I can only take your word for it. But it remains the case that your statement was not obviously true unless qualified, which you have now done. Good job. — Thorongil
No you haven't. You've tried passing the baton back to me to prove that there aren't other means as effective as guns in every scenario. Sorry, Sappy, that will not do. You made the claim. It's up to you to defend it. — Thorongil
If you really don't understand that the onus of proof is on the one making the claim - which in the case of both the premises is you - then a constructive discussion is not possible.My argument is valid and sound, unless and until you have show one of the premises is false, which you haven't done.
as you have worded it — Sapientia
There's practically no situation where a gun, rather than some other form of self-defence, would be necessary. — Sapientia
The question thus becomes: why should that mean abolishing the right to own firearms? — Thorongil
If I lose my life or property defending them by one means of self-defense but protect them by another means, then I require the latter to maintain my natural right to life and property.
Because the corollary to allowing guns to spread in the manner they have in the USA is the epidemic of gun rampages that plagues you, and might I add, only you. — Akanthinos
. The corollary to you claiming that the current state-of-affairs in the States is acceptable — Akanthinos
that you find it acceptable that kids get shot every other week because that is also founded in that same inalienable right. — Akanthinos
That's what a karambit, a dog, a mace or a black belt is for. It's not a reason to start carrying a gun to the grocery store. — Akanthinos
How can you both lose your life and protect it? Is this some sort of hypothetical counterfactual? The 'then' is an unsubstantiated claim, and the rhetoric leaves me cold. — andrewk
Ah, so this is the point at which we enter into a semantics battle. I'm not interested in that. — Thorongil
If 1) you are concerned with preventing crime and 2) there are means besides guns that are as effective as guns in all cases in preventing crime, then you need to show me what those means are and how, statistically, they are just as effective. — Thorongil
The use of the word "practically" here suggests that you do admit that there are situations in which only a gun can prevent a crime. I suspect there are more such situations than you would be willing to admit, but let's assume for the sake of argument that they're very rare. The question thus becomes: why should that mean abolishing the right to own firearms? Why assume that most defensive gun uses whereby the assailant is shot or killed are not the kinds of situations that require a gun? Most gun owners, believe it or not, believe that using and firing a gun should only be the last resort undertaken under the gravest of circumstances. So you still haven't successfully challenged my argument. — Thorongil
To simply ban guns would be to punish the innocent for the crimes of the guilty. — Thorongil
Then you fail to understand the first premise. Positive or legal rights can be added and subtracted, this is true. But natural rights don't ever go away, even if one passes laws that remove their positive legal status. — Thorongil
You can't be serious. Just for starters, what is it do you think cops bring with them most of the time when responding to reports of violent crime? — Thorongil
Second, as I have already pointed out, the gun violence is not perpetrated by those who are lawfully making use of their right to bear firearms, so in no way does it follow that the mere right to legally purchase them means greater gun homicides. — Thorongil
Those are rare, and it hasn't prevented mass killings in countries that have stricter gun control, unless you believe death by a gun is somehow worse than death by other means. — Thorongil
You've changed your argument. OK, let's consider the new one.I desire to protect my life and property.
I possess the natural right to protect my life and property.
My life and property can be successfully protected or not depending on the means I employ to do so.
Successful protection of my life and property depends upon adequate and effective means.
Therefore, I have the right to adequate and effective means by which to protect my life and property. — Thorongil
What I am required to defend is my own criterion, which is that there are means of self-defence other than guns which are effective enough (though not necessarily as effective as guns) as a means of self-defence. — Sapientia
It's more important to consider those who have had their lives destroyed, or are at risk, as a result of gun ownership. So you still haven't got your priorities straight. — Sapientia
It would be like punishing little kids for playing with sharp knives. Some might well be more responsible than others. Some might not end up hurting themselves or others. But still, little kids shouldn't be allowed to play with sharp knives. — Sapientia
There's no such thing as a natural right. — Sapientia
Even the fact that cops across the pond tend to bring a gun with them does not mean that that's necessary. It just means that that's considered good practice over there. — Sapientia
You've changed your argument. — andrewk
But it doesn't do anything to justify owning a gun — andrewk
It also justifies everybody being provided with a personal, ex-SAS bodyguard — andrewk
The proliferation of weapons in the States is the only variable that explains why you suffer so many more gun rampages than any other country in the world. — Akanthinos
These are not rare by any fucking definition of the word. They happen every other fucking week. And if you check, the States are miles ahead of any other country in terms of mass shootings per capita. — Akanthinos
This will be my last post. I leave it to neutral observers to judge whether I have been fair, clear, and consistent, — Thorongil
You didn't show that, you claimed it. There's a big difference.I've already shown that if you really thought them [extreme examples] relevant, you would be in favor of banning the right to own cars and household materials that go into making bombs. [emphasis added by andrewk] — Thorongil
I think you're right that no resolution is going to be obtained between you and those that don't believe your argument. If it was going to happen, I think one side or the other would have acknowledged the other's point. — andrewk
Perhaps a more productive strategy would be to submit your argument to a philosophy journal as a paper for publication. If they agree with you that it is an unassailable argument I expect they will be eager to publish it, since it will finally settle a controversial aspect of one of the most hotly debated topics - albeit only in one country, — andrewk
I think the endowment effect is a large part of why people are reluctant to give up their guns. — ProbablyTrue
By gun ownership, I assume you mean lawful gun owners, in which case I would refer you back to the statistic I gave earlier, which you ignored: most gun violence is perpetrated by individuals who own guns illegally. The people who lawfully own guns are not the ones responsible for gun violence. — Thorongil
"All guns start out as legal guns," Fabio said in an interview. But a "huge number of them" move into illegal hands.
...
More than 30 percent of the guns that ended up at crime scenes had been stolen, according to Fabio's research.
...
A number of factors could lead to legal firearms entering the black market. Owners could misplace them, or they could be stolen — either through carelessness on the owner's part (leaving a gun in an unlocked car, for instance) or determination on the part of thieves.
It's also likely that many guns on the black market got there via straw purchases — where a person purchases a gun from a dealer without disclosing that they're buying it for someone else.
Gun policy: Ban the private use of arms, or else abolish the second amendment, or else enforce stricter laws — Thorongil
We have evidence that strictly limiting or outright forbidding the private use of arms results in drastically lower rates of mass shootings and homicides. Look at the UK, Japan, and Australia, for example.
...
So for me, I have no principled reasons why we ought to uphold the second amendment ... If I did, I would maintain such principles directly in opposition to the facts at hand. — Thorongil
You have repeated this for the umpteenth time, yet still manage to fail in demonstrating it. Fine. You don't want to, and I can't force you. The only example thus far extracted from you of means "effective enough" in stopping precisely all the same crimes guns can and do stop are "arms and feet." If that's what you believe, that's what you believe. — Thorongil
By gun ownership, I assume you mean lawful gun owners, in which case I would refer you back to the statistic I gave earlier, which you ignored: most gun violence is perpetrated by individuals who own guns illegally. The people who lawfully own guns are not the ones responsible for gun violence. — Thorongil
This is a complete disanalogy, for it would mean cops, whom you do allow to carry firearms, are somehow super adults, enabling them to carry such weapons which the rest of us immature pseudo-adults couldn't possibly handle responsibly. This is not born out by the facts, however (see above). — Thorongil
You say this now, but it would have been much more helpful to have said it earlier and provided an argument in favor of it. — Thorongil
This gets you closer to being consistent, but you still allow the police to carry firearms for certain situations. You haven't shown why private citizens can't do the same. — Thorongil
I agree that a gun is a legitimate means of self defense and in the US is an established right, — ProbablyTrue
Well, when someone denies natural rights, thus denying the inherent right to one's own life, I think people are justified in being bothered by that kind of post modernist malarkey. — Buxtebuddha
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