Hermit wrote:Seth wrote:Hermit wrote:To begin with, you need to disabuse yourself of the notion that firearms regulations do not per se equal a blanket ban on all guns.
While this is technically true, as demonstrated by the fact that there are already more than 50,000 firearms regulations in force in the US
In 49 of your states an owner does not need a license for long guns, in 46 an owner does not need a license for handguns, In 48 of your states long guns don't need to be registered and in 43 of them handguns don't need to be registered either and 40 out of your 50 states have a "shall issue" policy on concealed carry firearms. What exactly do those already more than 50,000 firearms regulations in force in the US actually enforce? They certainly do not require licensing or registration in the vast majority of states, and I doubt they enforce the need for competence in handling firearms training and testing thereof.
That's because the facts show us that registration is neither necessary nor desirable and that licensing is most often used to interfere with law-abiding individual's rights rather than providing any realistic check on criminal possession of firearms. As for training, such laws are quite effective. The universal requirement for hunter safety education has reduced the incidence of hunting accidents dramatically. The vast majority of gun owners are also not complete idiots and fully understand the gravity of possessing firearms and so they obtain training voluntarily, at their own expense, and pass it on to their children as well. The NRA is the world's premier gun safety educator and has been for a hundred years. Through the NRA's efforts, accidental gun deaths have been reduced by more than 95% in the last century.
The laws enforce safe and lawful gun ownership and punish bad conduct quite severely, and the effectiveness of all these efforts is demonstrated in the huge number of guns in the US and the quite tiny number of gun-related accidents that occur each year.
Seth wrote:Hermit wrote:What you keep thinking of as a ban on guns in Australia is in fact regulation.
It's both. It's a regulation that bans the possession of certain types of firearms
Not much of a ban when 80% of firearms remained in private possession after the buyback scheme. As for the 20% that were bought by the government and taken out of circulation, they were weapons of the design that made them eminently suitable for massacres or designed specifically to kill human beings. Almost none of us are shedding any tears about their disappearance.
Appeal to fear and appeal to the consequences of a belief fallacies.
Seth wrote:Hermit wrote:So, yes, cars cause deaths. They can even be used to intentionally kill people. Same with kitchen knives. Same with cricket bats. Same with the 80% of remaining rifles in private possession. While we regret those deaths, and while we continually work towards the reduction of such deaths, we tolerate them because deaths of humans caused by cars, kitchen knives, cricket bats, hunting and sporting firearms et cetera are not caused by implements that are designed for the primary purpose of killing people. They are unfortunate, incidental to the fundamental purpose of those implements and increasingly rare side effects. And that is why we don't ban cars, knives, cricket bats, hunting rifles, sporting pistols and whatnots even though they can and do cause the deaths of human beings.
You "tolerate" those deaths not because those items are not "designed for the primary purpose of killing people," you tolerate those deaths because those items have utility to the public for transportation, food preparation, recreation, hunting and sport shooting.
That is a very good summary of what I said.
And firearms have utility to the public as well, particularly in the realm of personal self defense.
Seth wrote:you falsely assume that a particular type of firearm that you believe to be "designed for the primary purpose of killing people"
What is so false about it? To return to the car analogy, I can imagine that someone at some time has used an M1A2 Abrams tank to go out and do the shopping with, but that is not what the thing is primarily designed for, is it?
So what? So long as the tank owner (and I knew one...he died a couple of years ago) operates the tank (or armored car, of which there are many street-legal versions on the highways) in a lawful and peaceable manner, what business is it of yours or anyone elses what vehicle he chooses to drive to the market?
Sure, you can go hunting with an Uzi, but an Uzi is not made to merely "to eject projectiles at a specified velocity in a specific direction for the purposes of putting holes in inanimate objects like paper and tin cans and the occasional game animal." It is designed specifically to kill human beings. You are being disingenuous now.
Strawman. I didn't say "for the purposes of...." I said that all firearms are designed for one, and only one thing: to eject a projectile at a specified velocity in a specific direction." What the target of that projectile is has nothing whatever to do with the design of the weapon. But let's posit,
arguendo that an Uzi is "designed specifically to kill human beings." So what? Whatever it may be "designed" for, what is pertinent is how it is used. If it's not used to kill human beings, then its design purpose is entirely irrelevant. You might as well say that nuclear power plants are immoral because nuclear energy was "designed to kill people" since the first practical use of nuclear energy was to blow shit up.
Once again you are positing a fallacious appeal to fear and an appeal to the consequences of a belief. As I said, your objection is a "design" objection, or in other words it's an aesthetic judgment based on your personal fear and dislike of "ugly guns." If someone uses a gun to kill someone illegally, does it matter if it's a sinister-looking (to you) "black rifle" or the most beautifully designed and hand-built custom shotgun "designed" to shoot birds with? No, it doesn't matter. It only matters to you because you are mired in an irrational fear of firearms that you think have some maleficent "intent" or "purpose."
Seth wrote: you can OWN a car without having to be licensed to drive it on a public highway, and you may drive any car on private property, particularly your own, without having to be licensed to do so.
Correct. And that is where the difference lies between cars and weapons that are designed primarily for the purpose of killing people. At least this is the case here in Australia and many other civilised countries. In Australia you cannot own an MG0815 just because you want to, no matter which cupboard you like to keep it in, and we are happy with that.
See above. You have an irrational fear of an inanimate object.
Seth wrote:A firearm is an inanimate object that does nothing without being operated by a human being
No matter how true, the act of repeating an irrelevance does not make it relevant. We distinguish between things that are primarily designed to kill human beings and those that are not, and we do not want to see any of the former in private possession.
See above. You have an irrational fear of an inanimate object.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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