I enjoy shooting guns and I'm a decent shot but I don't own one they are too dangerous. For home defense I have a taser and I think that's more than enough. Why do you need to risk killing the intruder? A taser is a much more sane method.
I enjoy shooting guns and I'm a decent shot but I don't own one they are too dangerous. For home defense I have a taser and I think that's more than enough. Why do you need to risk killing the intruder? A taser is a much more sane method.
I enjoy shooting guns and I'm a decent shot but I don't own one they are too dangerous. For home defense I have a taser and I think that's more than enough. Why do you need to risk killing the intruder? A taser is a much more sane method.
I enjoy shooting guns and I'm a decent shot but I don't own one they are too dangerous. For home defense I have a taser and I think that's more than enough. Why do you need to risk killing the intruder? A taser is a much more sane method.
Absolute crap...as clearly explained in the link that you use to support the idea..Which is why Australia has a violent crime rate double that of the US.
http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/cfi/cfi115.html
Sane? That seems a tad judgmental.
I brandished my handgun in a dark parking lot to a group of thugs who had followed me through the store and out to an aisle where no one else was parked. Do you think I could have kept more than one of them at bay with a taser? I mean, c'mon. That's positively insane. Just seeing the grip caused them to turn tail and run.
I had no intention of killing them. But more importantly, I had no intention of letting them kill me. Or my infant, who was in the shopping cart I was pushing when they thought I was an easy mark.
And am I to believe that the absurd amount of guns legaly put in the bad-ass neighbourhoods has nothing to do with them being bad-ass neighbourhoods?
Some idiot said:Gun Control is ridiculous.
Correct. The plural of anecdote is not "data."The Fool said:anecdote competitions may be fun but they are no basis for debate.
I prefer the anecdote about the group of young men walking back to thier car and the person in front of them turning and brandishing a gun...of course they had to shoot quickly because they had a gun pointed at them.....they only realised it was an infant in the arms of the person after the shooting....sad story.
anecdote competitions may be fun but they are no basis for debate. But to add another factor...do you think your gun increases or decreases your chances of suffering a gunshot wound in your lifetime?
a nice grab bag of slogans here....and its nice to know that you are an educated and responsible gun owner. I've actually never come across a gun owner that doesn't believe that....wonder where all the irresponsible ones come from?This isn't a fun anecdotal game. This is my life we're talking about, and defensive uses are not marginal in number by any stretch of the imagination.
Since I'm a responsible and educated gun owner, there is little chance of an accidental shooting in my home. Since your car is more likely to kill than my gun, this argument doesn't impress me. Since five gallon buckets are more likely to cause an accidental death in my home, this argument doesn't impress me.
You can play fast and loose and call the story of how my gun did prevent a crime against me a fun little game, but it doesn't change the fact that there is very little chance I can defend myself against any man larger than me in a struggle. There is very little chance that when I am an elderly woman that any other weapon might be able to save my life.
I grew up on what the police at the time called the most gang infested block in the San Fernando Valley. I went through puberty as a slight girl on Willis Ave in Panorama city in the early 80's, where gang members shot at police out of their apartment windows. I know perfectly well the harm that guns can do. I can also safely say that few of those guns were purchased legally, and most people in Southern California who are NOT criminals cannot have a gun to protect themselves.
Luckily I was in WA when I needed my handgun, which I am legally licensed to carry. Nice little suburbs, at that.
It isn't all black and all white. I'm not one of the "you'll have to pry it out of my cold, dead hands" types of thinkers. I'm not in the NRA, I'm not a right wing gun nut. The fact is, the US is a country full of guns. You may sleep better at night thinking you can eradicate crime by banning guns. I can sleep better at night knowing how to safely and quickly access mine.
There is no way to disarm criminals! What are you going to do about that?
For me, this isn't about giving guns to nice people, as nice people sometimes to nasty things.
The figure below shows a dramatic increase in recorded violent crime in England and Wales between 1998 and the present. Rather than indicating a sharp rise in actual violence, however, this increase is largely the direct result of major changes to the way crime data are recorded in the England and Wales. First in 1998 and then again in 2002, amendments were introduced to include a broader range of offences, to promote greater consistency, and to take a more victim-led approach where alleged offences were recorded as well as evidence-based ones.
That's why firearms are used an estimated 8 million times a year to prevent crimes. Because all those firearm holders simply dropped their firearms and surrendered, and the criminals got embarrased and walked away.
To a certain extent, gun control laws are absolutely ridiuclous. Businesses will post signs outside saying no firearms allowed. Do they honestly think that is going to stop a criminal from coming into their business and stealing/shooting people? All that does is prevent law abiding citizens from defending themselves.
The Dems love their gun control laws but yet they do not seem to have effected anything. Waiting periods are imposed and there are background checks, but a criminal can get a gun on the street just as easy. It seems that all gun control laws do is prevent law abiding citizens from defending themselves. Now I do agree with some of the laws, but a good majority of them are useless.
This may be a little bit old and somewhat biased, but some very good points are brought up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RR9RN_iSKtg
Now I do agree with some of the laws, but a good majority of them are useless.
The person you are putting words ins mouth did not say first sentence or imply it. Said they do it. No argument they have that right - so perhaps if I am going by and see someone shooting people in a store/business with that sign posted I should not drop in and remove the head of the shooter since I would be taking a gun in against their wishes.So you are saying that private property owners don't have the right to oppose firearms on their property?
But, apparently you want to take away property owners rights here it seems.
#1 Property owners should have no rights to regulate their private property
#2 Criminals will always use weapon anyway, so we shouldn't regulate weapons at all, lest we harm the non-criminals
Like I said, Cuba. I think North Korea does this too, and I know the USSR did as well.
It seems to me that lots of these arguments can be summarised as "I should be able to have a gun, but no-one else should". I mean, the term "gun control" applies to all and any restrictions on ballistic weapon ownership, and I don't see many people having a problem with statutes preventing people running down a crowded high-street with a loaded AK-45 blazing.
The question then becomes, as you astutely point out, not "Should we control gun ownership?" but "How should we control gun ownership?". It becomes a question of where the government draws the line.
Personally, I'm happy living in a country where it's damn difficult to get a gun, and where I know I'll almost certainly never even see a firearm, nevertheless be near one fired in anger. How people really feel "safer" when people are able to own deadly weapons and carry them around town "just in case" absolutely boggles my mind. It really does.
That does not mean I walk/hide in fear but it does mean that at best, I am prepared to kill, at worst, I take my attacker with me.
I'm sure you meant AK-47 - just as I'm sure your other data (not counting opinion) is equally accurate.![]()
You clearly don't know much about your own country, then, since the UK (and Australia) has a higher rate of violent crime, including violent crime involving firearms, than the US does.