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Dox47
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16 Dec 2012, 12:47 am

J-Greens wrote:
Exactly quote the exact words where I exactly said that I was "suppressing information" stop lying to better your argument.


You said you'd call the police on me for knowing as much as I do about firearms; what do you call it when someone thinks the authorities need to be called because someone is "too informed"?


J-Greens wrote:
No, a person that could be owning weapons without permit. Funnily enough we learnt the first time at Dunblane.


Knowing information that is readily available online is now probably cause in England? Lucky for me that no permit is needed where I live.

We learned something from Dunblane too; bad crimes make for bad laws.


J-Greens wrote:
I have dealt with gangland murders that have involved firearms, have you tried saving somebody that's been shot? Are you aware of how much damage a bullet can cause?


So you've seen a few bullet wounds, how does that make you qualified to discuss firearms?
Also, I've taken my terminal ballistics and know, in great detail, exactly how much damage a bullet can do

J-Greens wrote:
Could? You're were/are a gunsmith - those create guns, debating gun control - a limit on guns, bias is clearly evident here. Don't try to argue otherwise, it's stupidity.


Of course I'm biased, as are you. You're from the UK and in some sort of medical field, so you've been spoon-fed the "guns are bad trust the police" line since birth and are in a profession that only see the most negative effects of firearms. Like I said, I'm merely pointing out that bias can only effect opinion, not fact, and that if you'd care to debate the facts I'm more than willing.


J-Greens wrote:
The irony. Children or Guns, what do you want to protect?


Simple, I use guns to protect children, and everyone else for that matter.


J-Greens wrote:
This sums up your whole argument. Well done


Pointing out that you're a thought nanny who doesn't know the subject and doesn't think anyone else should either? That was well done if I do say so myself.


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16 Dec 2012, 6:58 am

Raptor wrote:
J-Greens wrote:
Quote:
The purpose of firearms is clearly to attack an opponent. Can you think of any other uses for the Chinese fire lance other than to kill?
Or are you stating that guns have other purposes? Ones with in built defibrillators, or potato peelers?

It’s evident that you know nearly nothing about firearms and that’s being generous on my part.

Quote:
Whatever happened to the police instead of vigilantism? Isn't that what they're for? Trained and paid by the public to protect the public?

Protecting yourself isn’t vigilantism by any means. What exactly do you do when an armed attack on you is imminent or in progress? Take out the cell phone, dial 911, if you can get a signal and the call doesn’t drop you get through to a 911 operator and eventually your request for help gets queued and eventually the cops show up. Just in time to call the ambulance or coroner for you.
There’s a saying that when seconds count the police are only minutes away and it is all too often true. It will never get better because there is no way to make a cop appear out of thin air.
Quote:
Isn't that what they're for?

I’m more proficient than at least half of them and that’s not saying much.

Quote:
Well if you're not a policeman or in the military, I'd be highly suspicious to those that take an interest in objects and methods to kill people. That screams danger to me.

That’s paranoia plain and simple. There is nothing else to describe it.
Quote:
I'd be calling the police if you lived in my county, let alone anywhere else.

And what do you think they’re going to do besides laugh at you? Let me let you in on something: The police know citizens in their communities and state have guns and most of them support it without reservation for reasons that are apparently over your head. I’m a volunteer range safety officer (RSO) at one of the local shooting ranges where city, county, state, and even federal LEO’s train sometimes so I know something about this.
Quote:
What next, bomb creation 101 for casual interest? C'mon.

More paranoia. :roll:
Quote:
Anyone else want to debate this issue?

You’ve proven with abundance that you have nothing to debate with.


nostromo wrote:
Quote:
I think guns are winning in the "Best tool for murdering" stakes by quite a stretch.

Guns are the best tool for other tasks and one of them is defending oneself from murder.
Really, this isn’t rocket science.


Vermontsavant wrote:
Quote:
but if they banned automatic assault rifles people would just use hunting rifles.
and if they banned the classic deer rifle people would just use muskets,and if they banned muskets people would use knives and inevidably swords and such would make a comeback

An AR-15 is not an “automatic assault rifle” in the first place. Any knowledgeable gun owner would know that.
No, they would continue to use semi-auto rifles like the AR-15 because they are already here in abundance. Banning something does not make it go away otherwise there would be no crimes at all.

Quote:
because of the rise in the AR's popularity for hunting more guns stores are carying more of them,which then gives criminals the chance to break into these gun stores and steal them.

B&E or any other kind of theft or robbery is already illegal. Saying that something is bad just because it’s highly sought after by thieves is weak. It’s a nanny state approach to a problem.

ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
Quote:
You do have to seriously contemplate, if the mom had never bought any guns, would this have happened? Maybe the kid could have gotten his own guns, but it would have been more difficult for him. The mom made it all too easy.

His mother wasn't the one that pulled the trigger and should be left out of this. If he’d slit his mother’s throat with her own paring knife would you say that she committed suicide because she had bought the knife at one time?
i understand that an AR is semi auto not full auto.if you read my post i said my self that most AR's are bought for hunting or match purposes.AR's continue to dominate at 600 yd match competion.
i am not for a nanny state,i have never voted for a democrat in my entire life.i am not for banning AR's but personaly i think flooding the market with them is not wise because it makes it easier for criminals to steal them.i am for gun owners make responsable choices on there own not goverment involvement


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ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo
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16 Dec 2012, 7:03 am

This just illustrates how easy it is to take another's gun and use it to commit a crime tho.



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16 Dec 2012, 7:19 am

ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
This just illustrates how easy it is to take another's gun and use it to commit a crime tho.



Best point about the futility of gun control I have seen so far!

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16 Dec 2012, 8:02 am

Dox47 wrote:
J-Greens wrote:
Exactly quote the exact words where I exactly said that I was "suppressing information" stop lying to better your argument.


You said you'd call the police on me for knowing as much as I do about firearms; what do you call it when someone thinks the authorities need to be called because someone is "too informed"?


Stop changing tack. Answer the question. Where exactly are those words I supposedly said. You're a total liar.

Informed? I'm suspicious that you possess illegal firearms. Illegal. I'd call the police so that those firearms are taken, destroyed and yourself charged with possessing an illegal firearm. Don't care about informed rubbish.


Dox47 wrote:
Lucky for me that no permit is needed where I live.

How very dangerous where you live...oh wait.

Dox47 wrote:
We learned something from Dunblane too; bad crimes make for bad laws.

Love this. Please explain by making our country safer is the Firearms Act '97 a bad law? This is beyond hilarious...like talking to bozo the clown. :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


J-Greens wrote:
So you've seen a few bullet wounds, how does that make you qualified to discuss firearms?

Let's see hm, fatalities? Dangers? The need to ban all firearms to prevent fatalities?


Dox47 wrote:
You're from the UK and in some sort of medical field, so you've been spoon-fed the "guns are bad trust the police" line since birth and are in a profession that only see the most negative effects of firearms.

Yup, a country that had one bad incident and we had the leaders with the balls to do the right thing and have been safer ever since...seen the effects of firearms firsthand and with no paranoia/conspiracy theory about the people I work with to the job that they're trained for. Spot on. I'm biased in saving life. Is that really a negative?


Dox47 wrote:
J-Greens wrote:
This sums up your whole argument. Well done

Pointing out that you're a thought nanny who doesn't know the subject and doesn't think anyone else should either? That was well done if I do say so myself.

I'll post it again, so everyone gets a second laugh.
Dox47 wrote:
Oh well, have fun at that book burning, or whatever it is you people do for fun.

Yup, Well Done.
Google 'Warwickshire' and then to goto Maps. Book Burning, :lol: where did you think Warwickshire was? Afghanistan? :lol:



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16 Dec 2012, 8:07 am

^
Well, they can't say I didn't try.
Teach me to try and reason with the intentionally uninformed... :oops:


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Last edited by Dox47 on 16 Dec 2012, 8:13 am, edited 1 time in total.

Dox47
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16 Dec 2012, 8:12 am

Just for fun, an old but good Reason article on the history of British gun crime and control, and how effective it has been:


Joyce Lee Malcom wrote:
On a June evening two years ago, Dan Rather made many stiff British upper lips quiver by reporting that England had a crime problem and that, apart from murder, "theirs is worse than ours." The response was swift and sharp. "Have a Nice Daydream," The Mirror, a London daily, shot back, reporting: "Britain reacted with fury and disbelief last night to claims by American newsmen that crime and violence are worse here than in the US." But sandwiched between the article's battery of official denials -- "totally misleading," "a huge over-simplification," "astounding and outrageous" -- and a compilation of lurid crimes from "the wild west culture on the other side of the Atlantic where every other car is carrying a gun," The Mirror conceded that the CBS anchorman was correct. Except for murder and rape, it admitted, "Britain has overtaken the US for all major crimes."

In the two years since Dan Rather was so roundly rebuked, violence in England has gotten markedly worse. Over the course of a few days in the summer of 2001, gun-toting men burst into an English court and freed two defendants; a shooting outside a London nightclub left five women and three men wounded; and two men were machine-gunned to death in a residential neighborhood of north London. And on New Year's Day this year a 19-year-old girl walking on a main street in east London was shot in the head by a thief who wanted her mobile phone. London police are now looking to New York City police for advice.

None of this was supposed to happen in the country whose stringent gun laws and 1997 ban on handguns have been hailed as the "gold standard" of gun control. For the better part of a century, British governments have pursued a strategy for domestic safety that a 1992 Economist article characterized as requiring "a restraint on personal liberty that seems, in most civilised countries, essential to the happiness of others," a policy the magazine found at odds with "America's Vigilante Values." The safety of English people has been staked on the thesis that fewer private guns means less crime. The government believes that any weapons in the hands of men and women, however law-abiding, pose a danger, and that disarming them lessens the chance that criminals will get or use weapons.

The results -- the toughest firearm restrictions of any democracy -- are credited by the world's gun control advocates with producing a low rate of violent crime. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell reflected this conventional wisdom when, in a 1988 speech to the American Bar Association, he attributed England's low rates of violent crime to the fact that "private ownership of guns is strictly controlled."

In reality, the English approach has not re-duced violent crime. Instead it has left law-abiding citizens at the mercy of criminals who are confident that their victims have neither the means nor the legal right to resist them. Imitating this model would be a public safety disaster for the United States.

The illusion that the English government had protected its citizens by disarming them seemed credible because few realized the country had an astonishingly low level of armed crime even before guns were restricted. A government study for the years 1890-92, for example, found only three handgun homicides, an average of one a year, in a population of 30 million. In 1904 there were only four armed robberies in London, then the largest city in the world. A hundred years and many gun laws later, the BBC reported that England's firearms restrictions "seem to have had little impact in the criminal underworld." Guns are virtually outlawed, and, as the old slogan predicted, only outlaws have guns. Worse, they are increasingly ready to use them.

Nearly five centuries of growing civility ended in 1954. Violent crime has been climbing ever since. Last December, London's Evening Standard reported that armed crime, with banned handguns the weapon of choice, was "rocketing." In the two years following the 1997 handgun ban, the use of handguns in crime rose by 40 percent, and the upward trend has continued. From April to November 2001, the number of people robbed at gunpoint in London rose 53 percent.

Gun crime is just part of an increasingly lawless environment. From 1991 to 1995, crimes against the person in England's inner cities increased 91 percent. And in the four years from 1997 to 2001, the rate of violent crime more than doubled. Your chances of being mugged in London are now six times greater than in New York. England's rates of assault, robbery, and burglary are far higher than America's, and 53 percent of English burglaries occur while occupants are at home, compared with 13 percent in the U.S., where burglars admit to fearing armed homeowners more than the police. In a United Nations study of crime in 18 developed nations published in July, England and Wales led the Western world's crime league, with nearly 55 crimes per 100 people.

This sea change in English crime followed a sea change in government policies. Gun regulations have been part of a more general disarmament based on the proposition that people don't need to protect themselves because society will protect them. It also will protect their neighbors: Police advise those who witness a crime to "walk on by" and let the professionals handle it.

This is a reversal of centuries of common law that not only permitted but expected individuals to defend themselves, their families, and their neighbors when other help was not available. It was a legal tradition passed on to Americans. Personal security was ranked first among an individual's rights by William Blackstone, the great 18th-century exponent of the common law. It was a right, he argued, that no government could take away, since no government could protect the individual in his moment of need. A century later Blackstone's illustrious successor, A.V. Dicey, cautioned, "discourage self-help and loyal subjects become the slaves of ruffians."

But modern English governments have put public order ahead of the individual's right to personal safety. First the government clamped down on private possession of guns; then it forbade people to carry any article that might be used for self-defense; finally, the vigor of that self-defense was to be judged by what, in hindsight, seemed "reasonable in the circumstances."

The 1920 Firearms Act was the first serious British restriction on guns. Although crime was low in England in 1920, the government feared massive labor disruption and a Bolshevik revolution. In the circumstances, permitting the people to remain armed must have seemed an unnecessary risk. And so the new policy of disarming the public began. The Firearms Act required a would-be gun owner to obtain a certificate from the local chief of police, who was charged with determining whether the applicant had a good reason for possessing a weapon and was fit to do so. All very sensible. Parliament was assured that the intention was to keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and other dangerous persons. Yet from the start the law's enforcement was far more restrictive, and Home Office instructions to police -- classified until 1989 -- periodically narrowed the criteria.

At first police were instructed that it would be a good reason to have a revolver if a person "lives in a solitary house, where protection against thieves and burglars is essential, or has been exposed to definite threats to life on account of his performance of some public duty." By 1937 police were to discourage applications to possess firearms for house or personal protection. In 1964 they were told "it should hardly ever be necessary to anyone to possess a firearm for the protection of his house or person" and that "this principle should hold good even in the case of banks and firms who desire to protect valuables or large quantities of money."

In 1969 police were informed "it should never be necessary for anyone to possess a firearm for the protection of his house or person." These changes were made without public knowledge or debate. Their enforcement has consumed hundreds of thousands of police hours. Finally, in 1997 handguns were banned. Proposed exemptions for handicapped shooters and the British Olympic team were rejected.

Even more sweeping was the 1953 Prevention of Crime Act, which made it illegal to carry in a public place any article "made, adapted, or intended" for an offensive purpose "without lawful authority or excuse." Carrying something to protect yourself was branded antisocial. Any item carried for possible defense automatically became an offensive weapon. Police were given extensive power to stop and search everyone. Individuals found with offensive items were guilty until proven innocent.

During the debate over the Prevention of Crime Act in the House of Commons, a member from Northern Ireland told his colleagues of a woman employed by Parliament who had to cross a lonely heath on her route home and had armed herself with a knitting needle. A month earlier, she had driven off a youth who tried to snatch her handbag by jabbing him "on a tender part of his body." Was it to be an offense to carry a knitting needle? The attorney general assured the M.P. that the woman might be found to have a reasonable excuse but added that the public should be discouraged "from going about with offensive weapons in their pockets; it is the duty of society to protect them."

Another M.P. pointed out that while "society ought to undertake the defense of its members, nevertheless one has to remember that there are many places where society cannot get, or cannot get there in time. On those occasions a man has to defend himself and those whom he is escorting. It is not very much consolation that society will come forward a great deal later, pick up the bits, and punish the violent offender."

In the House of Lords, Lord Saltoun argued: "The object of a weapon was to assist weakness to cope with strength and it is this ability that the bill was framed to destroy. I do not think any government has the right, though they may very well have the power, to deprive people for whom they are responsible of the right to defend themselves." But he added: "Unless there is not only a right but also a fundamental willingness amongst the people to defend themselves, no police force, however large, can do it."

That willingness was further undermined by a broad revision of criminal law in 1967 that altered the legal standard for self-defense. Now everything turns on what seems to be "reasonable" force against an assailant, considered after the fact. As Glanville Williams notes in his Textbook of Criminal Law, that requirement is "now stated in such mitigated terms as to cast doubt on whether it [self-defense] still forms part of the law."

The original common law standard was similar to what still prevails in the U.S. Americans are free to carry articles for their protection, and in 33 states law-abiding citizens may carry concealed guns. Americans may defend themselves with deadly force if they believe that an attacker is about to kill or seriously injure them, or to prevent a violent crime. Our courts are mindful that, as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes observed, "detached reflection cannot be demanded in the presence of an upraised knife."

But English courts have interpreted the 1953 act strictly and zealously. Among articles found illegally carried with offensive intentions are a sandbag, a pickaxe handle, a stone, and a drum of pepper. "Any article is capable of being an offensive weapon," concede the authors of Smith and Hogan Criminal Law, a popular legal text, although they add that if the article is unlikely to cause an injury the onus of proving intent to do so would be "very heavy."

The 1967 act has not been helpful to those obliged to defend themselves either. Granville Williams points out: "For some reason that is not clear, the courts occasionally seem to regard the scandal of the killing of a robber as of greater moment than the safety of the robber's victim in respect of his person and property."

A sampling of cases illustrates the impact of these measures:

� In 1973 a young man running on a road at night was stopped by the police and found to be carrying a length of steel, a cycle chain, and a metal clock weight. He explained that a gang of youths had been after him. At his hearing it was found he had been threatened and had previously notified the police. The justices agreed he had a valid reason to carry the weapons. Indeed, 16 days later he was attacked and beaten so badly he was hospitalized. But the prosecutor appealed the ruling, and the appellate judges insisted that carrying a weapon must be related to an imminent and immediate threat. They sent the case back to the lower court with directions to convict.

� In 1987 two men assaulted Eric Butler, a 56-year-old British Petroleum executive, in a London subway car, trying to strangle him and smashing his head against the door. No one came to his aid. He later testified, "My air supply was being cut off, my eyes became blurred, and I feared for my life." In desperation he unsheathed an ornamental sword blade in his walking stick and slashed at one of his attackers, stabbing the man in the stomach. The assailants were charged with wounding. Butler was tried and convicted of carrying an offensive weapon.

� In 1994 an English homeowner, armed with a toy gun, managed to detain two burglars who had broken into his house while he called the police. When the officers arrived, they arrested the homeowner for using an imitation gun to threaten or intimidate. In a similar incident the following year, when an elderly woman fired a toy cap pistol to drive off a group of youths who were threatening her, she was arrested for putting someone in fear. Now the police are pressing Parliament to make imitation guns illegal.

� In 1999 Tony Martin, a 55-year-old Norfolk farmer living alone in a shabby farmhouse, awakened to the sound of breaking glass as two burglars, both with long criminal records, burst into his home. He had been robbed six times before, and his village, like 70 percent of rural English communities, had no police presence. He sneaked downstairs with a shotgun and shot at the intruders. Martin received life in prison for killing one burglar, 10 years for wounding the second, and a year for having an unregistered shotgun. The wounded burglar, having served 18 months of a three-year sentence, is now free and has been granted �5,000 of legal assistance to sue Martin.

The failure of English policy to produce a safer society is clear, but what of British jibes about "America's vigilante values" and our much higher murder rate?

Historically, America has had a high homicide rate and England a low one. In a comparison of New York and London over a 200-year period, during most of which both populations had unrestricted access to firearms, historian Eric Monkkonen found New York's homicide rate consistently about five times London's. Monkkonen pointed out that even without guns, "the United States would still be out of step, just as it has been for two hundred years."

Legal historian Richard Maxwell Brown has argued that Americans have more homicides because English law insists an individual should retreat when attacked, whereas Americans believe they have the right to stand their ground and kill in self-defense. Americans do have more latitude to protect themselves, in keeping with traditional common law standards, but that would have had less significance before England's more restrictive policy was established in 1967.



The murder rates of the U.S. and U.K. are also affected by differences in the way each counts homicides. The FBI asks police to list every homicide as murder, even if the case isn't subsequently prosecuted or proceeds on a lesser charge, making the U.S. numbers as high as possible. By contrast, the English police "massage down" the homicide statistics, tracking each case through the courts and removing it if it is reduced to a lesser charge or determined to be an accident or self-defense, making the English numbers as low as possible.

The London-based Office of Health Economics, after a careful international study, found that while "one reason often given for the high numbers of murders and manslaughters in the United States is the easy availability of firearms...the strong correlation with racial and socio-economic variables suggests that the underlying determinants of the homicide rate are related to particular cultural factors."

Cultural differences and more-permissive legal standards notwithstanding, the English rate of violent crime has been soaring since 1991. Over the same period, America's has been falling dramatically. In 1999 The Boston Globe reported that the American murder rate, which had fluctuated by about 20 percent between 1974 and 1991, was "in startling free-fall." We have had nine consecutive years of sharply declining violent crime. As a result the English and American murder rates are converging. In 1981 the American rate was 8.7 times the English rate, in 1995 it was 5.7 times the English rate, and the latest study puts it at 3.5 times.

Preliminary figures for the U.S. this year show an increase, although of less than 1 percent, in the overall number of violent crimes, with homicide increases in certain cities, which criminologists attribute to gang violence, the poor economy, and the release from prison of many offenders. Yet Americans still enjoy a substantially lower rate of violent crime than England, without the "restraint on personal liberty" English governments have seen as necessary. Rather than permit individuals more scope to defend themselves, Prime Minister Tony Blair's government plans to combat crime by extending those "restraints on personal liberty": removing the prohibition against double jeopardy so people can be tried twice for the same crime, making hearsay evidence admissible in court, and letting jurors know of a suspect's previous crimes.

This is a cautionary tale. America's founders, like their English forebears, regarded personal security as first of the three primary rights of mankind. That was the main reason for including a right for individuals to be armed in the U.S. Constitution. Not everyone needs to avail himself or herself of that right. It is a dangerous right. But leaving personal protection to the police is also dangerous.

The English government has effectively abolished the right of Englishmen, confirmed in their 1689 Bill of Rights, to "have arms for their defence," insisting upon a monopoly of force it can succeed in imposing only on law-abiding citizens. It has come perilously close to depriving its people of the ability to protect themselves at all, and the result is a more, not less, dangerous society. Despite the English tendency to decry America's "vigilante values," English policy makers would do well to consider a return to these crucial common law values, which stood them so well in the past.

http://reason.com/archives/2002/11/01/g ... ed-outcome

Gee, ineffective and it leads to asinine prosecutions? Where do we sign up?


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Dox47
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16 Dec 2012, 8:15 am

J-Greens wrote:
Yup, Well Done.
Google 'Warwickshire' and then to goto Maps. Book Burning, :lol: where did you think Warwickshire was? Afghanistan? :lol:


Hey, if the mustache fits...


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16 Dec 2012, 8:46 am

The guns laws in the UK didn't stop Derrick Bird a few years back. Which just shows that a person can do as much damage with an innocuous double barrel shotgun and .22 CAL rifle as someone with a couple of handguns -- Dunblane and Cumbria had a similar body count.

Then, Derrick could have used a hunting bow to do the same thing.

Then again, he could have done the same thing with a cricket bat.

And it goes on and on.

It just takes determination. Humans can have a lot of that.



matchalatte
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16 Dec 2012, 9:15 am

Dillogic has a good point.

Guns don't kill people any more than cars cause car crashes. In both cases, people are the ones in control. Driving a car will certainly cause a more fatal crash with a pedestrian than a bike just like using a gun gives the opportunity for more casualties. Why? Because in comparison to other weapons like knives, bows, etc. guns have both range and speed -- some even have range far enough that large numbers of people could be killed before a shooter is even located, let alone dealt with.

Just think; this shooter could've done considerably less damage if he were running around attempting to off people with a knife instead of a gun. Even a bow could've done less damage.

It's true that it's not the weapons themselves that cause these problems, it's the urge to be violent and the inability to manage or control it. But, that said, guns do give the opportunity for considerably more damage.

I think it's important also to consider: is this gun necessary for the use I need it for? I know someone who has a semi-automatic assault rifle. I asked him what possible use a non-military person would have for something like that. He told me that you could shoot deer with it. I personally don't hunt but it seems like overkill. I mean, you don't kill flies with a cannon, do you? It's true that in America, we have the freedom to bear arms. I don't object against that, but having a stockpile of assault weapons...sure, they won't go off and kill people on their own but they do seem a bit like an accident waiting to happen, even under the best of circumstances.



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16 Dec 2012, 9:24 am

Image


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16 Dec 2012, 10:30 am

Respectfully, can we please get along? This is getting a bit out of hand and with everything going on and the accusations being thrown around about us being violent people, it's important to prove people wrong, not right.

I'm not taking sides or trying to insult anyone. I'm not even saying that an argument is unwarranted.

I just feel like now is a time for us to stick together and have each other's backs. :)



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16 Dec 2012, 10:39 am

matchalatte wrote:
I just feel like now is a time for us to stick together and have each other's backs. :)


I feel the same. Time to band together and nail out necessary changes.



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16 Dec 2012, 11:10 am

matchalatte wrote:
Dillogic has a good point.

Guns don't kill people any more than cars cause car crashes. In both cases, people are the ones in control. Driving a car will certainly cause a more fatal crash with a pedestrian than a bike just like using a gun gives the opportunity for more casualties. Why? Because in comparison to other weapons like knives, bows, etc. guns have both range and speed -- some even have range far enough that large numbers of people could be killed before a shooter is even located, let alone dealt with.

Just think; this shooter could've done considerably less damage if he were running around attempting to off people with a knife instead of a gun. Even a bow could've done less damage.

It's true that it's not the weapons themselves that cause these problems, it's the urge to be violent and the inability to manage or control it. But, that said, guns do give the opportunity for considerably more damage.

I think it's important also to consider: is this gun necessary for the use I need it for? I know someone who has a semi-automatic assault rifle. I asked him what possible use a non-military person would have for something like that. He told me that you could shoot deer with it. I personally don't hunt but it seems like overkill. I mean, you don't kill flies with a cannon, do you? It's true that in America, we have the freedom to bear arms. I don't object against that, but having a stockpile of assault weapons...sure, they won't go off and kill people on their own but they do seem a bit like an accident waiting to happen, even under the best of circumstances.


But people don't regularly go out of their way to crash their cars.

-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer



Raptor
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16 Dec 2012, 11:13 am

Raptor wrote:
nostromo wrote:
Quote:
I think guns are winning in the "Best tool for murdering" stakes by quite a stretch.

Guns are the best tool for other tasks and one of them is defending oneself from murder.
Really, this isn’t rocket science.

nostromo wrote:
Maybe so, but I have never needed to defend myself from murderous intent, never want to have to, and never expect to.

Good for you but it's not over until it's over. In other words you haven't had to defend yourself yet.
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Its very safe where I live and basically guns are few and far between and tightly controlled.

You don't mention where you live. If it's safe there it's not because of gun control and would be just as safe without strict gun control.
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I think thats the best solution; to have safe communities, and guns are definitely not part of that solution as they only make the environment less safe not more.

That's like saying that removing the seat belts and airbags from a car make it safer because it will eliminate traffic accidents.
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Check the stats anywhere it will show you that.

Fabricated stats or real world data?
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Edit: Note that doesn't mean people like you and Dox couldn't have guns, they would just be more tightly controlled.

Apparently you don't know what mean is. Trust me when I say that mean does exist and if it ever comes a'calling you won't be prepared because you won't recognize it and believe your laws protect you.
'Nuff said.


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"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."
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matchalatte
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16 Dec 2012, 11:25 am

Kraichgauer wrote:
But people don't regularly go out of their way to crash their cars.
-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer


In my post, I actually wasn't talking about intent in this so much as how guns augment the harm of things just like cars. After all, you don't hear about many people under the influence of alcohol running on foot into a tree at 90 mph, right?