I haven't mentioned explosives at all, but hand saws and Caustic Soda; both of which are freely available for purchase. — John
Try sometimes a new thing, Landru, read what the others actually write.Your argument reduces to a claim that gun restrictions can't be perfect; therefore why have them? — Landru Guide Us
That's the main problem in my understanding too. Once you have the 2nd Amendment argument, the NRA has, well, a logical negotiating tactic of simply object to every legislation attempt. 2nd Amendment makes this easy as it makes gun regulation an issue of principle. This then makes it a "freedom that Americans enjoy", hence the issue becomes more than just some regulation, waiting times, bureaucracy to obtain a gun licence otherwise it would be. Gun legislation itself becomes this way "to attack the liberties that Americans enjoy". And what this means that the issue has ended up in a typical political cul-de-sac like many things in the US nowdays. And that cul-de-sac just creates a highly juxtapositional environment where there isn't any actual attempt to get a consensus. In fact, the "opposing sides" just keep mudslinging each other. And hence you end up with attitudes like Landru has here... and similar attitudes on the other side. And when the 1/3 of Americans owning guns means that a 1/3 (or even half of those) is a voter base far too big to forget.Unfortunately guns, gun ownership, gun violence, the 2nd Amendment, and some other issues have been become so intertwined they are inseparable. — Bitter Crank
Try sometimes a new thing, Landru, read what the others actually write. — ssu
There's a difference between a society with a police force and a militarized society where everybody is primed to engage in gun violence. One difference is that the latter consistently suffers from gun massacres and their public space is eroded. Which of course is the goal of the gun fetishists. Their attack is really on the notion of democracy and a public realm. — Landru Guide Us
In any case, the proposition that a armed society (forced militarization of every citizen) is a polite society is utter and complete rubbish. It's just the opposite of course. And the opposite is the purpose.
I certainly don't call the police to my house. — Moliere
What the legislators should be praying for is the courage to do what any rational legislature would do, even if it means they are bounced from office in the next election: enact laws that tighten access to assault weapons and hand guns--laws that are as tight as the NRA's grip on these bastards' balls. — Bitter Crank
Yep. You're just an internet troll.I prefer to deal with your gun fetish cliches as cliches — Landru Guide Us
Yep. Your just an internet troll.
No reason to respond to you. — ssu
Just for the record: I live in Arizona and the law allows individuals, to legally carry a concealed weapon, without a permit.
However there are in fact individuals who have lost their right to own a firearm. I am one of those people because as long as I am a Legal Medical Cannabis patient and Cannabis is still against the Federal Law, the gun dealer would have to decline the sale of a firearm to me, because in the Federal Governments eyes, Cannabis consumption is against the law and they cannot sell to someone they know is breaking the law. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
There are more possibilities than two, however. Most gun owners are not "militarized" -- and even those who are are no more militarized than our present day police force ;). Owning one's violence does not mean that you are militarized, either. It means that your choices to use violence are closer to home and harder to forget. I certainly don't call the police to my house.
What you present here is a false dichotomy, and not merely in some hypothetical sense. Gun ownership and usage is not an attack on public space or democracy. Many people own weapons without the fetishism you're targeting.
In any case, the proposition that a armed society (forced militarization of every citizen) is a polite society is utter and complete rubbish. It's just the opposite of course. And the opposite is the purpose.
I've agreed to your first sentence, though I don't agree with the latter. — Moliere
Then your point is even more attenuated. If you think that a guy with a saw and lye can cause as much death as a man with a gun, then you shouldn't mind banning guns. Arm yourself with lye and saws -- I hear they're just as deadly as guns. NOT!
But the proof's in the pudding: gun nuts use guns. It probably has something to do with how deadly they are even for unskilled dolts who worship guns. I suspect most people can run away from a man with a saw carrying ten kilos of caustic substances. — Landru Guide Us
Feel free to discuss this with the local troll, who actually has already earlier on the thread stated that Australia has a ban on guns and that this ban has successfully ended mass shootings. Your opinion will put you in the gun-nut, right-wing meme & drinking Kool-Aid section.I am not against tighter gun laws for the US. Here in Australia weapons are required to be registered, but citizens may still own them, even semi-automatic weapons. Tasmanian has the highest gun ownership, with, according to Wiki, 1 gun per 4 people. The Northern Territory is second with 1 gun per five. The problem is there is not a clear correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths.
Given the US has always been a 'society of the gun', a think a nuanced approach will be needed there, not an hysterically extreme 'black and white' approach; which you seem to be advocating. — John
Is Landru a real person? — The Great Whatever
Those who want to inflict harm and kill will always find ways to do so. Mass shootings constitute a tiny percentage of total gun deaths. — John
I am not against tighter gun laws for the US. Here in Australia weapons are required to be registered, but citizens may still own them, even semi-automatic weapons. Tasmanian has the highest gun ownership, with, according to Wiki, 1 gun per 4 people. The Northern Territory is second with 1 gun per five. The problem is there is not a clear correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths.
Given the US has always been a 'society of the gun', I think a nuanced approach will be needed there, not an hysterically extreme 'black and white' approach; which you seem to be advocating.
Feel free to discuss this with the local troll, who actually has already earlier on the thread stated that Australia has a ban on guns and that this ban has successfully ended mass shootings. Your opinion will put you in the gun-nut, right-wing meme & drinking Kool-Aid section. — ssu
Yes, Virginia, there is a Landru. Landru, an omniscient computer on the planet Beta III, had a near-tyrannical hold on Beta III's people until Captain Kirk put a stop to it. This is the way Landru wished to represent himself. Apparently Kirk wasn't quite as successful as he thought. Landru escaped from Kirk through an unguarded TV screen back in the 1960s. Just walked out of the screen into a state college dorm TV room and took over. A generation of leftist students was the result. There was infiltration and subversion. There were sexual outrages on campus. Lesbian separatists performing unspeakable acts on the Quad (It was quickly paved over -- literally - to contain the sacrilege. Sodomy in the stacks. Buggery back stage. Je suis l'homme -- well never mind. — Bitter Crank
It obviously is. There's something inherently wrong how US policemen approach these situations. Perhaps it's the response to 9/11 mentality: to show that the police are doing things, the kind of militarization happens. It cannot be anymore only the excesses, just a few incidents from many. Basically the militarization of the police is something real and severely counterproductive. When the first this is to take out the gun for a police officer, something has totally gone wrong in a lot of things.This is a good example of excessive force. — Bitter Crank
This fear is basically what the police responds to with a more aggressive stance. And people have these worries, rightly or wrongly. Yet a highly publisized attack will have big consequences: like that the guards at the mall will have submachineguns and flakvests. Best example are the armed voluntary groups that have sprung up... for example to patrol the US Mexican border.Frequent gun fire in cities, frequent fratricidal killings by gangs and various criminal enterprises, gun ownership driven by fear of attack and fear that the police will fail to protect the community - The militarization of police and the often disproportionate responses to any kind of resistance to the police are not typical of civil government. — Bitter Crank
Begging the question: Why? Why limit gun ownership and possession one case and not another? — Landru Guide Us
Now before we start controlling bow and arrows, let's remember that primitive bow and arrows can be found and forged from elements of the earth, the world over. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
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