Darth Wong wrote:Beowulf wrote:And tell me, exactly how does registration help prevent crimes?
Good question. I would say that if guns were registered, you would know how many guns someone owns if he is convicted of a serious crime, so you could go in and grab them. But the more important item is licensing, not registration. There should be a few hoops one must jump through in order to get a gun; the quaint notion that any idiot should be assumed responsible enough for gun ownership is naive and foolish. Registration is an inevitable accompaniment to licensing.
Right now, in California at least, (If that doesn't give you a clue where i'm from I don't know what will...) You have to take a safety course to make sure that you know how to handle a gun, or take a test for the same purpose. The quaint notion that any idiot is responsible enough for car ownership is naive and foolish. Just look at the idiot who decided i was going too slow(at 75 mph) for him in a van. He tailgated me, passed me on the right, while giving me the finger, swerved in front of me, all without using a blinker, of course, and then hit his brakes, while giving me the finger yet again. Note, I was going fast than all the traffic to my right, so it really was just him being an asshole why couldn't stand my moving slow...
Trying to legislate being responsible enough to own something is naive and foolish. Take a look at cars. Out of all the driver's out there, you'll always find somebody who will be irresponsible.
Why must you need to know how many guns a person owns when licensing? To continue the car analogy, does the government need to know how many, and of what kind, of cars you own?
[size=x-large] NO! [/size]
They just make sure you're not driving a car that you don't know how to handle.
4 years isn't a long enough time to determine the effects? I'm not expecting the effect to be immediate or drastic, but it should have shown at least a drop in crime after that much time.
Crime, or gun homicide? Crime rates wouldn't change at all; guns only change the lethality of crime, not its incidence. As for gun homicide rates, it's hard to say; the timeframe for any kind of change would be more generational than one, two, or even five years (let's put it this way; has gun
ownership dropped yet?).
More than half a million guns were turned in in victoria when the 1996 gun control law was put in effective.
And that assumes laws which are actually written in order to function, instead of being written to appease voters while leaving so many loopholes and legalese that you can get around them easily, and nobody wants to bother enforcing them.
Wow. My argument against gun control. You know that many of the gun laws weren't enforced during the Clinton administration?
Darth Wong wrote:If I drive while straddling two lanes on the highway, I am not hurting anyone. Does this mean that's OK, and that the laws regarding driving should be changed to permit it?
Strawman. I never said that, because it has a very high probability of risk involved. It's like saying that I want all prisoners freed, becuase it won't hurt anybody...
How is it a strawman? Handing out guns to people without rigorous checks
is an enormous risk.
And where did I say that? Stop putting words in my mouth.
I'm saying that if you want to have a gun to shoot at a paper target, why shouldn't you be able to? It's like drugs...
Ah, so (continuing the "logic") if I want to have a car just to drive around my backyard, I should be able to get one without any kind of licensing requirement? Ridiculous. Anyone can state any intent when they purchase something, but the public risk must be assessed. This is merely a smaller-scale version of the same reasoning that keeps high-powered military weapons out of private hands.
You know, in the US, an unlicensed driver can drive around in private property. The license only applies to public roads.
Hmm... not all guns are designed to hurt people, while the only purpose of a bazooka is...
... to blow holes in metal. Gee, I guess bazookas aren't meant to hurt people either! Seriously, this "guns are not meant for killing" bullshit is moronic. Guns were designed to be lethal against people or animals. That is their sole purpose for existence.
/me points to a Olympic free pistol
So this target pistol is really a gun designed to kill people?
No, it's designed to be as accurate as possible, which is the reason why it fires a .22 LR cartridge and only holds one shot.
/me points to a Olympic Rapid fire pistol
So this pistol is designed to shoot people?
No, it's designed to be able to fire very fast at a target, very accurately. It fires a .22 short round, which is nothing remotely like a 9mm in terms of lethality.
The idea of gun control does make sense, but almost all implementations cater towards fear, while in reality do jack shit.
Then attack the implementation, not the idea. You are attacking the idea by attacking the implementation. Unless a reasonable gun law is
impossible due to inherent flaws in the idea, I don't see how that can be a reasonable approach.
The problem is that due to the extremism of the anti-gun crowd, the only way to attack the implementation is to attack the idea. A reasonable gun law will be attacked by extremists from the anti-gun crowd as doing nothing, and from the gun nuts as being too restrictive.
Picture this:
A 6 year-old boy picks up a gun from his crack-dealing, felonious uncle, and shoots a girl in his first grade class.
Should we pass a law forcing gun locks on the public? Why? It's not like that uncle should have had the gun in the first place, should have had in reach of a minor, or would have paid any attention to a law saying that their must be a gun lock on all guns not in use...
Ah, the "it's not 100% effective, so don't bother" argument. I've heard it before. It's a black/white fallacy. What is it with you gun anarchy people and black/white fallacies? Do they take you aside and tutor you on this technique?
So I'm a gun anarchist?
I guess you must be an anti-gun nut then.
I'm saying that you shouldn't have to legislate common sense, like securing your weapon when not in use, and you should try them for laws already on the books.
I mean, trigger locks is something that they can really only use to slap on another few years onto the sentence, rather than actually be able to prosecute.
I'm opposed to new gun legistation because it will do jack shit to the crime rate.
Every argument against gun licensing can be applied to vehicle licensing. Without exception. The only difference is that gun licensing has been fought so vigorously in the US that whatever laws have been passed have been byzantine and hopeless. The situation calls for rewritten and improved laws, not new laws piled on the old ones or worse yet, gun anarchy.
Why do you assume that I'm promoting gun anarchy? I'm promoting the idea that gun control is almost entirely a piece of shite due to how it's implemented, and how it's written, and that therefore, we don't need new gun control laws. Also, it's a bad idea to make blanket statements, they just need one counter-example to disprove them. I just can't think of one at the moment...
BTW: why is your board so slow? It took more than a minute for the post reply page to show up, while pages from other sites pop-up rather fast.
"preemptive killing of cops might not be such a bad idea from a personal saftey[sic] standpoint..." --Keevan Colton
"There's a word for bias you can't see: Yours." -- William Saletan