No, it's an apt comparison. I have dozens of guns around the house, and some fire extinguishers. Neither have caused a single death. But I could beat someone to death with a fire extinguisher, or use it to defend myself against a physical attack by using it as a weapon.Tero wrote:Apples and oranges. You can have dozens of fire extinguishers around the house. Fire extinguisher deaths are very few a year.
Based on the logic of gun banners, fire extinguishers must be banned because they MIGHT be used unlawfully to kill someone.
The sole difference between a fire extinguisher (or baseball bat) and a firearm is the false claim that the firearm is "designed only to kill people."
This is not factually true, but even if it were, it's irrelevant because the point is not what the object is designed for, it's what it's actually used, or is usable for, and almost anything can be turned into an offensive weapon and used illegally to harm another.
The fact that SOME guns (a very, very tiny and ever-shrinking percentage of them) are used for criminal purposes does not mean (ie: there is causation OR correlation) that ALL guns are or will be used for criminal purposes. This is called the Fallacy of Composition:
In this case, as BG continues to insist:The fallacy of Composition is committed when a conclusion is drawn about a whole based on the features of its constituents when, in fact, no justification provided for the inference. There are actually two types of this fallacy, both of which are known by the same name (because of the high degree of similarity).
The first type of fallacy of Composition arises when a person reasons from the characteristics of individual members of a class or group to a conclusion regarding the characteristics of the entire class or group (taken as a whole). More formally, the "reasoning" would look something like this.
Individual F things have characteristics A, B, C, etc.
Therefore, the (whole) class of F things has characteristics A, B, C, etc.
This line of reasoning is fallacious because the mere fact that individuals have certain characteristics does not, in itself, guarantee that the class (taken as a whole) has those characteristics.
P1 Guns are designed to kill people
P2 Law abiding citizens have guns
C1 Therefore, law-abiding citizens will kill people with guns
That's false logic.
There is no rational or logical connection between the fact that guns are designed to kill people and the conclusion that the possession of a gun by a law abiding citizen will result in that person killing someone.
The evidence in the record amply demonstrates that this is simply not true. As I've said, and BG and Jonno have ignored utterly, the number of guns in the hands of law abiding citizens in the US has never been higher in all of history, and it continues to go up and up, and yet the violent crime and murder rate continues to drop.
How inconvenient for those who pander this particular fallacy.