Robert66 wrote: ↑July 29th, 2021, 12:26 am
Gee wrote: ↑July 28th, 2021, 9:35 pm
Robert66 wrote: ↑July 28th, 2021, 7:48 pm
Gee wrote: ↑July 28th, 2021, 11:35 am
I believe the thinking is that if George Floyd had had a gun, then his murderers would have at least paused before murdering him.
OK, well, now it all makes sense. Floyd should have gotten with the program and armed himself. Logically then he was partly to blame for his own death. How soon after birth should US citizens do the logical thing and arm themselves? And what advice should worried parents give their little ones as they strap on their holster ready for school?
"Remember, Junior, you just can't be sure if a cop won't kneel on your neck for nine minutes, so shoot first and don't worry everything will be fine. Have you brushed your teeth?"
I apologize. When you stated that you wished to be "enlightened", I took it to mean that you wanted to understand the problem. I was wrong. Apparently you just wanted to share your ignorance, to insult the US, and complain about the people.
Gee
I am the one who should apologise. I am sorry. From outside it does seem insane, but of course the vast majority of US citizens are normal, decent, peace lovers. But it seems to me you don't agree with "the thinking" you describe - thinking which would appear to be part of the US problem. And if people think having a gun isnecessary, even if it merely delays being murdered, it does seem like futile thinking. Is there more to it?
If you are willing to talk about this rationally, then I am willing to accept your apology. Of course it is insane to kill people for no good reason, but as the George Floyd case made clear -- a gun is not necessary for that to happen. So what killed George Floyd? Ignorance, self-righteous arrogance, bias, and a system that divides people into the "good guys" and the "bad guys". It is even apparent in this thread; if you read the posts, you will find that the criminals are the "they", whereas the good guys are us. Anyone, who has killed with a gun is assumed to be a criminal, but is this true? What about self-defense, is that criminal also?
I suspect that no one in this thread has owned a gun, been threatened by a gun, and had to point a gun at another person (outside of military experience) -- because no one is speaking from personal experience. They are quoting statistics, parroting news articles, and generally making up their information to suit themselves. Am I right? Of course admitting that one has had this experience is somewhat detrimental to their credibility because the other posters will see this person as a quasi-criminal and will attack the person's points, or just go on an emotional rampage.
I have owned guns, had them in my house for most of my adulthood, been threatened with a gun, pointed a gun at another person, but personally know of no one who has been killed by a gun. I know of one person who was killed in a car accident, and others who were hurt badly. I know of three different people who died because of a mistake made by a surgeon. My experience seems to agree with the statistics that I found in Wiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preventab ... s_of_death
Death caused by medical malpractice is above 20%, from auto accidents is below 2%, and from guns is even lower. So I don't see the reason for all this drama.
People associate guns with death -- this is not necessarily true. One does not need to kill a person in order to stop him/her; a shot in the leg will stop a person without killing, but only experienced people seem to know this.
People associate guns with criminals -- this is nonsense. A lot of people own guns, but do not use them in criminal activity. There are a lot of crimes committed that have no guns involved, and often the police will raid a house for a
suspected crime, but find no evidence of that crime -- the news will then state that
guns were found in the house like that has some relevance. It has none. This is just the police trying to justify the fact that they scared the hell out of someone and tore up their house.
I have notice something about guns -- they are very obedient. They tend to stay where you put them and do what you want them to. They are a tool like a hammer, but they are represented as an object of fear or power depending on which end is pointed at you. The real problem seems to be centered around fear and or power, because it is not guns. According to the statistics, we would be wiser to be afraid of a doctor, who thinks that we need surgery.
As long as people keep the focus on guns, then they can avoid the real problems. Why would they do that?
Gee