Could you interpret something worse? How can you read that as massacre is "fine" when it clearly was saying steps can be taken to mitigate it. Do you really think being in support of guns means a person is okay with people dying? People are going to be killed by other people, with or without guns. The question is how to reduce the amount of deaths, because stopping it isn't going to happen. Get off your high horse.Whateveralot said:See, that's the problem. You are so "ok" with weapons being legal that massacre is fine, but you need to regulate the weapons more strictly so no more than 2-3 people get killed at the same time.Lucem712 said:(It's being said that the weapon the Colorado massacre was a legal rifle, AR-15, which was legalized after the ban on it ran out. So, it's possible that stricter laws could have prevented a slaughter on that scale. But, that's not really the issue, because he probably could have gotten it regardless on the black-market.)
That's culture for you.
Wrong. The second Amendment grants all people the right to bear arms. "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." Notice how it doesn't say "People in the militia". They cite the Militia as the reason the right shall not be infringed. That's it.Nikolaz72 said:The 2nd Ammendment grants the right for Militia to bear arms (As far as I recall) Plenty of European nations have militia's that can own firearms. Just that the US court at some point interpretated Militia as Everyone living in the country.
I don't know about melee fighting? Baseless assumption, I'm a medically discharged Marine. Our base instincts are for survival, and that usually means killing your attacker. Killing with firearms is easy, killing with knives is easy, and for a trained person killing with hands can be simple.Blablahb said:Indeed, the experience shows that without guns, despite of weapons of opportunity, crime gets far less severe.Xangba said:Because that nice sharp kitchen knife couldn't be used, right?
People don't think of stuff like kitchen knives as often as firearms, and even if they do, the consequences are less bad. For one thing because killing someone with a small knife is much harder than shooting them with a firearm.
Killing is difficult. You don't know this, but melee fighting is extremely difficult psychologically. We have instincts against killing. The trick with firearms is that everything is alright and the instincts are quiet, untill you pull the trigger and someone is dead.
Killing with firearms is easy. Thus, without firearms, killing is harder. Thus, there will be less killing. There's really no way you could assail that reasoning.
Why would that happen?Xangba said:The biggest fallacy is the idea that removing guns would get rid of gun crime and change nothing else, while the more logical idea is that removing gun crime would see an increase of other crimes.
People are inherently less dangerous without guns, so violent crime would fall for certain. And what remains would be far less deadly and thus the people would be a lot better off.
Experiences with countries that were armed to the teeth before would suggest otherwise. People will disarm for the same reason they're not killing whomever they like and pillaging stores; people want to behave and not break the law.Xangba said:Also to repeat something I said earlier, they are far too widespread for any kind of real banning or limiting to work in America.
Most would hand in their firearms voluntarily when it's about to become law. Many would follow after that, and only a tiny minority of crazed rednecks and criminals would hang on to their firearms, and these could be easily disarmed by the police. Over time their firearms would be seized as well, and untill then, you'd see they no longer use them frivolously, because that's a crime.
My link is, as I said, a primary source. That means it's much like a research paper that compiles information from other sources in a more manageable form, and cites them at the end. I would have just used the sources for the article in question, but there are almost 200 of them, and not even most of them are biased(in favor of looser gun restrictions) sources.Daveman said:Sure... lets stick with the numbered arguments.spartan231490 said:1) Hyperbole. no one ever claimed gun carry stopped crime all together, but studies have shown that it does reduce violent crime, including armed robbery, rape, and even murder.Daveman said:some stuff I wrote...
Here's a link to a primary source that confirms it: http://gunowners.org/fs0404.htm
2) It's not just about hunting, it's about self defense(and you don't want to defend yourself from an ak-47 wielding gang banger with a bolt action rifle). Further, fully-automatic weapons are already virtually illegal in the US, no one legally owns AK-47s, so you're again using hyperbole. The rifle you should be talking about is the AR-15, which is one of the best sport shooting rifles because of good accuracy, cheap ammo, and low recoil, not to mention a bunch of attachments. It's also a top choice for hunting certain game like bears and boars because a quick follow-up shot could save your life. Many hunters of these animals carry semi-automatic handguns for the same reason. Also, semi-automatic weapons like the AR-15 are some of the best and only reliable home defense options. For example, in Arkansas, a police officer was fired upon by a drunk individual and it took 15 bullets from the officers handgun hitting the man to stop him from firing. Illinois police were fired upon by a junkie and it required a staggering 33 hits to prevent him from firing his weapon. http://gunowners.org/fs0404.htm As hunting rifles rarely carry more than 5 shots because it's often illegal to hunt with more than 5 loaded, they are not adequate for self defense.
3) Here you have to understand something, yes the constitution can be amended to adapt to changing times, but until it is amended by congress it is a binding document which protects our legal right to bear firearms. If you truly feel a ban is necessary, then do not argue for gun control laws which set precedents for violations of the bill of rights, but instead argue for an Amendment to the Constitution. So, while the 2nd amendment may not always be an argument against gun control, and individual who believes in the bill of rights should treat it as such until and unless it is amended out of the constitution.
Final word: It is wrong to allow innocent people to die, but as I've already said, a person is about 42 times more likely to defend themselves with a firearm than they are to be killed by one, including suicide. If you exclude suicide, a person is 125 times more likely to defend themselves with a firearm, than to be killed by one. So banning guns would cause many more deaths than it would stop, and by the it is wrong to kill an innocent argument, a gun ban is far worse than gun ownership.
Also: "readers of Newsweek learned that "only 2 percent of civilian shootings involved an innocent person mistakenly identified as a criminal. The ?error rate? for the police, however, was 11 percent, more than five times as high"
Maybe we should ban the police from having firearms and not the populace.
Shout out to any Australians on the forum, you might want to consider writing your politicians and asking them to re-legalize firearm ownership and use for self defense: * Australia: Readers of the USA Today newspaper discovered in 2002 that, "Since Australia's 1996 laws banning most guns and making it a crime to use a gun defensively, armed robberies rose by 51%, unarmed robberies by 37%, assaults by 24% and kidnappings by 43%. While murders fell by 3%, manslaughter rose by 16%." From the same primary source as above, if you want to fact check it.
1) I'm not clicking on that link. It's just for some reason I doubt "gunowners.org" is going to be the unbiased bastion of knowledge you might want it to be. I'll concede there are some studies that agree with your argument.
2) Well this numbering arguing thing clearly hasn't worked. I say some people argue it's for hunting, you say it's not just about hunting. That's obvious. That's why there are more points.
2)b) To actually respond to that argument... I'm not pro-hunting. I just think it's a different argument entirely. Frankly I think we should give the bear a gun at least to make it fair game. However the last line of your sentence makes my point exactly. Hunting rifles aren't meant for self-defence, and guns for "self-defence" is what I'm opposed to. I'm sure that drunk guy had his gun for self-defence from sober policemen.
3) What I got from what you were saying is it doesn't matter that the second amendment is (or isn't) a bad argument against gun control. It's law so it doesn't matter. I would agree with that, and I guess I would say they should get rid of it. It is a bit sad to just grab a convenient bit of legislation rather than actually argue from an actually justifiable standpoint.
I would question your use of statistics here but I really can't be bothered to look into them because I was gonna play some bulletstorm before I got distracted by responding to this post.
I didn't mention sending out millions upon millions of people to hunt feral pigs. That was solely your invention. I do keep bringing up that the differences in geographical scale between your home state and my country because it matters. I also keep bringing up the overall lack of human population density because it matters as well. It means less available resources, human or otherwise that are available to solve the problems at hand.farson135 said:I do not need millions of people because my team has never been larger than 7. Millions of people would just get in the way.
Wait, what?Blablahb said:Indeed, the experience shows that without guns, despite of weapons of opportunity, crime gets far less severe.
The observed statistics contradict your opinion.Blablahb said:Killing with firearms is easy. Thus, without firearms, killing is harder. Thus, there will be less killing. There's really no way you could assail that reasoning.
Now, while this particular assertion gets a bit trickier, given the variation between definitions of "violent crime", as a general rule there's more of it in the UK than there is in the US.Blablahb said:People are inherently less dangerous without guns, so violent crime would fall for certain. And what remains would be far less deadly and thus the people would be a lot better off.
I'm not on a side. Both sides have positives and negatives.fletch_talon said:Not hard to see which side you're on eh? Presumably you've followed the entire debate between myself and Farson and this is the part you choose to comment on?lacktheknack said:Congratulations, you threw out all credibility you may have had.
You can't say "leave this conversation" because you don't like their preconceived notions. That makes you worse than any inflammatory commenter.
And you don't happen to think that my oh so flawless and noble opponent lost credibility with the remark:
Because this shows no bias and is absolutely not in any way a blatant insult directed not against my arguments, or even myself, but my entire country."Just, do not say that we have to sacrifice ourselves to live down to your [Australia's] expectations."
I'm not usually hugely nationalistic, but when someone I'm trying to have a reasonable argument with claims they factually know better than an entire nation and culture of people. I'm liable to lose my temper a tad.
there are at least 5 easily accessible locations on the human body where less than an inch and a half of penetration will cause rapid death from blood loss.Blablahb said:Indeed, the experience shows that without guns, despite of weapons of opportunity, crime gets far less severe.Xangba said:Because that nice sharp kitchen knife couldn't be used, right?
People don't think of stuff like kitchen knives as often as firearms, and even if they do, the consequences are less bad. For one thing because killing someone with a small knife is much harder than shooting them with a firearm.
"We have instincts against killing" This is probably one of the most amusing things I've ever heard. We have no such instinct, and the instinct for self-preservation is far more powerful than any squeamishness. Hell, look at "ice man" we've been murdering each other for millennia, long before guns came around. In fact, a quick google search will reveal that the debate in academia is whether or not there is an instinct to kill, not an instinct to avoid murder.Blablahb said:Killing is difficult. You don't know this, but melee fighting is extremely difficult psychologically. We have instincts against killing. The trick with firearms is that everything is alright and the instincts are quiet, untill you pull the trigger and someone is dead.
How about with the hard fact that study after study has shown that, at least within the US, stricter gun control laws tend to cause an increase in crime, including murders, not the other way around. How about Switzerland, one of the highest guns per capita nations in the world, one of the lowest murder rates.Blablahb said:Killing with firearms is easy. Thus, without firearms, killing is harder. Thus, there will be less killing. There's really no way you could assail that reasoning.
Violent crime would not decrease. Again, look at the source, it has well over half a dozen sources that show that increased handgun carry reduces violent crime rates significantly, including murder, rape, and armed robber, and that gun control in general doesn't cause any significant reduction in violent crime.Blablahb said:Why would that happen?Xangba said:The biggest fallacy is the idea that removing guns would get rid of gun crime and change nothing else, while the more logical idea is that removing gun crime would see an increase of other crimes.
People are inherently less dangerous without guns, so violent crime would fall for certain. And what remains would be far less deadly and thus the people would be a lot better off.
what countries? I can't think of any nations that were "armed to the teeth" and then disarmed. Further, even if they did exist, I doubt they had over 70 million gun owners possessing over 300 million guns. They also didn't have a right to firearm ownership ingrained in their culture. That's a logical fallacy, false analogy.Blablahb said:Experiences with countries that were armed to the teeth before would suggest otherwise. People will disarm for the same reason they're not killing whomever they like and pillaging stores; people want to behave and not break the law.Xangba said:Also to repeat something I said earlier, they are far too widespread for any kind of real banning or limiting to work in America.
Even say you're right, over 70% of gun crime in the US is done with illegally purchased firearms, another law isn't going to stop criminals from getting themBlablahb said:Most would hand in their firearms voluntarily when it's about to become law. Many would follow after that, and only a tiny minority of crazed rednecks and criminals would hang on to their firearms, and these could be easily disarmed by the police. Over time their firearms would be seized as well, and untill then, you'd see they no longer use them frivolously, because that's a crime.
GunsmithKitten said:Glad you pointed this out.DarthNader26 said:Where I'm from, most everyone owns a gun simply because you -have- to. The only police in the area is the county sheriff, and it can take almost 20 minutes for him to reach your house. That's -if- you can get to the phone. And I'm not just talking about escaped convicts or crazies (which did happen often enough for stories to trickle down the grapevine). I'm talking about rabid dogs, or racoons killing all your chickens, or something nastier killing livestock. Speaking as someone who's traveled to Europe many times, it's tough for Europeans to imagine the kind of vast, empty spaces that exist in the U.S. You guys are kind of crammed in there, and even your rural areas are pretty populated compared to ours.
Simply put, the US still needs it's guns in a bad way, as a lot of people depend on their ability to react to situations to protect their homes and livelihoods.
Now, I've moved to a more urban area since then, and it's a lot different here. The police are minutes away, and I don't have to worry about livestock getting taken, and I still own my 12 gauge shotgun. Going out and spending a weekend clay shooting with friends is some of the most fun you can have.
Also, I'll point you to Switzerland, that has the highest gun ownership per capita in the world. Until not long ago, it was mandatory for every family in the country to own a firearm and be trained in it's usage. Gun crime is -extremely- low, and most cases of legally owned guns used in gun crime are domestic disputes. The rest of the gun crime is done with illegal firearms.
Response time for police in my area is even worse than that. An hour, if you're lucky.
If you're attacked, you're on your own.
I've actually been meaning to say this for a while, but a gun ban would cripple the economy. There are hundreds of thousands of registered gun dealers in the US, which means a ban would cost the US hundreds of thousands of jobs, which our economy cannot afford.Xangba said:I don't know about melee fighting? Baseless assumption, I'm a medically discharged Marine. Our base instincts are for survival, and that usually means killing your attacker. Killing with firearms is easy, killing with knives is easy, and for a trained person killing with hands can be simple.Blablahb said:Indeed, the experience shows that without guns, despite of weapons of opportunity, crime gets far less severe.Xangba said:Because that nice sharp kitchen knife couldn't be used, right?
People don't think of stuff like kitchen knives as often as firearms, and even if they do, the consequences are less bad. For one thing because killing someone with a small knife is much harder than shooting them with a firearm.
Killing is difficult. You don't know this, but melee fighting is extremely difficult psychologically. We have instincts against killing. The trick with firearms is that everything is alright and the instincts are quiet, untill you pull the trigger and someone is dead.
Killing with firearms is easy. Thus, without firearms, killing is harder. Thus, there will be less killing. There's really no way you could assail that reasoning.
Why would that happen?Xangba said:The biggest fallacy is the idea that removing guns would get rid of gun crime and change nothing else, while the more logical idea is that removing gun crime would see an increase of other crimes.
People are inherently less dangerous without guns, so violent crime would fall for certain. And what remains would be far less deadly and thus the people would be a lot better off.
Experiences with countries that were armed to the teeth before would suggest otherwise. People will disarm for the same reason they're not killing whomever they like and pillaging stores; people want to behave and not break the law.Xangba said:Also to repeat something I said earlier, they are far too widespread for any kind of real banning or limiting to work in America.
Most would hand in their firearms voluntarily when it's about to become law. Many would follow after that, and only a tiny minority of crazed rednecks and criminals would hang on to their firearms, and these could be easily disarmed by the police. Over time their firearms would be seized as well, and untill then, you'd see they no longer use them frivolously, because that's a crime.
You make many baseless assumptions about what would happen, but at least I've done research on this. I'm wrapping up my Criminal Justice degree and taking Academy classes for the police. I actually research our crime rates, weapons of opportunity, changes in crime rates, ect. You don't live in America, so don't make baseless assumptions about how changing gun laws would affect our crime.
Also the whole "crazed rednecks" comment is again a baseless assumption. When half the population owns them, they will not simply hand them over. The more likely scenario is a nationwide backlash that would result in many of the current people in office either being kicked out or changing policies and then opportunistic idiots would take control that would instead make gun control worse instead of better. America has a strong gun culture, it's not a matter of "Hey, can we take these? 'Kay thanks." especially because the government would have to pay each person the cost of their weapons and ammo. That's a LOT of money that the government doesn't have. Or we could do it and have a complete financial collapse.
But feral pig ranges in Australia are actually somewhat smaller, overall, than they are in the United States as a whole.Paradoxrifts said:Could you do what you do, the way you're doing it currently and get the results that you're currently getting if the geographical range of your responsibilities were to be expanded by a measure of five and the amount of people that were available to help you do it were reduced by half?
It wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing at all.Moth_Monk said:The question is this: I live in the UK, where firearms are illegal, even the police do not have them, and the rate of gun crime is SIGNIFICANTLY lower than gun crime in the US. I have not even heard what a gun shot sounds like outside of TV and video games - think of that. With this being a fact, how can you people who are pro-guns; that don't like the idea of guns being made illegal, even rationalise why it would be a bad thing?
While you do have a valid argument, I don't think it right to include 'rape' in your list of things that would happen if you take the guns away. Simply because rape is a crime of an entirely different nature than the others you've mentioned.cotss2012 said:Because there's a difference between "crime" and "gun crime", and they respond in opposite ways to gun laws.
Basically, for every person that you spare from death by bullet wound, you're getting a mugging, a rape, and two deaths by knife wound in return.
We're just better at math than you are.