Rederic wrote:Would you agree that a blanket ban on driving a vehicle whilst drunk is done for the good of the community? Does it infringe on the drunks freedom?
Interesting analogy, but equating gun owners to drunk drivers is not even remotely accurate. Gun owners are not actively endangering the public through irresponsible actions like drunk drivers are. You'll not find any statistics anywhere that claim any lives were lost (as in drunk driving fatalities) simply due to the responsible and lawful
ownership of guns.
So far we have attempts to equate gun owners to pedophiles and now to drunk drivers. What might be next, gun owners are all terrorists?? Let's keep the analogies realistic for more productive discussions.
I don't understand why you think your right to own whatever gun you want, without controls, is above the right of children to come home safely from school.
My ownership of an assault rifle would not harm a single child, ever. The guns I have owned for years upon years have never harmed anyone. There is no logic or precedent to support your statement.
The argument that you need guns to protect yourself from your government, is just absurd & I think you know it.
I've never made that argument. You must be confusing me with someone else?
The land of the free, so frightened of your next door neighbour & your government that you have to arm yourselves to the teeth. Doesn't sound very free to me & certainly not free of fear.
I can't speak for others, but I personally don't fear my neighbor or the government, and I'm certainly not "armed to the teeth". That's not why I own the handful of guns I have.
>>>
Lucylu wrote:If you are a responsible person you would be more than happy to submit to a long process of training and testing before being given a single handgun.
Why does responsibility necessarily mean that the person must capitulate to arbitrary (and unproven) regulations? There are innumerable instances of people who have never taken a single safety or testing course having owned guns responsibly and safely.
The gun owner would then be able to prove their continued responsible behaviour, over time being permitted to own other weapons and would agree at all times to be completely transparent about his/her weapons, undergoing any checks necessary on a regular basis (be they of his property, his physical condition, his known associations, or his mentally capacity).
That's an egregious invasion of privacy. Also, it has been proven that the knowledge of the presence of the type of weapons and the particular location of those weapons by people who have no particular personal interest or investment in the weapon, property or owner greatly increases the likelihood of criminal theft and potential homicide in the committing of that theft.
Also, who determines the specific criteria for these checks and what are the objective parameters for determining whether the owner passes these checks? Who is to be the "neutral third party" who monitors these checks to make sure there is no unfair practices?
When someone is given one, and then shows that they are not responsible it is already too late.
Yes indeed, I knew this argument would come sooner or later. This logic would preclude anyone and everyone from owning any type of weapon. The personnel of the police, military, FBI, secret service, CIA, etc., who
are allowed ownership and/or possession of these weapons, are all made up of people who are just as susceptible to psychotic breaks as anyone else. If one of these people decides to go on a killing spree, then they are even more capable of inflicting even more damage to more people than the average citizen.
Don't be mad, but I do personally feel that it is a reasonable line to draw that civilians should not have automatic weapons or more than 2 handguns guns each.
Why 2? Why not 1 or 3? It's an arbitrary subjective judgment with no logical or justifiable basis. What makes your particular judgment objectively the best standard?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but weren't assault rifles specifically designed to be able to kill as many people as possible with the greatest degree of accuracy?
That's correct, but why does that matter? They aren't required to be used in that capacity and they don't only function in that capacity. If someone owns a gun that can fire off 1,000 rounds a minute, that doesn't mean that the gun is any more inherently dangerous that a single-shot muzzle loader.
The security of such an object (in my opinion) is better left to professionals who work in teams, around the clock so that the margin for error or potential hazards are as small as humanly possible. The responsibility is too great for one person, in a residential setting.
Are you aware of gun safes? It's basically a heavy-duty security vault for your firearms. That would satisfy your security requirement.
Owning an assault rifle isn't really necessary in order for you to protect yourself and your family, or in order to fulfill your right to bear arms.
That also doesn't make any difference. There are also a lot of other things that aren't necessary for people to own. Is it necessary for someone to own a Hummer H2 as a daily driver to work? A Prius would do just as well.
There is a real distinction between an individual and a group of trained professionals on a military base, don't you agree?
Not necessarily. What do you think the key differences are?
I know you would like to have what ever guns you like, but there is only so much one man can do. You wouldn't be able to provide the level of security required on your own
Yes I most certainly can. Gun safes! There are about as secure as it gets.
and you never know when you may become vulnerable to illness or human error.
That goes for everyone everywhere. Even trained professionals on military bases.
It's just that no one person could be expected to do it alone.
I'm not sure why you're saying that. Do you have any specific examples of real life occurrences that you are basing that statement on?
Being truly responsible is also recognizing and admitting that something is beyond your individual capabilities and that it would be unsafe to proceed.
You'll have to provide some examples of how my ownership of assault rifles is "beyond my individual capabilities and unsafe".
>>>
Wilson wrote:But I think what underlies this debate, and in particular Spiral Out's attitude, is that he is concerned only about his own self-interest.
Not entirely. One of the primary reasons I own guns is for home protection and thus the safety of myself and my family in the event of a home invasion, that while being unlikely, is not impossible.
And for him that personal right is more important than a safer country for the citizens.
The unjustified implication here is that the simple ownership and/or possession of guns inherently causes an unsafe condition for the country as a whole. This is patently and provably false.
We can go back and forth about statistics that supposedly show that substitutes would be found for guns if they were harder to obtain so that the death rate wouldn't change - but honest to God, that's ridiculous.
It's not ridiculous at all. You're still stuck thinking entirely within the framework of only one particular type of violence.
Domestic violence in a household where there are guns vs one in which there are none is the difference between a black eye and a dead significant other.
That's a blatant oversimplification. Are you at all aware of what domestic violence really is? Do you honestly think it's the difference between death and a black eye? That is extremely offensive to victims of domestic violence. It shows a lack of empathy for victims of domestic violence to belittle their plight like that. Maybe you could speak with some of those victims so you can understand what really happens?
Eliminating guns wouldn't eliminate murder or injuries, of course, but it flies in the face of common sense to say that that the country wouldn't be at least somewhat safer with a more restrictive gun policy, especially after those restrictions had been in place for a while.
Nobody is saying that all guns should be available to all people at all times and in all circumstances. What
is being said is this:
If the right to engage in an activity must be earned (by the actor) through a requisite of responsible behaviors (by the actor) then the restriction of an activity also must be required to be earned (by the restrictor) through a requisite of irresponsible behaviors (by the actor) as well. This would be a fair gun control policy.
Blanket laws that group lawful and responsible citizens in with criminals is simply not justifiable.
My guess is that those who want more restrictions on gun ownership are more empathetic, more community-minded, more concerned about the welfare of others.
That's a presumptive view and is insulting to gun-owners. Can you show any logic or precedents to support your statement that gun owners are any less empathetic than non-gun-owners?
And those who vehemently oppose restrictions tend to be more selfish, less willing to give up their own pleasures for the benefit of their neighbors.
Equally presumptive and offensive.
I say that not in order to put down those who disagree with me but just as a general observation, to which there are probably many exceptions. Thoughts?
I think your position is just as biased as everyone else's who is involved in this discussion, mine included. You seem to imply that your position is somehow more "objective" than others. All views here are invariably an exercise in subjective and arbitrary line-drawing. We draw those lines to suit our comfort level; simply to satisfy our desires and allay our fears.
I also wonder how you have "observed" this selfish tendency and lack of empathy (other than your own biased perception) in those who oppose unfair, unjustified, unproven, ineffective and arbitrarily contrived restrictions on gun ownership.
Thank you all for your thoughtful input.