Congratulations to the Minnesota Lynx for their WNBA championship! What a series and what a team! Also, thank you to the Star Tribune for your coverage of the team this season. Great articles on a range of related topics throughout the season. I specifically recall a fun one about Maya Moore's shoe contract. Thank you for sending a reporter to cover away games down the stretch. Fans notice and appreciate it.
We love our home teams! Go, Lynx!
Suzanne Olson, Maple Grove
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Thank you, Twins! You have given us a great season, watching the improvements in the players and the many great plays that were made. It was fun watching the games unfold and of course all the home runs. We hope they have a great 2018, so we'll wait til next year. It's too bad the Star Tribune failed to commend them for a great season they gave us fans instead of the harping about no playoffs.
Jean Lansing, Minneapolis
LAS VEGAS MASSACRE
A win-win on military weapons, our founding fathers — and fear
Solving the problems associated with public ownership of military-grade weapons, including high-powered sniper rifles, automatic weapons and large capacity magazines, is really quite simple. U.S. citizens should be able to own and operate all the military-grade weapons they want to own and operate, so long as they are at all times stored, used, bought and sold at government-certified (private and public) gun club facilities. It's as simple as that! Both sides win.
The spent bullets can be "harvested," thereby minimizing the environmental impact of the "sport." The club provides security against theft of the weapons, including the times when a limited number of weapons are out of storage and in operation. Rifles used for hunting can be legally limited to seven-round magazines, with severe punishments for "workarounds."
This will not make the people who think that they need military-grade weapons in their homes for protection very happy. If in fact these people are so paranoid that they can't feel safe without a military-grade weapon in their home, well, that's a different problem. That's a mental health problem. It raises the question: Do "we," including the "we" in the NRA, really want people who are this mentally ill to have military-grade weapons in their possession?
Piecemeal, knee-jerk solutions such as banning bump stocks when other "workarounds" are readily available are ridiculous, myopic, ineffective solutions for larger problems that can readily be solved with simple grand-scale solutions.