And that reason is not applicable here.
Then why did
you post a link to this ridiculous "parachute-as-medical-intervention" article? I've been saying since you posted it that the article is both wrong and has no bearing on the topic.
Your standards of evidence are hypocritical and irrational.
What standards are those? I asked you to back up your claim that guns are "more effective than knives" at self defense. It wasn't an irrational request at all. It's a very common request in this forum, in fact, that people back up claims they make. And all you've done is repeat the claim and insist that it doesn't require support, and then throw around all this straw about me wanting "double blind tests" or some nonsense when I never asked for any such thing.
No, it really isn't sufficient to counter it. It makes not one god-damn lick of sense. Not only do all self-defense methods have downsides, all alternatives to self-defense have downsides. Every human activity under the sun, including those necessary for survival, has a downside. This alone is insufficient to conclude anything, and yet you wave about this triviality (and it is a triviality to note the obvious and universal) as if it could just wipe away the entire debate. Well, it cannot.
This particular point was made in response to a particular point of yours; it wasn't an attempt to wipe away "the entire debate".
A benefit which is not worth the cost.
I see.
What's this "unilateral" garbage? Are you suggesting that all of your assertions were arrived at by mutual consent? Please.
No; but I don't attribute my assertions to you, as in this case when you said "In
your knife scenario, you aren't merely being attacked: you can expect to be injured." For one thing, I didn't really give a "my knife scenario". For another, there are scenarios - credible ones - in which a person can be attacked without being injured. If the bad guy takes a swing and misses, or shoots and misses, or throws something at you and you duck in time, you suffer no injury but this does not equate to not having been attacked - just for an example.
And yes, you can be expected to get injured if you are being attacked by someone within arms length. If you can expect to not get injured, then you've got no justification in using deadly force.
It's a reasonable possibility; but I've dealt with it already.
You did, but you've given me (and everyone else) no reason to decide likewise. Again, you're cherry picking specific possible outcomes with no regard to their probabilities, and using that to justify your decision. And it's absurd.
What probabilities already? This is like nailing jello to a wall. "The probabilities, the probabilities". Why don't you say what you think they are for once, so I have something concrete to work with. Right now these "probabilities" can be anything you want them to be.
You know, I should never drive to the grocery store to get a soda: it's much better to remain slightly thirsty than to accidentally hit a pedestrian.
We are talking about self defense weapons used in self defense situations. Also, shooting at a possible "attacker" who turns out to be an innocent person is not an
accident, it's an error. Accidents are happenstance. A gun going off and killing someone because you dropped it is an "accident". You deliberately shooting at the possible "attacker" with the express intention of killing or at least wounding him/her is not, whether it turns out your judgment was right or wrong.
I have *NO* objection to you arming yourself with a knife instead of a gun. I have an objection to you telling me that I should arm myself with a knife and not a gun.
Yeah, remember way back in the thread when I never said anything like that?
It's only three pages long; go check for yourself.
As an aside, I don't like that we've focused on knives; I mentioned them, but I also mentioned blunt weapons as well like batons and saps.
YOU brought up the scenario of an attacker with a gun, not me.
Fine; but I've also handled it.
So in other words, you now claim that your example (and it was yours, not mine) is rare enough to not be a primary concern?
Then for FSM's sake, why did you even bring it up?
Again, the thread is only three pages long. But to save you time, I brought it up to prove the uselessness of your argument that "If they are within arm's length, then (by definition) they can strike you, and your knife cannot prevent that." My answer was basically, "so what?" Having a gun can't stop someone else from shooting and wounding you (and this was actually the limit of the "example" as used by me), but do you let that stop you from using the gun? Modern self defense weapons aren't like swords; the point isn't to "block" incoming blows, it's purely to deliver outgoing ones (by whatever means the weapon operates). Therefore, interjecting that "a knife can't stop you from being hit" in a debate about the effectiveness of the respective weapons in their intended use is misleading at best.
There are plenty of examples of people with guns successfully defending themselves from attackers with guns. Those people aren't Chuck Norris either.
Are there "plenty of examples" of people with guns successfully defending themselves after having been
wounded by attackers with guns (or even with some other weapon)?
No. Guns are better for self defense for the same reason that they're more dangerous: they are more effective at disrupting the body's ability to function. That's how weapons work when you're using them in self defense: you stop the attacker's body from working sufficiently well to continue the attack. And that's also what leads to guns (and knives) killing people: the body's functions can get too disrupted to keep the person alive as well. You have already conceded that guns are deadlier than knives, which means that they're more effective at disrupting the body's functions. It makes no sense that you would seriously contest that they are also more effective for self-defense, when you have already conceded their superiority in the very mechanism by which self-defense weapons work.
Finally.
That looks like a perfectly reasonable argument. Using that logic, one can rationally predict that a gun should be more efficient than a knife in any given scenario at injuring an attacker.
My question is - does the practice bear out the theory? Have people who used knives to defend themselves historically been less successful at ending attacks upon themselves than people who used guns have been?