The self-centered, myopic view is that gun control violates individual rights. Does it? The majority of people favor gun control. The prevalence of guns violates their right to life. Right now, judging by government inaction, the state and powerful special interest groups such as the NRA are aligned with the interests of individuals who oppose gun control. — Fooloso4
Over 300,000,000 guns out there, how would one start to deal with the sheer numbers? — jgill
Sometimes, in order to protect the rights of an individual constraints are put on the rights of other individuals. If you are a business owner, for example, you cannot hire children to work in a sweatshop.
That is an overly broad, vague, and simplistic generalization, intended to pit the government against the individual. The interests of the state are not necessarily antithetical to the interests of the individual. The example, chosen to stay on topic, is gun control.
Cool, like the right to life- via not getting shot.
I own property because I purchased it or made it. — NOS4A2
I get to live on a plot of the lord’s land, pay them a certain percentage of what I myself make and create through my own industry ... — NOS4A2
... so that I might find solace in the chance that my government will protect me should war come knocking. — NOS4A2
Restricting my rights to own a gun does not protect the rights of anyone else, for I have not violated anyone’s rights. — NOS4A2
Yet the government reserves for itself the right to own weapons that can destroy the whole planet. Where is the gun control then? If this isn’t antithetical to the interests of the individual I don’t know what is. — NOS4A2
What this all boils down to ... — NOS4A2
Is that how you protect someone’s right to life, by begging the government to restrict our rights? — NOS4A2
Or in other cases, abortion control, the right to life via not being chopped up in a womb and sucked out with a vacuum. — NOS4A2
What kind of weapon would you use to protect your children, should the need ever arise? Ballots and petitions? Beg a politician? — NOS4A2
Restricting my rights to own a gun does not protect the rights of anyone else, for I have not violated anyone’s rights. — NOS4A2
That story could have turned out very differently! It makes me wonder about what happened leading up to the story that brought together a fourteen year old, a mafioso, and a frequently fired stolen gun — Fooloso4
Rights can only be conferred by men. But the idea that only man in his official or government form can confer rights is equally absurd. — NOS4A2
it’s mostly disingenuous when the topic is gun control. — Mikie
Their research showed that a large share of shooters were suicidal in the year before they committed their violent acts. Taking a gun to school (or shopping center...) and opening fire was a fairly certain way of dying--a form of suicide by police bullet. — BC
On this thread, however, it’s avoiding the issue of gun control. — Mikie
So our response, is exactly on the issue of gun control, it's not avoiding it, it's the main issue because its our opponent's main argument and they're currently winning. — Isaac
Although suicide is a mental health issue not everyone who becomes suicidal suffers from mentally ill. — Fooloso4
The majority of suicides by gun are not mass murders. — Fooloso4
Is that how you protect someone’s right to life, by begging the government to restrict our rights?
Or in other cases, abortion control, the right to life via not being chopped up in a womb and sucked out with a vacuum. All this talk of protecting life suddenly falls on deaf ears when this subject comes up. I don’t believe any of it.
What kind of weapon would you use to protect your children, should the need ever arise? Ballots and petitions? Beg a politician? — NOS4A2
My question would then be, why is the government and military so untrustworthy that civilians feel that gun ownership is a requirement to feel safe/protected? — Benj96
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