It's not that deep. I just want justice for the victims of mass shootings. I'm not a legislator.
I respect that. We all want justice for the victims and protections going forward, but hollow statements and sentiments do not work. And the sad part is that the country has been running off of hollow statements, buzzwords, double talk, platitudes.
We vote for and pass bills with a lot of big words and long sentences that in reality don't say shyt. shyt that just sounds good to say, sounds good to hear, looks good on paper. We vote for people that do that shyt over the people that actually put in work and get shyt done.
Look at crt and dei programs. They've been talking about it for years, people vote for and against it, fight about it, die about it. When asked for a simple explanation about it "well..It's..umm..but.."
We have to be specific about the things we want, the things we don't want and the things we want to see.
My whole issue with the "charge the family" statement is no one has ever been specific about it. They've never designated who can and can't be charged. Is it everyone in the immediate household? If you're a parent that shoots something up, do they charge your kids and wife? If it's your wife do they charge the husband? Do we charge mom's and dad's or grandma's and grandpa's? Uncle's and aunties? Brothers, sisters? At what age or how far away or how far removed does someone have to be to avoid being charged?
Can you imagine the fukking pigs showing up at your work or your house to arrest you
"Why

?"
"Your son shot up target and killed 14 people.

"
"He's 26 years old! He doesn't even live here."
"

these are the laws"