..... I'm willing to pay for other people's accidents in order to protect myself against the risk of causing an accident myself. But I'm not willing to pay for other people's crimes in order to protect against the risk that I will commit a crime, because I won't. And even if I was willing to, that's still what insurance amounts to: shifting the cost away from those who are actually responsible for the damage.
Semantics.
Speeding is a crime, and if you cause injury or harm through speeding, you are likely to be prosecuted. As will every other speeding driver out there, for whom you pay into the insurance pot to cover for their mistakes.
If someone is fooling around with a loaded gun and it 'accidentally' goes off and injures another person, is that really an accident? Or is it negligence?
If someone is climbing over a gate while carrying a loaded gun and gets snagged and the gun goes off injuring another person, is that an accident?
If you're driving too fast in the rain, or too close to the car in front or trying to find that track you want to listen to on your mp3 and someone pulls out in front of you or the car in front stops suddenly, is that an accident or are you to blame?
So long as
your insurance has to pay out to the third party, then you have been found to be responsible for causing the harm they have suffered. In some cases, you might even face criminal prosecution.
Yes, completely different. Not opposite positions, not even contradictory positions, but most certainly different positions. One position deals with who has to pay (and gets it wrong), one deals with who gets paid.
No, they both deal with who gets compensated by the legal gun owner
No it doesn't.
What insurance does is enable the insurer to meet the costs of the claim. The insured just has to meet the costs of the monthly premium. Once I've paid my monthy fee to the insurance company, do you think I'm going to be more or less careful with my gun? I mean, with the insurance scheme Nessie is proposing, I can rest assured that no matter how negligent I am--no matter how criminal I am!--the costs of my bad behavior will be met by a third party. Because I paid the fee.
I believe someone intimated upstream that the best deterrent against you acting criminally with a gun is the criminal justice system, not a lack of insurance.
What you really want is for firearms owner to pay into a Reparations Fund. Once their fund reaches the government-mandated amount, they can be permitted to own a firearm. If, through negligence or willful misuse, their firearm harms someone else, the government can seize their fund and use it to meet the costs of their bad behavior (presumably their guns would then be confiscated, until such time as they replenished their fund). If they never behaved badly, the money in the fund could be returned to them when they give up ownership of their firearm.
Insurance already does that function. You don't pay premiums on the basis that you can't make a claim (or own a car) until you stacked up enough to cover those costs, you're insured as soon as you make that first payment.
And some people actually do this kind of thing: setting aside money for health care, rather than paying insurance premiums for it. Those people are, of course rich people. The rest of us use insurance instead. Because it's cheaper. And it's cheaper because the insured don't actually meet their own costs: The insurer does. That's the distinguishing feature of insurance over other cost-paying schemes.
Yeah, people certainly claim to do this for health care, but call me skeptical.
If you was very rich, wouldn't you choose to just have the all bells and whistles, gold standard, platinum edged health care plan which gives you the absolute best? You can certainly afford the premiums and it avoids any hesitation on the health care providers part.
Would you really put say $500,000 in a ring fenced account and maintain it at that level, just in case?
I wouldn't