Georgia state house candidates talk guns, taxes and IUDs
"People have a right to defend themselves," said
"The
A member of the audience brought up the
"OK," Caldwell said, "after 9/11 we should have really outlawed airplanes, because it's a weapon. Criminals are always going to find a way to kill people. They do it with their car. Insane, crazy, evil people will always find a way."
Candidate
"We don't have a gun problem," he said. "We have a mental health problem. And I think that needs to be addressed more than anything. I would say gun control is not a good pathway to go down."
The lone Democrat in the race,
"Ultimately," he said, "you can't stop people. But you can limit their harm. And at this point, I think we're establishing a pattern for what these murders look like. It's all people who over the past several years have started amassing huge arsenals of military-style weapons."
Thursday's forum was sponsored by
Tax rates
Patton and Caldwell both said they wanted to lower the state's 6 percent income tax and raise the sales tax.
"Ultimately, I'm for what looks like a fair tax," Patton. "That's going to essentially make us look a little bit more like
"I support reducing the income tax," Caldwell said. "But we've also got to cut some spending. We can't continue to go into debt."
Pociask said he would leave the current tax rates alone.
Audience member
"You're going to have to give them some kind of an exemption," Patton said. "So whenever they go into a store and make a purchase, it's the same kind of an exemption they would have gotten."
"You're going to make the small businesses do the adjustment?" Freund asked.
"Correct," Patton said.
"I think the small businesses will object to that, too," Freund said.
"That's one thing, too, we'll have to look at: how other states have handled that," Patton said.
"It does open a can of worms," Caldwell added.
Global warming
"We should follow several other states in our country's lead and join in the Paris Accords," Pociask said. "Even if the federal government's going to pull out, we should be a member. We have quite a bit of coastline. It's very valuable. I'd hate to see it be washed away."
Caldwell said the state needs to end rules that prevent residents from installing solar panels and selling electricity to their neighbors.
"Deregulation would be the thing that would actually help," he said.
Said Patton: "There's so many heavy economic issues weighing in on
Abortion laws
A woman asked the candidates when human life begins and whether the government should protect innocent human lives.
"At conception," Patton said. "And yes."
"At conception," Caldwell said. "And yes. Human life, we all have a right to life, everyone. Especially the unborn."
"When the woman's doctor says it does," Pociask answered, straying from his Republican colleagues.
"Well, I would say conception happens after," Patton said. "I mean, conception obviously happens whenever. I mean, really."
"An IUD is a contraceptive that comes after conception," Peppers said.
"Well then, I would think we would have to look at that," Patton said. "Because I do believe that life begins at conception."
Caldwell asked Peppers to repeat the question.
"I think I'm " Caldwell began after some hesitation.
"Do you want to explain to him how an IUD works?"
"An IUD prevents an egg from attaching to the uterine wall," she told Caldwell.
"You're using a different definition of conception than I'm using," Caldwell said.
"No," Peppers said. " I assume you're saying life begins at conception. Conception being when the sperm and "
"Fertilization!" Bronson shouted.
"That would be fertilization," Caldwell said, "not conception."
"Yes," Bronson said. "When the egg is fertilized."
"OK," Caldwell said. "So I'm not saying fertilization; I'm saying conception. When the egg attaches to the wall."
"Clearly," Pociask said, "our educational upgrades need to be to our sex education."
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