callmeslick wrote:Lothar wrote:And there have never been bigots in any of those professions.
wait a minute.....your whole defense to your rationale boils down to some kind of paranoia about health professionals?
That's nowhere close to the most charitable interpretation of what I said. You're looking to criticize too quickly, without putting in adequate listening effort.
My rationale boils down to "we know that people and systems can be both intentionally and accidentally abusive." We know that people of certain racial and ethnic backgrounds get "randomly" checked more often, get harsher penalties for certain crimes, are less likely to get called back for job interviews, and so on -- sometimes due to outright bigotry, but other times just because the system has been tilted against them in subtle ways for a long time.
So if we're going to infringe on something as
fundamental as the constitutional right to bear arms, the onus is on those proposing restrictions to make sure said infringement has adequate checks and balances in place to make sure it doesn't create an "underclass" that can't protect themselves. (How many individual shootings, rapes, robberies, etc. of those who might be disenfranchised by a biased system should I trade per mass shooting?)
you DO bring up a common scenario for violence that mental health checks do not prevent: certain mass shootings, and other attacks stem from short term extreme dispair due to relationship issues ... a 30-day minimum would serve both to allow folks to psychically regroup and/or be identified as a danger by a police agency
And, simultaneously, make an unarmed ex-partner of someone who was already armed before the relationship trouble began into an easy target.
I don't conflate taking it seriously with tossing out a series of equally improbable 'what ifs'
In a nation of 300,000,000 people, "improbable" things happen pretty often. Mass shootings themselves are pretty improbable. If you're going to build a system to reduce mass shootings from insane people, you have to account for what might naively appear to be "small" side-effects that are only relevant to 0.01% of the population (that's 30,000 people!)
Ferno wrote:Lothar wrote:Oh, and for what it's worth, I absolutely take mental health seriously..... Again, I point you to "voter literacy tests".
then why did you even suggest that mental health criteria is subjective?
There are absolutely subjective components to mental health evaluations. In particular, "is this person a danger to themselves or others?" might involve a lot of objective observations, but ultimately there's plenty of room for subjectivity and bias to creep in to some types of diagnosis.
intentionally malicious flagging
Are you really implying that some doctors would be inclined to jeopardize their medical license and risk being disbarred and discredited based on a personal vendetta?
People are willing to jeopardize a lot of things based on a personal vendetta. Do you think someone willing to kill their ex wouldn't be willing to abuse their power to keep their ex from being able to get a gun?
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=doctor+murder+lover
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Let me be clear on one thing:
I'm not against mental health requirements as part of a background check. What I'm against is the naive approach that brushes off "MIGHT, MAYBE, SOMEDAY" side-effects as insignificant and not worth addressing. Hundreds of people have died in mass shootings this year, and some of those shootings "might, maybe" have been prevented by mental health flags -- saving like, dozens of lives. But naively-implemented policy might cost hundreds of lives and allow thousands of assaults, rapes, etc. That's not a good trade.