I don't think this has been posted yet:
Tenn. demonstrates trend of looser guns laws - Life- msnbc.com
bill
Tenn. demonstrates trend of looser guns laws - Life- msnbc.com
bill
I fully understand that the term "liberal" may have a negative connotation with regrds to political viewpoints, and I actually did debate whether to use that term. But I think my use of the term is correct. I found a fairly wide variety of definitions and descriptions of the term "liberal, but it includes these:Perhaps you misnamed this thread. The article that you linked to demonstrates how gun laws are becoming "looser", not more liberal.
I fully understand that the term "liberal" may have a negative connotation with regrds to political viewpoints, and I actually did debate whether to use that term. But I think my use of the term is correct. I found a fairly wide variety of definitions and descriptions of the term "liberal, but it includes these:
not strict; free
Link Removed
Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin liberalis suitable for a freeman, generous, from liber free;
liberal - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
favorable to or in accord with concepts of maximum individual freedom possible,
Origin:
1325–75; ME < L līberālis of freedom, befitting the free, equiv. to līber free + -ālis -al1
Liberal Definition | Definition of Liberal at Dictionary.com
Note that both liberal and liberty share the common root origin, liber
Well, that's enough of the linguistics lecture, now we can go back to talking about guns.:biggrin:
bill