Liste des Groupes | Revenir à a tv |
On 6/15/24 10:17 PM, moviePig wrote:Maybe if we all chipped in a few bucks, Clarenzabell and Sammy Flagflyer would change their votes.On 6/15/2024 8:30 PM, BTR1701 wrote:You bring up an important distinction. "Murder is illegal." That's one you can go by the "letter of the law." Murder is clearly defined, and the consequences of illegality are defined too. "A bump stock allows a semi-automatic rifle to fire as if it were a machine gun" certainly is open to interpretation, and that's what SCOTUS is around for. They are the ultimate arbiters of the interpretation. As ever, the devil's in the details, and going further, when you have the most corrupt man in the history of the Supreme Court writing decision odds are the American people are getting screwed. And most certainly they have been.In article <17d9412e82a8a311$8843$3053472$46d50c60@news.newsdemon.com>,>
trotsky <gmsingh@email.com> wrote:
>On 6/15/24 11:46 AM, moviePig wrote:>On 6/15/2024 4:20 AM, trotsky wrote:>On 6/14/24 5:47 PM, BTR1701 wrote:>The Federal Firearms Act of 1934>
>
From wiki:
>
The current National Firearms Act (NFA) defines a number of categories
of regulated firearms. These weapons are collectively known as NFA
firearms and include the following:
>
Machine guns
"any weapon which shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily
restored to shoot, automatically more than one shot, without manual
reloading, by a single function of the trigger. The term shall also
include the frame or receiver of any such weapon, any part designed
and intended solely and exclusively, or combination of parts designed
and intended, for use in converting a weapon into a machinegun, and
any combination of parts from which a machinegun can be assembled if
such parts are in the possession or under the control of a person."[10]
So, bump-stocks are patently a "workaround" for a law whose intent is
patently obvious. Not exactly a triumph of sanity.
>
"A work around" is accurate. And the spirit of the law is far more
important, obviously, than the letter of the law
Oh, cool! I see Hutt the Fuck-Up Fairy has visited us again!
>
No, Hutt, you're unsurprisingly about as absolutely wrong as you can be
yet again.
>
The letter of the law is obviously paramount in the context of
jurisprudential determination as evidenced by the 1000-page statutes we
have coming out of Congress, millions of pages of administrative
regulations, and the multi-page click-thrus of tiny and
near-hieroglyphic legalese that you have to agree to just to use a piece
of software.
>
If all we needed to concern ourselves with was a law's "spirit", then
none of that would be necessary.
>
I'd elaborate further but I don't have the time or the crayons to
explain it to you. Jeezus, Hutt, if I wanted to kill myself, I'd climb
your ego and jump to your IQ.
Unfortunately, your "letter of the law" is a false god, a pipe dream. Because any word's meaning invariably depends on one or more *other* words, and so on ...you eventually need someone to "know" (i.e., to *interpret*) whatever basic thing someone else has tried to say.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.