DENVER | Some words fail us, and for Robert Werthwein, “depression” is one of them. The 41-year-old director of Colorado’s Behavioral Health Office prefers to say “everything turned to complete s ” when his identical twin, [.]
lives are are enough? so in this case suicides are a great example. two thirds of deaths by handguns are by suicides and that brings us right into. suicides is a whole different question. well, it s a mental health debate. mental health had. i want more mental health and part of the president s presentation which was lost in the politics is that we have to have more stringent mental health reporting and i m for that. right. you guys have to understand that law abiding people registering their guns is not going to stop charleston or connecticut can or terrorism. the only thing that will stop it? it will stop the majority of them though. no, it won t. nomiki you are living in a world of your own with hundred million guns on the streets momiki you can get a gun walk into the wrong neighborhood and flash a cash and you will get it? that s because some states have loser gun laws.
the discussion on the bill that was the bill wasn t for that. the bill was for national gun re registry. that wasn t going to have mental health reporting and involuntary detention of these people at a mental hospital. if that s where america decides that it wants to go, maybe that s appropriate. that wasn t what the discussion was on the bill. he did go through a background check. let s say for example the shooting that he did through his ceiling to his neighbors, she says that she thought there was malice in it. the cops came. they did an investigation. ultimately they didn t press charges against him. there s not at record of it. clearly there was a record and someone found out when they were investigating this guy. later on. you have to be convicted of a felony or domestic violence or some sort of violence. insurance companies keep the
the discussion on the bill that was the bill wasn t for that. the bill was for national gun re registry. that wasn t going to have mental health reporting and involuntary detention of these people at a mental hospital. if that s where america decides that it wants to go, maybe that s appropriate. that wasn t what the discussion was on the bill. he did go through a background check. let s say for example the shooting that he did through his ceiling to his neighbors, she says that she thought there was malice in it. the cops came. they did an investigation. ultimately they didn t press charges against him. there s not at record of it. clearly there was a record and someone found out when they were investigating this guy. later on. you have to be convicted of a felony or domestic violence or some sort of violence. insurance companies keep the
while lawmakers could have taken a step towards strengthening mental health reporting. instead, they opted for stopping the rights of gun owners and they did it under a veil of secrecy. sometimes they work after 5:00. i know, who would have thunk it? you know, politicians working after 5:00, and passing something substantial, they didn t just work in the dead of night and do something. they passed it in the senate and the house, as it were, in new york today. in the light of day. exactly, in the light of day. and this is the way i hate to break it to the nra. they think that politics is supposed to work with nra lobbyists and it being pasted with the sort of pen that they give to the person, that is not the way it works this time. and one important thing that was