So you have to pass a background check to buy a car now?Ian wrote:Fair enough. It shouldn't be much of a comparison; guns should be far more regulated than cars. But it's the other way around.Nibbler wrote:Oh dog, do I hate it when people compare cars to guns.![]()
The only regulation of cars applies to using them on public streets. If you instituted the same kind of regulation with firearms, anybody who could pass a very rudimentary marksmanship test would be handed a license that allowed them to carry their firearm in all 50 states and DC.
You really don't have a clue what you're talking about, do you?Kristie wrote:It's the most bullshit comparison I've ever heard of! Cars are designed to get people from one place to another. You can have your license suspended if you don't obey traffic laws. Guns are unnecessary and designed to kill.
There are a lot of offenses for which you can permanently lose your right to even touch a firearm, and many of them don't involve using a firearm at all. If you're sixteen years old and you get busted with a single joint, your right to own firearms is gone for life.
The argument that 'cars aren't designed to kill'? Damn, I'd hate to see the carnage if they were, since they're already out there killing 40,000 people a year.
You would have an almost impossible time buying a bona fide assault rifle unless you have tens of thousands of dollars, a seller with one registered prior to 1986 willing to part with it, six months to a year to wait for it, three sets of finger prints, and a federal tax stamp authorizing you to buy it.Ian wrote:Depends how you define regualted of course. But without a drivers license I would have a far easier time buying an assault rifle than a car. Reality is what it is.
If you're not wiling to put in the time and effort to become familiar and proficient with its workings and how to handle and operate it safely, you should take it to a gun store and sell it. Having a gun you're unwilling to even touch is a bad idea.Ian wrote:Pragmatism. I don't want to own the thing. I don't love it, and I don't ever want to even fire it. I bought it because thanks to the NRA and gun-loving paranoid types everywhere, there is a flood of guns per capita in the US, far ahead of any other country. I consider it potential insurance against a home invasion, not insurance of my freedom from the government. If I could be assured that gun ownership in the US was plummeting, I'd be thrilled to get rid of it.
Skills degrade over time, and in a high stress situation shooting something roughly human being sized that's 20 feet away is going to be harder than you think.
Criminals perfer victims who pose little risk to the criminal.Warren Dew wrote:Apparently when knives are the easiest weapon to use, the spree killers prefer younger children: