Estimated reading time: 3 minutes
Every time something bad happens, the script gets dusted off.
“Common sense gun control.”
It sounds good. Feels good. Polls well. But when you actually press on it, ask for specifics, it starts to fall apart real fast. A recent breakdown by Colion Noir took a closer look at that argument and started asking the questions nobody seems willing to answer.
Case in point: the latest viral push from Hope Walz, daughter of Minnesota’s Tim Walz, jumping on TikTok to explain how gun control is basically the line between civilized people and savages.
That’s a bold claim. And to be fair, she did say something worth agreeing with: political violence is never okay. That should be the baseline. No debate there.
But then comes the leap. The idea that more gun laws would’ve somehow stopped the violence we’ve already seen play out.
That’s where things get shaky.
Take the Minnesota church shooting she’s pointing to. The shooter? Bought his guns legally. Passed background checks. No criminal history. No red flags. Nothing that would’ve tripped any of the “common sense” laws we keep hearing about.
So here’s the obvious question nobody wants to answer: Which law stops that guy?
Universal background checks? Already passed.
Red flag laws? Nothing to flag.
Assault weapons ban? He brought multiple guns.
That’s the part that keeps getting skipped. Instead, we get the phrase: “common sense.”
But what does that even mean anymore? 10-round mags? 15? 7? Semi-autos? Just rifles? Handguns too. The goalposts don’t just move, they sprint.
What was “common sense” five years ago isn’t enough today. And what’s being pushed today won’t be enough tomorrow. That’s not a fixed policy, that’s a moving target. And when you zoom out, there’s a bigger pattern.
Every major incident people point to either involves:
- Legal gun ownership
- Or someone already prohibited who got a gun anyway
Which leads to the uncomfortable truth: laws aimed at compliant people don’t stop non-compliant ones.
Criminals don’t follow gun laws. That’s not a slogan, it’s reality. And yet, the solution always circles back to restricting the same people who weren’t the problem in the first place. That’s where the debate gets real.
Because underneath all the buzzwords, the argument starts to sound less like “safety” and more like control: who should have access, and who shouldn’t.
So let’s keep it simple. If “common sense gun control” is the answer Hope Walz… then what’s the exact policy? Not the slogan. Not the vibe. The actual law.
Which one stops the next attacker who:
- passes a background check
- has no record
- and decides to act anyway
As Noir correctly asserts, that’s the question that never gets answered. And until it does, we’re just running the same play over and over again.
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