More Then 90 Percent

ITCH

New member
Background checks on all gun buyers are supported by 92 percent of voters, including 91 percent of gun-owning households, a Quinnipiac poll released Thursday finds, while other gun measures are significantly more divisive.

The results on background checks are identical to a CBS News/New York Times poll taken in January, before President Barack Obama laid out a series of proposed reforms, suggesting the issue has so far avoided becoming a partisan football. The CBS/Times poll found 92 percent of Americans supported background checks, including 93 percent of gun-owning households.

Other gun proposals garnered slimmer majorities. Voters favored banning assault weapons by 56 percent to 39 percent, and banning the sale of sale of high-capacity magazines by 56 percent to 40 percent. A small majority of voters from households with a gun opposed both ideas.

The Senate is expected to propose a gun bill including the background checks and ban on high-capacity magazines, but not the assault weapons ban. The National Rifle Association, which formerly supported universal background checks, says it changed its position because current background checks aren't working well enough.

"There is no significant voter opposition to requiring background checks for gun buyers," said Quinnipiac's assistant polling director, Peter A. Brown, "and there is support for banning high volume ammunition clips and assault weapons, with the issue pretty much falling along party lines."

Overall, the poll shows attitudes on gun control have changed little over the past few years. Voters favored stricter gun control laws, 52 percent to 43 percent -- a margin 5 points greater than in mid-2008, when 54 percent supported and 40 percent opposed those laws.

Obama and congressional Republicans were trusted about equally to handle the issue of gun control, and voters were similarly divided as to whether Obama or the NRA better represented their views.

The Quinnipiac poll surveyed 1,772 registered voters by phone between Jan. 30 and Feb. 4.
 
universal background checks are bad bad bad! universal background checks means you cant go to the range with a buddy and during shooting you want to shoot his gun but he can't let you legally until he has processed a background check on you.

Background checks on all gun buyers are supported by 92 percent of voters, including 91 percent of gun-owning households, a Quinnipiac poll released Thursday finds, while other gun measures are significantly more divisive.

The results on background checks are identical to a CBS News/New York Times poll taken in January, before President Barack Obama laid out a series of proposed reforms, suggesting the issue has so far avoided becoming a partisan football. The CBS/Times poll found 92 percent of Americans supported background checks, including 93 percent of gun-owning households.

Other gun proposals garnered slimmer majorities. Voters favored banning assault weapons by 56 percent to 39 percent, and banning the sale of sale of high-capacity magazines by 56 percent to 40 percent. A small majority of voters from households with a gun opposed both ideas.

The Senate is expected to propose a gun bill including the background checks and ban on high-capacity magazines, but not the assault weapons ban. The National Rifle Association, which formerly supported universal background checks, says it changed its position because current background checks aren't working well enough.

"There is no significant voter opposition to requiring background checks for gun buyers," said Quinnipiac's assistant polling director, Peter A. Brown, "and there is support for banning high volume ammunition clips and assault weapons, with the issue pretty much falling along party lines."

Overall, the poll shows attitudes on gun control have changed little over the past few years. Voters favored stricter gun control laws, 52 percent to 43 percent -- a margin 5 points greater than in mid-2008, when 54 percent supported and 40 percent opposed those laws.

Obama and congressional Republicans were trusted about equally to handle the issue of gun control, and voters were similarly divided as to whether Obama or the NRA better represented their views.

The Quinnipiac poll surveyed 1,772 registered voters by phone between Jan. 30 and Feb. 4.
 
BS. On that poll. People say yes because the question is phrased in a way to illicit the yes response. Like, do you support the reasonable position of universal background checks to prevent mentally ill persons from getting access to a gun? Who would say no to that?
 
Polls do not matter. it is all a farce to sway public opinion. We need to educate people. We live in a constitutional republic, not a democracy. Here is the biggest difference, in a constitutional republic the rights of the minority of the population can not be taken away from them by the majority of voters. in a true democracy the will of the majority rules.

Please don't get sucked into the fight on the enemy's terms. We are right in our position. This is our right not given to us by the government or by the majority of the people, but by our creator himself.
 
Looks to me like they polled 1,772 registered voters who voted for Obama in the last election. It's like saying a poll on this website is an accurate indication of how the nation as a whole feels about a subject. Polls are subjective and easy to manipulate.
 
These politically produced polls are the equivalent of asking 1700 first graders if they like candy. Straight garbage used to swing low information voters and those that like to follow the crowd.
 
The only poll that would matter is this:

Go to any prison. Poll those prisoners who are incarcerated for a crime involving a gun. Ask them this:

"Did the background check laws do anything to deter you from getting a gun?"

Bet you that poll get at least a 95% NO vote.
 
Like a staunch negotiator, act like you want it all knowing your outrageous requests will make an "innocent" little thing like a background check sound reasonable. Then push out tons of bogus polls that show "most" people support it. The crowd follows. It passes and the groundwork has been laid. Next thing you know...
 
I think it is sad that the media and idiots that support gun control are showing stuff like the link. Me and the wife watched a program on the tube last night and the program was in regards to all the school shootings we have had in the history of America. What about other things that have killed people in history besides Guns. I guess the only topic the media can eat up is gun violence and mental health.
 
Any background check is only as good as the information they are aloud by law to access. If medical records are not accessible because of some law such as HIPPA, mental illness will not show up. This is all about a back door way to disarm law abiding citizens. Like it or not the 2A states it shall not be infringed for a reason.
 
addn info

Like a staunch negotiator, act like you want it all knowing your outrageous requests will make an "innocent" little thing like a background check sound reasonable. Then push out tons of bogus polls that show "most" people support it. The crowd follows. It passes and the groundwork has been laid. Next thing you know...

just added info.. on our new's station..wyff greenville,sc ch 4..yesterday.... a cable co, called comcast out of tex, stop showing gun's ads from stores in that area It a shame they will lose a lot of business.. so good..
 
Like a staunch negotiator, act like you want it all knowing your outrageous requests will make an "innocent" little thing like a background check sound reasonable. Then push out tons of bogus polls that show "most" people support it. The crowd follows. It passes and the groundwork has been laid. Next thing you know...

I said basically the same thing on another thread.

As to the poll: the old saying applies- Figures don't lie, but liars figure.
 
92% WOW it's a miracle.
Never new that 92% of Americans could agree on anything.

Hmmm let see now.
2% of Americans are in Prison.
2% are in other institutions.
2% are in motor cycle gangs
That leave me in the remaining 2%

And I say to Barack Obama. I will agree to background checks as long as we do one you first.
 
I don't care if 99.999 percent of Americans favor a gun ban, we are a constitutional republic and the 2nd amendment would have to be changed.
 
Background checks on all gun buyers are supported by 92 percent of voters, including 91 percent of gun-owning households, a Quinnipiac poll released Thursday finds, while other gun measures are significantly more divisive.

The results on background checks are identical to a CBS News/New York Times poll taken in January, before President Barack Obama laid out a series of proposed reforms, suggesting the issue has so far avoided becoming a partisan football. The CBS/Times poll found 92 percent of Americans supported background checks, including 93 percent of gun-owning households.

Other gun proposals garnered slimmer majorities. Voters favored banning assault weapons by 56 percent to 39 percent, and banning the sale of sale of high-capacity magazines by 56 percent to 40 percent. A small majority of voters from households with a gun opposed both ideas.

The Senate is expected to propose a gun bill including the background checks and ban on high-capacity magazines, but not the assault weapons ban. The National Rifle Association, which formerly supported universal background checks, says it changed its position because current background checks aren't working well enough.

"There is no significant voter opposition to requiring background checks for gun buyers," said Quinnipiac's assistant polling director, Peter A. Brown, "and there is support for banning high volume ammunition clips and assault weapons, with the issue pretty much falling along party lines."

Overall, the poll shows attitudes on gun control have changed little over the past few years. Voters favored stricter gun control laws, 52 percent to 43 percent -- a margin 5 points greater than in mid-2008, when 54 percent supported and 40 percent opposed those laws.

Obama and congressional Republicans were trusted about equally to handle the issue of gun control, and voters were similarly divided as to whether Obama or the NRA better represented their views.

The Quinnipiac poll surveyed 1,772 registered voters by phone between Jan. 30 and Feb. 4.
Sounds like some of Bloomy's made up numbers. Like the fake numbers of NRA members that support this IMO. Think about it. There is NO WAY you can EVER have "Universal" Background Checks. Impossible. How many crooks will register? Also you could NOT have this WITHOUT registering every firearm in the country. Or, am I missing something?
 
Another Example of them owning the conversation.
I bet we could also get 92% favorable if the question was.

What do you think about increasing the penalty for spouse beating.
Are you A) in favor B) Opposed.
 

New Threads

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
49,523
Messages
610,661
Members
74,992
Latest member
RedDotArmsTraining
Back
Top