
pianycist wrote:I am of the opinion that all guns but handguns for self-defense (and guns that are specifically designed for hunting, in the case that a person hunts for food) should be illegal. Guns are scary. But---there is a problem in US culture about guns, too. Canada has significantly more gun owners than the US, but also has significantly less deaths resulting from gun violence.

Kladeos wrote:pianycist wrote:I am of the opinion that all guns but handguns for self-defense (and guns that are specifically designed for hunting, in the case that a person hunts for food) should be illegal. Guns are scary. But---there is a problem in US culture about guns, too. Canada has significantly more gun owners than the US, but also has significantly less deaths resulting from gun violence.
Really?
Kladeos wrote:more guns on the street means more gun crime.
Ryles wrote:ChildOfTheLight wrote:Who's Miyazaki?
A film director. In Princess Mononoke, Lady Eboshi was commenting that they needed to make the guns much lighter so the women could use them, to which her workers insisted they didn't think they could manage that and still have a functional gun.
Ryles wrote:I'm not saying that, I'm saying that strength isn't the only deciding factor in a fight. Someone needs to develop a fighting style that'll let a smaller, lighter opponent have an easier time of beating a larger, stronger opponent while focusing on the strengths of the female body.
Ryles wrote:"Second, raw data from the 1979-1985 installments of the Justice Department's annual National Crime Victim Survey show that when a woman resists a stranger rape with a gun, the probability of completion was 0.1 percent and of victim injury 0.0 percent, compared to 31 percent and 40 percent, respectively, for all stranger rapes (Kleck, Social Problems, 1990).
Not all rapes are strange rapes, though. Only about 31%, that doesn't protect against the majority of rapes.
Today, many women (quite reasonably) fear the threat of attack by a physically stronger man, and a firearm could prevent many of these attacks. Take the case of the “North Side Rapist†in Chicago, a city where hand guns are banned, as an example: The rapist broke in to the womens homes, and at least one of the women heard him break in and then climb the stairs. Had this woman had a handgun, she almost certainly could have stopped the rapist before it was too late. This would have prevented her from enduring such a horrific crime, as well as preventing the rapist’s future victims from experiencing the same thing. Instead, Chicago law prevented her from being able to defend herself, and gave the advantage to the rapist/home-invader. Women in areas with gun rights are able to defend themselves every day. This is not an isolated incident, and similar events happen every day across the county. Even more women are attacked or even killed by former boyfriends and husbands, and even with a restraining order and police protection, they are still vulnerable.
Ryles wrote:It's not unconstitutional.
"A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."
This isn't "everyone should be allowed to carry fire arms and go off and shoot each other all willy nilly" it's "since a militia is necessary, members of it should be allowed to keep guns but it should be well regulated".

Kladeos wrote:...I would not feel safe if civilians like myself had concealed weapons. Guns are designed to kill, and are only used to kill and wound. I don't think that any civilian should feel the need to carry a device designed to kill on their person for personal safety reasons. While it's true that pepper spray and tasers can only do so much, and that there aren't always police when you need them, more guns on the street means more gun crime. Making guns more accessible to the public in general makes it easier for criminals to access them. It also makes it easier for someone who would not normally have the means for an illegal gun to buy one legally to use for illegal purposes...

EJA wrote:Kladeos wrote:...I would not feel safe if civilians like myself had concealed weapons. Guns are designed to kill, and are only used to kill and wound. I don't think that any civilian should feel the need to carry a device designed to kill on their person for personal safety reasons. While it's true that pepper spray and tasers can only do so much, and that there aren't always police when you need them, more guns on the street means more gun crime. Making guns more accessible to the public in general makes it easier for criminals to access them. It also makes it easier for someone who would not normally have the means for an illegal gun to buy one legally to use for illegal purposes...
I agree with this statement.
ChildOfTheLight wrote:EJA wrote:Kladeos wrote:...I would not feel safe if civilians like myself had concealed weapons. Guns are designed to kill, and are only used to kill and wound. I don't think that any civilian should feel the need to carry a device designed to kill on their person for personal safety reasons. While it's true that pepper spray and tasers can only do so much, and that there aren't always police when you need them, more guns on the street means more gun crime. Making guns more accessible to the public in general makes it easier for criminals to access them. It also makes it easier for someone who would not normally have the means for an illegal gun to buy one legally to use for illegal purposes...
I agree with this statement.
I've already made it clear that I don't, but I'd just like to draw attention to one word: "civilian." That is the word by which military rulers call their subjects, not the one by which governors who are in fact servants of their people call them. That is "citizen." That, perhaps, sums up the difference in philosophy here.



heldenautie88 wrote:I support gun rights, although not for the same reasons right wingers do. I'm a revolutionary socialist and I believe that the state having a monopoly of arms only serves to be an instrument of oppression of the people. Therefore I agree with the right of the people to defend themselves when the state declares war on us. I'm not really down with the NRA line of "those criminals will stop at nothing" because the term "criminals" among the right wing is so often an excuse to be racist.
ChildOfTheLight wrote:heldenautie88 wrote:I support gun rights, although not for the same reasons right wingers do. I'm a revolutionary socialist and I believe that the state having a monopoly of arms only serves to be an instrument of oppression of the people. Therefore I agree with the right of the people to defend themselves when the state declares war on us. I'm not really down with the NRA line of "those criminals will stop at nothing" because the term "criminals" among the right wing is so often an excuse to be racist.
You would probably call me "right wing" (though "libertarian" would be closer) and I'll be the first to affirm that "the state having a monopoly of arms only serves to be an instrument of oppression of the people" is true, as a matter of historical fact. Governments murdered 170 million people in genocides in the 20th century (and it's much more depending on whether you count wars, and which ones.) In every case guns were made illegal for "civilians" (or heavily restricted -- which means only the well-connected had them, which is nearly the same thing) first. "I agree with the right of the people to defend themselves when the state declares war on us" is the essence of the Declaration of Independence, and the classical liberal philosophy which underlies it.
Indeed, criminals, be they public or private, will always arm themselves.
V.I. Lenin wrote:The state is an organ of class rule, an organ for the oppression of one class by another; it is the creation of “orderâ€, which legalizes and perpetuates this oppression by moderating the conflict between classes.

-Kt- wrote:Nyeti Nyeti, I applaud your foresight, I was about to start a huge argument in the "What do you believe?" thread
Here's a more verbose explanation at what I believe:
Laws only apply to the lawful.
That is to say, that gun restrictions, and waiting lists, and concealed carry permits only matter to lawful honest citizens. If I were a criminal, there is nothing stopping me from getting a firearm illegally. But If I am a lawful citizen, I have to submit to backround checks, wait times, and Go through the red tape of getting my CCW.
"Gun Control" Does, Not, Work!
Infact it makes the situation worse. The current system of "Gun Control" only acheives the effect of taking more guns out of the hands of lawful people. It does nothing to impact criminals having guns.
In this manner criminals have more power to rob, steal, hijack, kidnap, rape, murder, the docile public.
If you were about to rob a convenience store, in a world where everyone is packing, wouldn't you think twice about sticking up the clerk, if you knew that granny in aisle 9 is armed, and the guy by the slurpee machine is armed, and the woman at the atm is armed, and the clerk is armed?


Lyn Aven wrote:Gun control DOES work if it's properly implemented. It is, of course, not a COMPLETE solution, but it cuts back on gun-related crimes committed in hot blood. For example, with waiting period laws, if you've gotta wait a week to get the weapon, are you STILL gonna want to kill that person by the time you get it? If you do, gun control or not, nothing's going to stop you anyway; if you don't, the law worked.
Gun control that keeps weapons out of the hands of those with a legitimate desire for self-defense, on the other hand, is counterproductive. Laws that restrict carrying a weapon in places where it can't be enforced (for instance, if there aren't metal detectors at every entrance) only mean that the people who are already ignoring the law will have a weapon.


In as much as Australia has a lower rate of gun crime, yes. Australia has murders - although more of them are carried out with knives, rope, or other weapons than in the U.S.Anti-Gun laws seem to work pretty well for Australia.
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