Do you propose to ban private ownership of ALL firearms? What about knives? Baseball bats?
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Grotto19 wrote:It takes a great deal more conviction to kill someone with a Melee weapon than it does with a firearm. Banning firearms certainly would not end murder. People will kill with a sharpened pencil if driven enough. But it is a hell of a lot easier to work up the nerve to do it with a firearm than it is to do it with a knife.I understand the rationale behind gun control and what you've said above is certainly logical. But there is an underlying principle at work here that no gun control advocate wants to admit to because they're trying to create and maintain the illusion of moral superiority.
Robert66 wrote:Spiral Out I have answered that question already. If you were to read my posts you will know that what I have argued is:
When it comes to gun control, you and I are mostly in agreement. That's right - I agree there is the principle of a kill limit. What I don't agree with about is the location of that limit.
I don't have a problem with knives. I have been threatened by a would-be thief with a knife. The great thing about that scenario was that all I needed to do was run (no loss, no injury, not dead). A knife is a length of sharp metal, and a baseball bat a length of timber. What makes them useful is a handle. Are you going to ask me if I think the fitting of handles to lengths of metal or timber should be banned?
Questions (which, judging from what has happened in this discussion so far, will probably not be answered, maybe not even read):
What is the topic of this thread? Where would I find a problem with mass murder?
I think UniversalAlien is cranky with me, and we were only just getting to know one another. Now he has gone to his room, and shut the door, and left me out here with so many questions to ask him, like:
Where do you find all your fantastic statistics? The Ecclesia organisation - what are they like? Is Howard Nemerov a reliable source, someone I could trust to write with authority on Australian gun control? Do you think the Australian Bureau of Statistics, or the Australian Institute of Criminology might be helpful, if I were interested in finding out what's happening in that country? Is it OK to post stuff on a forum like this if it is untrue? (such as: 'All guns were banned in Australia, then the crime rate went so high, they had to rescind the laws" - remember that one? or: 'The gun control lobby will be celebrating news of the latest mass murder in USA' - such an elegant put-down)
But he can't hear me ... can you hear me UniversalAlien? can you hear me ...
...
[Cut to Major Tom - sorry - UniversalAlien, sitting in his tin can, far above the world, trying to pick up a signal, but getting a lot of lunatic interference]
UA [muttering to himself]: " ... those damned trolls, trying to ruin my plans ... wait a minute ... what's this ... sounds like Charlton ... could it be? What's he saying? ...
[Fuzzy image on screen, ghostly figure speaking to a group which looks like children in a classroom]: " ... and so that's why guns are so great ..." [Interrupting child] "Why are guns great?" ... "Because (What's your name, son? ... ) Because Tommy, there are bad people everywhere, but if you have enough guns, you don't need to worry. If a bad person tries to hurt you, or take something from you, well all you need to is shoot some holes in them, and then they won't hurt you" [Children all clap]
Robert66 wrote:When it comes to gun control, you and I are mostly in agreement. That's right - I agree there is the principle of a kill limit. What I don't agree with about is the location of that limit.Great! Then where do you draw your line for an acceptable kill limit, and please provide your reasoning in order to justify why you draw that line where you do.
Robert66 wrote:I don't have a problem with knives. I have been threatened by a would-be thief with a knife.Well, if that "would-be thief" had a gun then I doubt he would have used that either, since he didn't use the knife. But we're not talking about "would-be thieves" here, we're talking about gun control and mass murder. If that "would-be thief" had been a murderer with a knife, or a baseball bat for that matter, then you'd be dead.
Robert66 wrote:Where would I find a problem with mass murder?Look to any region of the world that has ever experienced war. Look to Imperial China. Look to Feudal Japan. Look to the Crusades. Look to the Inquisition. Look to the Witch Trials. Look to Nazi Germany and the use of gas chambers. Look to Jonestown and the use of poisoned drinks. Look to Syria's use of chemical weapons on its own citizens. Look anywhere in the world throughout the history of Humankind.
Grotto19 wrote:If we really wanted to cut roadside fatalities to zero we would set the max speed to something like 15MPH.And if we really wanted to cut homicides to zero we would have to physically incapacitate people against their will and to the point that they could not harm themselves or anyone else. But then who would have the capacity to incapacitate these people? So the zero kill limit is both logically and morally impossible.
Therefore, gun control advocates must have some realistic number greater than zero for this kill limit.What is the value of human life that we should seek to impose a kill-limit?
Yet they cannot justify what that kill limit should be because they are trying to maintain the illusion of moral superiority and thus would have no tenable moral reasoning for any number greater than zero.
Spiral Out wrote:Question to Robert66 and Rederic:I've answered this so many times. No, not a complete ban on firearms.
Do you propose to ban private ownership of ALL firearms? What about knives? Baseball bats?
Vijaydevani wrote:For what it is worth, we have gun control in India. Licences are very hard to come by and few have them. And I can say that we do not have the kind of stuff that happens in the USA. Right to bear arms and such I do not want to comment on, but the fact is, gun violence is very rare. Mass murders are unheard of except when terrorists attack.Great! Great civilization the India of today isn't it? But why do stories like this in your well gun-controlled country bother me? Why do some of us feel gun control caters to the jungle mentality?
-- Updated October 14th, 2014, 6:30 am to add the following --
Oh and of course, I do not recall a single incidence of a rampage in a school in our history.
NPR's Julie McCarthy reports today on another alleged gang rape and murder in India — this one involving two teenage sisters from the lowest Hindu caste whose bodies were found hanging from a mango tree.See whole article here: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/201 ... d-in-india
Julie says the two girls, ages 14 and 15, were killed in a village about 140 miles east of the capital New Delhi......
The Press Trust of India says charges have been filed against seven people, including two police constables. Local media report that one of the policemen allegedly participated in the attack. The other is said to have refused to listen to relatives who reported the two girls missing.......
The world watched in horror as the terrorists prowled and murdered for hours through the streets of a major city in India. The mayhem went all but unabated. No one tried to stop them -- because no one could stop them. None of the citizens were armed.See whole article here: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/200 ... india.html
India has a long history of gun control. Under British occupation, the citizens of India had no rights to private gun ownership. Even Mahatma Gandhi protested the firearms prohibition:
"Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon the Act depriving a whole nation of arms, as the blackest." (M. Gandhi, An Autobiography: The Story of my Experiments with Truth.)
UniversalAlien wrote:I was not trying to say that it is a great thing or that we are a great civilization. I have no such illusions. I was simply stating the facts. Gun control here is such that there is great deal of back ground check before a licence is issued. The licence is renewed every three years after checking the three year record of the person. Any criminal act, and the gun goes. I personally hold a licence, and do bear a firearm. But only one is allowed per person and nothing about a .32 NB ( whatever that might be called in the USA. I am obviously not a gun guy. I just have one for protection an have never had cause to use it.)Vijaydevani wrote:For what it is worth, we have gun control in India. Licences are very hard to come by and few have them. And I can say that we do not have the kind of stuff that happens in the USA. Right to bear arms and such I do not want to comment on, but the fact is, gun violence is very rare. Mass murders are unheard of except when terrorists attack.Great! Great civilization the India of today isn't it? But why do stories like this in your well gun-controlled country bother me? Why do some of us feel gun control caters to the jungle mentality?
-- Updated October 14th, 2014, 6:30 am to add the following --
Oh and of course, I do not recall a single incidence of a rampage in a school in our history.
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