Mycroft
High Priest of Ed
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2003
- Messages
- 20,501
Precisely.Mycroft, it was a reductio ad absurdum. That's the point.
Cars.
I let my freind drive my car for a day, while he "goes to look for a job". Meanwhile, he robs a bank. Should I get busted for my freind's crime? He used my car to commit it. What about my friend using my phone and computer to commit wire fraud? Why should guns be special before the law?
If you know your friend is not a licensed driver and you give him the keys, then yeah you should bear some responsibility. If your buddy is on parole for wire fraud and shouldnt be using a computer, and you give it to him. Yeah you should be in trouble too.
Handing out guns to unlicensed thugs to do who knows what is reckless to say the least.
What I don't get are the people who make the argument that it would have been better to simply let the woman get robbed/raped than to have killed the attacker. That's great if they want to make that decision for themselves, but it's not cool at all to make that choice for someone else.
Mycroft, it was a reductio ad absurdum. That's the point.
But it is cool for the woman to make the choice of whether the attacker shall live or die? In both situations, a person is making a choice on behalf of another person. And being killed is vastly worse than being raped.
What I don't get are the people who make the argument that it would have been better to simply let the woman get robbed/raped than to have killed the attacker. That's great if they want to make that decision for themselves, but it's not cool at all to make that choice for someone else.
But it is cool for the woman to make the choice of whether the attacker shall live or die?
In both situations, a person is making a choice on behalf of another person.
And being killed is vastly worse than being raped.
Yeah I bet that happens a lot, given how often people advertise that they're armed and all.If true, it doesn't take into account those who would choose not to be agressors because they know the other person is also armed.
Why you imply that these are the only situations involving handguns is extremely puzzling to me.Why anyone would want to leave an appealing young woman, an infirm old lady, a citizen confined to a wheelchair, a young (safety-minded) boy or girl at the mercy of thugs wielding blades or clubs is puzzling to me.
What do you mean, "is it cool?" Is she within her legal rights? Is she morally correct? Is she obeying the current dictates of teen fashion as she fires? Come on, let's use specific absurdities.
[It] means, if you decide to attack me, one consequence of that might be that I will react with deadly force. That you didn't consider this possibility before I killed you doesn't somehow make me more responsible for your death than it makes you.
Are you stating an opinion or making a claim?
If a claim, I require evidence that proves this statement.
Actually it's not, but it is a very weak argument in defense of owning a handgun.
There are consequences to our choices. If someone chooses to spend their time on this planet committing acts such as muggings and rapes, they will have to suffer the consequences of that choice. If the consequence is that they end up dead on a sidewalk (rare in defensive handgun use for the attacker to die, actually), well...that's the way it goes. You don't want to get shot? Find something else to do with your time than mugging and raping people.But it is cool for the woman to make the choice of whether the attacker shall live or die? In both situations, a person is making a choice on behalf of another person. And being killed is vastly worse than being raped.
I'm not neccesarily saying that lethal self-defense is always unacceptable, but the argument seems to make sense to me.
I don't think it is. What Mephisto stated is the end result of your policy.Why you imply that these are the only situations involving handguns is extremely puzzling to me.
Actually it's not, but it is a very weak argument in defense of owning a handgun.
I was merely adopting Mycroft's terminology for the purposes of debating his particular post.
I don't follow. When a woman wears a revealing dress, she also brings certain possible consequences into being, but no sane person would say that responsibility lies with her if she gets raped.
A claim, I suppose. When you're dead you can never be happy again, whereas when you're a rape victim, it is merely harder to be happy. Therefore, death is worse.
And the REASON someone is dead or unhappy doesn't matter?When you're dead you can never be happy again, whereas when you're a rape victim, it is merely harder to be happy. Therefore, death is worse.
But what do you mean by "cool?" Unless you know, it does your argument no good to parrot Mycroft's teminology.
Hint: when you're dead, you also can never be in pain again.
freakshow said:And the REASON someone is dead or unhappy doesn't matter?
I was merely questioning his logic. I meant the word "cool" to refer to what he was talking about in his post, and I do not know what he meant. I am not claiming he is wrong, (I suspect he might be, but I'm not willing to make that claim as of yet) but his logic simply did not make sense to me, so I turned it against itself.
The way I see it, the only things worse than being death are when you have inevitable pain which counteracts the pleasure you will feel. Such things exist, but I don't think rape is such a thing, because the main long term damage done is depression. Depression is curable, thus depression is not worse than death, thus rape is not worse than death.
I suppose you might be right though.
No, it is not irrelevant. In fact, I think it is of critical importance, and the subject can't be properly discussed without considering it.I don't see why it should. I was deciding which of two possible states is preferable, and how you got to such a state seems irrelevant.