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LongingSoul
Guest
The focus of government is necessarily more broad than particular individuals capacities and qualities though. It’s interest is in the common good of all. It can’t make laws that overall benefit one group by disadvantaging another group, even a released convicts. The right to self defense should be equally available to all private citizens with the government focused on the environment of the community it serves. Private gun ownership for defense increases the volume of guns in the community increasing violent gun crime making death as a result of crime more inevitable for all. Owning a gun is not an inalienable right of a human being so these broader considerations must impact on how the policy is serving the safety overall of the community.The current gun laws *do *attempt to balance rights with safety though, as for example curtailing weapons rights for citizens with criminal histories. If one owns a gun and uses it responsibly, the public’s safety is not endangered. That person retains his right because he has given no reason for it to be revoked. The weak and the sickly also have the right to bear arms. The poor have that right as well; that is, the right to *bear *arms – not the right to be *given *one in the event they don’t have the money to pay for it.
Only in the opinion of some is healthcare a basic human right. Unlike gun ownership, healthcare is a service, and the idea that someone is entitled to another person’s labor without paying for it is quite a debatable subject; hence, the uproar over Obamacare. I understand you may be theorizing about universal rights in abstract terms, but this analogy doesn’t align with the subject of protection of life. Guns protect the life of the individual from an external threat; healthcare prolongs the life of the individual who is ill.Originally Posted by LongingSoul
Say we are speaking health care. The ideal would be to have a system that gives all people access to health care if they need it. Health care is a basic human right. We don’t say to people only those who are responsible with their health should have access to healthcare. We recognise that there are many conditions genetic (and self imposed within reason) that are worthy of treating regardless of the a persons private capacities.
The WHO defines access to health care as a “fundamental, inalienable human right” that governments cannot abridge, and are rather obligated to protect and uphold.
The right to bear arms is granted to American citizens because it affords people the opportunity to defend their lives and property - at their own expense and to their own capabilities. Everyone has the right to preserve their lives in ways that do not infringe upon the rights of others and do not take from others. For some people, self-protection might entail installing a security system in their homes or cars. For others, it may mean getting a really big dog. And for others, it means possessing a gun.
That doesn’t equate because when a position makes a person more vulnerable it is right to afford that person greater protection to have equal safety. But if it is *personal qualities *that determine if a person can have a gun for protection, their qualities don’t make them less vulnerable. Those people are in fact less safe than the rest. For example a street person with schizophrenia might not have access or qualify for a weapon, but in turn there are no greater protections afforded to them to make them equally safe as the legally armed home owner. If vigilante groups were allowed to address this for the vulnerable, that would go some way to making the disadvantaged equally protected perhaps.If you think about it, your argument that *everyone *– rich or poor – deserves equal access to gun ownership would no longer hold up if the laws meant to restrict the ownership of civilians were enacted while the very same politicians who wrote those laws walked around with armed bodyguards. That, in essence, would be an affirmation that the safety of public officials is paramount to those of us who don’t have such prestigious government jobs.
Again, every adult *does *qualify for gun ownership, barring contingencies. It’s people who have already harmed others run that the risk of having this access taken away. And justly so.Originally Posted by LongingSoul
Likewise, personal safety. Everyone should have equal access to means for safety within governmental policy. If you are saying put a gun into the hands of qualifying people in order that they can feel and be safe, but let those who don’t qualify take care of themselves, that is a fundamentally unfair system.
If we were talking about guns for sporting shooters or farmers or other legitimate purposes, I understand the value and need for contingencies. But we are talking about guns for self defense which is a basic right of everyone. Limiting the qualifiers disadvantages some people in favour of others. If the police decided not to attend emergency calls to someone who has a record or was homeless or mentally ill based on their personal qualities, would that be fair? What about the ambulance? Are they allowed to discriminate about what sort of people to attend based on personal qualities? They aren’t, because governmental policy has to uphold the human standard of basic equality in serving the common good.