Alelou wrote:Of course guns don't kill people, people do. But guns make it a lot easier for people to kill people. Surely we can agree on that, even if we don't agree on gun control? You want to kill as many people as possible before the police shoot you, because you're a freaking nutcase who wants to commit suicide-by-cop and take as many people with you as you can in the process, what are you going to use? A gun or a baseball bat? I mean, come on. And if you're a coward who's afraid he might not win a struggle with someone, what will you choose, a gun or some hand-to-hand weapon?
A Lincoln Towncar makes it a lot easier to kill people too. A stainless steel grill can't hurt anyone, but put a V8 behind it and you can smear kill a family of four without scratching your ass twice. That's what that dude in Japan did, and then he used a knife to finish off the ones he only winged. That old guy killed all kinds of people in that farmer's market because he mixed the pedals up. So are we going to ban all the cars now?


You and everyone else trying to get guns or knives banned is wasting their effort because they're focusing on the wrong thing. Why not take all of that anti-gun energy and put it into anti-violence - and yes, there is a difference. Instead of trying to keep people from killing each other even though they want to, why not try to keep them from wanting to kill each other to begin with?
justTripn wrote:If you want to own a gun, you also have to consider the odds of you or a family member, including teenage children, ever becoming temporarily depressed or suicidal. Go through your inventory of friends and family and count up the ones who have ever been suicidal to get your estimate of the likelihood of this. Doesn't matter if everyone you know is emotionally healthy at the time you choose to get the gun.
i was a teenager too once, and so were my sisters before me, I was even kind of moody and depressed, yet I never entertained the idea of killing myself. And even without a gun, there are plenty of ways to off oneself. Gravity works pretty swell, for example, especially when combined with a length of rope or great height. If one is concerned about their kids, then they need to be involved with them - it takes more than just not having a firearm they might theoretically blow their own brains out with because they might theoretically want to.
The other big risk is small children. I had a shortcut way of dealing with deadly risks. If I can imagine it happening, it can happen, so prevent it. Maybe this was extreme, but they had taken me by surprise too many times with their newfound athletic abilities and determination--to climb out of cribs, escape over fences, open doors, and wander outside. So I nailed the bookshelves to the wall (in case they tried to climb a bookshelf, it wouldn't collapse on them). I put bars on the low to the floor third-floor window. I chained the gate shut. And yet, one baby did roll head over heals down a flight of stairs at some point---escaping from supposedly secured area to do it.
Again, I was an infant too, and I even had my fair share of accidents, one of which as a big header off of the kitchen table. Yet I never blew my head off, and neither did my sisters, even though there were loaded guns in the house. Imagine that. Now I'm guessing that it had something to do with them being kept inaccessible to short people, and later on my parents having some talks with us about how dangerous guns could be, never to touch them, etc.
And why shouldn't I argue with people one by one about this, even if I've already "lost" at a Constitutional level.
Like I said, if something works for you, fine, that's how you want to do things. But don't make the mistake of assuming that it's something everyone else should do too, or in any way attempt to force them to do so through activism aimed at laws that would ban guns. I have freedoms that I enjoy too, and I don't appreciate them getting stomped on because someone else thinks they know better for me and that it's for my own good.
Everyone has a right to smoke, but smoking is becoming frowned upon, and rates of smoking are dropping in this country.
Actually, they don't because there are so many limitations on the use of tobacco, and I can seriously see it getting banned altogether in the near future.
If I think gun ownership is a bad idea, because the risks to innocent bystanders is too high, why can't I frown on gun ownership and argue against this practice?
Why not argue for better enforcement of anti-gang laws and harsher penalties for the actual people who are responsible for that stuff happening instead of trying to take away guns from everyone else who isn't?
Why can't I lobby for controls and safety regulations for guns and gun owners?
Sure, but we already have plenty of them; the real trick is enforcing them.

You have to get a drivers license to drive a car.
There is no Constitutional amendment protecting the right to drive a car, and I highly doubt there ever will be. Driving a car is a privilege, because essentially it's just a form of transportation, and there are plenty of others, including walking. Owning a gun is a right, because as the Supreme Court has pointed out, it's connected with our right to defend ourselves.
And why can't I howl at the random violence that takes our random high school students who wander into the wrong neighborhoods? Of COURSE I blame people. I want to vilanize those who shoot their neighbors-- accidentally or on purpose-- make sure no one remembers them fondly.
Everyone already does that. The thing is, a lot of folks like you also make the mistake of putting the blame on inanimate hunks of metal instead of keeping the blame squarely on the shoulders of the people causing the problems.
No, but they might still lose a few fingers if they aren't taught how to responsibly use them.justTripn wrote:I prefer knives. At least my kids won't get caught in the crossfire of any knife attacks.
