Question:
Why do liberals feel that Michael Moore is an authority on guns?
?
2014-04-10 09:40:49 UTC
So, he made a video film. I have dozens of gun videos on youtube. Michael Moore is a fat, commie idiot.
Seventeen answers:
cornbread_oracle
2014-04-10 10:02:01 UTC
Michael Moore is expert at nothing except the menu changes of all the major fast food chains.



Other than that, he is a know-nothing a$$hat.
Blackadder
2014-04-10 17:09:17 UTC
You're asking this of the same people that believe Obama to be an authority on health care and economics. So, really, no matter what answer they give, it will be inherently stupid. That's because they don't care about knowledge, experience or an understanding of anything of substance. All they care about is the agenda. The spread of dependency and authority. Seriously, the town drunk would be their latest tour d'force if he'd just start spouting ignorant hate toward any aspect of freedom, personal strength and self reliance. They're like a bunch of children rebelling against the wisdom of their better educated and responsible parents by setting up a toddler tyranny. Gawd help you if you oppose free ice cream day!
?
2014-04-10 16:58:24 UTC
Moore has the same rights as anyone else to talk about guns. Since when does anyone have to be declared an authority to express an opinion?
?
2014-04-10 18:48:09 UTC
Speaking of idiots, your village wants you back. I missed the part where Moore claimed to be an expert on guns.
RockHunter
2014-04-10 17:16:48 UTC
Seems to me some of those here yelling the loudest about being told how they feel are the same ones loudly declaring what and how Conservatives and Republicans, and NRA members feel & think.
?
2014-04-10 17:02:48 UTC
Same reason why righties rely on the Family Research Council as an authority on homosexuality. Ignorance, and lots of it.
George S
2014-04-10 17:03:30 UTC
They aren't liberals. Today in the US most progressives and some socialists falsely call themselves "liberal."



He promotes their p.c. delusional rhetoric. They have little reasoning ability. Their emotions overwhelm most of that.
Sarah
2014-04-10 16:43:13 UTC
I haven't seen any liberal make such a claim. Perhaps you have evidence proving that liberals suggest that at Michael Moore is the authority on guns. To my knowledge, he is merely a filmmaker who has an opinion.
anonymous
2014-04-10 16:42:36 UTC
That's how I feel?



I wasn't aware that I felt like that. What else can you tell me about what I feel?



I'm curious....since it appears you know my feelings better than I do.
?
2014-04-10 16:45:00 UTC
Because liberals rely on pin-heads as an authority on everything.
Chuck
2014-04-10 16:43:41 UTC
for the average liberal, michael moore is a tub of lard that can walk on water and do no wrong.
anonymous
2014-04-10 16:42:21 UTC
Anyone who is scared of a gun is an "Authority" on firearms and gun violence in liberal land
?
2014-04-10 16:43:13 UTC
Is that how I feel?



Thanks for telling me!
?
2014-04-10 16:54:47 UTC
Moore's importance to liberals is a fabrication of the right. It's fiction and most people on the left couldn't care less what Moore has to say. However the thgougts of Larry Alan Burns, the judge who presided over the Tuscon shooting case, I find to be very relevant.



"Last month, I sentenced Jared Lee Loughner to seven consecutive life terms plus 140 years in federal prison for his shooting rampage in Tucson. That tragedy left six people dead, more than twice that number injured and a community shaken to its core.



Loughner deserved his punishment. But during the sentencing, I also questioned the social utility of high-capacity magazines like the one that fed his Glock. And I lamented the expiration of the federal assault weapons ban in 2004, which prohibited the manufacture and importation of certain particularly deadly guns, as well as magazines that can hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition.



The ban wasn't all that stringent — if you already owned a banned gun or high-capacity magazine you could keep it, and you could sell it to someone else — but at least it was something.



And it says something that half of the nation's deadliest shootings occurred after the ban expired, including the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn. It also says something that it has not even been two years since Loughner's rampage, and already six mass shootings have been deadlier.



I am not a social scientist, and I know that very smart ones are divided on what to do about gun violence. But reasonable, good-faith debates have boundaries, and in the debate about guns, a high-capacity magazine has always seemed to me beyond them.



Bystanders got to Loughner and subdued him only after he emptied one 31-round magazine and was trying to load another. Adam Lanza, the Newtown shooter, chose as his primary weapon a semiautomatic rifle with 30-round magazines. And we don't even bother to call the 100-rounder that James Holmes is accused of emptying in an Aurora, Colo., movie theater a magazine — it is a drum. How is this not an argument for regulating the number of rounds a gun can fire?



I get it. Someone bent on mass murder who has only a 10-round magazine or revolvers at his disposal probably is not going to abandon his plan and instead try to talk his problems out. But we might be able to take the "mass" out of "mass shooting," or at least make the perpetrator's job a bit harder.



To guarantee that there would never be another Tucson or Sandy Hook, we would probably have to make it a capital offense to so much as look at a gun. And that would create serious 2nd Amendment, 8th Amendment and logistical problems.



So what's the alternative? Bring back the assault weapons ban, and bring it back with some teeth this time. Ban the manufacture, importation, sale, transfer and possession of both assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Don't let people who already have them keep them. Don't let ones that have already been manufactured stay on the market. I don't care whether it's called gun control or a gun ban. I'm for it.



I say all of this as a gun owner. I say it as a conservative who was appointed to the federal bench by a Republican president. I say it as someone who prefers Fox News to MSNBC, and National Review Online to the Daily Kos. I say it as someone who thinks the Supreme Court got it right in District of Columbia vs. Heller, when it held that the 2nd Amendment gives us the right to possess guns for self-defense. (That's why I have mine.) I say it as someone who, generally speaking, is not a big fan of the regulatory state.



I even say it as someone whose feelings about the NRA mirror the left's feelings about Planned Parenthood: It has a useful advocacy function in our deliberative democracy, and much of what it does should not be controversial at all.



And I say it, finally, mindful of the arguments on the other side, at least as I understand them: that a high-capacity magazine is not that different from multiple smaller-capacity magazines; and that if we ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines one day, there's a danger we would ban guns altogether the next, and your life might depend on you having one.



But if we can't find a way to draw sensible lines with guns that balance individual rights and the public interest, we may as well call the American experiment in democracy a failure.



There is just no reason civilians need to own assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Gun enthusiasts can still have their venison chili, shoot for sport and competition, and make a home invader flee for his life without pretending they are a part of the SEAL team that took out Osama bin Laden.



It speaks horribly of the public discourse in this country that talking about gun reform in the wake of a mass shooting is regarded as inappropriate or as politicizing the tragedy. But such a conversation is political only to those who are ideologically predisposed to see regulation of any kind as the creep of tyranny. And it is inappropriate only to those delusional enough to believe it would disrespect the victims of gun violence to do anything other than sit around and mourn their passing. Mourning is important, but so is decisive action.



Congress must reinstate and toughen the ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines."
?
2014-04-10 16:54:13 UTC
he did a lot of research on it... a lot more than you probably ever have...
anonymous
2014-04-10 16:43:20 UTC
Falsehood on your part.
Mother Hubbard
2014-04-10 16:41:41 UTC
he's anti-harm, unlike the 2 parties.



OH wait-- 3 parties!-- DNC, GOP, & NRA!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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