Kerberos said:
Yes the burden of proof for a crime being committed. If possessing a nuke or attempt to acquire one is a crimme then they have to prove possession or attempts to acquire.
A crucial aspect of pretty much any crime, be it murder or whatever, is
mens rea. That deals with motive and intent. Firing a gun at another human being may or may not be a crime based on
mens rea. If your motive is self-defense, and your intent is to stop that person taking a life, it's not murder. If your motive is greed and your intent is to take his money, then it is.
Are you HONESTLY telling me that this shouldn't apply at all to people acquiring weapons? That somehow, something they can determine in practically every other crime is suddenly impossible in this case?
Having a nuke is as I've pointed out repeatedly the equivalent of having a gun pointed at anybody within the blast radius.
IF it's armed and ready to launch or detonate. As I pointed out, that's not necessarily the case.
If somebody has a gun pointed at mem I don't want to have to prove that he was going to use it to kill mem because by the time I have that proof it will very likely be to late.
I agree 100%. And if someone has a nuke armed and ready to detonate, either pointed at a target or around the radius of it exploding in place, then I fully agree that it's time to step in.
Saying my argument is invalid doesn't make it so but that is entirely beside the point.
I showed WHY the argument was invalid. You called it a non-sequitur for reasons that don't have anything to do with showing the argument to be invalid.
Yes, but only because there's no chance in hell that he would be elected, and because he would be impeached within a week if he was, at least if he's going to deliver on his election-promises.
Let's assume that he is elected, and assume he manages to get through his first weeks in office without impeachment: how much threat would we be under from people having nukes? Please show your work.
I suppose that I could support giving our hypothetical zillionaire permission if we really, really trusted him, and we could set safeguards in place that made sure he couldn't lunch them against USA or some other country, but that would be a case of giving him special permission not of granting a general right. If possessing nuclear weapons was a right, then our hypothetical benefactor could get nukes, but so could anybody else who we couldn't prove was going to use them to kill millions of innocents.
And how do you make the determination that it's not a right, that we should only restrict certain people from doing if they do it dangerously, and a privilege, so we should only allow people to do it if they do it safely?