Gagglegnash
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2008
- Messages
- 1,445
Hi
Since all those laws prohibit an illegal act, yes, you have misunderstood my argument.
If I behave illegally, arrest me, try me and imprison me.
In your examples of murder, speed limits (I have to think that you mean exceeding them), and child abuse, each of those is illegal because someone does something bad. In the context of current gun control thinking, prohibiting the owning and operation of personally owned vehicles comes to mind to solve the speeding problem.
The murder and child abuse are too broad in their implementation for some politician to say that we should prohibit something, saying it will stop all similar jackassulation, and have a significant amount of the citizenry to go along with it.
If someone does something illegal, put 'em in jail.
If someone does something illegal or criminally stupid with a gun, put them in jail for a very long time.
I have guns and I'm neither a killer nor an armed robber in exactly the same way that I have a penis and I'm not a rapist.
Punish the guilty and leave the law-abiding alone.
If you are going to punish the law abiding users of something by prohibiting that particular something in order to prevent an illegal action performed by a small percentage of the whole using that something, then, yes, I feel that I'm allowed to demand 100% (or damn close to it) effectiveness.
[ETA] I just went to WISQARSTM and did some spot research.
There are about 65,000 firearm nonfatal incidents and about 30,000 fatal firearm incidents each year. That's about 95,000 total firearm casualty incidents.
There are about 75,000,000 firearm owners in the US, using the Brady people's estimate of percentage of adults who own guns.
If we assume that each and every one of those 95,000 casualties represents a formerly law-abiding firearm user who suddenly decides to step over the legal/illegal line, that gives us a jackassulation rate of about 0.00126.
One eighth of one percent of the total users.
Will you judge all dogs by the one dog that bit you? [/eta]
You argue that the only worthwhile laws are those that successfully prevent as opposed to prohibit an action. I presume therefore that you oppose laws prohibiting murder, speed limits, child abuse etc and these do not successfully prevent people from breaking them.
Have I misunderstood your argument?
Since all those laws prohibit an illegal act, yes, you have misunderstood my argument.
If I behave illegally, arrest me, try me and imprison me.
In your examples of murder, speed limits (I have to think that you mean exceeding them), and child abuse, each of those is illegal because someone does something bad. In the context of current gun control thinking, prohibiting the owning and operation of personally owned vehicles comes to mind to solve the speeding problem.
The murder and child abuse are too broad in their implementation for some politician to say that we should prohibit something, saying it will stop all similar jackassulation, and have a significant amount of the citizenry to go along with it.
If someone does something illegal, put 'em in jail.
If someone does something illegal or criminally stupid with a gun, put them in jail for a very long time.
I have guns and I'm neither a killer nor an armed robber in exactly the same way that I have a penis and I'm not a rapist.
Punish the guilty and leave the law-abiding alone.
If you are going to punish the law abiding users of something by prohibiting that particular something in order to prevent an illegal action performed by a small percentage of the whole using that something, then, yes, I feel that I'm allowed to demand 100% (or damn close to it) effectiveness.
[ETA] I just went to WISQARSTM and did some spot research.
There are about 65,000 firearm nonfatal incidents and about 30,000 fatal firearm incidents each year. That's about 95,000 total firearm casualty incidents.
There are about 75,000,000 firearm owners in the US, using the Brady people's estimate of percentage of adults who own guns.
If we assume that each and every one of those 95,000 casualties represents a formerly law-abiding firearm user who suddenly decides to step over the legal/illegal line, that gives us a jackassulation rate of about 0.00126.
One eighth of one percent of the total users.
Will you judge all dogs by the one dog that bit you? [/eta]
Last edited:

