RE: The Gun Control divide (Full Version)

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The Gun Control divide


I despise you and your poll.
  19% (5)
I need a weapon so I can defend my family from others and tyranny.
  15% (4)
I need a weapon so I can defend my family from tyranny.
  0% (0)
I need a weapon so I can defend my family from others.
  0% (0)
I don't need a good reason for owning a gun. It's my right.
  26% (7)
Weapon access causes harm, individual rights wins because Constitution
  3% (1)
Weapon access causes societal harm which trumps individual rights
  26% (7)
Access to weapons does not cause societal harm
  7% (2)


Total Votes : 26
(last vote on : 6/19/2016 9:25:06 PM)
(Poll will run till: -- )


Message


BamaD -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 9:33:12 PM)

I don't have a specific agenda here, and you may not wish to play along but it might be worth giving it a go.

Anyone who believes this is a fool.
You constructed the poll to split up the people who disagree with you to make those who disagree with you look like a bigger block.




BamaD -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 9:35:53 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Awareness


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

Twisted reasoning, much?
What reasoning? It's a clear cut set of questions to try and get an idea of what principles and beliefs drive people's attitudes towards gun control.


No it doesn't it is

Pick one of 7 reasons to have guns, or pick the only reason not too
crafted to make sure the largest block is no.




Awareness -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 9:40:29 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD

I don't have a specific agenda here, and you may not wish to play along but it might be worth giving it a go.

Anyone who believes this is a fool.
You constructed the poll to split up the people who disagree with you to make those who disagree with you look like a bigger block.
Dude, I don't think you understand how this poll works. First off, how would constructing a poll which made it look like the opposing view had more support POSSIBLY benefit me?

And second, how does providing a range of options for people who disagree magically increase the number who will?

This is part of the problem, dude - there are far too many people in the US who, like you, not only don't understand statistics, but have real trouble with basic arithmetic.




mrevibo -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 10:26:26 PM)

I put "I don't need a good reason for owning a gun. It's my right." Now by that I don't mean a right given to me by the .gov. Would anyone care to say that I don't possess the right to life? Go ahead, we have people to compare you to. Corollary to that right is the right to defend myself, whether it be from a tyrannical .gov or some tweaked out thug that wants my wallet. In order to protect myself, I assert the right to the tools to do so. I don't have the fight in me I used to, and definitely not the flight, with my hip the way it is. Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. They just take what they want. The gun equalizes the playing field. While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization. Our society in the US is very heterogeneous, and some of the minorities have a significant number among them who are actively hostile.

I have a .45 or 10mm on me at all times except when I'm in a place it's specifically illegal, such as a courtroom or school. I disagree with it being illegal in a school, but I don't have to go there much anymore, so I play along. You should see the look on the face of an anti when they ask why I have it. "To shoot people". Takes them totally off script when I don't start equivocating about target practice, and um, self protection, whatever. And shooting people is why I have it; I don't anticipate a random target practice breaking out. Who do I plan on shooting? Nobody. It would suit me fine if it never left my holster for anything but cleaning and practice. Thing is, you can never know when things will go pear shaped, and sitting in the safe back home, it won't do me any good.




Edwird -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 10:58:20 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo
Our society in the US is very heterogeneous, and some of the minorities have a significant number among them who are actively hostile.


You nailed it right there.

If the US were 100% white Protestants; no crime. No theft, no muggings, no wife beatings, the whole lot ... gone.





tweakabelle -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/14/2016 11:35:49 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo

Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. They just take what they want. The gun equalizes the playing field. While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization. Our society in the US is very heterogeneous, and some of the minorities have a significant number among them who are actively hostile.


While this sounds plausible at first glance it fails to withstand the slightest scrutiny:
" Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. " Sorry but virtually all Western European countries, which each have some variant of gun control, constitutes indisputable empirical evidence that gun control does not equate to or result in anarchy. Alternatively look at the response of Japanese to the shocking tsunami there recently. The institutions of the State had been destroyed, yet the people responded in an orderly fashion co-operating with each other to ensure mutual survival - all of it achieved without a single gun. If anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"The gun equalizes the playing field."
No it doesn't. It loads the dice in favour of gun possessors against non-gun possessors, in favour of those who are proficient with firearms against those who aren't and so on. Again if anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization.
There are no historical grounds to support this claim. If anything, one mark of civilised societies is the removal of guns (and violence) from the public sphere. Modern societies such as those inhabited by you and I operate on the consent of their citizens. Civilisation lasts because we all agree to make it last, because we all agree it's better than the alternative.

Sorry but whatever conclusion you may have reached on the basis of this argument is automatically invalidated by the shonky logic you have employed to reach it.




Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 3:42:20 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: WinsomeDefiance

I think your poll is too narrow.

I need a weapon, because deer and small game won't just lie down and be dead - and I like to eat.
I need a weapon because there are seldom more than three days worth of food stuffs available in stores during any given day and I'm not guaranteed packaged food during a natural or other form of disaster...meaning I'm gonna have to provide another way.

I need a weapon, because trying to obtain one AFTER a natural or other form of disaster is too late and I still suck with a bow and arrow and I'm sure as hell not up to the task of chasing the animals down.

I also need to know how the weapon (gun, bow, slingshot) etc works and be proficient enough with it to make owning one of any use. Which means having and using it enough in advance of any potential need.

I do not believe any property I own is worth killing, dying or going to jail for. It is why I have insurance. So I don't own a gun for home defends. I do have several staffs, knives and mace which I can do damage with, but given the opportunity- I'd slip into flight mode before fight mode, as experience has taught me.

For me, a gun is a tool. Just like my brain. I make it my business to learn what foods are edible for foraging within 10 miles of me at most any given time. I am growing my own food as well. Things that I think are fun and worth doing.

I never even knew, for most of my life, that there was so much controversy surrounding guns.

My father retired from the Air Force, there was always a shot gun and rifle in the home. In Everyone's home that I knew.
Hunting wasn't just a sport, it was a lesson in learning to provide and respecting life and the cost of pulling that trigger.

I believe that gun control based off fear - just like the war on drugs - will simply make it harder for law abiding citizens to obtain At a reasonable price what people who are willing to break the law will be able to obtain easily with a simple phone call.

Kay has years of documentation of chronic pain from degenerative diseases. She should be able to get pain pills to ease her suffering and allow her to function daily. Because of over-enforcing of narcotics; doctors no longer want to risk their practice by subscribing narcotics. I could make a phone call and pay out the ass, and have narcotics delivered to the home. Except, I don't break the law. I don't do things I know will put my personal liberties at risk. Which is why I own a gun and take personal responsibility for how it is used, stored, kept locked and out of reach of anyone not me.

I didn't see those options available on your post, otherwise I'd have participated and been less verbose.




Do you need an assault rifle for all of that?

Or do you get by fine with regular hand guns and hunting rifles?




Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 3:45:18 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyJSirF

Tired of all the absurd parallels people try to paint. A fire arm isn't a nuke. My point is you can't take the rights of a populace away because evil people find ways to do evil. How do you think north Korea became the way it did. The government convinced the people they needed no guns to protect themselves because the government run army would do it for them. They gave away the ability to defend their freedom and the current regime took over without too much fuss. What rights would you need to loose before you wish you were armed? This isn't a call to put automatic weapons into vending machines, but we need to look to history and see what has Ben done with under the guise of gun saftey. And all those "no gun" European countries still allow for shotguns and rifles for hunting and sporting purposes. Thier laws limit the availability of pistols that can be hidden and full auto machine and sub - machine guns.

The absurd parallel is to point out your absurd claim that hey, people who are going to harm are going to harm, so there's nothing we should do. It's bullshit. Like the nuke example, we can limit their access to the ability to harm massively.

Everytime the idea of limiting access to assault rifles comes up, the "debate" is "you want to outlaw guns," an absurd distortion of the actual debate.

Wake up. You're being absurd.




thishereboi -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 3:51:01 AM)

I never thought I would say this but I agree with Reagan.




KenDckey -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 5:45:17 AM)

The StG 44 is considered the first modern assault rifle. It had a selector switch for either semi-automatic or fully-automatic. Machine Guns are generally crew served although some are not. Sub-machine guns are individual weapons capable of fully automatic fire. Some like to define assault weapons that are capable of holding a bayonet but they go back in history to the 16th century. Some say if they have a magazine they are an assault rifle. That takes away about anything that isn't single shot. Since single shot weapons can be fitted with a plug bayonet that takes away all firearms.

Since bayonets are a varient on the sword and knife, we can take all those away from us. Clubs, stone axes and knives go way back in history, they were considered the weapons of mass destruction of their time. This allowes axes and hatchets from being allowed to won. Cycles, sythes, pitch forks, manuer forks, and so on were used in warfare, we can exclude themfrom ownership. Spoons can be used for stabbing. Another exclusion.

There is no limit to what can be excluded as as assault weapon. Looks like something that it isn't is usually the criteria. A really stupid standard. If I make a wood M2 machine gun, is it a machine gun? It looks like one.





Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 5:54:23 AM)

OK, Ken. What semantics would you prefer to describe what you clearly understand folks are talking about here.

Hint: not spoons.




KenDckey -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 7:00:49 AM)

The point is you can call anything a weapon and a weapon is capable of killing multiple people. BTW spoons make excellent killing devices. They are much quieter than powder actuated weapons and can be very effective in close quarters. Just ask your local corrections officer.




Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 7:02:27 AM)

No, Ken, it's not the point. Spoons and nuclear weapons are very different in their capacity to kill multiple people, and that's why we treat them differently.




mrevibo -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 7:36:44 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo

Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. They just take what they want. The gun equalizes the playing field. While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization. Our society in the US is very heterogeneous, and some of the minorities have a significant number among them who are actively hostile.


While this sounds plausible at first glance it fails to withstand the slightest scrutiny:
" Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. " Sorry but virtually all Western European countries, which each have some variant of gun control, constitutes indisputable empirical evidence that gun control does not equate to or result in anarchy. Alternatively look at the response of Japanese to the shocking tsunami there recently. The institutions of the State had been destroyed, yet the people responded in an orderly fashion co-operating with each other to ensure mutual survival - all of it achieved without a single gun. If anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"The gun equalizes the playing field."
No it doesn't. It loads the dice in favour of gun possessors against non-gun possessors, in favour of those who are proficient with firearms against those who aren't and so on. Again if anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization.
There are no historical grounds to support this claim. If anything, one mark of civilised societies is the removal of guns (and violence) from the public sphere. Modern societies such as those inhabited by you and I operate on the consent of their citizens. Civilisation lasts because we all agree to make it last, because we all agree it's better than the alternative.

Sorry but whatever conclusion you may have reached on the basis of this argument is automatically invalidated by the shonky logic you have employed to reach it.


Ahh, but your Western European and Japanese societies are more homogeneous. People of common ancestry with common goals. And good will. Not so here. We have active hostiles living among us with no intention of assimilating into peaceful society, and without me being armed, the bigger, faster, stronger can take whatever they want from me. In my prime I was a lot faster and stronger, but that's no longer the case. Watch what happens as Europe is overrun by immigrants hostile to the way of life there.

As to equalizing the playing field, that depends on the intent of the individual. I'm one of those people that really like the voluntary civilization, and I have no interest in causing mayhem generally nor stealing things from people. I'm armed merely to stop a threat, and how would you suggest I do that otherwise? If you want peace, prepare for war. In many cases, the mere sight of a firearm makes the miscreant reconsider his course of action, but if he is particularly committed, profoundly stupid, or mentally defective, the response must be escalated. As one of the "good" people, I simply refuse to take a beating or die, just so some malefactor may live, when he's in the wrong.




tweakabelle -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 8:58:43 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo


quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo

Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. They just take what they want. The gun equalizes the playing field. While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization. Our society in the US is very heterogeneous, and some of the minorities have a significant number among them who are actively hostile.


While this sounds plausible at first glance it fails to withstand the slightest scrutiny:
" Without the gun, you're creating an anarchy, the advantage goes to the youngest, the biggest, the strongest. " Sorry but virtually all Western European countries, which each have some variant of gun control, constitutes indisputable empirical evidence that gun control does not equate to or result in anarchy. Alternatively look at the response of Japanese to the shocking tsunami there recently. The institutions of the State had been destroyed, yet the people responded in an orderly fashion co-operating with each other to ensure mutual survival - all of it achieved without a single gun. If anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"The gun equalizes the playing field."
No it doesn't. It loads the dice in favour of gun possessors against non-gun possessors, in favour of those who are proficient with firearms against those who aren't and so on. Again if anything the opposite to your claim is true.

"While civilization may exist for a time among people of good will, over the long run the gun is and allows civilization.
There are no historical grounds to support this claim. If anything, one mark of civilised societies is the removal of guns (and violence) from the public sphere. Modern societies such as those inhabited by you and I operate on the consent of their citizens. Civilisation lasts because we all agree to make it last, because we all agree it's better than the alternative.

Sorry but whatever conclusion you may have reached on the basis of this argument is automatically invalidated by the shonky logic you have employed to reach it.


Ahh, but your Western European and Japanese societies are more homogeneous. People of common ancestry with common goals. And good will. Not so here. We have active hostiles living among us with no intention of assimilating into peaceful society, and without me being armed, the bigger, faster, stronger can take whatever they want from me. In my prime I was a lot faster and stronger, but that's no longer the case. Watch what happens as Europe is overrun by immigrants hostile to the way of life there.


The Australian experience of gun control, (Australia has a similarly heterogeneous population, is also English speaking and subject to the rule of law, and so directly comparable to the US in this instance) is also compelling evidence that the introduction of strict gun laws in the mid 1990s did not result in anarchy or anything remotely approaching it. In fact crime rates fell after gun control was introduced. Again the opposite to your claim.

quote:

As to equalizing the playing field, that depends on the intent of the individual.
This represents a considerable slide from your initial position which was "The gun equalizes the playing field". I'm glad we both agree now that this is not the case, guns do not equalise the playing field and that therefore your initial claim was incorrect.

Just as point of interest, I am intrigued by your continuing references to "active hostiles". I have no idea who you are talking about. Could you please enlighten me? Thanks.




Nnanji -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 9:22:16 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery


quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyJSirF

Tired of all the absurd parallels people try to paint. A fire arm isn't a nuke. My point is you can't take the rights of a populace away because evil people find ways to do evil. How do you think north Korea became the way it did. The government convinced the people they needed no guns to protect themselves because the government run army would do it for them. They gave away the ability to defend their freedom and the current regime took over without too much fuss. What rights would you need to loose before you wish you were armed? This isn't a call to put automatic weapons into vending machines, but we need to look to history and see what has Ben done with under the guise of gun saftey. And all those "no gun" European countries still allow for shotguns and rifles for hunting and sporting purposes. Thier laws limit the availability of pistols that can be hidden and full auto machine and sub - machine guns.

The absurd parallel is to point out your absurd claim that hey, people who are going to harm are going to harm, so there's nothing we should do. It's bullshit. Like the nuke example, we can limit their access to the ability to harm massively.

Everytime the idea of limiting access to assault rifles comes up, the "debate" is "you want to outlaw guns," an absurd distortion of the actual debate.

Wake up. You're being absurd.


The absurdity you're trapped in is that they did ban "assault weapons" for ten years and it made absolutely no difference in crime rates. So, your assertion that you'll solve the problem by governmental authority diminishing the rights of citizen's has been experimented with and failed.




Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 9:23:51 AM)

More parroting of the NRA Kool-Aid instead of any actual research.

http://www.factcheck.org/2013/02/did-the-1994-assault-weapons-ban-work/




Nnanji -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 9:30:32 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

More parroting of the NRA Kool-Aid instead of any actual research.

http://www.factcheck.org/2013/02/did-the-1994-assault-weapons-ban-work/

So your big results that I'm drinking koolaide is this:

"Koper, Jan. 14: What we found in these studies was that the ban had mixed effects in reducing crimes with the banned weaponry due to various exemptions that were written into the law. And as a result, the ban did not appear to effect gun violence during the time it was in effect. But there is some evidence to suggest that it may have modestly reduced shootings had it been in effect for a longer period."





WhoreMods -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 9:30:46 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo
Ahh, but your Western European and Japanese societies are more homogeneous. People of common ancestry with common goals.

Quite. There's no asian moslem immigrants in the whole of Europe, let alone any asylum seekers, Africans or Australians.




Musicmystery -> RE: The Gun Control divide (6/15/2016 9:32:11 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nnanji


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

More parroting of the NRA Kool-Aid instead of any actual research.

http://www.factcheck.org/2013/02/did-the-1994-assault-weapons-ban-work/

So your big results that I'm drinking koolaide is this:

"Koper, Jan. 14: What we found in these studies was that the ban had mixed effects in reducing crimes with the banned weaponry due to various exemptions that were written into the law. And as a result, the ban did not appear to effect gun violence during the time it was in effect. But there is some evidence to suggest that it may have modestly reduced shootings had it been in effect for a longer period."



You are well-demonstrating the selective picking of figures the article describes.

So yes, absolutely, by definition.




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