Okay, so collectively there will be greater safety.
Now what about an individual who, consequently, is killed or severely injured by a threat that he/she could have neutralized if the aforementioned gun control had not been enacted?
Is he/she collateral damage?
Collective public safety is greater than the safety of individuals?
We need honest answers to those kinds of questions before we can get any real traction on the issue. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I can easily imagine that there are individual situations that owning explosives could save someone's life- but we don't see that as a valid reason to allow everyone to have a grenade or a rocket launcher because the potential damage they can cause is so high that we accept the cost of those deaths that could have been saved. All decisions carry an opportunity cost. Money spent on the opioid problem is money that could have been spent saving lives elsewhere. Research into cancer is research that could have been spent looking to other diseases and medical problems. There is always a cost when it comes to social decisions. However, in this instance, I am not sure it really matters, because I can switch the inverse onto you.
People have a right to defend themselves, but this is just an extension of their right to life. Why do the lives of those who defended themselves with a gun count for more than those who died because of current gun laws? Consider an example. The following example is entirely hypothetical and in no way reflects actual statistics, and is merely meant to show a point:
Imagine that for every death that was prevented by a gun, 100 deaths occurred from current firearm policy from a combination of mass shooting and general gun violence. In total, 100 people are save by firearms, but 10,000 We can enact a different set of firearm policies- the new policy would save 10,000 lives in the upcoming year, but would prevent people from obtaining guns and, as such, would cause 100 to die.
Why do the lives of the 10,000 individuals count for less than that of the 100? You make it sound like the 100 individuals are being sacrificed for monetary gain or some indirect good, like one would do in some utilitarian calculus by speaking of social good and the public, but we are talking about individuals who are dying. Those 10,000 are people, too. Are the 10,000 just collateral damage for the 100? All else being equal- without consideration of rights or other uses- it makes semse to protect the right to life of 10,000 over the right to life of 100.
Well, I have never seen that point thoroughly, honestly evaluated, analyzed, debated, etc.
In the United States of America we are talking about a government that through murder and other violence removed the indigenous peoples from its part of North America, leaving only a small percentage of them alive, and continues this policy today.
People can argue that armed citizens have no chance militarily against a state with the military manpower and weapons like those of the United States, but "no longer makes sense in a modern context" is highly debatable.
I have never seen that debate happening, let alone in an honest manner. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I discussed this topic in another thread and you bringing up the indigenous population helps make my point. In one point in history, the disparity between what a civilian militia could bring to the table versus what the government could bring was relatively low. When the southern states seceeded from the US, the difference in terms of the power of each was there, but the South could feasibly hold off the North and could have won. Weaponry and capability between what the government can muster versus what the average person can muster is so great that it seems unlikely that someone could reasonably stand up against the state. If you had half the country rebel, similiar to the Civil War, then it begs the question of why you need guns when you can just get arms from the local military base.
This assumes an overt form of violence against the general populace is used. However, as history shows us, democracies tend not use overt violence against "normal" citizens. It becomes hard to stand for life, liberty, and the pursuit of hapiness when you attack the "average" person. Rather, the government uses a more covert form of oppression- you justify yourself and your actions by playing on people's fears and shifting public perception to see your actions as necessary or, at the very least, acceptable. No one- at least, the majority and those in power- cared about the natives and how they were treated as trash, so they effectively had no rights. Japanese Americans during WW2? Potential enemies. We had to intern them in camps. We were at war. So on and so forth.
The government can oppress those at the fringes of society and get away with it. That's not the question. The question is whether guns are going to help? The Native Americans? They tried violent resistance, and they lost outright. Japanese Americans during WW2? I can only see bloodshed and validating the fears of the public from an armed resistance. Blacks? John Brown and Nat Turner couldn't start a slave rebellion. Slavery was ended by a war and a vote to amend the Constitution. Even after the Civil War, whena group of black Republicans formed a militia to protect themselves, the Supreme Court said the Second Amendment only applied to the federal government and the allowed the individual state to abolish the militia. I doubt the civil rights movement from then one would have done very well if it was an armed and violent movement.
I don't see it seriously discussed often because, well, it is not generally considered all too seriously. The government has already proven that it can take rights away- it just does so in the dark against people no one cares about. Firearms would either be counter-productive to small groups and would be irrelevant to anything approaching a civil war.
The right to self-defense is useless if one does not have the right to the means necessary to effectively defend him/herself from a threat. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I must be able to have military-level firearms, such as light machine guns and other full-auto firearms, because of the possibility of being attacked by multiple attackers wearing full body armor. The need for suppressing fire can help defend myself. Without said firearms, my right to self-defense is useless, as I do not have the means necessary to effectively defend myself from a potential threat. I also must be allowed to carry these weapons at all times (at least on state and public property, like public schools) because if I can't use them, then I can't effectively defend myself, making the right to self-defense useless. This applies even if I am a convicted violent felon, have been deemed mentally ill, or am a minor, as everyone has the right to self-defense.
Morally, the right to self-defense simply means that a person is, at all times, allowed to defend themselves from severe bodily harm, even if that defense involves lethal force. I am not morally wrong to kill someone in defense of my life and limb. Legally, self-defense is a just a legal defense to justify an action that is normally considered a crime, like killing someone or assualting someone. It does not mean that I must have access to an object that can greatly aid in my defense. A grenade can effectively defend me and might save my life in situations that a gun could not, but we do not see the need to legalize grenades.
It is not about "crime".
It is about the threat of being harmed immediately, or the process of presently be harmed. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
See above regarding self-defense. Part of your argument is an attack on the pro gun-ban position by mocking the idea that the police will adaquately defend everyone. I am saying that the reliance on police is not a needed premise of the pro-gun ban stance.