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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Reasonable Gun Restrictions
Sunday, July 29, 2012 7:18 PM
MAGONSDAUGHTER
Sunday, July 29, 2012 7:21 PM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Well, according to the tally I've been keeping so far- You think police should have guns under special circumstances, other less lethal weapons under normal circumstances. You do not think citizens should be able to qualify to match police armaments. And you believe all weapons should be treated equally... The sum of which would leave me with no ability under your preferred scheme to carry any weapon for my defense. --Anthony Hmm, I think you have added 1 = 1 and gotten to 7. or maybe I am not making myself clear.Or maybe I am being inconsistent. All of these are possible. I really don't want people to be able to have 'easy' access to lethal weapons without restrictions or permits. I'd like there to be some fairly heavy restrictions on military style weapons and armaments in general. I see the need for police to sometimes use weapons and sometimes use some fairly heavy duty ones, but I'd prefer them not to be armed with guns on their regular beat. I can't argue or debate exactly what sort of weapons should be legal, should be available by permit, and should be illegal because here is where my life kind of veers away from that path. I own no weapons that have been purpose built for killing and maiming. That is, I own knives and hammers and other equipment that could be used as weapons, but I have bought none for the purpose of self defence, or for that matter to prevent tyranny. I can't ever imagine a time when I will do so. So I will never own a 'purpose built' weapon as far as I can see. Unless my husband becomes an active member of Medievel Reenactments, and starts building trebuchets in the back garden;) I hope you understand how this does not correlate with me calling for an absolute ban on anything, but that I am limited in my interest in the nitty gritty of what should or should not happen. And I guess that is really for you in the US to work out.
Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Well, according to the tally I've been keeping so far- You think police should have guns under special circumstances, other less lethal weapons under normal circumstances. You do not think citizens should be able to qualify to match police armaments. And you believe all weapons should be treated equally... The sum of which would leave me with no ability under your preferred scheme to carry any weapon for my defense. --Anthony
Sunday, July 29, 2012 7:23 PM
Quote:Well I don't see you as making any compromises on your position
Sunday, July 29, 2012 8:13 PM
1KIKI
Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.
Sunday, July 29, 2012 8:15 PM
Quote:I'm curious if you could repeat to me what you think my major point was through this whole discussion.
Sunday, July 29, 2012 8:34 PM
Sunday, July 29, 2012 8:59 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: And the related point is that if you can find a way to mitigate the destructiveness, then the guns aren't a problem. In other words, fix the real problem. In the bird's eye view of things, what do you feel should have the most weight - the destructiveness of guns AS CURRENTLY STRUCTURED in terms of laws and attitudes, or the theoretical possibility they might possibly be used in rebellion. SignyM: I swear, if we really knew what was being decided about us in our absence, and how hosed the government is prepared to let us be, we would string them up.
Sunday, July 29, 2012 9:19 PM
Sunday, July 29, 2012 9:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: It may be that your statements were not internally consistent. Now that I know you weren't trying to envision a specific weapons control system, I also know there was no reason for such consistency.
Quote:But it may be folly, because asking someone who has never thought of owning a weapon what a reasonable system of weapons restrictions might be is perhaps like asking a blind man the color of a rainbow. (I don't presume who is the 'blind man' here because I've never lived in a world that felt so secure that the idea of owning a weapon was alien.) Our worldviews may be so far apart that we can't even understand each other. But god damnit if I haven't been trying.
Monday, July 30, 2012 2:07 AM
6IXSTRINGJACK
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: I'm not sure what you're getting at here. Are you suggesting that people will still commit suicide even without guns in every room? I'm sure you're correct, since suicide existed before guns did. Are you suggesting guns should be available because they're such a nifty and effective suicide tool? Let's see...
Quote:Nope. That's not it. You say yourself that hanging would have been more effective for your uncle.
Quote:And yet, more people hanged themselves in America than in Cuba (1056 for Cuba; 6642 for Team USA). And vastly more people blew their heads off with guns in America. Overall suicide rates per capita in both countries are within 1.3% of each other overall, though, with Cubans committing 1.3 suicides more per 100,000 people. As hellish as we're told Cuba is, that number should be higher, shouldn't it?
Quote:So in your uncle's case, was it national or spiritual pride to inflict a gunshot wound and lingering death on himself, or was it just using whatever was handy?
Quote:As noted, about 1.3 people per capita more than in the U.S. How great has your life been up to this point, Jack? Would a bullet to the brain be a more noble death than on overdose or jumping off a building?
Monday, July 30, 2012 3:03 AM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Geezer The study showing higher gun ownership rates with higher deaths and violence was done by the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. Unless you're claiming that Harvard is significantly biased, I don't think you have a point to make.
Quote: Also, the study controlled for "resource deprivation, urbanization, aggravated assault, robbery, unemployment, and alcohol consumption" all known to affect murder rate separately from gun ownership.
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:14 AM
CAVETROLL
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: TROLL "gun ownership" The constitution says 'arms'.
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:29 AM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/Ushomicidesbyweapon.svg Well, OK - I'll kick it off. This is the big negative about handguns. To my mind, anything or set of things which purports to be a reason to have handguns with the current level of restriction had better overcome this big negative. I know the usual arguments - supposedly, handguns deter far more (unspecified) crimes than the number of murders they are used for. The figure I have read from the NRA is something like 10:1. But that supposes a baseline level of violence that would make this country about 10x more criminal than anywhere else on the planet. It also supposes that the prevention of a property crime is a justification for allowing the condition for murder. And in places with 'stand your ground' laws crime rates haven't gone down. If guns were such a good deterrent, you would see some effect. I sum, I don't buy the argument on the numbers of potential crimes prevented, I don't buy the argument that incipient property crimes rationalize keeping a condition for murder, and I don't buy the claim that handguns reduce crime at all. If you include suicides and accidental killings, and the number of people who are permanently maimed from handguns, the cost of medical care and policing, the negatives get significantly worse. Some of the other positives are sport, collecting, and rebellion. Sport in my framework is basically play. Collecting is a hobby. Rebellion is political. I don't think we should consider play and hobbies to be valuable enough to outweigh the large numbers of murders. The potential for rebellion is up for discussion, but I can't think of any that were won with handguns. Concluding, since the negatives outweigh the positives, following from that, we should reduce the number of handguns or improve the quality of guns owners, or both.
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:36 AM
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:38 AM
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:51 AM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Anthony I find it more useful to focus on the very large numbers of deaths, disabilities, injuries and violence visited on citizens BY citizens first. "In the U.S. for 2010, there were 31513 deaths from firearms, distributed as follows by mode of death: Suicide 19308; Homicide 11015; Accident 600." "In 2008, the number of fatal and non-fatal gunshot wounds hit 110,215, the highest total during the nine-year period surveyed." "Information collected regarding type of weapon showed that firearms were used in 67.1 percent of the Nation’s murders, 42.6 percent of robberies, and 20.9 percent of aggravated assaults. (Weapons data are not collected for forcible rape.)" This doesn't include intimidation or harassment. This is massive non-governmental violence by anybody's measure.
Monday, July 30, 2012 6:18 AM
Quote:Additionally, the figures for suicide can be removed from these statistics.
Monday, July 30, 2012 7:36 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote: I almost get the sense that you're compromising with what you THINK other people are asking, and not grasping what they're actually posting.
Quote:1. Demanding enforcement and prosecution of the existing laws. Make all prosecutions federal, so they have stiffer penalties and be on some kind of national database, so people can't get away with things state by state.
Quote:2. As above, background checks for private sales of ANY kind. Wouldn't stop criminals, but it would be one step which might slow things down. Any buyer AND seller found to have a gun that was purchased without same and/or without registration should be held accountable in some way. Might increase the difficulty of volume straw-man sales and illegal private sales.
Quote:3. Limiting sales of any and all guns to one TYPE per person and only one gun AT A TIME. Would make it harder to buy guns in quantity...yes, there are ways around it; buy one kind of gun one time, another time, but would sure slow quantity purchases.
Quote:4. Any dealer found breaking the laws would get one strike, or two, or whatever, and then lose their license. Yes, they can open up under another name, but it would take effort to do it repeatedly and again, make getting around the laws more difficult.
Quote:5. No ammunition sold over the internet, of any kind. I would add, proof of registration of a gun before ammo for that gun can be sold, but that's just me.
Quote:6. Sales of those high-volume clips should be illegal; they do so much more harm when people go berserk, we could at least minimize the damage.
Quote: Interesting here that the magazine is considered more dangerous than the gun, since you do advocate the legal acquisition of guns but want to outlaw the magazines entirely. What would constitute a 'high volume' magazine, and would you also restrict the constabulary similarly?
Quote: I wonder what is inherently dangerous about people 'stockpiling' guns (presumably owning more than one or two?) and why we feel the need to target this.
Quote: I've never lived in a world that felt so secure that the idea of owning a weapon was alien.
Quote: what do you feel should have the most weight - the destructiveness of guns AS CURRENTLY STRUCTURED in terms of laws and attitudes, or the theoretical possibility they might possibly be used in rebellion...... You have made many arguments, so the one I'm going with is the one you keep returning to - that you personally would be powerless in the face of a government you felt had overstepped some essential barrier, unless you had a gun.
Quote: But the terms given to you were I think very unrealistic, a dramatic/ heroic crossing a line - or not. They aren't terms I accept or agree with.... So while I think I understand your position, and where it comes from, I don't agree that it's a vital choice in this society at this time.
Quote: I don't feel the same sense of reassurance that tyrannies can be overthrown by an armed population. When I think of revolutions, I generally think of bloodbaths, countless dead, and often a replacement systems of government that are often as bad if not worse than the tyranny that preceeded it. And at best, I see the wounds that pass on from generation to generation by violent conflict, even when it is over.
Quote: I also think figures like "gunshot wounds" are curious. Just ways to inflate figures.
Quote: I have been trying to envision a comprehensive weapons control system that might address the widely different concerns of people on all sides of the issue. Some system of compromise that might grant the the maximum number of people the maximum amount of satisfaction.
Monday, July 30, 2012 7:57 AM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:Originally posted by CaveTroll: 31,513 fatalities works out to 0.0000954% of the population. Tragic, but hardly a motivating percentage. Compared to the 37,261 auto fatalities in 2008. Almost 6,000 more lives taken by those bloodthirsty killing machines. That's a whole 0.0001129% of the population. Truly a massive, non-governmental violent action.
Quote: Additionally, the figures for suicide can be removed from these statistics. Otherwise we'll need to outlaw rope, tall buildings, bridges, and drain cleaner. Homicides likewise occur from other causes, so it will be a never ending hunt until we all live in nice, safe, padded isolation rooms with no other human contact.
Monday, July 30, 2012 9:13 AM
Quote:Do guns make us safer? It's an article of faith among many gun owners that yes they do. Last week, I presented in this space some evidence of the dangers of gun ownership: the elevated risks of accident and suicide in households that own guns. I pointed to a paradox: More Americans support gun rights, even as fewer Americans own guns. I explained this paradox with data that suggested many Americans hold false ideas about the prevalence of crime -- and wrongly look to gun ownership for self-defense. Over the following seven days, I heard from many angry gun-rights supporters. They argued that gun ownership is necessary for self-protection. They narrated stories of how their guns had saved them or their loved ones in armed confrontations. And of course that must sometimes be true. The question is: How often is it true? And how do the benefits of widespread gun ownership compare with the measurable harms in higher rates of accident, suicide and crime? Government figures from the National Survey of Criminal Victimization suggest 100,000 uses a year of guns in self-defense against crime, the vast majority of these uses being the display of weapons to deter or dissuade. {By the way, I will grant you the efficacy of guns displayed as a deterrent, against someone with no gun; I forgot that last time} There are some problems with these government numbers, beginning with the fact that they are based on data from the early 1990s, when crime rates were much higher than they are today. The number of criminal attempts has declined 30% to 40% since then, and one would expect the number of occasions for self-defense to decline correspondingly. For gun advocates, however, the main problem with the government estimate is that it is not nearly high enough to support their case that private gun ownership is the best way to stop crime. Many of them prefer another statistic, this from a study published in 1995 arguing that Americans use guns in self-defense some 2.5 million times a year, or once every 13 seconds. A Google search finds more than 1 million citations of this study posted online. You can read the study at http://www.pulpless.com/gunclock/kleck1.html. The trouble is that this claim of 2.5 million defensive gun uses is manifestly flawed and misleading. Let's review the ways: 1) Even if you think the 2.5 million statistic was correct at the time it was computed, it must be obsolete today, for the same reason that the victimization survey data is obsolete. The 1995 study that generated the figure of 2.5 million defensive gun uses was based upon data collected when crime rates were vastly higher than they are today. Some of the data was collected in 1981, near the very peak of the post-Vietnam War crime wave. It's just incredible on its face that defensive gun use would remain fixed at one level even as criminal attempts tumbled by one-third to one-half. 2) When we hear the phrase "defensive gun use," we're inclined to imagine a gun owner producing a weapon to defend himself or herself against bodily threat. Not so fast. The authors of the 1995 study aggregated 13 prior polls of gun users, most of which did not define what was meant by "use." As the authors of the 1995 aggregation study themselves ruefully acknowledged: "The lack of such detail raises the possibility that the guns were not actually 'used' in any meaningful way. Instead, (respondents) might be remembering occasions on which they merely carried a gun for protection 'just in case' or investigated a suspicious noise in their backyard, only to find nothing." In other words, even if the figure of 2.5 million defensive gun uses had been correct at some point back in the early 1990s or early 1980s, the vast majority of those "uses" may be householders picking up a shotgun before checking out the noises in the garage made by raccoons rooting through the trash. 3) The figure of 2.5 million defensive gun uses is supposed to represent the number of such uses per year. Yet none of the studies aggregated in the 1995 paper measured annual use. Most asked some version of the question, "Have you ever?" Two asked instead, "Have you within the past five years?" The authors of the 1995 study took those latter two surveys, multiplied the rate in the survey by the number of U.S. households, then divided by five to produce an annual figure. But people's memories of fixed periods of time are highly unreliable. It's not very likely that many respondents thought, "Today it's August 1990. I do remember scaring off a prowler in June 1984. But that was more than five years ago, so the answer to the question is 'No.' Not within the past five years." More likely they thought, "I'll never forget the night I warned off a prowler with my shotgun. That was scary. Man, I'm glad I had my gun ready. When was that anyway? Three years ago? Four? I don't remember exactly, but the answer to the question is 'Yes.' " 4) Meanwhile, over in the world of hard numbers, the FBI counted an average of 213 justified firearm homicides per year over the period 2005-2010. If the figure of 2.5 million defensive gun uses were any way close to accurate, it would imply that brandishing a gun in self-defense led to a fatality only 0.00852% of the time. That seems almost miraculously low. 5) Underneath all these statistical problems is a larger conceptual problem. When we hear "defensive gun use," we're invited to think of a law-abiding citizen confronting a criminal aggressor. Yet crime does not always present itself so neatly. The vast majority of homicides take place between intimates, not strangers. Assaults, too, are often an acquaintance crime. When guns are produced by two parties to a confrontation, one party may deter the other. Yet it may be seriously misleading to designate one of these persons as a "criminal" and the other as a "law-abiding citizen." Perhaps when we hear "defensive gun use," we should not imagine a householder confronting a prowler. Perhaps we should think of two acquaintances, both with some criminal history, getting into a drunken fight, both producing guns, one ending up dead or wounded, the other ending up as a "DGU" statistic -- but both of them entangled in a scenario that would have produced only injuries if neither had carried a gun. To be clear: I'm not disputing that guns sometimes save lives. They must. I'm certainly not disputing that the Constitution secures the right of individual gun ownership. It does. I'm questioning the claim that widespread gun ownership makes America a safer place. The research supporting that claim is pretty weak -- and is contradicted above all by the plain fact that most other advanced countries have many fewer guns and also many fewer crimes and criminals. Should you own a gun? In some few cases, the answer to that question of wisdom is probably yes. But most of the time, gun owners are frightening themselves irrationally. They have conjured in their own imaginations a much more terrifying environment than genuinely exists -- and they are living a fantasy about the security their guns will bestow. And to the extent that they are right -- to the extent that the American environment is indeed more dangerous than the Australian or Canadian or German or French environment -- the dangers gun owners face are traceable to the prevalence of the very guns from which they so tragically mistakenly expect to gain safety. http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/30/opinion/frum-guns-safer/index.html?hpt=hp_t1
Monday, July 30, 2012 9:24 AM
Quote:First, I apologize for letting my frustration get the better of me.
Quote:I'm not debating GUN OWNERSHIP or the value of guns intrinsically
Quote:I believe I BEGAN from a point of compromise, accepting that guns will always be around, rather than even considering otherwise.
Quote:Let's see if I can take it step by step.
Quote:My #1 should have been registration of all firearms
Quote:I think you caveated this idea of a national database. I would like to hear again your argument against this...I seem to remember it again as being fear of the government.
Quote:Demanding enforcement and prosecution of the existing laws.
Quote: As above, background checks for private sales of ANY kind.
Quote:You never addressed this, as far as I can tell.
Quote:I clarified my point since it caused some confusion. My point was that there seems to me to be no need for people to have many guns of many different types. You find no problem with people "stockpiling" guns of all kinds. I see no reason for this. Again, leaving out the government, why do you believe this is acceptable?
Quote:Any dealer found breaking the laws would get one strike, or two, or whatever, and then lose their license.
Quote:Your argument was that buying over the internet's "only effect is to make ammunition less expensive". I disagree. I believe it's major effect is to allow people to purchase high volumes of ammunition anonymously--it is only AFTER some kind of mass slaughter that investigations discover said purchase.
Quote:I should clarify that by "stockpiling" I mean many guns, not just one or two.
Quote:Sales of those high-volume clips should be illegal; they do so much more harm when people go berserk, we could at least minimize the damage.
Quote:Again you go back to limiting the police the same as limiting the population. I explained why I think the police should have an advantage over the populace; things which are outlawed are still obtainable, and regulations are regularly gotten around; to put the police up against potential criminals with a lot more firepower is illogical to me; in such a world the police would be severely handicapped--I believe that happened in L.A. once? The police have a job; to minimize damage to the populace. I believe they SHOULD have the advantage in the real world.
Quote:I made the argument that the police, by virtue of their occupation, are held more to account than individuals; they are USUALLY seriously investigated when they use their firearms at all, to ascertain whether it was an acceptable use or not.
Quote:and again that has come back to two things: The rights of gun owners to enjoy their guns, and insurrection.
Quote:There we go beyond the idea of killing. Gunshot wounds are traumatic; to dismiss them as one aspect of the problems with gun ownership is I believe a fallacy. People who have merely been intimidated at the barrel of a gun, or suffered merely "wounds" (in some cases wounds which have changed their lives forever, as some have in the recent massacre), have had their rights abused and usually carry away fear of further intimidation or harm.
Quote:versus the rights of people who want to pursue a "hobby", which in essence, unless used for criminal purposes, is what gun ownership IS.
Quote:An armed criminal is far more adept at the use of a gun
Quote:So going from the basic premise that people will own guns, for whatever reason, what are the arguments in favor of those things?
Quote:Okay, I'll stipulate that we can remove suicides from these statistics, if you'll further stipulate that we can remove self-defense from the reasons to carry a gun.
Monday, July 30, 2012 11:12 AM
Quote:I want you to acknowledge that the government DID use lists of firearm owners to seize weapons from the homes of lawful citizens in the 21st century in America.
Quote: 1) A law stating that the list of all registered firearm owners could only be accessed with a court order specifying either the firarm or person to be researched, and solely for the purpose of investigating a crime involving a firearm. 2) A law stating that if the first law is overturned or overruled, the list shall be destroyed and any use of the list thereafter shall be considered a violation of civil liberties.
Quote:" As above, background checks for private sales of ANY kind." Not only did I agree that it was a good idea, I expressed my wish that I could access such a system right now. My only concern was the government having access to all gun ownership records, which I already dealt with above.
Quote: I enjoy lawful use of a variety of firearms for sporting purposes and recreation. There is absolutely no reason to limit the amount or type of firearms I own.
Quote: You claim (incorrectly, to my mind) that bulk ammo can be purchased online anonymously.
Quote: If you want ammunition purchases to not be anonymous, then say so.
Quote: I see you returned to the stockpiling argument later on in your post. Well, what *do* you mean by stockpiling? You seem to think owning five guns is okay. So a survivalist camp of 20 people with 100 guns in it would be okay. I'm not sure what you're aiming for. I am also disturbed that we are talking about militia groups and survivalists as though they are a primary threat. Of all the gun violence we are so deeply concerned about, how much has been attributed to such groups? On the few instances when it happens, it gets a lot of press. But it happens exceedingly infrequently. These are not the droids you're looking for.
Quote: what is a high-volume clip? What is the threshold upon which a clip is high volume?
Quote: Why are high-capacity ammo magazines readily available on the open market in America, despite having been banned in 1994? .....ammunition magazines with which a shooter can rattle off more than 30 bullets in rapid succession. http://articles.nydailynews.com/2011-01-11/news/27087057_1_ammo-bullets-in-rapid-succession-federal-assault-weapons-ban
Quote: Any threat a policeman can be expected to face is one that I can be expected to face FIRST. That's how it works. The criminal is harming me, I call the police, and they respond. Usually, I (the citizen) am the first contact with the criminal, not the police. So why shouldn't the police and I be allowed to have the same weapons?
Quote: Individuals are usually just as strenuously investigated when they use their firearms. They are asked all the same questions. But police are not usually convicted of crimes when they misuse their weapons. More often, they simply lose their jobs.
Quote: You seem to neglect defense. Whether against the tyrant you believe to be a myth, or against the criminal who would do you harm.
Quote:I have not observed this to be the case.
Monday, July 30, 2012 11:27 AM
Quote:Your beginning opinion was ALWAYS that people should be allowed to have guns, since you claim not to be an abolitionist.
Monday, July 30, 2012 11:48 AM
Monday, July 30, 2012 11:52 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Quote:Your beginning opinion was ALWAYS that people should be allowed to have guns, since you claim not to be an abolitionist. I find it fascinating that you keep saying this, Anthony. It really demonstrates that you believe that false statements are intentionally being made. You've said it to me a number of times and now to niki.
Monday, July 30, 2012 11:55 AM
Quote:Its a shame that you never felt the need to respond to my post. I honestly believe that trying to understand people's underlying philosophies rather than a blow by blow tally of what should be legal/not legal would be more useful. I wonder if you have had the time to read it, or whether you just don't bother to try and understand.
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:16 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Hello Magons, I want to address this first, because it is brief and simple to do. Niki said that she BEGAN with the COMPROMISE of the idea that guns would be available. And I pointed out that such a position could not be considered a COMPROMISE unless her original position was 'no guns.' i.e. No movement or compromise actually exists in this starting position if she is not an abolitionist. I am pointing out an inconsistency of two statements. One of these two statements MUST be untrue (though perhaps unintentionally.) Either conceding the idea of owning guns is a compromise, and the initial position was abolition, or the idea of owning guns is NOT a compromise, and was he initial position anyway. I am not trying to be insulting nor to call anyone a liar, but the two statements are not compatible. Only one can be true. --Anthony
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:33 PM
Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Quote:Its a shame that you never felt the need to respond to my post. I honestly believe that trying to understand people's underlying philosophies rather than a blow by blow tally of what should be legal/not legal would be more useful. I wonder if you have had the time to read it, or whether you just don't bother to try and understand. Hello, I hope to respond to these broader philisophical questions soon. I have to budget time, and the issue of finding mutually agreeable compromises to actual gun control policy has been my primary goal here. --Anthony
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:36 PM
Quote:I disagree. Unless there is some way the database mentioned connects how many guns someone owns, there is no way to be aware of the stockpiling of guns or to flag straw buyers--my reason for disagreeing with have been enumerated.
Quote:in reality it's not that bad that ONE PERSON hss numerous guns, but a group of people collectively amassing the equivalent of five guns each, that's stockpiling in my opinion.
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:37 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Quote:Its a shame that you never felt the need to respond to my post. I honestly believe that trying to understand people's underlying philosophies rather than a blow by blow tally of what should be legal/not legal would be more useful. I wonder if you have had the time to read it, or whether you just don't bother to try and understand. Hello, I hope to respond to these broader philisophical questions soon. I have to budget time, and the issue of finding mutually agreeable compromises to actual gun control policy has been my primary goal here. --Anthony ok. please excuse me if I don't enter the discussion for awhile. I have work committments for a couple of days that will prevent me from responding.
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:40 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Quote:Originally posted by ANTHONYT: Hello Magons, I want to address this first, because it is brief and simple to do. Niki said that she BEGAN with the COMPROMISE of the idea that guns would be available. And I pointed out that such a position could not be considered a COMPROMISE unless her original position was 'no guns.' i.e. No movement or compromise actually exists in this starting position if she is not an abolitionist. I am pointing out an inconsistency of two statements. One of these two statements MUST be untrue (though perhaps unintentionally.) Either conceding the idea of owning guns is a compromise, and the initial position was abolition, or the idea of owning guns is NOT a compromise, and was he initial position anyway. I am not trying to be insulting nor to call anyone a liar, but the two statements are not compatible. Only one can be true. --Anthony Sounds like you are playing semantics here, because as far as I can see she has never advocated no guns, nor have I, not has anyone that I can see. And yet you have made that statement or similar a number of times. I seem to remember that Niki has guns on her property.
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:45 PM
Quote:Much can be gotten around on the internet, easier than presenting a driver's license with a photo ID to a dealer. And no, investigations can discover that ammo was bought anonymously over the internet JUST as happened--they found the receipt.
Monday, July 30, 2012 12:52 PM
Quote:Obviously I'm talking about one person's wounds being counted as one, or at least it should be obvious as I'm trying to be fair and reasonable.
Monday, July 30, 2012 1:01 PM
Quote:Why are high-capacity ammo magazines readily available on the open market in America, despite having been banned in 1994?
Monday, July 30, 2012 1:37 PM
Quote:I also believe that an awful lot of people who buy a gun for protection don't get trained and would be at a serious disadvantage against a gang member or criminal who is familiar with and comfortable with their weapon. And lastly, I again refer you to the article above.
Quote:Does this mean that you will never consider the possibility that the government won't do--whatever it is you think they'll do for which you believe you need guns from which to defend yourself?
Monday, July 30, 2012 2:00 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 4:05 PM
Quote: 3. a quantity, as of munitions or weapons, accumulated for possible future use.
Quote: They found a receipt for goods bought anonymously over the internet?
Quote: If I stab you seventeen times, then does the wound tally for knives come to 17? And if so, then when I present a wound tally of 17, am I giving the reader the false impression that 17 people were wounded by knives, when there was really just one attack? Also, if you cut your own throat out of despair for your life, is that a 'wound' statistic? If you slit both wrists, is that two wounds?
Quote: The logic for limiting the constables could follow the logic for limiting the public if we assume there is no good reason for a law abiding individual to be spraying 90 rounds of ammunition during a self defense situation.
Quote: There are a lot of criminals who buy a gun for crime and don't get trained.
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:03 PM
Quote: Apparently you weren't there? Because you said maybe he was drunk when the authorities questioned him, so you didn't know?
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:06 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:18 PM
Quote:This'll be short; I just came back from icing foot and putting it up, gotta get back to that asap. Wanna make notes for a few minutes, then I'll post this later. Anthony, no, they're not incompatible, you just don't get my initial position. I DON'T want people to have guns, I think it's extremely deleterious to our nation. But I'm a realist; I accept that's not possible, so before we even start I make the concession that we can't even consider that. And I go from there. When I say I don't want to take away people's guns, or that nobody wants complete prohibition, I'm speaking from that place. If things were different in America and it were possible, I'd love to see guns go away. I don't live in a fantasy world. Does that clarify it for you? Simply put: I'd like no guns around; I recognize that ain't ever gonna happen; so starting right off I compromise and deal with what we CAN do. Ergo the statement that nobody wants to take away your guns (actually, it never occurred to me that anyone was stupid enough to want to!).
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:23 PM
PIRATENEWS
John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:28 PM
Quote:There are probably more criminals who are comfortable with guns--particularly among gangs--and are pretty adept at using them, as well as being awake, less frightened than the victim, have expectation of the possibility of dealing with someone with a gun...ach, why bother. I agree to disagree that, in my opinion, a homeowner with a gun could quite possibly not find a gun viable for self-defense, DEPENDING ON THE SITUATION.
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:34 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:35 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Ahem - TROLL, your math is wrong. It's not 0.0000954% it's 100x higher than that. Try again. SignyM: I swear, if we really knew what was being decided about us in our absence, and how hosed the government is prepared to let us be, we would string them up.
Monday, July 30, 2012 5:43 PM
Monday, July 30, 2012 6:01 PM
Quote: Why? It turns out that when guns are available, suicide rates go up. The availability encourages the suicide.
Monday, July 30, 2012 6:16 PM
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