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Night Strike wrote:I know that, but that historical context and intent tend to mean little or nothing to the people who want to reinterpret everything the Constitution says. At least if it had specifically said "individuals", there would be one fewer area for people who want to take away rights to go after.
Phatscotty wrote:crispybits wrote:Yall like to point out our murder rate is higher, but you never want to talk about how your violent crime rate is higher.
Which would you rather be the victim of PS, a violent crime that leaves you alive or a murder?
Would you rather take a shot thru the head, or be in a wheel chair with permanent brain damage for the rest of your life, knowing that some stranger did that to you for the 17$ in your pocket?
If the potential victimhas a gun with them, odds are they will be able to defend themself in both cases.
- Nearly 1 in 5 injured violent crime victims, or an average of just under 480,000 persons per year, were treated in an emergency department or hospital for violence-related injuries.
- Of the violent crimes measured by the NCVS, a higher percentage involved injury when committed by an intimate partner (48%) or a family member (32%) than when committed by a stranger (20%).
- Between 1992 to 1998, 72% of the average annual 21,232 homicide victims age 12 or older were killed with a firearm
OBJECTIVE:Determine the relative frequency with which guns in the home are used to injure or kill in self-defense, compared with the number of times these weapons are involved in an unintentional injury, suicide attempt, or criminal assault or homicide.
METHODS:We reviewed the police, medical examiner, emergency medical service, emergency department, and hospital records of all fatal and nonfatal shootings in three U.S. cities: Memphis, Tennessee; Seattle, Washington; and Galveston, Texas.
RESULTS:During the study interval (12 months in Memphis, 18 months in Seattle, and Galveston) 626 shootings occurred in or around a residence. This total included 54 unintentional shootings, 118 attempted or completed suicides, and 438 assaults/homicides. Thirteen shootings were legally justifiable or an act of self-defense, including three that involved law enforcement officers acting in the line of duty. For every time a gun in the home was used in a self-defense or legally justifiable shooting, there were four unintentional shootings, seven criminal assaults or homicides, and 11 attempted or completed suicides.
CONCLUSIONS:Guns kept in homes are more likely to be involved in a fatal or nonfatal accidental shooting, criminal assault, or suicide attempt than to be used to injure or kill in self-defense.
crispybits wrote:And I really don't get this logic. "We can make a huge dent in the problem, but not 100% solve it, so unless we can 100% solve it let's just not bother trying to do anything at all"
crispybits wrote:The immediate response is to ban guns because the majority of the rest of the world has moved on from the time where everyone is armed to a time when weapons designed as weapons are highly restricted, and with the exceptions of a few places with other significant cultural problems combined with a proximity to large legal gun markets for ease of illegal import the rest of the world has seen deaths caused by crime drop dramatically. We all still have murderers true, but we have a lot less per capita because either you have to get deep enough into the criminal world to be trusted by them to sell you a gun (it really is a big deal here, I'm pretty sure I know who I could ask who would know someone who knows someone, but it would be something really massive for me to start asking, and more likely than not I wouldn't get anywhere with those enquiries), or you have to commit the murder some other way which would nearly all require you getting up close and personal and beating someone to death or cutting them, which is a whole difference psychological experience to standing several feet away and pulling a small lever.
I'm off to bed now so I'm not going back to google for yet more stats but I'd be willing to bet that a lot of attempted murders requiring physical contact fail because when it actually comes to driving a knife into someone or hitting someone with a heavy object most people will not strike properly, either through lack of training or a lack of a real will to kill.
As for the drink driving thing, drink driving is banned. Is drinking while concealed carrying banned? Isn't that massively more dangerous to others?
thegreekdog wrote:crispybits wrote:The immediate response is to ban guns because the majority of the rest of the world has moved on from the time where everyone is armed to a time when weapons designed as weapons are highly restricted, and with the exceptions of a few places with other significant cultural problems combined with a proximity to large legal gun markets for ease of illegal import the rest of the world has seen deaths caused by crime drop dramatically. We all still have murderers true, but we have a lot less per capita because either you have to get deep enough into the criminal world to be trusted by them to sell you a gun (it really is a big deal here, I'm pretty sure I know who I could ask who would know someone who knows someone, but it would be something really massive for me to start asking, and more likely than not I wouldn't get anywhere with those enquiries), or you have to commit the murder some other way which would nearly all require you getting up close and personal and beating someone to death or cutting them, which is a whole difference psychological experience to standing several feet away and pulling a small lever.
I'm off to bed now so I'm not going back to google for yet more stats but I'd be willing to bet that a lot of attempted murders requiring physical contact fail because when it actually comes to driving a knife into someone or hitting someone with a heavy object most people will not strike properly, either through lack of training or a lack of a real will to kill.
As for the drink driving thing, drink driving is banned. Is drinking while concealed carrying banned? Isn't that massively more dangerous to others?
The activity of driving while under the influence of alcohol is illegal. The two items which contribute to deaths related to illegally drunk driving are vehicles and alcohol.
The activity of killing someone with a gun is illegal. The item which contributes to deaths related to illegal gun deaths is a gun.
Why would we ban guns and not alcohol or cars? And if the answer is that cars are more useful than guns, why do we not ban alcohol? That serves no more useful purpose than guns, right?
thegreekdog wrote:The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 17,941 people died in alcohol-related collissions in 2006. That is more than was killed (suicide, accident, or murder) by guns in the United States in 2004. Should we ban alcohol, cars, or both?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunk_driv ... Statistics
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 17,941 people died in alcohol-related collissions in 2006. That is more than was killed (suicide, accident, or murder) by guns in the United States in 2004. Should we ban alcohol, cars, or both?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunk_driv ... Statistics
Actually, all it would take was a breath-alizer attached to the cars ignition, to cut the number significantly...further, as with some gun murders, some of those accidents would probably have happened anyways, and alcohol was a coincidence.
There are many regulations on cars, that kept that number much lower as well. Many, many safety features and regulations that have simply saved lives, so essentially, many types of cars are essentially illegal...just as more regulations on guns would cut down on many deaths.
AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 17,941 people died in alcohol-related collissions in 2006. That is more than was killed (suicide, accident, or murder) by guns in the United States in 2004. Should we ban alcohol, cars, or both?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunk_driv ... Statistics
Actually, all it would take was a breath-alizer attached to the cars ignition, to cut the number significantly...further, as with some gun murders, some of those accidents would probably have happened anyways, and alcohol was a coincidence.
There are many regulations on cars, that kept that number much lower as well. Many, many safety features and regulations that have simply saved lives, so essentially, many types of cars are essentially illegal...just as more regulations on guns would cut down on many deaths.
I think you've kind of proven my point. There are things we can do apart from banning alcohol to limit alcohol-related car accident deaths. There must be things we can do apart from banning guns to limit gun-related deaths. However, the first reaction to gun violence is to ban guns and the immediate response to the resistance to banning guns is "anything else would not be as effective."
thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
If guns are banned first and the government then bans alcohol, we're fucked.
thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
If guns are banned first and the government then bans alcohol, we're fucked.
crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
If guns are banned first and the government then bans alcohol, we're fucked.
OK I lied - back for one last post before sleep
We've done this one TGD, and you've agreed (provisionally, based on you not coming back with further research and arguments we haven't seen yet) that any argument that goes back to defence vs government is flawed.
AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 17,941 people died in alcohol-related collissions in 2006. That is more than was killed (suicide, accident, or murder) by guns in the United States in 2004. Should we ban alcohol, cars, or both?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunk_driv ... Statistics
Actually, all it would take was a breath-alizer attached to the cars ignition, to cut the number significantly...further, as with some gun murders, some of those accidents would probably have happened anyways, and alcohol was a coincidence.
There are many regulations on cars, that kept that number much lower as well. Many, many safety features and regulations that have simply saved lives, so essentially, many types of cars are essentially illegal...just as more regulations on guns would cut down on many deaths.
I think you've kind of proven my point. There are things we can do apart from banning alcohol to limit alcohol-related car accident deaths. There must be things we can do apart from banning guns to limit gun-related deaths. However, the first reaction to gun violence is to ban guns and the immediate response to the resistance to banning guns is "anything else would not be as effective."
I didnt prove your point. You are proving mine. Banning the most dangerous guns is obviously a good start to saving lives, and your analogy proves it.
crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
If guns are banned first and the government then bans alcohol, we're fucked.
OK I lied - back for one last post before sleep
We've done this one TGD, and you've agreed (provisionally, based on you not coming back with further research and arguments we haven't seen yet) that any argument that goes back to defence vs government is flawed.
thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:thegreekdog wrote:The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 17,941 people died in alcohol-related collissions in 2006. That is more than was killed (suicide, accident, or murder) by guns in the United States in 2004. Should we ban alcohol, cars, or both?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunk_driv ... Statistics
Actually, all it would take was a breath-alizer attached to the cars ignition, to cut the number significantly...further, as with some gun murders, some of those accidents would probably have happened anyways, and alcohol was a coincidence.
There are many regulations on cars, that kept that number much lower as well. Many, many safety features and regulations that have simply saved lives, so essentially, many types of cars are essentially illegal...just as more regulations on guns would cut down on many deaths.
I think you've kind of proven my point. There are things we can do apart from banning alcohol to limit alcohol-related car accident deaths. There must be things we can do apart from banning guns to limit gun-related deaths. However, the first reaction to gun violence is to ban guns and the immediate response to the resistance to banning guns is "anything else would not be as effective."
I didnt prove your point. You are proving mine. Banning the most dangerous guns is obviously a good start to saving lives, and your analogy proves it.
Okay, but one of those British dudes said we should ban all guns. The most dangerous guns are apparently handguns (given homicide statistics), and no one from the White House or Congress is proposing that.
I think we should do a few things (this is my sort of final answer, after having thought about it and done two days of research):
(1) Have a limit on the amount of ammunition a single clip can hold for all semi-automatic weapons.
(2) Have a limit on the amount of guns (all guns) a single person can purchase in a given time period.
(3) Gun violence or illegal ownership of a gun should carry mandatory minimum sentences of upwards of 10 years (I'm not fond of mandatory minimums).
(4) Illegal sales of guns should carry mandatory minimum sentence of upwards of 10 years (again, not fond of mandatory minimums).
That's what I think we should do. Don't go back to the super ineffective and easily avoided Assault Weapons Ban.
Phatscotty wrote:Still, nobody has shown how reducing production/consumption of arms and ammunition will reduce crime.
Phatscotty wrote:Still, nobody has shown how reducing production/consumption of arms and ammunition will reduce crime.
thegreekdog wrote:crispybits wrote:thegreekdog wrote:AAFitz wrote:Im not sure how many actual gun owners will be on board with you banning alcohol.
If guns are banned first and the government then bans alcohol, we're fucked.
OK I lied - back for one last post before sleep
We've done this one TGD, and you've agreed (provisionally, based on you not coming back with further research and arguments we haven't seen yet) that any argument that goes back to defence vs government is flawed.
I was kidding. I attempted and failed to craft a good joke.
Go to sleep.
AAFitz wrote:Im not sure he was fully serious, though, its a point worthy of considering, depending upon who "we" are, which in his case, seems to be a gun carrying drinker.
Army of GOD wrote:I joined this game because it's so similar to Call of Duty.
Evil Semp wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Still, nobody has shown how reducing production/consumption of arms and ammunition will reduce crime.
You haven't proven how arming everyone will reduce crime.
One reason I don't think repealing gun free school zones is good.
http://xfinity.comcast.net/articles/new ... other.gun/
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