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LibraLabRat wrote:Really sick propaganda:
I will show a snip from the Brady website. Everything untrue I will highlight and counter.
Qwertyuiopasd wrote:Capellini wrote:
If an individual can't be bothered to wait long enough for a background check to get a gun, and can't be bothered to prove they know how to use it safely, I DON'T THINK THEY SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO HAVE ONE.
if an individual can't be bothered to wait long enough for a background check to get a gun, and can't be bothered to prove they know how to use it safely, I DON'T SEE HOW YOU'RE GOING TO STOP THEM FROM GETTING THE GUN ILLEGALLY!
Capellini wrote:Qwertyuiopasd wrote:Capellini wrote:
If an individual can't be bothered to wait long enough for a background check to get a gun, and can't be bothered to prove they know how to use it safely, I DON'T THINK THEY SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO HAVE ONE.
if an individual can't be bothered to wait long enough for a background check to get a gun, and can't be bothered to prove they know how to use it safely, I DON'T SEE HOW YOU'RE GOING TO STOP THEM FROM GETTING THE GUN ILLEGALLY!
That's a different issue. Legal gun ownership and illegal gun ownership are two different things. I think it should be harder for people who SHOULDN'T have a gun to own one legally. Dealing with then keeping them from getting it illegally is the second prong. It starts with, 'where do the illegal guns come from'?
LibraLabRat wrote:This had the unintended unfortunate side-effect of putting tourists in Florida driving marked rental cars at risk from criminals, since such individuals getting off airplanes invariably were not carrying concealed, unlike large numbers of residents.
Chimaera wrote:LibraLabRat wrote:This had the unintended unfortunate side-effect of putting tourists in Florida driving marked rental cars at risk from criminals, since such individuals getting off airplanes invariably were not carrying concealed, unlike large numbers of residents.
Sounds like a charming place. Provided you have a gun to defend yourself. Even so, I think I'll be taking my vacations somewhere else.
LibraLabRat wrote:So where are you going to vacation without crime?
Swindon? Wiltshire? Cornwall?

LibraLabRat wrote:How did you guys manage to conquer so much of the world with attitudes like that?
On September 2, 1898, the Khalifa committed his 52,000-man army to a frontal assault against the Anglo-Egyptian force, which was massed on the plain outside Omdurman. The outcome never was in doubt, largely because of superior British firepower. During the five-hour battle, about 11,000 Mahdists died whereas AngloEgyptian losses amounted to 48 dead and fewer than 400 wounded.
Someone in a rental car with a noticeable accent is either a tourist or a drug smuggler. And you can guess that the drug smuggler is gonna be armed.
LibraLabRat wrote:So where are you going to vacation without crime?
LibraLabRat wrote:Also, I get involved. If I see someone getting attacked, I intervene. Too many Americans just walk on by.
Okapi wrote:All of the legal solutions proposed and in effect (though you all seem to feel that enforcement is feeble at best) have a fatal flaw: Somebody has to be victimized before the law can take effect. This is not the end of the world in the case of theft of insured goods. But where lives or, less dramatically, where well-being and health are at stake, better to err on the side of safety. If you're "in a situation" as one American soldier I worked with used to call it (he had funny euphemisms for a lot of things, most of which are unmentionable in company), statistics are quite irrelevant and the pending prosecution promised by power is really no comfort to losing your knee (the criminal shot you in the knee because he knows it's easier to get aquitted that way if caught than if he shot you in a location deemed lethal), or your chastity.
The common argument on the gun issue usually consists of hurling statistical proofs coupled with applied logic on a very theoretical basis. Anyone who has ever fallen victim to an armed criminal can tell you, that when his/her life was flashing before his/her eyes, the statistics were, well, statistics and quite removed from the reality of the experience. Excuse the comparison, but it's like those guys on the American Airlines flight who fought back against the hijackers on 9/11. Geopolitical considerations and the benefit of the country probably lost all significance in the moment leading up to their heroic demise.
I make this comparison in light of something the Bush administration (not well received in this forum I daresay) realized in the months following the attack which bears heavily on the subject of guns and crime: law that only takes effect after the crime is limited as a deterrent.
Preemption is the only responsible policy that an individual can entertain. If you don't want to carry a weapon, at least get over your fear of them adn familiarize yourself. Jsut because 25% of the internet is prawn doesn't mean you have to shut it out of your lives, and just because guns are not the ideal solution to any conflict (except perhaps close encounters with Bin Laden) is no excuse to ignore their impact and benefits.
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