charlou wrote:
I've been considering the points of the pro-gun side and reconsidering my own stance. Not necessarily changing my personal preference, but understanding the other point of view better.
Part of the problem with this whole debate, sort of like the abortion debate, is you get people taking sides and then arguing against the exaggerated, extreme view that the other side holds.
On the one hand, we get some folks claiming that gun advocates must be in favor of completely unregulated gun ownership, to the point of private ownership of rocket propelled grenades and M-60 military machine guns. And, the gun advocates claim that those who are "anti-gun" must be in favor of complete banning of all weapons, ever, under all circumstances.
Most people generally adopt a position located somewhere within one standard deviation from the midpoint.
I consider myself "pro gun ownership," because I think most people can be trusted with most things, because my overall opinion of people in general is that they are good, and self-regulating moral actors. I think that there are a number of IMO "legitimate" reasons to have guns, and that they are a tool - like a saw or a knife. Can they be used for bad purposes? Sure they can. So can aspirin, but that's sold over-the-counter...to the chil'run - gasp!!!!
Does that mean that EVERY gun of EVERY size and capacity must be legal? Does that mean there can't be regimes of registration? Does that mean that the government can't require that people are trained and instructed on proper use and handling? Does that mean that ownership of certain weapons ought not require a license? And, can we restrict ownership to non-violent folks, non-felons, non-psychotics, etc? -- I think that all those kinds of regulations can very well be appropriate.
In the US the laws vary from state to state, and that seems to make sense. The country is very big. And, a guy in Wyoming, where there is 1 person per square mile, ought very well have fewer impediments to walking down the street with a shotgun, rifle and handgun, than some guy living a block from Central Park in NYC. The needs of the community are different. The purposes for owning and carrying around a gun are different.
I can tell all the Europeans out there who want to pretend like Americans walk around with sidearms every day, and that we munch our McDonald's burgers daily with background music in the form of gunfire, that that isn't the case. If you come to the US and walk around New York City, you won't see a gun, most likely, except on the belt of a police officer. I've run into many Europeans in Florida, because despite your abject scorn for the US, you folks seem to come here in droves - and bleat on about how much you love it here. Not a single one of them encountered a gun in the US.