|
|
DelMarVa Survival Trainings
Daily Features |
|
|
September 22, 2007
Banning guns for veterans
Are there any statistics which show
that veterans with PTSD is a danger
to their communities? Why would the
Federal Government want to disarm
those who are professionally trained
in the use of arms and equipment?
Could it be because veterans are
trained in use of arms and are
disciplined enough to mount real
resistance in the event of a
domestic situation here at home?
Seems I read that 40-60 percent of
returning servicemen were considered
to suffer some sort of stress
disorder, which takes awhile back
home to recover. And by then they
have had their year at home and are
called back to duty again. So the
Army thinks they are Okay, but the
feds think they are a danger and
must be disarmed.
This legislation is wrong, its
another slap in the face to those
that served us. Its also a travesty
that the government once again
wishes to dictate who can possess
the means to self defense.
How long will it take for new troops
coming home to find out that the
minute they report in for PTSD that
they will no longer be able to own a
firearm? That will be a big
detriment for some of them. Maybe
that is why the Government planned
this and so it will cut way down on
their medical expense payout.
Delaware Survival Training Site
urges everyone to contact their
representatives and demand an end to
this legislation before it takes
control of our legal rights to
purchase a gun or weapon.
September 22, 2007
NewsWithViews.com
Hundreds of thousands of veterans --
from Vietnam through Operation Iraqi
Freedom -- are at risk of being
banned from buying firearms if
legislation that is pending in
Congress gets enacted.
How? The Veterans Disarmament Act --
which has already passed the House
-- would place any veteran who has
ever been diagnosed with Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) on
the federal gun ban list.
This is exactly what President Bill
Clinton did over seven years ago
when his administration
illegitimately added some 83,000
veterans into the National Criminal
Information System (NICS system) --
prohibiting them from purchasing
firearms, simply because of
afflictions like PTSD.
The proposed ban is actually
broader. Anyone who is diagnosed as
being a tiny danger to himself or
others would have his gun rights
taken away ... forever. It is
section 102(b)(1)(C)(iv) in HR 2640
that provides for dumping raw
medical records into the system.
Those names -- like the 83,000
records mentioned above -- will
then, by law, serve as the basis for
gun banning.
No wonder the Military Order of the
Purple Heart is opposed to this
legislation.
The House bill, HR 2640, is being
sponsored by one of the most flaming
anti-Second Amendment
Representatives in Congress: Carolyn
McCarthy (D-NY). Another liberal
anti-gunner, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-
VT), is sponsoring the bill in the
Senate.
Proponents of the bill say that
helpful amendments have been made so
that any veteran who gets his name
on the NICS list can seek an
expungement.
But whenever you talk about
expunging names from the Brady NICS
system, you're talking about a
procedure that has always been a
long shot. Right now, there are NO
EXPUNGEMENTS of law-abiding
Americans' names that are taking
place under federal level. Why?
Because the expungement process
which already exists has been
blocked for over a decade by a
"funds cut-off" engineered by
another anti-gunner, Sen. Charles
Schumer (D-NY).
So how will this bill make things
even worse? Well, two legal terms
are radically redefined in the
Veterans Disarmament Act to carry
out this vicious attack on veterans'
gun rights.
One term relates to who is
classified a "mental defective."
Forty years ago that term meant one
was adjudicated "not guilty" in a
court of law by reason of insanity.
But under the Veterans Disarmament
Act, "mental defective" has been
stretched to include anyone whom a
psychiatrist determines might be a
tiny danger to self or others.
The second term is "adjudicate." In
the past, one could only lose one's
gun rights through an adjudication
by a judge, magistrate or court --
meaning conviction after a trial.
Adjudication could only occur in a
court with all the protections of
due process, including the right to
face one's accuser. Now,
adjudication in HR 2640 would
include a finding by "a court,
commission, committee or other
authorized person" (namely, a
psychiatrist).
Forget the fact that people with
PTSD have the same violent crime
rate as the rest of us. Vietnam vets
with PTSD have had careers and
obtained permits to carry firearms
concealed. It will now be enough for
a psychiatric diagnosis (a
"determination" in the language of
the bill) to get a veteran barred
for life from owning guns.
Think of what this bill would do to
veterans. If a robber grabs your
wallet and takes everything in it,
but gives you back $5 to take the
bus home, would you call that a
financial enhancement? If not, then
we should not let HR 2640 supporters
call the permission to seek an
expungement an enhancement, when
prior to this bill, veterans could
not legitimately be denied their gun
rights after being diagnosed with
PTSD.
Veterans with PTSD should not be put
in a position to seek an expungement.
They have not been convicted (after
a trial with due process) of doing
anything wrong. If a veteran is
thought to be a threat to self or
others, there should be a real
trial, not an opinion (called a
diagnosis) by a psychiatrist.
If members of Congress do not hear
from soldiers (active duty and
retired) in large numbers, along
with the rest of the public, the
Veterans Disarmament Act --
misleadingly titled by Rep. McCarthy
as the NICS Improvement Amendments
Act -- will send this message to
veterans: "No good deed goes
unpunished." |
|