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TX: Second border militia member arrested on weapons charges

12K views 131 replies 36 participants last post by  Roberto Rodriguez  
#1 · (Edited)
#9 ·
Please tell me this was a joke.

if not you have to be one of the dumbest people. (and those who thanked you for that comment)

I could go on and on and on about victim-less crimes, the illicit war on drugs, or the simple human decency on giving people a second chance.
..Or I could tell you how you committed felonies in your life, you may just not have been caught yet.

But i prefer to focus on your stupid ass ignorant comment indicating that everyone with a criminal record is a burglar.
Pathetic.
 
#3 ·
After 5 years of good behavior I think that they can petition to get their rights restored.

But yeah. Armed criminals we do not need.

Hmmm:

State records show that Massey was convicted of burglary in Dallas back in 1988 when he was 21 years old.

Massey was paroled in 1993 and kept a clean record ever since.
He's going to have a really tough time getting them back now.
 
#8 ·
After 5 years of good behavior I think that they can petition to get their rights restored.
5 years of not being caught? or 5 years of absolutely being watched and monitored 24/7 and being good?
 
#11 · (Edited)
Depends on the felony charge. I think some felonies that keep people from owning a weapon is just plain dumb (I.e. Repeat drunk drivers) when the consequence of their driving actions have nothing to do with gun possession. Just hope they are sober when hey have a weapon on their person.

Keep in mind in some states, they are trying to make it a felony just owning "high cap magazines". And in the very near future, it may become a felony offense to buy ammo in California without a permit...
 
#12 ·
Somehow we accept that a felon has lost 2a rights. Why do felons who have served their time not have the right to protect themselves, their families and their property? This equates to having a potential death sentence tacked on to the original sentence. Not just for them but also their families. Anyone free to be in public should be free to carry. These laws need changed. And no, im not a felon.
 
#13 ·
Somehow we accept that a felon has lost 2a rights. Why do felons who have served their time not have the right to protect themselves, their families and their property? This equates to having a potential death sentence tacked on to the original sentence. Not just for them but also their families. Anyone free to be in public should be free to carry. These laws need changed. And no, im not a felon.
spare us the drama.

you might as well argue that we shouldn't lock criminals away in prison because they are bad places and it might be dangerous for them.
 
#20 ·
#26 ·
If a felon has a woman thats a felon, and is living in an apartment that does not allow dogs, well I guess he needs to dial 911 and pray…..

Pit bulls are cheap where I am. Some one breaks into a house with pit bulls they will have their hands full long enough you can hit them with a bat, machete, 2 by 4, chair, …….;)
 
#36 ·
It was not until 1968 that felons were no longer allowed to own firearms because our fore fathers understood that youth makes mistakes and they should not be punished forever and they understood forgiveness and that you should be punished for your crimes but once paid you are once again a person trying to achieve in society. You do not want to make permanent losers do to mistakes.

Actually in most states after 15 years your felony is no longer held against you but that was before computers.
 
#37 ·
It was not until 1968 that felons were no longer allowed to own firearms because our fore fathers understood that youth makes mistakes and they should not be punished forever and they understood forgiveness and that you should be punished for your crimes but once paid you are once again a person trying to achieve in society. You do not want to make permanent losers do to mistakes. It just makes a society of none-productive citizens. It was not until ignorant self important modern liberals started making laws that they are no longer allowed to own them.

Actually in most states after 15 years your felony is no longer held against you but that was before computers.
restricting possession of firearms by felons hardly turns them into non productive permanent loosers.
 
#53 ·
Texas law lets a convicted felon possess a firearm on the premises where he lives once five years have elapsed from his release from prison or from parole, whichever is later. Texas Penal Code §46.04.

Still could be prosecuted under Federal law, but saying that a felon cannot possess would be incorrect, because at least 1 state, Texas, does allow it.
 
#60 ·
masked robbers or rapists? no. they are people who have been proiven to have committed a serious crime however and most feel that sort of individual should not be a LEO.

in reality NO right is absolute, sorry.

Are you familiar with the time and cost involved in getting back a right yhat couldnt be rightfully taken in the first place? I have heard its significant.
lol, back to defending the poor, poor criminal.
cry me a river.
 
#63 ·
Does not surprise me that when a bunch of people get together some have criminal histories. The thing that alarms me is that the feds are down there sneaking around checking peoples backgrounds trying to find anything they can on those guys. Just sop they arrest a few and use them as snitches to watch the others.