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I probably should have clarified: I am pro-gun when it comes to places like the US - where there are already lots of guns, it makes sense to be able to be able to put yourself on equal terms with an assailant. Yet to make my mind up about here in the UK.
Numbers said:It keeps people under the delusion that they can win against the State.
Dev said:Once the secret government orchestrators have pushed too far in their fight to take our freedoms. We will need those guns when a peoples revolution happens
Foxhound888 said:um... eye for an eye, Honestly i would probably tell him that God works in mysterious ways right before I blew his brains out. If i was married...
(Someone mentioned the mysterious ways phrase on one of these threads, i just thought this would be a funny application of the phrase. Apply to forehead)
By the way I hope you guys aren't getting the wrong idea, I'm no "Bible thumper", I just don't like it when people put my belief in my God down. I hope you all understand.
BeenJumpin said:Because having a tiger or highly explosive material lying around are both very dangerous. The tiger could get out or a small fire could ignite the explosives.
BeenJumpin said:But owning an unarmed locked gun in my house doesn't put anyone in any danger. Theres no threat and no danger. It shouldn't be a crime.
BeenJumpin said:So because my friend safely stores guns in his house, you die? Clearly you're not dead so I'm not understanding you...
The only thing that infringes on your right to live is someone killing you
Most people own guns so they can shoot it, plain and simple.
Gun control works but only on a small controlable island with very high security and lack of human freedom (the UK) even there it's not very effective at controlling gun related deaths.
It simply would not work in a country like america.
and you know this to be true because .......?
It is a large country with vast reserves of illeagal guns.
Number of firearms produced by US manufacturers every minute: 8
Number of handguns produced by US manufacturers every minute: 3
The people who are likely to be involved in gun crime will still have guns if control is implemented.
The only thing that will reduce gun crime in america is a change in american social psychology.
where are they coming from? certainly not mexico or canada ..in fact most guns used in the US are made i the US:
I don't entirely agree with this. We have serious issues at our southern border...which I'm sure you know. I understand Mexico has strict gun laws, but they don't prohibit handguns, which you'll find are the culprit behind the bulk of gun related crimes/deaths in the US. They don't prohibit rifles or shotguns as well. Further, back to the borders...the second you illegalize firearms in the US, you create a lucrative market there since they're no longer readily available here. I guarantee that when there's money to be made...and a lot of it...the smuggling will pick up and you'll still wind up with guns in the hands of those that shouldn't have them. So, I'll bring up drugs, again, since we've been so effective at stemming the influx of them into the country...
I'll say it again, banning all guns would be the mother of all cases of ineffective legislation and the epitomy of overextension.
again if there was a complete ban on firearms in the US only a small minority would risk breaking the law in order to obtain one ..but law or no law it wouldnt stop them which is exactly the same as in every other country on this earth.
But, can't you agree that the effectivness would be greatly reduced considering there is already a ludicrous amount of guns in circulation in the US.
Further, what percentage do you figure is registered?? How many guns are in existance that are not a matter of public knowledge??
My point is that I think it's overlegislating...you're putting all that responsibility in the hands of, already overtried, law enforcement.
There needs to be a balance between banning, certain types of firearms, prepurchase regulation, and post-purchase regulation (stiffer nonregistatrion penalties).
Also, just an aside, in 2005, Mexico had just as many gun-related homicides (as a percentage) as the US. Even amidst strict regulations. So, the answers may not lie in stricter rules and regulations alone...
Cho was carrying a backpack that contained receipts for a March purchase of a Glock 9 mm pistol.
Ballistics tests by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms showed that one gun was used in Monday's two separate campus attacks that were two hours apart.
As a permanent legal resident of the United States, Cho was eligible to buy a handgun unless he had been convicted of any felony criminal charges, a federal immigration official said.
Cho was eligible to buy a handgun unless he had been convicted of any felony criminal charges
Looks like it's supposed to be a representative democracy to me. What I said equally applies to the UK, where I live, which is at least on paper a representative democracy. Here, Parliament is supposed to be sovereign. However, there are many forces which stop Britain from being a 'liberal democracy' in the true sense of the term.Hmm. well, thats kinda the way I see them, a "dark, close-knit cabal hell-bent on ruling the world"
You think illuminati is just a conspiracy theory?
And we're not a Democracy, were a constitutional Republic, and we have gone so far away from that. "They" have been attacking the constitution since 911. So again, no to not being allowed to have guns, it's our constitutional right.
Because power elites, cabals and old-boy networks have been operating and asserting their influence for a hell of a lot longer than just the last six years.
Cho's being a complete psychopath allowed him to kill 33 people.
Of course if he didn't have a firearm he would never have killed that many people (assuming he didn't make a bomb or something). But just as easy an argument could be made that he'd never have killed that many people if EVERYONE had a firearm. Both scenarios involve major problems.
If gun control was as easy to solve as most people seem to think, then it would have been solved long ago. Instead its a hideously complicated mess that involves factors political, social, economic, and historical all interacting simultaneously. So don't patronize the people on the other side of the debate as you, and try and understand what they're saying so that someday we can make some progress here.
Chris Rock said it best: "We don't need gun control, we need bullet control".
$5k per bullet? I think he was onto something.
Chris Rock said it best: "We don't need gun control, we need bullet control".
$5k per bullet? I think he was onto something.
Pointless, I can get equipment to make bullets at home.
I'd rather live in a society where everyone carried a sidearm than a society where one nutjob can walk into a building and know everyone would be defenseless.
People don't go on knife killing sprees, why? Because they know someone would be able to wrestle them and disarm them.
People wouldn't go on gun killing sprees if they knew there would be a deadly backlash if they tried.
Go you?Pointless, I can get equipment to make bullets at home.
I'd rather live in a society where everyone carried a sidearm than a society where one nutjob can walk into a building and know everyone would be defenseless.
People don't go on knife killing sprees, why? Because they know someone would be able to wrestle them and disarm them.
People wouldn't go on gun killing sprees if they knew there would be a deadly backlash if they tried.