L
LongingSoul
Guest
Don’t believe a word about the fictional drop bears that fall on you from the trees and suck your blood dry before you can cry out. (They are only in the outback.)
Don’t believe a word about the fictional drop bears that fall on you from the trees and suck your blood dry before you can cry out. (They are only in the outback.)
Well, suppose you are a criminal. And suppose you really want to get money and think that robbing someone at gunpoint is a good way to achieve that goal. Now, if you know for a fact that there are no guns in your target area (let’s say the corner store–the store and anyone who happens to be inside)–no deterrence there.No one would claim that privately arming civilians with guns would actually reduce criminal use of handguns so what use would privately arming civilians be in relation to criminals?
Interestingly enough, very few guns are actually designed to kill other human beings.Okay. I believe the difference here is that you are not talking about weapons that are designed to kill other humans.
Haha, you sound a lot like me when I try to wrap my head around what my opinions are on this matter! It’s a complicated issue for me as well.I really am undecided on the whole thing.
For starters, I think people do and should have the right to owning a gun. But, I also think that it’s a good idea to not allow the immediate purchase of a gun. Background checks and waiting periods are smart, in my opinion. Then again, that won’t stop a criminal from getting a gun. And, it is a good idea to be able to protect your family from an intruder. But, then again, it’s at least 5 times a year in my city alone that a story comes out of a child being killed in their home from an accidental firing of the gun either by a sibling or the parent or themselves, bless their heart. So you would have to keep your gun locked in a safe place. But then if someone breaks into your house, do you really have time to go to your safe, punch in the code, quietly remove the gun and defend yourself? It seems unlikely to me. But, they’re great and necessary for hunting and I fully support hunting. But does one necessarily need an assault weapon for any real reason? Well, I suppose for militia if the government were to take over and go corrupt. But, they’ll likely wipe out your militia army with drones or biochemical warfare which renders those assault rifles relatively useless.
…In other words, totally undecided.
I will say that I feel that I should have the right to NOT carry a gun, and still feel safe. I grew up in an area where plenty of people are hunters and go to shooting ranges, and where I live now, that is even more true. I don’t have a problem with people hunting of course (especially when they share their venison with me!I think everybody should be required to own a gun and keep it on them. Maybe that’s totally wrong, but everybody would be able to defend themselves, and if anybody pulled a gun on you, you’d have a gun, too. Rape rates would plummet.![]()
I also don’t own a gun but I’m “pro-gun” in that I’m “pro-2nd amendment.”I chose “other”. I am not a gun owner but I have been in the past and I hope to be again very soon. I am not sure I would call myself “pro-gun” but I am “pro 2nd amendment” and “pro gun ownership” and “pro concealed carry”.
But it doesn’t seem that anywhere in that reasoning is the desire to respect human life or hope for discouraging violence. Those should be valued high on the governments agenda for the common good of all. You’re saying that put guns in everybodies hands and when the robbers get bigger guns and use more violence, we get bigger weapons and just keep matching weapon for weapon. An arms race. When does it stop.Well, suppose you are a criminal. And suppose you really want to get money and think that robbing someone at gunpoint is a good way to achieve that goal. Now, if you know for a fact that there are no guns in your target area (let’s say the corner store–the store and anyone who happens to be inside)–no deterrence there.
Now, let’s suppose you are a criminal. And suppose you really want to get money and think that robbing someone at gunpoint is a good way to achieve that goal. But now either you know for a fact that someone in the corner store is going to also be armed with a gun. Or that you have no idea if that person perusing the candy aisle might haul out a gun if you make a move on the cashier.
Or this: Armed citizen stopped mall shooting
Yes, trust in God. But remember the story of the man who prayed for rescue from a flood?
For now, and it’s good that AU has a conservative PM, but Muslim immigrant desires to overthrow the government and institute sharia law shouldn’t be overlooked, and I’ll warrant some AU secularists would join that out of sheer fear and political correctness that will go a long way in the West committing cultural suicide. :yup:=LongingSoul;11897775]Well the gubmint is the people. I live in Australia so not a dictatorship.
:tsktsk:The pro gun voice is mainly young (and some older) redneck lads of the likes of Oscar Pistorius.
I’m sure the immigrants who started riots as well as other criminal elements there also breathed a sigh of relief knowing it’s open season.Apart from that it is a dead issue and we sigh a collective sigh of relief that sense prevailed here.
They also don’t pay attention to rape and theft. Should we repeal those laws, too?I believe criminals do not pay attention to speed limits or road rules either, but we still have them.
Thank you for reading
Josh
Most crimes are crimes of opportunity, and if resistance is encounter, the success rate of crimes goes down, and the more resistance or deterrence, the better.No one would claim that privately arming civilians with guns would actually reduce criminal use of handguns so what use would privately arming civilians be in relation to criminals?
No it wouldn’t. Chicago has lots of gun violence because of gun control.Thanks for the information. But what may work in a township would be difficult, to say the least, in a large urban center such as New York City or Chicago.
One of the aspects of the western world that is undervalued by nature is national and international Intelligence. We do have trust in the resources available to the governments in keeping tabs on subversive activity. Sure there will be pockets trouble here and there, but hopefully they serve to keep people awake and alert. Arming people against the potential for subversive attacks is an over reaction. It does more harm than good to the community.For now, and it’s good that AU has a conservative PM, but Muslim immigrant desires to overthrow the government and institute sharia law shouldn’t be overlooked, and I’ll warrant some AU secularists would join that out of sheer fear and political correctness that will go a long way in the West committing cultural suicide. :yup:
:tsktsk:
.Such bad language
17 years of strict controls and it hasn’t happened yet. Most immigrants assimilate peacefully and actually appreciate the safe and peaceful environment for a change. Nobody seriously believes in a civil arms race to bring a better world.I’m sure the immigrants who started riots as well as other criminal elements there also breathed a sigh of relief knowing it’s open season.
What gun control I’d like to see? I mean, as you’ve alluded to, the government has nuclear weapons, and is already violating Catholic teaching in that regard. So… the only gun control I support is background checks… making sure guns don’t get into the hands of those who have mental problems, and also I believe it should be illegal for felons and ex-cons to have guns. Also, anyone who has ever been on a sexual predator list shouldn’t have a gun.My apologies, It’s my attempt at showing how weaponry is constantly advancing and becoming capable of more and more destructive power, so my question would be, If it were up to you RC Sojourner, may I ask, where would you darw the lines on gun control? may I ask what kind of gun control you would like to see if any?
Yes, nuclear weapons kill indescriminately, which necessarily contradicts the moral law. Jus Ad Bellum could never allow for the use of nuclear weapons. Jus Ad Bellum, (Just War Theory), which is Catholic doctrine, accepts that war will involve the loss of innocent life, but it still sets a bar that the participants (if they want to follow Just War Theory) should try to limit the loss of innocent lives.I agree, but I have heard many people say “Weapons don’t kill people, people kill people.” So may I ask why that defense wouldn’t work when it comes to neuclear weapons?
Yeah, I think I’ll stick to the Founding Fathers, before I start quoting the FrenchI believe that not every man should have the right to keep and bear arms, because weaponry I believe is getting to the stage where some men should not have the right to weild that kind of destructive power, so I believe lines need to be drawn.
Absolute freedom mocks at justice. Absolute justice denies freedom. To be fruitful, the two ideas must find their limits in each other. - Albert Camus
Well, again, you’re the one who was so quick to point out that the government has nuclear weapons.May I ask what happens when people fear their very neighbours? I believe the government will fear the people so long as the people are the ones who decide who is in government.
Right… I’ll just address all of this. What I’m trying to say is this: Ok, you don’t believe our government is a tyranny yet, I don’t either.I tend not to think about it a great deal. But one thing is for sure, if war does break out again with the likes of WWII in this day and age, it will be something new altogether. I believe if war ever broke out among the neuclear world … heaven help us, we shouldn’t be in the mindset of ‘preparing’ for that, but rather ‘preventing’ that I believe.
I believe that’s why we are not living in dictatorships.
I mean, if we still had the weapon technology that Thomas Jefferson had in his day and age, than I would be all for the right for every American to keep and bear arms, but the weaponry is far too advanced for that nowdays I believe, the destructive capabilities of these weapons falling into the wrong hands are too great nowdays I believe, so with greater power comes greater responsibility I believe.
Just like the faster and more powerful vehicles become, the greater need there is for road rules.
Hmm, well, I’d definitely have to agree with that. The gun is a tool which has been used throughout much of human history. I don’t think guns have been so politically charged until liberalism rose in the 1960s and such. I mean, in the frontier days, most people would’ve depended on guns, or their neighbors to have guns for protection.That was one of my points as well, OCG. It would have been more insightful, perhaps, to ask if we are pro- or anti- the right to keep and bear arms. However, I respect and thank the OP for creating this thread and hindsight is wonderful.
Neither are 99% of other people (myself included).… Personally, I’m not interested in statistics at all.
You are terrified of an inanimate object? That is a hallmark of an irrational fear. I don’t think national policies should be basis of an national policy.I see the arguments for gun ownership in the US, but I’m still glad to be in the UK where it’s simply a non-issue in terms of whether or not we carry. Largely because I would be utterly terrified to have a gun in the house.