A
agmoose02
Guest
The argument I called fallacious referred to prison inmates being issued handguns. These are cons not ex-cons. It is not fallacious to say that due to the nature of incarceration certain freedoms are forfeit until the debt to society for the crime is repaid. For instance, the freedom to come and go as you please, something we take for granted, the nature of incarceration also puts an end to this freedom until the debt to society is paid. So, once again, I say yes after the incarceration and the probationary period once released I believe ex-cons should be allowed their second amendment rights.It would have been fallacious if I were making the argument that ex-cons shouldn’t be allowed guns. Your argument was that the right to bear arms is irrevocable and absolute, and therefore ex-cons should be allowed to own guns. My argument was to disprove your premise, no more, no less, and on that count, the only count I was aiming for, I was successful. Your objection is a strawman.
Now of course, you could change your argument to “The right to bear arms is absolute for everyone not in prison,” but that would require a different proof entirely (and you’d have to clearly mark that you were changing your argument, lest you commit a fallacy).