The point being that the ultimate goal of many of those advocating for tighter firearms restrictions seems to be the total elimination of private firearms ownership with no law being too 'silly' if it promotes that agenda.
As I've commented many times before, whenever someone says "seems to be" your antennae should go up, because it's highly likely a fallacious argument is in the works.
The total elimination of private firearms ownership would be silly. Guns are needed by farmers, veterinarians, pest control workers, maybe private security in some cases, anyone who needs to go into grizzly bear or polar bear territory, I'm sure you could supply more.
So this "ultimate goal" is almost certainly a boogyman of your own invention.
However if one's ultimate goal is saner gun laws, even somewhat silly gun laws might be a step in the right direction.
The fact that many pointless, irrational and ineffective rules and regulations are currently in force tends to justify the opposition to further restrictions.
No it doesn't. If further restrictions lead to greater social utility they lead to greater social utility, completely regardless of whether there are some pointless laws already in place.
What you are doing here is trying a strained guilt-by-association argument, where you associate gun control with silly laws and argue that because silly laws exist all gun control is bad. It's just not a rational argument.
In any case it can be argued that, in western society at least, there are now already enough gun control laws to prevent the criminal use of firearms provided those laws are enforced and complied with.
Since the criminal use of firearms still goes on, more obviously needs to be done, right?
Getting those with criminal intent to comply seems to be the problem. If that can't be accomplished with the laws that we have now, how would adding more prohibitions and restrictions rectify the situation???
Wow, three question marks!!! It must be a really serious question!!!
Adding more prohibitions can reduce the number of guns in circulation, or make those guns more secure, thus decreasing opportunities for criminals to obtain them.
However focusing strictly on criminals is an exercise in goalpost-shifting since we're also worried about suicides, accidents, domestic incidents and lots of other cases where people other than career criminals engaged in armed robberies use guns.