alonzomourning23
CAGiversary!
- Feedback
- 26 (100%)
Last years gun bill was just the beginning:
If this passes expect to see a jump in republican voters:
Well I guess this is better than the bill requiring employers to allow guns in the work place.
Here's the other bill they're trying to pass:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/state/orl-guntowork0806feb08,0,6714843.story?coll=orl-news-headlines-state
Remember be nice to Mickey when you go to disney world, he may be packing.
Also, do you want to fire a guy with a gun sitting in his car?
Last year, the Legislature passed a bill that allows Floridians to use deadly force if they feel threatened by an attacker without first trying to escape. That prompted one gun-control group to distribute fliers at airports in Orlando and Miami warning tourists, "Do not argue unnecessarily with local people."
If this passes expect to see a jump in republican voters:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/columnists/orl-maxwell0206feb02,0,6519315.column?page=2&coll=orl-news-colFlorida legislators say they want more people to register to vote.
Just not all people.
At least that's what their actions suggest.
Their latest plan would require businesses that issue hunting and fishing licenses to also pass out voter-registration forms.
This means we'll be courting people who care enough about shooting things -- but not voting -- to fill out paperwork.
Getting more folks involved in democracy is always a noble idea. But if that's really the goal, you'd assume that the state would also be passing out voter-registration forms in more of the offices it actually runs.
What kind of registration efforts are in place, for example, at the state's Health Department offices, which serve tens of thousands of people?
"Nothing at all," said Health Department spokesman Fernando Senra.
So what's the difference here?
Well, the Health Department serves many poor people. And minorities. In other words: a lot of Democrats.
Hunters are a reliably Republican lot.
One Florida pollster estimated that more than 60 percent of hunters are Republicans. And a recent Gallup poll found that Republicans are 78 percent more likely to own guns than Democrats.
The bill sponsor, state Sen. Carey Baker, a Republican who owns a gun shop in Mount Dora, said this week that beefing up his party's voter rolls had nothing to do with this.
Conservation, he said, was his motivation for his NRA-backed measure. He wants hunters to use the ballot boxes to tell politicians to save and protect land (though obviously not the fuzzy and feathered critters who live on the land, since they want to pump 'em full of lead).
"The bottom line," Baker said, "is getting more people to vote."
OK. Well, how about amending your bill to also require similar efforts at the health offices?
Or what about the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, which issues occupational licenses -- and which also said this week that it doesn't deal in voter outreach? Shouldn't manicurists, acupuncturists and veterinarians be encouraged to vote as well?
Maybe, Baker said. But he doesn't want all that on his bill.
"I have a good bill right now. I don't want to make it controversial," he said. "I don't want to mess up my bill."
State Rep. Sheri McInvale, the Democrat-turned-Republican from Orlando who is co-sponsoring the so-called "shooter voter" bill in the House, didn't eschew the idea of getting more offices involved.
But she also said she had no problem starting with hunting and fishing licenses. On the heels of the state's "motor voter" act to register voters at DMV offices, she said this proposal seems like "a natural progression."
House Majority Leader Andy Gardiner, however, sounded a little more interested in getting more offices involved quickly.
"It's a good point," he said. "To me, the more people we can get to vote, the better."
We'll see what actually passes. Health Department patients, after all, don't have quite the lobby that gun owners do.
Well I guess this is better than the bill requiring employers to allow guns in the work place.
Here's the other bill they're trying to pass:
At issue is a law the NRA is pushing that would guarantee employees the right to bring guns to work, provided the weapons remain locked in their cars. It's part of a nationwide campaign by the powerful pro-gun group to ensure a company can't force its employees to give up their Second Amendment rights.
But the idea has generated fierce opposition from the state's deep-pocketed business lobby, which calls it a gross infringement on their private-property rights. Leaders of the state Chamber of Commerce voted unanimously Monday to oppose the proposal, and the president of the Florida Retail Federation says the issue has generated unprecedented opposition among the group's nearly 12,000 members, which include Walt Disney World, Wal-Mart Stores and Publix Super Markets.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/state/orl-guntowork0806feb08,0,6714843.story?coll=orl-news-headlines-state
Remember be nice to Mickey when you go to disney world, he may be packing.
Also, do you want to fire a guy with a gun sitting in his car?