C
colmcille1
Guest
Where exactly did I suggest that you “have some violent obsession with power”?Your arguments about “evidence” and “better arguments”: If you do not defend that your argument is better, then you have conceded it. But on the substance of the “evidence” debate, you still have none of your own while saying that another does not. Even if he cannot claim to know the “vast majority of gun owners,” he still knows more than you even claim to do. He has myself, many others on this forum, and the residents of his town to back him up, while you have only your disturbing reaction to a gun used on a set. I defend that our evidence has more weight than your lack thereof. If the onus is on “those who believe in guns to defend their position,” we have.
Hi alex,
I never made the claim about “better” argument because it is not mine or yours to make. Your society already backs up your views; I am arguing against the use of guns because the vicious cycle must be broken.
I have already mentioned Nortern Ireland. This was once a state in the grip of armed violence. But talking, civilised reasoning, prevailed.
And yes, freedom can be won through the barrel of a gun, by fending off violent oppressors. Please explain this argument further.
**We were talking history. I pointed out about the ambivalent attitude in the USA towards the gun. On the one hand you are aghast at the level of gun crime and on the other you take pride in a history that was built upon guns. **
And yes, sorry if I sounded a bit hot-headed last night, but I do take this as somewhat of a personal affront. You have quite plainly suggested that I only like to shoot inanimate targets because I have some violent obsession with power. I would call that an insult, and also very much against church teaching. Who are we to judge the hearts of others?
And the question “Who are we to judge the hearts of others?” may be more profitably addressed to the various gun-loving anti-government groups in the USA.
God Bless,
Colmcille.