joe Asshole deserves nothing other.
Pot, meet kettle.
You have no idea what Cotton "thinks they all deserve". Cotton is a politician trying to make a political compromise between people who want to ban guns altogether and 2A rights. Maybe that compromise is a bad one, maybe it's all we can achieve.
Sullum: your attempts to attribute the worst possible motives to other people are disgusting.
Oh, he gives the best motivations for the producers of Cuties though. Funny that.
Maybe you should deal with your own issues with pedophilia, since that's the only reason someone would still be posting about that.
Oh Jacob, have I hurt your feelings by reminding you of your defense of Cuties?
You're right. The worst possible motives should only be attributed to Democrats. After all they deserve it.
Not at all. Like communists, socialists, and Nazis, the Democrats believe they have the best of intentions. Their problem isn't bad motives, it's a lack of morals, a lack of scruples, and a lack of basic common sense, coupled with a lot of greed and selfishness.
The road to hell is paved with the unintended consequences of good intentions.
"Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be 'cured' against one's will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals."
-- C.S. Lewis, "The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment" (1949), p. 292; see also "A Reply to Professor Haldane" (1946)
"`He that is born to be a man,' says Wieland in his Peregrinus Proteus, `neither should nor can be anything nobler, greater, or better than a man.' The fact is, that in efforts to soar above our nature, we invariably fall below it. Your reformist demigods are merely devils turned inside out."--Edgar Allan Poe in Marginalia
The failure of reformist demigods is not that they lack good motives. They lack understanding of the motives of people including their own, therefore their solutions do not address the problems with bad people's motives.
I for one fully support Tom Cotton because we have to DO SOMETHING! He's DOING SOMETHING. Sullum and his ilk would have us DO NOTHING! Whatever Cotton is doing it's sure not NOTHING.
Let me loan you my [sarcasm][/sarcasm] tags in case the clueless don't get it.
First, I agree that the use of felony conviction to take away 2A rights is overly broad. There are any number of non-violet crimes that don't necessitate taking away the right to own a firearm. I have read in my newspaper of pardons given just to allow the individual to go hunting again.
Senator Cotton's bill also only helps after the fact. We need to develop solutions that address the period when an individual is in crisis. Not an easy task. I am more supportive of developing workable Red Flag laws that may target individuals in a crisis state. I am less concerned with long term mental illnesses than the period when a person is having a mental health crisis that could result in him harming himself or others. I also would support waiting periods as the time could allow an individual in crisis to regard some control.
"I also would support waiting periods as the time could allow an individual in crisis to regard some control."
Perhaps a longer waiting period for people less than 25 or 30 years old who want to buy a gun.
1) It is a bad idea
2) Having gun control laws where literally nothing is done to punish those who violate it is worse. It serves solely as an annoyance to law abiding citizens.
If you will not punish violaters, repeal the laws.
For once I can agree with you.
So petition your state legislature to remove the penalty for non-violent felons to lose their rights, and to automatically restore non-violent felons 2A and other rights upon completion of their sentences!
Florida did that in 2018 with a binding referendum on restoring voting rights. The Florida Legislature then found a way around the referendum.
If Tennessee state court imposes a state gun rights suspension on you, you can go before a Tennessee judge and try to convince him you are reformed and should have your rights restored.
If your gun rights are suspended at the federal level, your only chance of restoring your gun rights is a Presidential pardon. Democrats will not fund the ATF office that is supposed to restore gun rights to petitioners and Republicans lack the courage to push the issue.
But we are saved from felonious perjurors like Mark Furman and Martha Stewart owning guns forever.
https://www.harvard-jlpp.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/21/2009/03/marshall_final.pdf
C. Kevin Marshall, "Why Can't Martha Stewart Have a Gun?", Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 32, pp 695-735.
One way to reduce gun crime is to avoid subsidizing it. A law needs to be passed that any convicted felon and illegal border crosser (if it is not a felony) cannot receive any federal government benefits. That would greatly reduce gun crime, it will reduce the budget and it will provide a huge incentive for people to follow the law.
That doesn't work. You can't tax people and then deny them benefits their taxes paid for, not even ex-felons. That's not a moral issue, it's a simple practical matter of being able to survive in a high tax social welfare state like the US.
You can't tax people and then deny them benefits their taxes paid for
Huh? People are turned down for unemployment, SS, Medicare, etc all the time for numerous reasons - age, work status, etc.
There are eligibility criteria for benefits. Felony convictions and illegal alien status could simply be criteria for denying eligibility.
I can't think of any legal reason for which people are commonly denied benefits they paid for with their taxes.
Of course, you could deny benefits to random groups of people.starts with the letter "C". I'm saying that it's not a good idea to do this to American citizens who happen to be ex-felons, because you end up with a whole bunch of ex-felons who lack any sort of support, are still taxed a lot, and have no place to go.
The point of releasing people from prison is to have them reintegrate into society. I'm perfectly fine with denying ex-felons the ability to vote and the ability to own guns. But financially and economically, they should be on equal footing with other US citizens after their release.
Illegal aliens, of course, should be denied all benefits and be deported immediately. At that point, their recidivism isn't America's problem anymore.
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That’s four more years than for tossing Molotov cocktails for the right reason.
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Cotton is living in a fantasy. Prosecutors refuse to enforce the laws we have already. He’s a fool if he thinks they will suddenly enforce new laws just because they include mandatory sentencing provisions.
Tom Cotton doesn't want to be President. He wants to be Base Commander. With a 330 million person Base.
Spare me the tears for the 'poor' drug dealers caught illegally carrying a gun while illegally selling drugs...
So just by his thinking, we need to start arresting all the scum (ALL) IN DC and take awY their gun rights. Then take away their benefits, bodyguards and let them deal with their stupid fn laws. There are thousands. Why do we need one more?