This is really my point, Zircon Blue. That is a default uk assumption:it is not absolutely correct, of course: the guy could have been Mr Bird. But he usually isn't,and so we act as if he is not.
I agree that people usually do not attack police officers in such situations where they are unarmed. But, in the USA, people do not usually attack police officers in such situations,
even if they are armed. It might be a reasonable assumption that he would have been
less likely to attack had he not had a gun. Or that he would have been less likely to have been killed. But to extend that thinking to "the incident would inevitably have been quite low-key, and nobody would have got hurt," is absurd.
Do people in the UK
never attack police officers? Do UK police officers
never kill people? Even if the answers to both these questions were "yes, that never happens", it would not be logical to extend that as an absolute belief to this situation. Americans, both armed and undarmed,
do occassionally attack police officers, and some of them end up dead as a result. Unless the assumption is that this guy was a UK citizen on holiday? Then, of course, he would never have gotten violent had the demon gun not made him do it.
And that is the cultural divide which cannot be bridged.
I disagree. I don't believe your position and mine are actually so far apart.
You cannot know either what would have happened if he had not had a gun. He did, and he was trying to kill someone. Each instance of that justifies your basic position, in your mind. And each instance of it justifies mine, in my mind.
I'm curious what you think my "basic position" is. I think you may be surprised at what has been assumed to be my position vs what my actual position is, and what position I've expressed in this thread.
There is nothing at all we can do with that, and so far as I have seen from all the other gun threads nobody is ever going to change their mind. It is a peculiar difference but it is not amenable to argument because we do not even agree about which premises are relevant, so far as I can see
Is one of your premises the belief that the mere possetion of a gun will turn otherwise normal, non-violent people into homicidal maniacs?
Indeed. And yet your basic premise seems based on some wholly imaginary notion of what might have happened if random passers-by had been carrying guns when Derrick Bird went on his rampage.
Which is also an absurd premise, btw.