the right of self defense does not concern itself with which instruments are acceptable but with whether the level of force used is acceptable — Benkei
We all must surrender our lives, that's the reality of living, and to claim a right against impending death is not natural. To claim the right to extend your own life at any cost to others, is selfish nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's a slippery slope fallacy. — Michael
You've been trying to argue against Agustino's claim (which I'm defending) that rifles are more dangerous than handguns. — Michael
So I believe this excludes semi-automatics, given that semi-automatics are not "rough equivalents" of the single shot pistols and rifles which existed at the time the Second Amendment was written. — Michael
For one, it cannot be enforced (too expensive). — Agustino
Do you think gluttony should be illegal? — Agustino
WTF! Who put you in charge of what things are proscribed by natural law? — Pseudonym
There is a difference (you and Buxte will readily agree) between being a squishy little 6 week old fetus and a 6 year old child learning arithmetic when some well armed angry male decides to wipe out a batch of people. It's gunning down people who made it all the way to personhood, a name, preferences, friends, lovers, etc. that outrages people. — Bitter Crank
There's this? — Michael
But a single bullet from a handgun is not likely to be as deadly as one from an AR-15.
If we accept your line of thinking then stopping at guns would be entirely arbitrary and we might as well include grenades and anti-personnel mines as those exist too. — Benkei
Well, Buxtebudd, how common do you think abortions are? It would appear that they are at a 45 year low. — Bitter Crank
I not only practiced homosexuality back when it was both immoral and illegal, I was also promiscuous. It was great. I have no regrets, morally or legally. — Bitter Crank
I checked and it's not illegal in the US. — T Clark
I also find that eating animal flesh is immoral, but recognize that such an immoral act is sometimes necessary — Buxtebuddha
trade-offs and compromise — Buxtebuddha
The one has greater destructive potential than the other. — Agustino
Given the same amount of time and the same situation, the AR-15 will kill more people. — Agustino
The very fact that you are undecided about euthanasia — Pseudonym
either untrue to say that all killing of another person is automatically murder — Pseudonym
there are circumstances in which the killing of a completely innocent person is not automatically morally wrong — Pseudonym
So your claim is that if something is not morally right then it ought be made illegal? — Michael
I'm using it in the sense of "not legal" throughout. — Michael
So is euthanasia murder? — Pseudonym
Murder is an unlawful killing. — Michael
but you have not demonstrated objectively that once a thing has been identified as a human being it is automatically a moral duty to keep it alive — Pseudonym
But the same people who fulminate against abortion do not want to take responsibility for any of the many unwanted children languishing in care homes, let alone people whose lives they could save. — unenlightened
which weapon can kill more people faster? — Agustino
Why are there no philosophers and no threads arguing that when a homeless person freezes to death while there are warm places locked up all around him, that is murder; that refusing your spare bedroom to a refugee is murder. — unenlightened
What I mean by “double effect” is that the intention has to be to save the mother and NOT to directly end the life of the baby. — LostThomist
Thus by using this example as a case for not making abortion illegal is bad logic. You are using a VERY obscure exemption that does not affect the main topic because the example is so rare. — LostThomist