Exactly.laugh "We hold some truths to be self evident!" --metalwing
Again, if you want to debate about what the Constitution does or doesn't say, then quote the Constitution. Not the Declaration of Independence, which NO party has ever been willing to vote into having any legal standing in the U.S.
what do you think the Bill of Rights is for?laugh--conrad_73
This is a non-answer response. A rhetorical question with no answer included.
The point I am trying to make, since this subject IS important to us all, is that too many people are neither reading or thinking through what they read, before leaping to declare that something in the Constitution says something they want to believe it says.
I am not saying that I support any and all, or even any specific regulations being proposed. I'm trying to get more people to argue more accurately, and stop playing the same repetitive and false rationalizations, which are standing in the way of doing anything at all, to respond to real challenges facing Americans.
As for the above idea that mass killings are a small proportion of deaths, and should therefore be entirely accepted and ignored as acceptable, I call nonsense on that altogether.