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Are guns really all that great?
Hi.
I come from Ireland. In Ireland the only people with access to guns are the army, special divisions of the police force, hunters ( in order to be legally considered a hunter you must first attain written permission from several landowners to hunt on their land. As a hunter the only weapon legally available is a double barreled shotgun ) and criminals. While I find it unnerving that there are a number of weapons in the hands of those who might intend to use them for something more sinister than sport, I don't feel the need to carry one for my own protection. As is most often the case with shootings in Ireland, you only get shot at if you piss off the wrong people. I choose to avoid all contact with these kind of people. So, having never really discharged a firearm other than in a video game, tell me: Are guns as much fun in real life? Or does it get boring shooting at tin cans and deer? |
They are more fun in real life than they are in games like Counter Strike; there's a reason it's a popular sport in the US. It's a skill that takes practice and effort, and is a very fun way to enjoy an afternoon. I also believe it's a necessary skill to have, and that (if you are comfortable with guns) you should take measures to protect yourself.
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What Delayed said, and I would like to add that I personally feel that even if you do not like guns, I still think that you should at least know how to unload one safety. Of course, that is really not an option for you ecomdan
Last I heard, we have over 500 million guns in private ownership here in the states, and that is just an estamate of the ones legally owned. |
i own 2 guns a handgun and a shotgun.....im around them (guns) all the time so they are no big deal to me....if i could have it my way....no civilians would have them....
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Absolutely. I think maybe the reason some of you might think its a necessary skill is because firearms are so prolific in your country* there must be some kind of constant worry that any remotely dodgy lookin punk could just pull out a gun and blow your fucking head off for no good reason... *I just said that assuming most of you are from the US, please correct me if I'm wrong. |
Ecomdan: I think you might have watched a a few too many movies. America is actually a very safe place and probably safer than most european countries. With that aside. I shoot fairly often and I do it merely as a hobby. It takes a lot of practice to become completely comfortable and proficient with a firearm. And just like any other hobby it is extremely rewarding when you see the fruits of your work.
G5Todd: If you use history as an example you might find that taking away of civillians guns is an indicator of impending doom. |
Nope, I'm not afraid at all of where I live. I regularly jog at night, and have walked across campus at 2AM several times. Crime at College Park is on par with the rest of America, and yet I still have never feared for my life around here.
Why would I insist on being armed? It's a question of preparedness. Despite the fact that I don't go out of my way to take chances, I believe every individual has an obligation to know how to protect themselves. Training in the use of a firearm, and then carrying that firearm, is one way to be prepared. I also intend to take training in defensive driving and knife defense when I have the time and money. Why? Partially because it's fun and I like stuff like that. But also because if you're in a situation where you need it, you will miss not having it if you don't. You want every advantage you can have in life or death situations, and these are easy advantages to get. One of the reasons I'm so passionate about this is because I have yet to hear of a valid reason to ban the ownership of firearms. |
believe me...this country would do just fine if civilians didnt have guns.....its just my opinion
but i like the arguement of when the bill of rights was issued it was a long time ago (obviously) and alot has changed we were a country that was not a super power by any means and you needed a gun in certain areas for many reasons..... those reasons no longer exist....we have supermarkets, 911, and a kickass military...... |
Every branch of the government has checks and balances on itself, and that it has on others, the only way that civilians can be sure that the government can not become oppressive is to own firearms.
Additionally, target shooting is a great activity, it doesn't get boring, and hunting gives you the satisfaction of earning your food. |
G5: Those reasons do exist and will always exist. In a simple context, gun control is an inversely proportional measure of how much a government trusts the people that it governs. If I am trusted to vote, pay taxes, and come to the defense (using a gun, of course) of my country in times of need, shouldn't I be trusted to possess guns for private use?
For the longer answer: The framers of the US Constitution ultimately had one goal in mind: The power must remain in the hands of the People. As long as the People control the government, all is well. When the governement controls the People, its power will only increase until is becomes uncontrollably oppressive (i.e. tyranny). "People" is capitalized on purpse. Would we ever reach a situation where I would have to go up against a brigade from the local Army base? Of course not. (I hope. Then again, look up "Bonus Army" on Google.) On the other hand, should a government fear its citizenry? Hopefully not, but it increases a little bit at a time. The greatest steps in gun control in the U.S. have come at a time when the government was most fearful of civil unrest--post Civil War, the Great Depression, and the late 1960s when there were many riots. When did Germany inacts its gun control--when the Weimar Republic was trying to maintain power from the rising factions after WWI. Hitler didn't need to enact gun control--it was already there when he took over. No matter the name given it, gun control is simply about control. |
To get a firearms licence here you only need the permission of 3 landowners or be a member of a gun club.So its not that hard to get a licence here.
As for the enjoyment, I have been shooting since I was sixteen. I find it a great way to relax and the slagging that goes on between all the lads is great.You dont have to be a "hunter" to own a gun here, there are plenty of us shooters who enjoy clay shooting more so than the actual shooting of live game. I dont know what part of Ireland you are in, but there are 2 good shooting grounds in Dublin, one in Courtlough and one not too far from the airport. You can get some coaching there and 99%(I say 99% because there will always be one bastard in life) of people there would be more than happy to help you along the way. If clays are not to your liking there is always rifle shooting. A target range is open in Tullowmore, again people there will help you to know end. We have not any handgun clubs except for I that I have just found out about,due to the troubles, they are not illegal here it is just that the garda will not issue you with a licence, but I think that is being challenged in the courts at the moment. So in a few years time you might, and that is a big might be able to get your hands on a handgun. As for it getting boring, if it was that easy we would all be world champions :thumbsup: |
Ecomdan-
To answer the question, "are guns really all that great?" I would have to answer a simple, "yes." I love my guns and I love living in a country where we are still hanging on to a Bill of Rights that allows us to possess them and protect ourselves. |
I think so.
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A gun is just a tool. People were killing people before they were invented and people will be killing people after they are band. If someone wants to kill someone it does'nt matter what tool they use does it?
I oun some guns and I don't have any for selfdefence. I have them for hunting and target shooting. |
target shooting, and clay shooting is a grand ol' time!
i do think knowledge of how to unload a gun safely should be something people in general should know, and I also think for gun owners proper cleaning and handling etiquette is very important to know. Hearing stories about people who have shot themselves while cleaning their rifle, or handgun just seems ridiculous to me. |
Shooting a gun is better than you could possibly imagine. The closest you will ever get to having the wizard-like power to point at something and see it destroyed at your whim. It helps if you work on your aim to be able to hit what you point at.
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id just like to have the option of telling someone to shut up in the movies and not have to worry about getting shot....
but thats just where i live i guess |
Banning citizens from owning guns wouldn't really solve that problem, though. That just disarms law-abiding citizens, not the criminals that you're worried about. All that a gun ban does is give the police, military, and criminals more power over the average citizen.
So yes, guns are great in the right hands. |
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But at the risk of turning this into a political discussion, Ill stop there :D So basically, yeah, guns can be a lot of fun. Its a large responsibility, but a lot of fun. I mainly shoot skeet, and have a grand old time doing it :) |
Yes.
And they're so much more. *cue Meg Ryan orgasm scene* I dunno about me either. ;) |
I love shooting. I've never hunter, nor do I want to, but I love going out to a range and shooting skeet. It's great to get a friend or two and go fire a box or two of ammo each and if you want to up the ante a little, keep score and have the loser buy lunch. None of us own a gun either, we just rent an over-under shotty at the range.
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Yes its definatly fun. It's nothing like you see in the movies. America is apparently nothing like you see on the news either.
I work midnights truck drivers are constantly coming in and asking for directions, I'm the only person who works this shift where I work. I have zero fear about being shot by them. The only thing I fear is when guns are illegal to own or the liscencing is ludacris so that I can't get one. Then I'll fear, but not for my own personal safety. more for where this country is going when that happens. |
I'm moving to Ireland after I finish writing this. My family has owned guns and has been into firearms for several generations. Army familys can be like that. As for myself, I've used several different types in a safe environment (a gun range). To be honest, I think guns are cowardly. Justice at 50 paces just comes off as more of human natures need to perfect and purify violence. I know most people probably think I'm a coward and a fool for saying this, but let me address that. I'm not a coward because I have prevented several violent crimes, without the use of weapons. The fool part is a matter of opinnion, I suppose. No one I've ever met has been in a situation that only guns can solve, outside of the military. I know that there are extreme situations where a gun might be necessary, but usually they involve an aggressor with a gun. "Why do you own a gun?" "The Bill of Rights says I can!!!!" The Bill of Rights is not a reason. Anyone who just spews back crap like this should be forced to not imbreed. The Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights states "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." Remember the Revolutionary War? The French and Indian War had just ended. The British rule was imposing unrepresented taxes on the 13 colonies. The Boston Massacre stirred the American people. This was when the Second Amendment was written. In those times, people needed to defend themselves from everything. Times have changed. The Second Amendment was made to protect Americans not from themselves, but from others. Americans killing each other is crap. This almost infant-like clutching of people to the Second Amendment makes me sick. What REAL right do you have to own guns? What LOGICAL reason is there? “To defend ourselves!!!!” I suppose you want people to build more nuclear weapons to deal with others nuclear weapons. Can’t people understand that is absurd?
So there you go. I don’t think guns are great. I don’t like them much at all. Oh, Zefleebin, in response to what you said to G5 Todd, something to think about. Every nation in history that has allowed government recognized gay marriges has fallen in one generation. Do you think America will fall apart in one generation? |
Of course they are not all that great. They are to protect people from other people with guns. Take away guns(handguns) all together and there wouldn't be that problem. Handguns are meant to kill people. You dont kill a dear with a handgun, and I see nothing wrong with hunting.
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The Supreme Court has already ruled on the militia aspect of your argument. And for the record, it isn't talking about about the National Guard. "The right of the PEOPLE shall not be infringed", how much clearer does it need to be? That spells it out in pretty simple terms. Why do you feel you must encroach upon the rights of others? I'm sure you do things that I don't necessarily like or approve but you don't see me trying to deny you what brings you happiness. Whatever happened to "live and let live"? |
What crazy country is going to attack the US with us citizens armed the way we are. They would have alot of people to fight off.
Or maybe we should ban all guns then put up a big peace sign. When the countries that we raped in the past come a knocking we'll put flowers in thier guns. Then the rainbows come out, birds sing, and all is good. |
Just to give you an example of why I like my guns, here is something that happened to me last week. I was sitting here, on my computer, at 2 in the morning. Then I hear a diesel engine outside. Strange, since it's so late, and the only time I hear that kind of engine is when the UPS or garbage truck goes by. I peek outside, and parked right outside my house is a pickup truck, 1970-80s style, and the guy in the cab is shining a flashlight into the windows of my house. What the fuck is going on? He drives off, then turns around up the street and comes back, parking infront of my neighbor's house. By this point I have my rifle loaded and locked, and I'm observing him through a small slit in the blinds. He then proceeds to get out of his truck, walks onto my front lawn, still shining that flashlight into the windows. After about a minute, he starts up the walkway to my front door, which is on the left side of my house. I don't think so motherfucker. I threw back the curtains when he was right outside the window and let him see me pointing my assault rifle at his fucking chest. He beat feet back to his truck. It was scary as fuck, because I didn't know if he was going to produce a weapon from his truck or not, and I didn't want to be standing there like a big target, but I also didn't want to kill him, so I let the curtain drop back, and I watched through the slit again as he drove off. I called the cops and told them what happened, and they sent a car around to patrol the neighborhood for the rest of the night.
So, who was this person, and what the hell was he doing prowling around my house so early in the morning? I don't have a damn clue. I've never seen a pickup such as that in my neighborhood before. Was he a delivery guy who got lost and went to the wrong house? A bounty hunter? A theif? A rapist? A murderer? Who knows. But I'll tell you right now, I'm not about to risk the lives of my loved ones to find out. Now, you might say just letting him see me would have made him leave. Maybe. What if he had a gun himself? Then he'd just see a victim standing in the window. What if he just came back later better prepared, confident that he could overpower me? Well, he got the message loud and clear. I have a big gun, and I will shoot you if you try anything. When I bought my rifles, the main reason was to go shooting at the range with them, with a secondary role of home defense. However, I never thought that I'd actually have to use them to deter someone. I am happy that I had them at that moment. Right there, they paid for themselves an infinite amount of times. I hope that I will never actually have to fire at someone to protect my loved ones, myself, or my property, but it makes me feel more comfortable knowing that I have the option to be more that a victim against criminals in my own home. I don't own a gun because the 2nd amendment says I can, I own it for fun, and for protection. I will never use it to harm an innocent, and you don't have to worry about me going out and preforming vigilante justice with it. I'm not worried about the US military turning on it's citizens either. However, I do think that people are deluded when they think the military could walk right over an armed citizenry. True, most gun owners only own handguns and rifles, and the military has jets, tanks, artillery, etc. However, think about the size of the military. There are only 1.42 million United States military personnel in the world http://web1.whs.osd.mil/mmid/M05/hst0403.pdf Only about 100,000-150,000 of those people are combat infantry. There are roughly 286 million people that live in the US. Let's assume 1/3 own firearms, that's 95 million people. Even if only 10% decide to take up arms against an oppressive government/military, that's still 9.5 million people. Granted, they won't all be in the same place, but neither would the military. The military would be successful in the opening stages, but it would bog down pretty quickly. It relys on the civilian infastructure to move around, and it isn't autonomous. It gets all it's equipment from civilian manufacturers. So, they would quickly run out of fuel, food, ammunition, etc. The might be able to establish strongpoints around bases and such, but they would not be able to control the civilian populus. How long until they would be overrun and wiped out? Ok, what if the law enforcement agencies help the military? Well, according to this http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/03statab/law.pdf there were only roughly 1 million law officers. Given that they are mainly equipped with handguns and shotguns, they would be swept aside in a massive armed uprising. It would be bloody, just as any civil war is, and you might be quick to point out that most people wouldn't risk their lives, but then I would point out that almost no one in the military would follow orders to kill other Americans. Simply put, the United States military could not beat the United States, and this is largely due to the fact that we are an armed country. Now, take a country with very few to no armed citizens (note: modern weapons, swords and the like don't count). The military would walk right over them. There might be isolated cases of people capturing military equipment after taking massive casualties, but in the end, they would be oppressed and put under the heel of the government. That is my belief, and that is why I'm wary of gun control. As long as it makes the government think twice, I'm all for an armed populous. On that note, if the government wants my guns, they can come try to take them. |
I agree 100% with the thought of guns being tools, nothing more. I own several guns and target shoot whenever I can. I don't want to hunt, I have no intrest in violence. I don't feel a need to own a gun for protection. I don't feel a need to own a lawn mower.
In my experence people who have any real knowlege of gun use or ownership can recognize that there is nothing evil about a hunk of steel. Violence comes from humans, it always has. I'm not a gun nut, I'll never have anything to do with the NRA, but it really bothers me when my Liberal friends (I'm also a big time liberal) act like it's a given that guns cause crime and that only crazy rednecks own guns. Are guns that great? For me, a gun isn't much of anything. I think shooting is great. I think that most shooters are very responsable and safty minded people who are great to be around. If it's not for you, that's cool too. |
Thank you, Scout, for proving my point. You tried to argue with a point I never even hinted at. The only mention of militia was in my quoting the second amendment. What I was saying, or rather writing, was that the time in which the amendment was put into effect was a different time in history, in respect to physical dangers that could only be defended against with guns. I haven't encroached on anyones rights here. I didn't take anyones gun. I was practicing freedom of speech. Are you encroaching on my rights by telling me I can't say that I don't like guns? Of course not.
Thank you whocarz for puting up a decent argument for the side of gun ownership. I appreciate it when someone can put thoughts together logically and present a case. In response to your post, I have to say I'm glad you and your family are okay. Yes there are some really dangerous people out there."What if he had a gun himself? Then he'd just see a victim standing in the window. What if he just came back later better prepared, confident that he could overpower me?" Interesting. So you say there should be no gun control, so you can defend youself from people that shouldn't have guns. "I'm not worried about the US military turning on it's citizens..." I agree. I trust the US military. "As long as it makes the government think twice, I'm all for an armed populous. On that note, if the government wants my guns, they can come try to take them." Wait. I'm not sure I understand you. You are not worried about the US military turning on its citizens, yet you own a gun to make the government think twice about "walking over you". I think that there are plenty of places in the world where a poor military and/or police forces make gun ownership necessary. I don't think that the US is one of those places. DO NOT GET ME WRONG. I am glad that you had a good offence as a defence in the case you mentioned. You had a last resort to defend yourself. Wouldn't you feel safer if you knew that guy outside your house couldn't have a gun? Would it still be necessary for you to own guns for defensive purpouses? |
I prefer swords, much prettier.
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I don't think that the most important aspect of gun control should necessarily be keeping them out of the hands of criminals. But rather, keeping them out of the hands of irresponsible adults and innocent children. Please don't take this as a personal attack on any of you gun owners here on the board, but I really think that children should not be raised in an environment where firearms are present. I grew up without them, and without fear of them. Should I ever take a trip to the US I'll probably go to a shooting range to play with some high-power rifles, but I'll never actually buy my own gun. Thanks, everyone, for all your feedback. Lots of valid points and stuff... I'd love to have some witty anecdote to really end this thread properly, but I've drawn a blank. I'll leave it up to someone else. |
How about this witty remark:Thant was Zen. This is Tao.
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Willravel: I think that you are mistaking what I said for a random correlation. The process of taking away the the guns of civillians is a tactic that governments have used in the past to bolster their power. The comparison you made, in my opinion, is a spurious correlation at best. To put that more plainly, I believe that the introduction of gay marriage laws can not reasonably be considered the true reason for the downfall of a government. Those laws could be viewed as indirectly involved but serve more as an extraneous variable.
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Ecomdan, did you mean that kids shouldn't have access to guns, or that they shouldn't even be in their presence?
If you meant that children should have no access to firearms, you'll be pleased to know that every American firearms maker includes well constructed locks with their firearms that render the gun inoperable. And I don't know a single gun owner that doesn't keep their guns locked up, unloaded, and out of reach. NO responsible gun owner ever allows a child acess to a stored firearm. If you meant that children shouldn't be in the general vicinity of guns, would you please explain why? I ask because I know other people (most of them very smart) who hold that belief, but have never really been able to articulate it in a way I can understand. BTW, have any of you ever noticed how the NRA ignores the words “well regulated” in the second amendment? I know a whole bunch of NRA members who have no problem at all with gun control, only with gun banning. In fact, most of the gun owners I know favor more laws to keep guns out of the hands of criminals and children. I wouldn’t bother saying that normally, but it occurs to me that some of the Europeans hear have as twisted a idea of gun owners as we do of Europeans. And to throw one more little thing in, what about the right of property? Life, liberty, and property are the most basic rights we recognize over here in the US. A gun is certainly a piece of property, and capable of doing less damage than a car or a tank of gasoline. Why do people retreat to the second amendment instead of arguing that people have the same right to a gun that they do a Porche? |
Ahem.
Political comments aside (which belong in "Politics"), yes, guns are extremely fun to shoot (and no, I don't mean hunting, which I don't do). Machine guns are even more fun to shoot, especially if you have a few acres and some propane bottles! |
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Did you just use 'bolster' and 'spurious' on an internet forum? No need to impress. I want everyone to understand what we're trying to say.
Governments in the past have used this tactic to tear its citizens away from their freedoms in the past, but what we are talking about is THIS government. Thus the homosexual correlation. What I was trying to point out is that with the comparison was that things that have happened in the past do not always repeat themselves. If the US government were to, hypothetically, take away gun rights from its civilians, I don't think it will be an act to control. It would most likely be a last resort against gun violence. Understand? I suppose what you were trying to tell me in so many words was that you wouldn't trust the American government if they were to take away our gun rights. We can agree to disagree on this one because neither one of us could possible prove our side conclusively. Bottom line, I beleive that your assumption that because other civilizations have used a gun ban as a tool for control, the US would would use a gun ban as a tool for control is just as baseless as my comment on gay marriges (which, by the way, I have no opinnions on either way) connection to governmental colapse. They are both government implemented rules that could be considered an act of control, and both have had disasterous results in the past. It's really not such a spurious correlation when you think about it in those terms. It is in these terms when the comparison becomes valid to the argument on the whole. Kurtz: Interesting point. Thank you for not hiding behind the second amendment. I hadn't thought of gun ownership rights as in 'life, liberty, and the persuit of property (happyness?)'. Oh well, I'm tired of speechafying. Goodnight. |
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How can takeing one tool(guns) away stop people from just useing a different tool?
Can any of you answer this? Yes guns can kill. So do alot of other things. I for one know more people that have died from other things than guns than that have died because of guns. Guns are used for fun and sport. There is a feeling of power holding a explosion in your hands. To be able to be in one spot and touch something far away. The gun needs some care takeing to it to keep it working good. Hunting is a whole different thing. It's not about going out and killing something. It's about being out in nature. It takes quite a bit of time. When you do kill something and just before some strange hormones go off in your body. Handguns can be used for hunting. You have to check you local laws on what guns can be used for hunting. Some places only shotguns are legal to hunt with. Thats because if someone missed with a rifle and there is nothing to stop the bullet it can still be lethal for over a mile. |
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If someone is a law-abiding citizen who enjoys the shooting sports and owning guns makes them happy and they don't hurt anyone, what harm is it to you? What harm has it done to you? What business is it of yours? It's absolutely none of your business, just as what happen's in your bedroom, for example, is none of my business or the government's for that matter, but there sure is a lotta people that want to regulate and make it their business. As I stated in my first post, whatever happened to live and let live? As long as you aren't hurting anyone but yourself, provided your over 18, you should be able to do or own anything you choose or want if it makes you happy. Why do you feel compelled to protect people from themselves? |
Deer hunting with handguns is popular, humane, and safe.
I agree with the "infant like clutching" bit, there are a bunch of gun owners that have no historical or practical understanding of the 2nd ammendment. That doesn't make them bad, or dangerous. There are plenty of people on both sides of the arguement that can't reasonably argue their points, that doesn't make them wrong. Have you ever herd Rosie O'Donnell speak on the subject? Talk about "infant like"... Whocarz: the laws I was refering to are the ones that put more cops on the street or more strictly enforce probation guidelines and restraining orders. The gunlaws we have now arn't really enforced anyway, It's basically a honor system thing. |
Militia has nothing to do with bears and wolves. What I was saying is that most people in that time were not living in large citys. Most of the people living in the 13 colonies in that time were living either in loose communities (i.e. a few neightbors withing a mile radius), or alone. This meant that there were natural dangers that guns might have helped with. Militia was not the only people who dealt with the brits. Before the Revolutionary war, or before actual american militias, there were people who were being treated poorly. Also, there was a shortage of policeing bodys in the colonies. All of that as opposed to now. More people live in towns and citys than by themselves in the US now. Our police is infinately better. Most dangerous animals are on endangered species lists. We are not in immediate danger from a foreign power that guns could prevent.
As for the Second Ammendment, I don't agree with the supreme court. You know what? That's okay. I would never brake the laws just because I don't agree with them, thus I would never take your guns, BUT that doesn't mean I have to agree with you. As for whos buisness this is, most of this is noones buisness, mine or yours. What I am talking about is so general, that it can't be applied to being just your buisness. I'm a little surprised that you compared gun ownership with some private act in the bedroom (probably hinting at sexual acts). Are you serious? I might as weell compare gun ownership to abortion or taxes. "Why do you feel compelled to protect people from themselves?" Good question. Hmmm. It's the right thing to do. I mean if Jesus did it, and Ghandi did it, it doesn't seem to be so terribly evil or bad. Besides, I'm not forcing my beleifs on others. That WOULD be wrong. I am having a discussion with someone that has a different opinnion. Are you really going to incite that is wrong? If you could have stopped what happened with the Heavens Gate suicides, would you have? According to what you said, you would say no. According to you, saving others from themselves is not something we should be compelled to do! And shame on me for doing something about it. |
Gun ownership deters crime and it is much more difficult to quell or subjugate an armed populace, let alone one that has had a fondness for guns since inception. As for other people's affairs, I shouldn't interfere unless your well being is at stake and I do not believe you to be of sound enough mind to handle your own situation.
Also I'm curious, how do you think of guns? From yours posts I get the feeling that you believe them to be things that bring unwanted elements into the world that on the whole are unnecessary and therefore can't really justify their existence except for the amount of people that want them and your disbelief in imposing your beliefs on other people in the form of rules and regulations on how to live, and in this case, pertaining to gun ownership. |
Gun ownership probably does deter crime in some way. I'm sure a few potential agessors think twice about robbing a house, because the 'guy might have a gun'. The bottom line is that in a study done by the NBER 'home weapons did not enter into the assailants mind before comitting the violent crime' in over 97% of home invasion cases in which there was a violent crime. According to a recent NBER Working Paper by MMark Duggan, after 1993, gun homicides in the United States dropped 36% by 1998, while non-gun homicidesdeclined by only 18%. In that same period, the fraction of households with at least one gun fell from more than 42% to less than 35%. Duggan finds that about one-third of the gun-homicide decline since 1993 is explained by the fall in gun ownership. The largest declines occour in areas with the largest reductions in firearm ownership. His conclusion was that guns foster rather than deter criminal activity.
In theory, the effect of gun ownership on crime is ambiguous. If criminals are deterred from committing crimes when potential victims are more likely to possess a firearm, then more gun ownership may lead to a reduction in criminal activity. If instead guns increase the payoff to criminal activity, or simply increase the likelihood that any particular confrontation will result in a victim's death, then an increase in gun ownership will tend to increase the crime rate. Proving one theory over the other has been difficult because of the lack of adequate data on gun ownership measured across geographic areas over time. But as evidence of the accuracy of the gun magazine subscription data, Duggan shows that sales rates are significantly higher in counties whose average demographic characteristics are similar to those of the typical gun owner according to national surveys. Furthermore, he shows that the death rate from gun accidents and the number of gun shows per capita are positively related to the magazine sales. While Duggan admits that relatively few readers may be criminals, he points out that the majority of firearms used in crime are obtained either from burglaries or from the secondhand market. Thus as the rate of gun ownership in the general population increases, the ease with which criminals can obtain a gun will increase. Duggan finds that state and county-level changes in the rate of gun ownership are positively related to changes in the homicide rate. His findings suggest that gun ownership causes crime, and does not simply reflect individuals purchasing guns in response to increases in criminal activity. In support of this, he finds that increases in gun ownership are positively related to future increases in the gun homicide rate, but bear no corresponding relationship to non-gun homicides. His findings reveal that the relationship with other crime categories is much less marked, suggesting that guns primarily affect crime by increasing the homicide rate. He then examines whether legislation that allowed individuals to carry concealed weapons had an important impact on the crime rate. He shows that this legislation did not lead to a substantial increase in gun ownership, nor did it reduce crime relatively more in counties with high rates of gun ownership. This latter finding suggests, Duggan writes, "either that gun owners did not increase the frequency with which they carried their guns or that criminals were not deterred by the greater likelihood that their victims would be armed." Taken together, his results suggest that Carrying Concealed Weapons legislation did not have an important effect on the rate of gun ownership or on the crime rate. I hope that successfully shut down your claim that "Gun ownership deters crime". I guess that there are a lot of people out there that are honestly afraid of the government or the military conquering (did't feel the need to use "subjugate" or "quell") the citizens of the United States (assuming you are from the US). The only argument I haven't yet addressed, that has been brought up several times, is this one. I want to clarify, because you suddenly become quite cryptic when it comes to this: are you afraid that the US government and/or the US military are going to take your freedom if you don't have guns in your homes? "It is much more difficult to quell or subjugate an armed populace" those are your words. The only other way I can interpret this is that you beleive that either a non government/military power in the US or a foreign force is immediatally threatening our freedoms. Now as far as a US civilian force, I don't know of any civilian group that can challenge the US police forces and/or military forces that will take YOUR freedoms. I can't imagine an independant group based in the US comming to your home and enslaving you. Most people would say that is either absurd or paranoid. As far as a foreign group, we do have enemys out there. We learned that they have tactics to strike on American soil on September 11, 2001. I know that freaked a lot of people out. BUT, there is no precedent to a foreign force taking over a residential area. The likelyhood of that happening is probably in the same range as alien abduction or being hit by lightning three or four times in a row. As for your run on sentance, yes, for the most part. I beleive guns are unwanted elements. I beleive that on the whole, they are unnecessary outside of law enforcement (including military). Yes, I was surprised that people were claiming that I was infringing on their rights by my simply stating that I am against private or civilian gun ownership. My argument about gun ownership is not about how people live. If guns are a way of life for you, then I feel pity for you. A way of life should not be around weapons of any sort, but about larger beliefs and values and morals and ethics. A gun is not a belief. To answer more specifically your question "Also I'm curious, how do you think of guns?": I think them to be a necessary evil for military and police forces. I do not, however, see the logic behind alowing such power to be given simply by background check and a few days to any citizen. Guns find their way to the wrong people too easily this way. How many guns used illegally do you think are from the military or police forces? I would assume very few, if any. As for sport, I know hunting can be fun for people. I've hunted on several occasions. I'd much rather hunt with an older weapon, such as a sword, dagger, or spear, in order to give the prey a chance. You do not hunt for food, but for sport. I hunt on the off chance that I am left away from civilization (meaning grocery stores or markets) and I need to hunt for food. As someone who hikes in very secluded areas and loves to travel to areas that are, in fact, far from civilization, I consider it a necessary evil. I do catch and release 100% of the time. In case you are wondering, I am not a big fan of any projectile weapons. Damn, I love to babble on. Please feel free to respond, as I welcome a good discussion. |
Well after reading the debate on this thread I would like to offer a brief commentary.
First, the two sides here will never agree on this subject. In fact, I feel strongly that both sides think the other is completely stupid, insane, and unable to see the big picture. I can't be sure about this because I'm one of those NRA gun lovers and I have never felt willravel's frustration with me, only my frustration with him (and his side.) So willravel, you can help me understand this a little better. Does it frustrate you to no end that I have the value set that I do? I will say this, I've felt the desire to chime into the small debate here several times with well argued posts, but in the end, my better judgement prevented it. Nothing you can say will possibly change my mind on this issue. To the contrary, the more you talk about the reasons we shouldn't have guns the more I question what species you belong to. I'm sure you feel the same way about me. So in the end I think it would be silly for me to spend hours preparing relatively well written responses on internet forums. I would seriously like to know what you think about my opinions posted here. -To the author and moderators, sorry about this post but the thread got hijacked a couple of days ago, I'm just piling on some semi-original thought. |
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Out of curiosity, what natural dangers existed then that do not exist now? I read this very literally, and assumed you meant wild animals, in which case I have to disagree with you. |
To Dostoevsky: I am totally fine with the fact that I'm probably not reaching anyone. I realize that I am basically preaching anti-guns on a gun forum, so I am not looking for minds to be changed. To be totally honest, I'm trying to understand. I admit that my mind was mostly made up before I started, but I am always looking to understand peoples thought processes and how they reach such different conclusions than I do.
I consider this to be a good way to spend my time and I enjoy talking to people who have completly different outlooks on topics and such. I am starting to understand a great deal about people that, just a few days ago, I had nothing in common with. While I don't think I belong to a different species than you, I do have a background and beliefs that are in stark contrast to yours. I NEVER meant to frustrate anyone. Actually, I want to share the enjoyment I get from discussions just like these. I think it's okay to question others beliefs, just as you should qustion your own. As long as you never force your beliefs on others, discussion can be constructive. Though I still consider myself to be very much anti-gun, I have more respect for those who are pro-gun (I realize that anti-gun and pro-gun are not case specific names for some of the people who posted, but it's specific enough to label both general sides). Getting back to the original question of the threat in pertaining to your question, I think guns are okay if you are completly responsible and there is no way your gun can be taken or given to those who would use it to harm others. I personally will not own a gun, unless of course something catastrophic happens like another civil war. I HAVE seen several constitutional rights taken away recently, several by the poorly named Patriot Act. If civil war does brake out, I would only kill in self defence. What I'm getting from the responses suggests that most of you guys are on the same wavelength as I am as far as self defence. You just have a slightly different acceptance ruler as far as when it is okay to actually own a gun. I hope that you can relate to me on some level. I was a bit dissapointed when you took what I said and considered me alienated to people like you. We are probably very similar in many respects. We may like the same music, we may both be of the same religion, or we may both be into the same fight to remain a free nation. I consider all of these to be much more important than opinnions on gun laws. Well thanks for responding honestly. I hope I helped you to understand both my state of mind and my reasoning. |
Oh sorry bodymassage3: the dangers of wild animals were higher a few hundred years ago. This is my opinnion, on which I based my argument. Good work pointing it out. I have done a lot of traveling in my life. Some of that traveling has landed me hiking torugh the Appalachian Mountains. Though I traveled more than 60 miles in about a week (this was not on a trail, btw) I only encountered one bear. I was expecting to encounter some wild cats and some wolves. Nothing. I was only with one other person the whole week and this would normally be a simple target for a pack of wolves or a wild cat. I was a combination of releived, and dissapointed. What this meant to me is that either the animals have become very very afraid of humans, or they are simply not there. Do you know how many animal attacks there are in the Eastern United States every year? Except for Coyotes, which are relitivly new in the East, there were almost none. I asked the guide after we had finished if we were in an area with wildlif control or hunting. Nope. While it wasn't a preserve, it was illegal to hunt on the land.
Now back a few hundred years ago, there was a different story. Records state of much different predators in the appalachian area. Wolves and wild cats were a serious threat in most rural areas, and even into citys! While they were hunted, their environment was still a large area and there were many more animals in total than there are now. One good defence from such wild and dangerous animals were guns. |
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First of all, fuck me, in my current condition I can't possibly read all of whats been written on this thread as I've just spent the last six and a half hours driving back from a gig. I haven't slept in 36 hours or so, I am tired, I promise to read all of your posts when I'm I've slept a bit. But I noticed your post Kurt, and felt obligated to reply. In answer to your question, I think that no parent in their right mind should ever expose their children to firearms except to tell them that they are of no use to a civilized person. I understand and believe what you say about manufacturers countermeasures and steps taken by parents to prevent their children from gaining access to their weapons, but all we hear over here is Michael Moores side of the story really. Thats the reason I started this thread, so I could get a well balanced view of the situation rather than some over-hyped media hacks interpretation of gun laws in the United States. Thanks. |
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No I don't feel compelled to save someone from themselves if they are over 18 and of sound mind. One could argue that anyone who wishes to take their own life isn't of sound mind, so depending on the circumstances I may or may not have felt compelled to stop the suicides at Heaven's Gate. I wasn't there nor did I have to make that decision so anything I say at this point would be pure conjecture with absolutely no meaning. I'm not attempting to shame you or anything like that, on trying to save someone from themselves, merely pointing out that one needs to be careful in doing so they don't take unalienable rights away from others. |
Ecomdam, you wrote that hunters and legal shooters must jump through hoops that criminals don't. Don't you find this ironic? The people who laws are intended for have guns to break the laws? I beleive Great Britan recently banned all private gun ownership, and promptly, crime skyrocketed. When the criminals don't know who is armed, they are far, far less inclined to commit crimes.
I own guns, I hunt and I shoot. That said, I do agree that owning guns requires responsibilty and training. Personally, while not infringing on current rights, think there should be some kind of training system or personal licensing in place. I'm not saying gun registration, just personal licensing, along the lines of hunters safety type courses. Hunting and shooting are challenging and relaxing past times, never seem to get old, just like golf, always a challenge to improve ones skills. Additionally, go to the Center for Disease Control web site and find the number of children killed or injured by firearms. Far more drown every year in 5 gallon buckets, shall they also be banned? |
I don't own any guns, and I haven't shot one since I was taken out by a parent when I was about 12. No offense intended to those who are for gun control, but it honestly blows my mind as to how and why this could even be brought up for debate.
Not trying to throw this further off topic any more than it already is, I agree with whomever it was that said, in a thread about gun control in the political forum, that getting a license for a gun should be much, if not exactly like obtaining a driver's license. Like was already mentioned, MOST gun advocates are for some sort of process for getting a gun. People *shouldn't* be able to walk into a store at any time, anywhere and buy a gun right that second (I'm sure there's relaxed processes for people already "in the system" who have bought guns before - this is meant more for first time buyers/users) I think outright-banning them is where its just rediculous. To answer the original question, I remember my limited experience being pretty fun, and even though it was shooting old empty paint cans, i'd like to shoot again. If anything its at least an important skill to have some knowledge of. |
I have never, nor will I ever vote on on anything that has to do with gun control. Just the same I will not vote based on pro choice/pro life. I vote for who I think will uphold the law as it is. I found out with Clinton that just because a politician has a different belief system than you doesn't mean that politician can do a good job. So, AGAIN, don't worry about me stepping on your rights. I can't believe how much you went off on that point.
As for the heavens gate tragedy, I was trying to illustrate what a person who wants to help people might have done. I really don't think you need to tell me you wern't there. Let's not be condecending. All it would have taken is a call to the police. Have you ever heard of the police being called to prevent a suicide? It happens. Is what they do wrong? I don't think so. The 'right' to kill yourself is absurd. Now someone can take this thought too far. One could say tht along my logic you should go bomb cigarette companys. Of course not. All I am saying is that some people are not responsible to the point where they need help, whether they know it or not. You mentioned '"of sound mind". |
I was raised around guns. When my grandmother on my Dad's side got the news that I was born (I was her first grandchild) she went out and bought a Colt Trooper II revolver in .22lr for me. She kept it until my family travelled to visit, and then she presented it to my parents for me. This was a tradition she kept up for every grandchild she had. No one thought this odd in the slightest, especially as my Dad grew up on a farm in a mountainous region of North Carolina, where guns are a daily part of life.
For as long as I can remember, I knew what guns were and what they did, and the consequences of misusing them. My parents did not go to any efforts to hide the guns, and I knew where they were. I was also under explicit instructions to never touch them unless there was a responsible adult in the room. I followed that advice explicitly until it was judged that I was safe enough with a gun to handle one on my own, sometime prior to my becoming a teenager. My parents thought nothing of me strapping on a small caliber revolver and going horseback riding in the Apalachians by myself as a youngster. They knew that I was not going to do anything stupid with the gun, that the rattlesnake population was such that a gun was a necessity, and that the horse was perfectly capable of getting me out of any truly bad situation (she was one helluva good horse). The only living thing that I have ever put bullets into are snakes, rattlers and copperheads. I have three kids now, and there are firearms in the house. My mother has decided to continue my grandmother's tradition, and has purchased a .22lr bolt-action rifle for all three kids, and we will teach them how to shoot when they are each old enough for it. I am of the considered and long-held opinion that the single most intelligent way to prevent accidents is education. Too many children grow up with a media-reinforced fascination for guns. As non-gun-owning parents are tepid to outright afraid of guns, they try to insulate their children away from the reality of them. As a result of fascination and prohibition, children are FAR more likely to want to satisfy their curiosity with a gun they might find. Ignorance and fasciantion is the source of child/gun accidents, not the gun. Guns are inert tools of wood, plastic, and metal. Nothing more. Any tool can be misused, and guns are certainly not the most likely to be misused. Take a look at vehicluar accidents and homicides if you think guns are some pervasive menace insofar as tools are concerned. As to the argument that people do not "need" guns, they also do not "need" televisions, nor cars with V-8's, nor computers, nor an awful lot of things. Trying to argue for gun control based on some perceived lack of need is as null-set useless as trying to argue that we should legislate computers out of common ownership because normal people do not need computers, only businesses do. The argument that on militias are easily debunked if you read the Federalist papers and the various writings of the Framers of the Constitution. Jefferson in particular was very specific in why citizens should have the write to own firearms, and it had nothing to do with hunting or self-defense against wolves and wild cats. It had everything to do with self-defense against tyranny, and tyranny has not dissappeared from the face of the world since 1787. Frankly you could just as easily argue for the dissolution of the First Amendmant because it is no longer 1787, or the Fifth, the Eight, etc. As to the correlation between guns and crime, there are numerous studies all over the place and showing all sorts of results. There was a very well-supported study published in book from recently that showed a direct relation between increased gun ownership and decreased crime. I hold both in basic contempt as statistics can be swayed and written to show any result you wish simply by monkeying with your control group and your questions, same as polling data. The bottom line is that you can go into police records anywhere that has CCW use wdespread and you will find an amazing lack of CCW holders involved in bad shoots. I personally police officers that call a CCW a "Good Guy Card" simply because they know exactly what a CCW holder has to go through to get a CCW, and the primary thing is showing that you are, in essence, a Good Guy. In the end, Gun Control does nothing but restrict those who are likely to pay heed to the law anyway, and thus has zero effect on those whom Gun Control legislation is intended to affect. This will always be the case. Yes, greater availablility of guns will also have a corrospondignly greater incidence of gun-related accidents (can't have gun-related accidents sans guns), but the numbers on gun-related accidents are ever so much lower than so many other commonplace, and even rare, occurrences as to be insignificant (except for those involved of course). That we see them reported on the news is solely due to how sensational they are, how well they play on TV. Guns are a fact of life in America, and a fact of life in most everywhere on the planet. The fact that you still see reports of shooting occurring in countries with pervasive gun bans are good examples that excessive Gun Control does nothing more than disarm those who are least likely to misuse a firearm. |
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I saw the "natural hazards" bit above and wanted to chime in. The founding fathers did not write the second ammendment to protect individual's right to bear arms. That never even occured to them. The Second Ammendment was written so that large groups of people (milita) could train with their weapons and exist as a coheisive fighting force. Back then, individuals with guns couldn't make a difference in a war, that's even more true now. The Second Ammendment was meant to protect the people's right to form military units with military weaponry that could fight against a real military and be sucessful. People being eaten by bears had nothing to do with it. Back then no one even thought of gun control in terms of private defensive or sporting use. It was about having a state by state force that could fight the federal government if it ever became tyrannical.
By it's intent, the Second Ammendment ONLY protects Millitary weapons. If we stayed true to its intent, we could all own rocket launchers and assault rifles, but would have to look elsewere for a target rifle. The second ammendment really isn't applicable to the modern world, I think we need to look somewhere else for answers to the gun control mess. |
Go Kurtz! I completly agree.
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You were cooking with gas up until the last paragraph, Kurtz. At the time of the writing of the Bill of Rights, there was no real substantive difference in technology between a firearm used by the miltary and one used for civilian purposes. They were essentially the same. Saying that the 2nd Amendmant is designed ONLy to protect military firearms is entirely innaccurate. Saying it was intended only to protect firearms for military and self-defense against a tyrannical government would be correct.
At the time of the 2nd Amenmant, the vast majority of firearms were the same basic design, being muzzle-loaded black-powder weapons, ignited by a flintlock type action. There were some that were both behind and ahead of the curve, but that was the standard. Said rifle was used commonly both for civilian purposes and pressed into action by the military. It was cutting edge, in essence, and had been so fro quite some time. There are some published reports of an interesting screw-action loading advancement being used in the ARW, but the British Col that came up with the idea was killed rather early on, and his design did not gain popularity as a result. Back to the point though, again you have to read what the Founders wrote outside of the Bill of Rights if you wish to better divine their intent. The 2nd Amendmant was pruposefully written in a relatively broad and vague fashion so as to not allow the government room to maneuver around it easily. |
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This is false, during the time that the Bill of Rights was being drafted and up until it was ratified December 15, 1791. There were in fact shooting competitions held in towns with prizes such as saddles, horses, and livestock. There was also no law stating if someone was breaking into your livestock and stealing them, or your farm and stealing equipment, saying you could not blast their head off. There were very many ways they defended themselves and their property with guns and there were just as many ways that they kept entertainment/sport with guns. So when you take away guns from the people your taking away one of the many many things that this great country was built on. Your removing one of the very very few traditions that can still be practiced today with relatively unmolested tactics and enviroments. |
Yes. Yes they are.
I'm going to vote "yes" on this one. I've grown up with guns, learned to shoot at a very early age, and now own several: a highpower rifle and a few handguns. I don't hunt, but not for ideological reasons; it's just not what I'm interested in. Mostly I just punch paper, or tin cans.
The thought processes of people who support gun bans in this country (the US) is something I've decided is nearly beyond my understanding. Frankly every intelligent argument I've ever had on the subject has degenerated into a dispute about whether on the whole people are good or evil, and I've begun to wonder if there isn't some fundamental difference of opinion which drives people to one side of the argument or the other. But really, we should move the thread to politics or philosophy if we want to discuss this. If you're interested in firearms, go to a local range, gun club, or gun store and see if you can get the names of some local people who are certified instructors. These people will almost certainly be both knowledgeable and eager to teach you about guns, and perhaps take you shooting. If I may make one suggestion: start small, like with a .22LR. :) I've had to spend hours training people to overcome flinching problems because somebody handed them a S&W .44Mag their first time out. And, of course, safety first!! My local club runs a twice-yearly "Fun Day" where they invite people who are interested or just curious to come down to the range and see what it's all about (under extremely close supervision). They do bowling-pin and balloon shoots, as well as more traditional bullseye, skeet, and trap shooting. It got started as a way to show the neighbors what all the noise was about, and has been a huge success. So anyway, it's not for everybody, but it can be a fun, rewarding, stress-relieving activity if you know what you're doing and take all the right safety precautions. |
To Willravel-
Thanks for your post, it gave me something to think about. Obviously, I concede that you and I are the same species. That comment was soley intended to make my post a more interesting read. I think our common ground lies in the fact that we would both use firearms in self-defense situations. Maybe I just believe that such a situation is more likely to arise than you do and feel the need to arm myself for it. I'm not crazy, I really don't wan't to harm anyone, I just want to know that if a bad situation arises I won't be dependent on a police officer who may or may not be able to respond to save me and my loved ones. Also, I don't trust our government and I believe that an armed population is our best bet to protect our rights against complete erosion over time. Something Moonduck said earlier about being raised around guns made me think a little bit. Maybe people who are raised around guns are more comfortable with firearms as adults than those who weren't raised around them. I was also raised around firearms. My Remington 870 express 12 guage was a permanent fixture in my closet as a youngster. I carried that thing all over the South Georgia woods. Now, as an adult, I am still very comfortable with guns and the fact that others can own them. In fact, I'm happy with people owning guns. I sincerely believe that the more responsible citizens who own guns, the safer our country will be from criminals and the government (criminals also for the most part). Just my opinion. -Dostoevsky |
I respect your opinion. Actually, I'm beginning to change my mind. A few private messages with some people have reminded me of a few things that I had forgotten. Waco Texas was the most prominent. I remember being so angry/sad at what my government was willing to do to keep control. That, in addition to the more recent Patriot Acts and second Gulf war, really undermined my faith in my government. The direction that we are headed in is a very scary one. I hope that a certian Abe Lincoln look-alike president (Kerry) can bring us back from a course twards civil war. Bush scares me. A lot.
In an ideal world, all non-simple-tool-weapons would be unnecessary. Well, in MY ideal world. We would all eat natural foods and work in small communities where everyone pulls his or her own weight. Hunting would be done with knives and bows. I think a lot of people wwould be happier this way. Unfortunatally, we REALLY don't live in that world. We live in a world of many terrible things. Ther is a real need to defend yourself and your friends and family. While I still will not buy a gun, I am going to continue to learn how to operate and maintain firearms. Who knows what's in the future? Things could get better, but things could get worse. Hope for the best, but prepare for the worst. Thank you to everyone who openly discussed and considered all parts of the discussion. |
I'm at work now so this is another quick one...
Just noticed that a few people consider gun control or the implementation of new gun control laws to be forcing their ideals on others.... well, the same thing can be said about drug laws, prostitution laws, and various other illegal activities that right-wing religious straight-head types would consider bad. Its all really a matter of opinion. I think every law should be voted on and not passed unless the majority want it to be law. |
Willravel-
Well, I will say one thing about not buying a gun right now and that is this... There is a possibility that by the time you really need a gun for protection during some kind of civil strife or defense against the government that you won't be able to buy one due to restrictive gun laws passed by our middling government. Think about it, the government can't ban all guns all at once because that would cause too much of an uproar. A better way to do it is to ban guns slowly. Ban "scary looking" guns, then make regular guns harder to buy, then, eventually, try to confiscate what we already own. Depending on if and when the 'shit hits the fan,' you may or may not be able to get a firearm. Although in such a situation you would be able to pick one up off of a corpse. Maybe it would be safer on your part to buy a nice AR15 style 'assault rifle' now and practice with it. That won't make you a lunatic, just a cautious person who won't be caught with his pants down should you ever need a weapon. Just a thought. -Dostoevsky |
"Just noticed that a few people consider gun control or the implementation of new gun control laws to be forcing their ideals on others.... well, the same thing can be said about drug laws, prostitution laws, and various other illegal activities that right-wing religious straight-head types would consider bad. Its all really a matter of opinion. "
Drug laws such as those involved in the War on drugs are pointless and stupid. It is my body. should I decide to destroy it with drug-use, that should be my decision. I view prostitution similarly. It is a victimless crime, in essence. Yes, there is a culture surrounding both drugs and prostitution that is hurtful and engages in crimes with victims, but much of this would be reduced by decriminalizing both. You would think we would have learned our lesson on restrictive drug laws from Prohibition. Do not make the grave mistake of assuming that someone that likes guns and supports the Constitution is automatically right-wing or a Social Conservative. They are NOT associated by default. "I think every law should be voted on and not passed unless the majority want it to be law." This obviates the purpose of government and reduces everything to mob rule. The Founders of the US called this "Tyranny of the Majority". What if a 51% majority decided that private property was no longer a valid concept? Does that make it Right? All mob rule does is put the power into the hands of those with the least amount of knowledge and forethought to use it, ie the mob. And the intelligence of any group of people varies in inverse proportion to its' size. |
If I were to go to war, I would die to defend the Constitution and Bill of rights for my family and friends, NOT the current administration leaching off the government. I don't care much for the party system or politicians. I do care about the foundation of this country.
Weapons can be all that great in defence. Scary when used against you. |
For anyone with a little time to do some reading, this is a good article on the "slippery slope" theory.
http://www.guncite.com/journals/okslip.html |
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I didn't mean to imply that gun-owners are right wing, nor did I mean that every single law be passed by a vote, but life-choices are our own to make. My government considers me a criminal, because I smoke pot. Although our police force tends to be relatively lenient when it comes to pushing criminal charges. Generally your stash will simply be pocketed by the officer who more than likely smokes himself or has friends who do. Although I've heard tell of people being done for intent to supply, even though he barely had the makings of two or three spliffs. Depends on who busts ya really. As for the whole firearm issue, I don't think it will ever become an issue here. Irish people shouldn't have guns, we're far too irresponsible in general. I can only imagine how much more dangerous a night in my local boozer would be if all the farmin folk were packing. They get quite rowdy sometimes and they aren't known for their common sense. |
Ecomdan, that is exactly what the British wanted you to think a century ago.
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i own and shoot my guns (shotguns, handgun & rifles) because it is much fun and i can. it has nothing to do with protection. protection to me is a side benefit. it does take skill to be able to shoot. target shooting is an olympic event. i grew up learning how to shoot a .22 rifle at our local police target range.
skeet shooting is wicked fun. hunting i have never been and can't see shooting animals for the sake of shooting them. if i was going to eat them or utilize other parts of them, then no problem. i have retired many animals for my, or others reasons. the main reason being a bullet costs under a quarter and the fucking vet will charge at least $75 for dope...then you have to dispose. guns are fun, but must be treated with great respect. |
Damn Straight! I'll die before I let anyone overtax MY tea!
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As a firearms holder and someone who comes from the “farmin folk” side of he line not only do I find it very insulting but also very ignorant. Firstly lets look at the amount of firearm incidents here in this little country of ours. The percentage of crime or incidents with firearms is not by legally held firearms. They tend to be with either stolen shotguns or handguns by organised criminals from that lovely capital of ours. Now the majority of people with legally held guns are responsible people here, but as with everything else in life you will always get those who will abuse the system. I have been shooting for a long time, I have never had the urge to go get my gun and go shoot someone, If I have that much anger towards someone I have two fists that I am quite capable of using, and even at that stage I would prefer to walk away. As for the farming community, go down to your local boozer and repeat that comment and I wouldn’t blame them for being rowdy. The only time I have come across farmers discharging their guns around people is when they are in around their farmyards in the middle of the night. Im sorry if you don’t like my response but comments like yours just make my blood boil and as I don’t know what part of Ireland you are from I cant generalise about your community. It’s a good job that I am not near you with my gun!!!!! :rolleyes: |
I am always curious about the geographical implications of guns. I am from the midwest own a couple of those deadly "assault rifles". My parents moved out to DC and had to leave their .22's because of the strick laws up there. Talking to their neighbors in DC, it was amazing to see how foreign a gun was to them, they believed only criminals and police had them. They never thought about using them for sport or for fun.
On a side note, has anyone ever gone to Las Vegas and done their shooting ranges where they allow automatic weapons? |
Not surprisingly, this has become another political debate.
Moved to Politics. |
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Anyways time and time again the Supreme Court has struck down this argument, and since they determine the intent of the writing that's how it stands atm. |
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If the govt WANTED to, they could totally come out to the cities and "conquer" us. |
i fully support gun ownership but stompy articulated something i've been thinking about for a while.
when the bill of rights was passed, the United States had just come off a revolutionary war where their militias were armed with firepower similar to the British (one of the most formidable armies in the world at that point). now-a-days, soldiers are so highly trained with such sophisticated weaponry a militia would have absolutely no chance to defend themselves from the government. if we're talking about people with standard firearms against the military, the casualty ratio would be disastrous. defending the citizenry has become nearly irrelevant to the issue of firearms. perhaps it's a hedge, but certainly not a check to the governments power. times have changed... |
Irate: It's not necessarily a matter of a citizen's militia waging battle against a tyrannically controlled military. When I think of gun ownership as relates to the security of a free state, I think of the impossibility of the US Army maintaining a martial law-style occupation over the whole of America, moreso when armed citizens are taken into account.
Factor in the occassional soldier who does not have the stomach to fire on his own countrymen, the government is restricted from enacting any sort of totalitarian fascist regime. |
journeyman,
good points, they are well-taken. i was approaching the issue from drawing direct parallels from the context in which the bill was enacted (post revolutionary years) and recreating the situation under modern circumstances. your assesment is undoubtedly more realistic in our day, times have changed. the importance of holding firearms has gone from the ability to organize a legitimate military force to a serious speedbumb in an attempt to enforce martial law. right on. |
Firearms are merely tools that enable free men to overthrow opressive governments. Hunting and self-defense are secondary to the first. Our Founding Fathers knew that all forms of government become opressive over time. They gave us in the USA a powerful deterent to that happening here. Banning firearms is not possible. Any gunsmith or machinist can build from scratch an operational single shot in two days, a semi-automatic in two weeks and a full-automatic in a month. One can never put the genie of knowledge back into the bottle. Mastering the use of a firearm to a high degree of accuracy is very satisfying and is a useful skill. It is also absolutely necessary to the responsible firearm owner.
"God made man, Sam Colt made them all equals". |
Only an oppressive and unpopular government would fear an armed populous.
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It's not really a funny topic but here's an attempt at humor on this topic that comes with a certain voice of reason on this topic. I can't tell you how many times I have avoided neighborhoods in my home town where firearms are routinely discharged by one so called human at other humans -- and low and behold I've never been shot or had a firearm discharged in my general direction. Well....except for this one time on my uncle's farm...but that' a story for another thread.
I own a few firearms and I do enjoy target shooting and the occasional dear hunt. Given the number of bad things that go on with weapons like this I'd be more than okay with giving them up in the name of making the world a safer place. My weapon of choice in the mean time is a Colt 45 Gold Cup edition. It's a fabulously smooth pull of the trigger and a splendid release of power that is overwhelming. It's no video game pinkie. This thing would do the real thing in terms of damage. It's great to take several 2 liter pop bottles full of water out to the fields and just open up on them. The requisite beer/pop cans are also fun targets. Shooting clay pigeons with the remington over/under 12 is also a lot of fun. But....like I said I'd give them all up for the sake of a safer world if society determined that to be necessary. |
I dont realy see what is so fun about guns. I support peoples rights to own them though because it is in the Bill of Rights, I support everypart of the Bill of Rights because when one part is destroyed by government that creats precident for another better part such as freedom of speech to be destroyed.
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Ever blown apart milk jugs full of water with hollow point .45s? Ever shredded a 55 gallon barrel with an Uzi or a Thompson submachine gun? Try one of the above and then get back to me and tell me that you didn't have *just* a little fun doing it... |
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