ChochemV2,
K: Owning and using guns has no meaning in itself. It is only when it's regarded as a God-given right, or even just a "right", that it becomes a problem. That belief is delusional, seeing that rights are determined by values.
C: The state gives us this "right" to own guns and it's one of the foundation beliefs in this country.
This is a delusional belief, with no rational basis.
Just because a group of people says, "Here, you can do so-and-so", doesn't mean you can always do so-and-so.
America has a history which is closely tied to guns and Americans don't react kindly when the rights granted to them by the government are whisked away without reason, or for reasons which cannot be substantiated.
It's interesting that the many different excuses, offered for supporting the usage and ownership of guns in America, in this thread, boil down to this:
- Someone else said I should, and they must be right
- No one else can be trusted
- Other people cannot be trusted to create and maintain a civilised human environment
It's very short-sighted and hellish. Very much coming out of a Merged Void mentality.
K: A total idiot is looked after by others, so they don't do any harm to themselves. When such a person becomes violent, and escapes from carers, then it needs to be retrieved by trained experts, who will not use excessive force.
Ch: That's wonderful but the situation you posited involved someone intending to kill you. If someone has a gun pointed at you and intends to kill you saying "Where are the trained professionals who can disable this mad man?" out loud doesn't save your life.
This is called awareness of consequences, so it may save lives. Being aware of how a situation may unfold does prepare intelligent persons.
For example:
- How to disarm an armed and violent idiot
- How to contact people trained to disarm the same
- Making sure there are people trained, and enough of them
and so on.
As the old saw goes, prevention is better than cure. Better to deal with it a long, long time before it happens.
K: We need to include as a "total idiot" someone who is on a drug high, like cocaine or crack.
C: As you asked me to direct my posts to whomever is quoted, can I ask you to simply say what you mean? If you mean "a crack head wants to kill you" then say that not "a total idiot wants to kill you", it would make the conversation much easier to follow.
They are exactly the same thing. You said something like, "a person who you can't reason with".
K: This American report about the likely causes for the dramatic drop in American crime rates in the '90s states that "higher rates of handgun ownership, which represent about one-third of all rearms, may be a causal factor in violent crime rates".
C: It also says:
There is, however, little or no evidence that changes in gun control laws in the 1990s can account for falling crime.
Yes, I read that. It's not strictly true though, because the article also states that crime fell when laws were passed to put more people who used guns to commit crimes in prison. That is really a law that controls gun usage, as it's a deterrent.
Given the realities of an active black market in guns (Cook, Molliconi and Cole, 1995), the apparent ineffectiveness of gun control laws should not come as a great surprise to economists. Even in the late 1980s, prior to the Brady Act, only
about one-Ž fth of prisoners reported obtaining their guns through licensed gun dealers (Wright and Rossi, 1994).
Yes. But look at the bigger picture. Potential criminals obtain guns in the same society that has prisons, police officers, abortion clinics, orphanages, juvenile detention centres, and drug rehabiliation wards.
So even though the potential criminal may not seem to come under gun control laws, there are many ways to communicate the cost of using guns to commit crimes.
More stringent gun-control policies such as bans on handgun acquisition passed in Washington, D.C., in 1976 and the ban on handgun ownership in Chicago in 1982 do not seem to have reduced crime, either.
You left out the rest of the paragraph:
While initial research suggested a bene cial impact of the D.C. gun ban (Loftin, McDowall, Weirsema and Cottey, 1991), when the city of Baltimore is used as a control group, rather than the affluent Washington suburbs, the apparent benefits of the gun ban disappear(Britt, Kleck and Bordua, 1996). Although no careful analysis of Chicago’s gun ban
has been carried out, the fact that Chicago has been a laggard in the nationwide homicide decline argues against any large impact of the law. From a theoretical perspective, policies that raise the costs of using guns in the commission of actual
crimes, as opposed to targeting ownership, would appear to be a more effective approach to reducing gun crime (for instance, Kessler and Levitt, 1999). The most prominent of these programs, Project Exile, which provides prison sentence en-
hancements for gun offenders, however, has been convincingly demonstrated to be ineffective by Raphael and Ludwig (2003), apparently in part because of the small scale on which it was carried out.
In other words, research hasn't been completed. Likely as not, there hasn't been enough funding.
According to the author gun control shows little or now impact on gun violence specifically because of the black market gun trade in the US. The guns are already out there and the criminals aren't buying them legally.
Again, the bigger picture is that gun control laws are an umbrella that encompasses all gun usage, both legal and illegal. The current perspective, which is popular from the look of things, is that gun control laws are only relevant to those who are likely to obey them.
This is ridiculous. The laws are for those who are not likely to obey them.
Laws that help make drug rehab patients and juvenile delinquents aware that gaol-life is a typical outcome for using guns in committing crimes. Or making young women aware that abortion is a very valuable option, when one's life is not stable. That sort of thing.
1.) An increase in the number of police
2.) Rising prison population
3.) The receding crack epidemic
4.) Legalizing abortion
These are four things which address the culture of violence and punishment of criminals and not taking away the weapons that criminals choose to use.
Well, I hope the guns are confiscated when arrested, and while in prison.
K: Is a total idiot a criminal?
C: Illegal drug users are criminals, assuming you haven't reverted to the dictionary definition of "idiot". In that case, a foolish person isn't a criminal unless he or she breaks the law.
If someone is aware that hard drug use is likely to cause them to become violent as well as totally idiotic,
and they go on to use the drugs, then they are a criminal.
But while they're out of control, then one has to treat them like a total idiot until they're capable of reasoning again.
K: A better option is to disarm a total idiot, as the above link described.
C: I'm not arguing that disarming someone is the better option.
It sounds rational to me.
I said that in a situation where someone is trying to kill you lethal force is justified.
"Lethal force" is just a euphemism for "kill them".
It's far better to disarm someone who is intent on killing.
You even seemed to agree with me admitting you wouldn't refrain from killing someone if you judged it was necessary.
Only if they can't be disarmed.
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