I know this already failed, but I'm sure it'll be back. Here is a perfect example of the problem that I, and I'm sure many others, had with this law.

This guy went to lunch with his family, got up from the table in a way that everyone thought he was going to the bathroom, but he went outside and drove his car through the wall right into the table where his family was sitting and killed his two daughters. He was battling mental health issues and had communicated as much to his family. He even had someone take all his guns from his house. Yet tragedy still happened. Sure, he didn't shoot a bunch of strangers, but does it matter? He still killed people in a public venue with zero disregard for others. All this to point out that if someone is that dangerous, then just removing some guns is not even a shadow of a solution. If the person is the problem, then that person shouldn't be in society. It's still a slippery slope, but at least it's focusing on the real issue, the person.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news...embers-n875996

It was supposed to be a chance for them to get together as a family — a relaxing lunch at a local seafood restaurant after Sunday's church service.

Appetizers had just been ordered at the Surf and Turf Lodge in Bessemer City, North Carolina, when patriarch Roger Self got up from the table without saying a word, according to the family's pastor. Moments later, they noticed him in his white Jeep outside, circling the parking lot several times.

Then, without warning, the SUV burst through the wood-framed restaurant and smashed into the family's table. Self's daughter and daughter-in-law were killed, while his wife, son and 13-year-old granddaughter were injured, authorities said.

Police say it was no accident. Self, 62, faces two first-degree murder charges for the crash.
In the past couple of months, Self had stopped working, and divulged to friends and family that he felt like he was sliding deeper and deeper into depression, Rammell said. Self had asked Rammell to take away his guns from him, the pastor said, which he did.

In the last few days, "it went from bad to really bad," Rammell added. He said he had spoken with Self on Saturday afternoon and texted with him and feared he might commit suicide, but was unsure how to help him.

"At the end of the day, we were all unable to help our friend," he said, "and the result was his mental health carried him to an act that the Roger Self we all knew would have, without a doubt, called insane and evil."