Topic: GUN CONTROL ! NOT. | |
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I'm a liberal, and I'm for gun control to a degree. Obviously people
who have criminal histories shouldn't be able to register guns.. but I've grown up around them and shot plenty of them and I believe in the right to bear arms. But... I don't carry because I really don't want to shoot anyone. There are other ways to protect yourself besides carrying guns. |
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Adventure said it all on page 1
I am licensed to carry concealed,hope I never have to use one in violence. If necc I will, no problem. I will protect the weak/needy & my family to what ever end is necc. Done it before. |
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I personally don't like guns. I have a mixture of respect and fear for
them. I don't own a gun, I haven't used one in years. But around here a lot of people do. And no one dares cross the line. Last time someone tried to rape someone in this town- he was shot. We all know who pulled the trigger.... but the police will never found them (hehe). There was a gang trying to get started here (we live waaay too close to chicago).... they left after a few people walked out onto their front steps holding rifles and shotguns. Criminals don't like victims who fight back. Any women's self defence course tells you this. All statistical evidence backs it up. Violence begets only violence- this is true. But the threat of violence makes most violent people shut up and hide. |
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Gardenforge wrote:
"Jese642 if guns increase the crime rate, why does South Dakota where there are ample guns and citizens can apply for and get a concealed carry permit with ease have one on the lowest murder rates in the U.S. while Washington D.C. where handguns are forbidden and which has one of the most restrictive gun laws on the books have the highest murder rate in the U.S. when the population of South Dakota and Washington D. C. are approxmiately the same. Guns dont cause crime, people cause crime. " A truism trying to slide by on statistical slight-of-hand that won't past muster when dissected. I certainly doubt if you'll support the logical consequent of your implied premise, that relaxing all gun control in Washington D.C. would have the same result there that it's had in South Dakota, right? A logician would cite the 'many worlds' theory, which basically says you have to consider statistics and the conclusions you draw from them with one eye on the reality in which they occur if they are to have the validity you assign them. Obviously, the two places are vastly different, with differing factors at work that you're not taking into account. So, gun control could make perfect sense in D.C., while it would unnecessarily restrictive in a place like S. Dakota. Too, in both places, the right to bear certain kinds of arms is restricted-- one can't own certain types of military armaments whose only purpose is for out-and-out waging of wars against other armies. The courts have found innumerable times that some forms of weapons control is NOT at odds with the Second Ammendment. " Ted Kennedy and Bill Janklow's cars have both killed more people than my unregistered guns" That may be, but one could also say the same thing about American nuclear weapons, yet I'm sure you're not against non-proliferation efforts to keep them out of the hands of certain regimes. I could construct the same type of Straw Man fallacy by extrapolating your gun control argument to suggest that, according to your logic, a nuclear weapon in every country's arsenal would make the world a safer place and make war obsolete. But we both know that is a sophistry.... -Kerry O. |
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Ah. But nukes in everyone's hands WOULD have a stabilizing effect. It
would essentially halt any military aspirations of all nations on earth. Except for the occasional true lunatic. Nukes, as with guns, will always come with some crazy people. Thus far, none of the nuts (except maybe Kim Jung Il) have gotten ahold of a nuke. If we could limit guns so thoroughly that only a few people on earth could have them (and make it *stick*)- then gun laws would work. If we lived in a world where every rogue lunatic could get ahold of nukes, it would make no sence to disallow a nation to having them. The one operational difference, though, is that a lunatic with a gun can't potentially cause the extinction of the entire human race. And there are a LOT more guns. We can't cork firearms- a crude gun could be made by anyone with a junk car to cut apart and a hillbilly's garage. And since they're available to the criminals, no matter what we do, we should make them available to honest and legitimate people. |
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If no one had one we wouldn't need to arm ourselves now would we?
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If no one had guns. Someone would use a KNIFE. We can't eliminate every
weapon. And even if we did- guys with muscle would beat on the guys without. And women, of course, would be worse off still. Not that this doesn't happen anyways. The only way crime stops is when victims fight back. It's just that simple. |
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" Ah. But nukes in everyone's hands WOULD have a stabilizing effect. It
would essentially halt any military aspirations of all nations on earth." No, it's more like having your hands around the throat of an immortal cobra-- do you have it, or does it have you? So many years after the War To End All Wars was brought to a halt with the aid of nukes, the U.S. has been in how many *more* wars? What happens is the wars just got fought with pawns and proxies. I daresay that's why we find ourselves in our present state of war-- a cascade of our past shadow wars, where we taught people like the mujahadeen in Afganistan how to go toe-to-toe with a superpower and win. The spectre of the gun (in all its forms) casts a long shadow... -Kerry O. |
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But look at the war it prevented. The one between the USA and the USSR.
A war between the two would have cost more lives than all wars fought before or sence, combined. And, whatever else you can say about the other wars we've been in- we came to them. No country with nuclear weapons has EVER been attacked by any outside enemy, except via sabotage or other clandestine methods. |
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Hmmmm....I'd rather face a nut with a knife than a nut with a gun....
Oceans |
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Not that I'm a great fan of nukes. I wish they never existed. I wish we
could have a full disarmament. I wish the same of guns. And violence in general. BUT since that is *impossible*- we need the ability to defend ourselves if and when some sad, evil little man brings them to bear. |
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May I share a train of thought, please?
ok, historically, first was bare hands, then rocks, sticks, spears, arrows, knives, guns, cannons, nukes, tazars, (sp?), umm, and so on and so forth... It just keeps escalating... What will be the weapon of choice next? What violence reaker will be invented next, to curtail the violence... I know my ideals are simplistic to some...I just see the elemental fear of "get them before they get me", has gotten society nowhere.. |
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a hosltered weapon takes more time to pull out than someone with a
knife. if you research this you will find, believe this or not (and I must admit it seems contradictory , but none the less true) that the knife strikes the first blow. studies were done with quick draw sharp shotters for the secret service and found that a person with a knife could close on and deliver a cripple strike before the gun can even get out of the holster. i know i know i know, i didnt believe it myself, but have seen it and do believe that it is as true as a baby is pure. whats the point. its not the weapon that kills but the person. we are not going to change bad people into good, simply because wqe want it to be so. well thats my two cents. \ doc |
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Hey Jess!
Disarmament takes courage. Few people have what it takes, and so the escalation goes on and on. I've done a bit of shooting -- target and terrain simulations -- and it is a bit of a kick -- boys with toys and all that -- but I'll take a game of foosball any day! Oceans |
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Disarmament takes UNITY. If we were limitted to just one mindset- if
everyone believed in peace and goodwill towards men and all that great jazz- then it'd work. And maybe, one day, it will happen. But we live in a world where people strap bombs to themselves as a method of military assault. We live in a world where strict gun laws ultimately mean more gun crimes and gun deaths than loose ones. In a perfect world, you guys would be right. In a perfect world. |
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Disarmament takes UNITY. If we were limitted to just one mindset- if
everyone believed in peace and goodwill towards men and all that great jazz- then it'd work. And maybe, one day, it will happen. But we live in a world where people strap bombs to themselves as a method of military assault. We live in a world where strict gun laws ultimately mean more gun crimes and gun deaths than loose ones. In a perfect world, you guys would be right. In a perfect world. |
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disarmment
takes away your freedom if no one is armed the govt can do whatever it wishes hitler was a strong gun control advacate as well |
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With all the gun control we have today you would think violence would go
down, but I saw on the news yesterday that mass killings were way up since the 1960's. Go fiqure..., or should I say assume. You say you would rather face a nut with a knife, well I am very profiecent with a knife as well as a gun. I would not attack you with either though, which takes me back to,,, Guns dont kill people, people kill people. Why does everyone feel the need to take away our guns? Aint there some other place yall can stick your do-gooder noses. How about make a law against whining about other people's buissness. Taking away peoples guns will not prevent murders. The right to bear arms is in the constitution to prevent the government from becoming to powerful. If we have guns we can at least fight back, like they did in 1776... |
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We never had this problem about gun control till they gave women the
right to vote....LMAO maybe we should resend that law?? |
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"He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy
from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent which will reach to himself." --Thomas Paine (1737-1809), conclusion, _Dissertation on First Principles of Government,_1795 |
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