bynmdsue
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 1,892
Cause the geniuses realized that you can't buy a 7-round magazine for any firearm on Earth.
Colt Automatic .45 1911 7-rnd magazine. But there are 8s available as well.
Cause the geniuses realized that you can't buy a 7-round magazine for any firearm on Earth.
No you haven't. You've put forward a number of nonsense arguments.
You've never once tried to seriously assess the benefits of gun ownership. And the overall costs are irrelevant to insurance. It's only the insurable costs that matter, and you have no idea what those are.
Not in and of itself, but I never claimed it was. That's only one piece of the puzzle, but it sure as hell matter. It even matters for your argument, if you're being honest.
The burden of proof doesn't lie with me. You're the one who wants to change the law and impose burdens on people. It's up to you to justify your position. And you have consistently failed to do so.
Every statistic you have shown has been irrelevant. Only the insurable costs are relevant for determining the benefits of insurance, and nothing you have presented tells us what those are.
But you don't actually know that. You concede that there should be some threshold, but you can't actually tell me what that threshold is, nor can you tell me whether we're above it or below it. And just saying it's somewhere between the USA and the UK doesn't suffice: you're using a predetermined conclusion to determine your criteria, rather than what should logically be the reverse. It's intellectually dishonest.
To what extent does it matter that criminals will not be insured?
I can show legal guns cost society resources to treat the injured and deal with the dead.
Has there got to be a precise figure, like $3,500,756? Or can it be within a range? Can you tell me what would be acceptable to you?
To the extent that the costs they impose cannot be used as any part of the justification for the insurance requirement. Why is that not obvious?
But you can't show how much.
It doesn't have to be precise, a ballpark figure will do. But you do have to justify it.
I cannot give you any figures as to what the insurance would cost, [...]
It doesn't have to be precise, a ballpark figure will do. But you do have to justify it.
I have never said compulsory insurance for guns should be used to pay for uninsured guns, I was never using that as a justification. Was that not obvious?
I all ready have justified it with accidents and mass shootings alone. I cannot give you any figures as to what the insurance would cost, but that does not negate my argument for insurance.
OK, I accept I cannot give you the figures, so in your eyes the argument is a fail. But since you cannot give me any figures either, you should accept that the argument can also be a success, we just don't know with the data we have available.
OK, I accept I cannot give you the figures, so in your eyes the argument is a fail. But since you cannot give me any figures either, you should accept that the argument can also be a success, we just don't know with the data we have available.
OK, I accept I cannot give you the figures, so in your eyes the argument is a fail. But since you cannot give me any figures either, you should accept that the argument can also be a success, we just don't know with the data we have available.
Even Scientific Wild Ass Guesses are also apparently unavailable; not even a WAG.So the argument for this particular mandatory restriction on law abiding gun owners cannot be objectively substantiated. That was already glaringly obvious.
ETA...
It appears it can't be justified.
The full extent of straw purchasing cannot be determined from available data, 4 but it appears to be a fairly common supply mechanism for criminals and juveniles. A survey of juveniles incarcerated in four states, for instance, revealed that a third had asked someone, most commonly a family member or friend, to buy a gun for them at a retail outlet at some point in the past (Sheley and Wright, 1993:6). Another rough indicator is the share of crime guns that are new but that have changed hands at least once. To illustrate, approximately one quarter of guns confiscated by police are less than three years old, and most of these are recovered from persons other than the original buyers (Cook and Braga, 2001:294-295); this implies that many of these guns were diverted from the primary market via straw purchasing and other means.
I accept that there is a potential for that part of the argument to be valid, yes. However, you and I may not agree about the appropriate tradeoff between freedom and security. That is ultimately a value judgment, and one can't "win" that argument in any objective sense. So even if we could settle the facts, we would probably still disagree.
But the facts are not settled. You want to change our laws, based upon facts you don't know. And that is not enough.
Is there any cost where you would accept that legally held guns have to be insured? Or no matter the cost, gun owners should not be forced to take out insurance and the whole of society foots the bill?
Is there any cost where you would accept that legally held guns have to be insured? Or no matter the cost, gun owners should not be forced to take out insurance and the whole of society foots the bill?
Under what legal theory does that work?The data in the following report suggests that making someone liable for their gun up to a legal transfer of ownership or five-years after they report it lost/stolen would affect a significant number of criminal guns.
Under what legal theory does that work?
I believe the legal theory is known in technical terms as " **** gun owners".