Joe Rogan argues for gun rights saying You have to be able to protect yourself
Joe Rogan argues for gun rights saying "You have to be able to protect yourself" Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout
10 years after it expired in 2004, mass shootings more than tripled and fatalities spiked more than fourfold, a recent study found. 26 years ago today, then-President Bill Clinton signed the federal assault weapons ban into law. 10 years after it expired in 2004, mass shootings more than tripled and fatalities spiked more than fourfold, a recent study found.
You have to be able to protect yourself - Joe Rogan resonates Tim Kennedy s concerns over rising cases of civil disorder
Tim Kennedy (left) and Joe Rogan (right) (Image via Instagram/Tim Kennedy) continues to sound off on the rising gun violence in the United States, saying the country has a mental health issue, not a gun issue. In a recent episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Rogan talked to former Navy SEAL and UFC fighter Kennedy now runs Sheepdog Response, which trains everyday Americans to defend themselves should they come face to face with an active shooter. After Kennedy explained how he wants to transform schools into "hardened targets," Rogan said: "It's taking a long time for people to come to grips with the only solution: you have to be able to protect yourself. ... People think guns are the problem, and this is the narrative we keep hearing, that we need gun control. But there's more guns than there are people so it's not necessarily a gun problem because the vast majority of people, the vast vast vast majority, would never do something like this. It's a very small amount of people that are deranged and broken and would do something like this. So how do we address that? That is the issue, it's a mental health issue." Listen to the Joe Rogan Experience with Tim Kennedy below: While mental health definitely needs to be addressed, there's no way to ignore the explosion in mass shootings following the 2004 expiration of a series of gun laws that banned the sale of weapons like semi-automatic rifle and extended ammo clips used in many massacres. Mass shootings tripled in the following decade. 26 years ago today, then-President Bill Clinton signed the federal assault weapons ban into law.10 years after it expired in 2004, mass shootings more than tripled and fatalities spiked more than fourfold, a recent study found. 26 years ago today, then-President Bill Clinton signed the federal assault weapons ban into law. 10 years after it expired in 2004, mass shootings more than tripled and fatalities spiked more than fourfold, a recent study found.