COLORADO SHOOTING
Thought experiments on guns in America
We have heard many people say that if someone in the movie theater in Aurora, Colo., had a legally carried concealed weapon, there would have been little or no loss of life in that terrible and senseless attack.
But consider if there had been 50 people in the darkened theater with concealed firearms -- or 100, each firing at the person who fired last. The bloodshed would have increased exponentially as each shooter fired at others who were shooting.
The problem is not too few guns, but too many. And the time to talk about it is now -- until we stop losing thousands of innocent lives a year in the United States due to gun violence.
RENEE BERGERON, ST. PAUL
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The 18th Amendment, the one that established Prohibition, was repealed because it didn't work. The Second Amendment, the one that's interpreted to provide virtually unrestricted access to firearms, should also be repealed because it doesn't work.
I wonder if the main section of a replacement -- a 28th Amendment, modeled after past amendments -- could read something like this:
"After two years from the ratification of this article, the people will have the right to keep and bear arms only as part of well-regulated militia, national defense or governmental law enforcement.