nuttynutskin
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 15, 2011
- Messages
- 10,732
Last time I check bombs weren't covered by the 2nd amendment
And yet did that stop him from killing 168 people.
Last time I check bombs weren't covered by the 2nd amendment
source pleaseViolent crime rates are the same in Euro countries only there you get stabbed or bludgeoned more than shot.
As I said before, I'm not even really opposed to gun control measures. I'm certainly not going to ignore faulty statistics being thrown around though. The fallacy of this statistic does raise a valid question given that states with stricter gun control measures still have high rates of gun murders. We're not talking about other countries (which keep getting brought up); we're talking about the USA and the effectiveness of these already enacted laws is very much relevant, regardless of what are anyone's individual beliefs on the subject.
Ok, let's start with some evidence that i ever said guns should be illegal and go from there.
I've said from the outset that this is a touchy subject for some; that it brings up all manner of defensiveness - and i think there is ample empirical evidence of that here.
Of course, the constant rebuttal is that 'all figures are subject to manipulation', right?
I would have thought evidence of "mass shootings" as defined by the FBI (those liberal pinkos) would be worthy of (at least some) consideration?
As for the repeal on gun regulation (let's not get ahead of ourselves - many people own guns legally here, it just isn't a cultural obbsession or overtly symbolic) in Australia, there is a small but vocal push to chip away at the legislation.
I don't agree with that, and shall oppose it, as is my prerogative in a democracy.
Oh wow Kentucky gets a 100% freedom score, nice![]()
alasdair
We're not talking about suicides or people being killed by firearms though. We're talking about gun deaths resulting from crime. In 2013, New Hampshire had 21 murders, 5 by firearm, resulting in a rate of 0.4 firearm deaths per 100,000. That's lower than the 1.2 in Massachusetts. Connecticut has much stricter gun laws than Rhode Island and yet were equal at 1.7 per 100,000 that year. Looking at the multi-year statistics, Massachusetts and Connecticut, the two states in New England with the strictest gun laws, have the highest rates of gun deaths resulting from crime. Flimsy evidence for the effectiveness of such measures, especially in light of the fact that the Newtown shooting happened in CT.
My point isn't that I think more guns floating around is the answer. My point is that increased gun regulation doesn't actually solve the problem.
Spacejunk you have a good heart and a lot of faith in the ruling class/ your government and I can respect that. This issue is just too complex and uniquely American for an outsider to comprehend.
I support animal rights too.
And I'm still not sure you understand the nature of my disagreement.
People being able to own guns, then being not allowed to, is a reduction in what you are free to do. Now it's totally fine if you feel it's better to not have that freedom than endure the cost of having it. I get that.
What I don't get is how you can not care if reducing freedom, any freedom, regardless of your interest in it, is ok when it doesn't make anyone safer. Again, that the subject is guns is immaterial, I don't understand your apathy about reducing freedom by any amount for no payoff.
And it is a freedom, if you can do something than can't, you are less free than before. You could make the argument that you gain more freedom by removing another because of an increase in your right to safety. But that requires that it work.
That's what I don't understand.