Ryan Thunder wrote:So, to sum up what you took four paragraphs to say, guns are designed to inflict serious injury or death, which has absolutely no effect on the validity of my assertion that they are designed to kill.
No, they are technically designed to wound or incapacitate, but if killing happens, it happens as another potential consequence.
So I guess its alright with you, then, if I, your hypothetical next-door neighbour, decide to use, say, a nuclear warhead as a space heater, then, right? You'd be just fine with that, because even though its
designed to cause death and destruction on an unimaginable scale, I'm not using it for that, right?
What if I wanted to build my house out of live artillery shells?
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Oh, boy, the old "if you want guns, then I have a right to a bomb!!!111" argument. No, sir, a bomb and a gun are not comparable. A bomb (grenade, nuclear, RPG, artillery shell, 500kg, etc etc etc) unleashes its destructive energy in an omnidirectional ball of destructive power. There is no reasonable way for a person to claim the ability to control an explosion; it would be impossible to defend oneself or one's home without also facing the possibility of inflicting additional damage or casualties. It is a silly, childish strawman argument that crops up over and over again.
So, you're saying that the police force failed to protect citizens and enforce the law, therefore people should be allowed to own assault rifles.
No, you're saying that, distorting my point once again with your emotionally-charged hyperbole. My point is that guns in the hands of private citizens can be used to stop crime before the police get involved, and estimates as high as 2.5 million legal uses of guns for self-defense have been calculated. You seem to forget that the police typically do not "stop" crime, they show up after the crime is over and take reports, filter the information up to detectives, who hopefully can figure out what happened and prevent the crime from happening again. The presence of police at any given time in an area may stop crime from happening; but only until the police are gone, at which point crime may, or may not, happen again. But police due not "cure crime" and more than the presence of doctors can "cure accidents". People still trip and fall, despite the presence of hospitals.
Any sane person would see that your police forces are obviously not doing a good enough job of protecting you, for whatever reason. Might want to look into improving on that before concluding that its a good idea to hand out firearms to everybody and his dog. Seems to work fine for everybody else.
Well, actually, I never once advocated "handing out firearms to everybody and his dog", you dishonest little bastard. Some people choose to own firearms; these people aren't breaking any laws; sometimes those people are able to prevent crime or defend themselves when criminals strike and cops aren't around. The cops are generally quite professional, but they cannot be everywhere at once, and they actually are tasked with protecting society as a whole, not any individual person or people.
So again-- we don't live in a society where a person must prove to a government apparatchik what our "needs" are
before we purchase something. We are innocent until proven guilty, and we are also not a society that believes in collective punishment of a group for the wrongs of another person.
Collective
punishment? Are you fucking
mad?
We aren't talking about toys, here; these are goddamn purebred killing machines, and by your own fucking admission, no less. You don't have a right to the power to kill. That dubious privilege is already granted to police officers and soldiers, who are there to protect you. Why you would want to leave it up to civilians is beyond me.
Collective punishment. A thousand people are doing something legally, but one person does something wrong. So you'd strip away certain rights from all thousand people because of one guy. That is called "collective punishment" and it is against the law and typically frowned upon. I never once said these were "toys" or implied such, and again you are being dishonest by implying otherwise. Every gun comes with a manual that very clearly spells out "this is not a toy, it is dangerous and misuse can cause serious injury or death".
A gun is a tool, I'm sure you've heard that before and I think I hear your head exploding now. But you hear that a lot because it is true. It is a tool and it is a most excellent tool for defending oneself if necessary, and if it is not necessary to defend oneself, then it is also a fun tool for target shooting, hunting, or just plain collecting for fun. All your histrionic screeching won't change that, and we still haven't come to any justification for punishing millions of law-abiding people because of the actions of a few.
Clearly you would prefer a world of non-violence and peace, where guns are un-necessary. Believe it or not, so would I. But that day is unlikely to come any time soon, because some fundamental things about human nature have to change first.
Besides that, going by your logic, stuff like imposed speed limits are wrong.
No, stuff like speed limits and traffic lights take something that could be inherently dangerous, like guiding a ton-and-a-half steel block down a street at high speeds, and organizes it so that it makes sense. Same thing with gun laws: don't murder people, don't rob people, displaying a gun in a threatening manner is cause for alarm and questioning by police, selling or giving guns to criminals is actionable by the law as well, use only in certain safe, approved areas and under proper supervision, do not use while intoxicated, fire only in a safe manner and know what you are shooting at (ie, don't just fire off into the fog, or the dark, or a forest without knowing WTF you might hit).
It actually takes just a little bit of education and instruction for the average person to know how to use a gun, when to use a gun, and what to do with a gun and what their legal rights are. Where do you think cops and soldiers come from? They are recruited from among the populace, which you seem to think is too stupid and stumbletyfuck to be able to handle a firearm. A serious person who takes the time to learn can, in fact, be an asset to the community. Mike Wong himself, also a resident of Canada, considered undergoing the process and found the concept quite simple, he just didn't want to spend the time to do it, which is his perogative.