Belz...
Fiend God
I don't want to ban guns.
I don't want to ban guns.
It's also sensible if your aim is to reduce the number of deaths and injuries from guns in the home. I'm sure someone has posted a few times the statistics that show in the USA the highest probability of you dying by way of a gun is from the guns in your own home. The idea of needing it for self-defence may have a strong emotional appeal but statistically such a choice puts you in more danger.
"Nobody's saying we should ban all guns."
No, not in so many words. But I do think there are a not statistically insignificant number of people (no I'm not gonna sit here and define some X percent of Liberals or whatever) that are not comfortable with any level of private gun ownership and absolutely would push for a total gun ban (or something functionally equivalent) if it was politically viable.
I know. I provided you with the complement.![]()
So far the government has been an obstacle when it comes to encouraging smart guns to reduce deaths. New Jersey passed a law which would require smart handguns only be sold after a certain date to the little people in their state. There was opposition, as expected. The NJ legislature let years go by before attempting to amend the law; in the end the new bill which would require smart guns be sold along side of standard guns was vetoed.Yet the automotive industry is taking it upon themselves to work towards autonomous vehicles to drastically reduce traffic deaths. Over 90% of deaths are caused because of human error, not the car, yet the industry is stepping in to reduce human input. It will take decades to come to fruition, but it has started. Better gun regulation will take time as well, but let's get started.
Then I don't understand, or you don't understand. If guns are part of a technological evolution that has made us happier and healthier, then it seems like going back to a time before guns would make us more miserable. Since presumably your wish would be to make us _less_ miserable, that would seem counter-productive.
Whenever these US shooting incidents occur, the pro-gun side always says that the problem is not actually the guns, but instead the fact that the killer was said to be mentally ill, or psychologically disturbed, or that they obtained the guns illegally without the right permits etc. And then they say that hence the correct solution must be to stop mentally ill or criminal people from being given a license to buy guns .... but it's very obvious why that can never work to reduce the problem ...
... at the time when the person obtains a licence, they may indeed be able to show (at least on the application forms) that they are not currently on health records or criminal records as mentally ill or psychologically disturbed etc. But people change ... things happen in their lives which can, and often do, cause them to change their attitudes & behaviour very quickly ... people develop mental illness or serious psychological problems etc. … things happen in their lives which produce those dangerous changes (divorce, death of a loved family member in some seemingly unfair circumstances, being sacked from a job causing serious financial problems, or being expelled from school or college, or they may become obsessed with the idea of combating different ideologies such as Islamic terrorism, or things they regard as seriously unfair in the society around them, etc. etc.) …
… just because the person can get a licence one year, does not mean that by the next year that same individual will not develop some psychosis or illness or obsession that turns them into a lethal danger.
I don't want to ban guns.
I don't understand the argument against registration. It would effectively numb out the gray and black markets, resulting in less illegal weapons on the street, and at no significant inconvenience to the owners.
I my neck of the woods, it's "Once the government knows who has guns, then the next step is that they will come get them, or target gun owners in some other way."
Plenty of people on the pro-gun side do demand access to all portable weapons (and some ask for tanks, too)
Well Bob does that but no actual... like human beings.
I my neck of the woods, it's "Once the government knows who has guns, then the next step is that they will come get them, or target gun owners in some other way."
Yes, there are paranoid conspiracy theory types on the loose who would think that. But I don't get the reasonable owners (who I assume are the majority) having a serious objection. Slippery slope, maybe? I would think that a law-abiding owner would want to encourage measures which keep firearms in the hands of the law-abiding.
Because that's what (some) liberals sound like when they say "I don't want to ban guns."
Look at Steve in post 830. If Steve's side won the election, they would use the list to target gun owners.