Transformers and More @ The Seibertron Store
Details subject to change. See listing for latest price and availability.
Professor Smooth wrote:Answer me this one simple question.
Would you say to one of the parents who lost their child in the NIU or Virginia Tech shootings and say that the death of their child was a price you're willing to pay for the right to own a gun?
Professor Smooth wrote:Answer me this one simple question.
Would you say to one of the parents who lost their child in the NIU or Virginia Tech shootings and say that the death of their child was a price you're willing to pay for the right to own a gun?
Caelus wrote:You really like the tacky underhanded rhetorical blows, don't you?
I thought you said it was inappropriate to use their deaths to make a point?
Professor Smooth wrote:I have a problem with the night stalker argument. The guy was simply a poor sap who went off his meds. He owned a bunch of guns and, in a moment of clouded judgement, used them on a bunch of random people.
Professor Smooth wrote: I don't see how it is an underhanded rhetorical blow at all. Feel free to explain.
I was against using the NIU topic for the gun rights discussion. This is a different topic.
There is a price to be paid for your freedom to own a gun. A small part of that price was the lives of five of my classmates.
Was it worth it to you? Are you alright with it happening again? Can you say to somebody that you know that this kind of thing will keep happening and that's a price you're willing to pay to own a gun?
If it is, cop to it. Say, "Yes, it's a shame that random people keep getting shot and killed, but if that's the price I have to pay for the right to own a gun, then so be it." If that's how you feel, then it's how you feel. Come right out and say it.
Caelus wrote:It's a knight's fork argument. If the person says no, then they lose the argument, if they say yes, you decry them as an inhuman monster. It's cheap and overused to the point of being a cliche.
Professor Smooth wrote:The only thing that he's pointed out is that he DOES feel that the deaths of those students are a price he's willing to pay. He just won't come right out and admit it because it would make him look "like an inhuman monster."
I think that much is fairly obvious from his post, don't you?
Caelus wrote:Missourisnowflakes wrote:If handguns were outlawed the only people who would not have guns were the honest law abiding citizens.
And yet, when was the last time that a group of honest law abiding citizens actually defended themselves with those guns they supposedly carry concealed everywhere they go? If that philosophy actually worked, why did this latest shooting 'succeed'? Why have all the others succeeded? Why do so many carjackings, muggings, and home-invasions succeed?
And has there actually been a significant decrease in violent crimes in Missouri since conceal and carry was passed? Lots of talk about it as a deterrent at the time, but since then, haven't really heard much about it.
Did some snooping - now IIRC, C&C was passed in 2002-2003. The immediate result was exactly what they claimed it would be - the violent crime rate dropped from 539 crimes per 100,000 people to 490.8 crimes per 100,000 people (almost as low as it was in the year 2000). Huzzah, it worked!
But wait... what has happened since 2003? As of 2006, the violent crime rate has risen to 545.6 crimes per 100,000 people, the highest it has been since 1998.
Similarly, murder rates dropped from 5.8 per 100,000 in 2002 to 5.1 per 100,000 in 2003, then rose to 6.3 per 100,000 by 2006.
In light of those numbers, how exactly can we claim that C&C has done anything of lasting benefit?The criminals would keep their illegal guns.
Some criminals would keep their guns illegally. Some. And some of those criminals would get busted for possession before getting a chance to use them.
But honestly, I'm less concerned with the use of handguns in bank-robberies and school-shootings than I am with their use in domestic violence and suicide, where the heuristic schemes tied to the weapons presence increase aggression in human beings, and their ready availability transforms contemplation into action.
Because of the way the human mind is constructed, and the thoughts we associate specifically with handguns, the gun's trigger, at least metaphorically, tugs the owner's finger. Turning a cranky or slightly disturbed person into a murderer in a single moment of idiotic spontaneity. That's ashame both for the victim and the killer.
Caelus wrote:You really are one of the biggest di'kute I've ever met.
Professor Smooth wrote:Caelus wrote:You really are one of the biggest di'kute I've ever met.
I hate to point out the obvious again, but you've never met me.
Dictionary.com wrote:Met...
1. to come upon; come into the presence of; encounter: I would meet him on the street at unexpected moments.
2. to become acquainted with; be introduced to: I've never met your cousin...
Dictionary.com wrote:Acquainted...
1. having personal knowledge as a result of study, experience, etc.; informed (usually fol. by with): to be acquainted with law.
2. brought into social contact; made familiar: people acquainted through mutual friends...
Dictionary.com wrote:Contact...
10. to communicate with: We'll contact you by mail or telephone.
Registered users: Bing [Bot], Bounti76, Bumblevivisector, EvasionModeBumblebee, Glyph, Google [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], Google Feedfetcher, MarvelMan87, MSN [Bot], Nemesis Primal, Yahoo [Bot], Ziusundra