Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
[Just like anti-gunners have to get past their own illogic.
I agree. But the post I responded to contained a pro-gun error, not an anti-gun error.
You don't look at individual incidents, you look at the total package and compare it to other total packages and then point out where the differences are. From there you extrapolate logical cause and effect scenarios and arrive at policy that is workable.
Reducing problems is useless unless it does so without creating new ones, and only if it is a significant reduction. There are around 12,000 firearm deaths (homicide & accident) per year. If you cut that down to 11,000 but take away a fundamental right, is it worth it? If you get rid of 6000 deaths it might be, but what if they're replaced by 5500 knife deaths? Then what have you really accomplished? Moreover, what of the hundreds of thousands or even millions of defensive gun uses every year? You save 4000 lives but cause 500,000 victimizations? That hardly seems a bargain worth exploring.[/quote]
Yes, you're going on to other issues on gun control. I assume then that you are agreeing with the point I made about the one that's fallacious.
A law must meet three standards for it to be useful:
1) it must address a real problem
2) it must be able to actually SOLVE that problem
3) the unintended consequences must not outweigh the benefits
I don't know what (1) means. Does it mean that if it's aimed at preventing a potential problem, it's not valid?
I disagree with 2. Murder laws have not 'solved' the problem of murder. Drunk drivign laws have not 'solved' the problem of drunk driving.
Perhaps society simply wants to be able to arrest people who do something they think is criminal.
One law that came up in recent years was the law against those who have been given access to information on the identities revealing those identities, willfully. It was aimed at one person who had done so for their own political reasons. The law has never been used to convict anyone, and was found not to fit the behavior of those who had outed Valerie Plame. Why should it be removed from the books, when it's not being used for any prosecutions?
I think the better argument you make is (3), that it makes sense to weigh the pros and cons. Even then, though, it may not be an absolute bar to a law.
Take for example the way some people want crack cocaine outlawed - many of them would want that even if it were shown the law causes more harm than good, because they're simply not willing for society to condone the use by legalizing it, and they want to continue to try to battle it with the criminal system. Should they not be allowed to make that choice?
Until you can CONCLUSIVELY show how gun control meets those three criteria it should not be implemented.
So now, people aren't allowed to pass laws because they think they're a good idea, they have to 'CONCLUSIVELY show' all those things. I think that's ridiculous.
Go back to the better arguments on gun control, that's not it.
***NOTE: there is also a pre-requisite to the above standards...the agency in question must have the authority to enact the law - otherwise the rest is moot. Along with that authority is the consideration of rather the law will withstand scrutiny. So consider adding:
0) the acting agency must have the authority to enact such a law
4) the law itself must be likely to withstand scrutiny (ie suits to overturn)
I have no idea what you're trying to argue here, apparently something about the 2nd amendment and why the law should not be passed if there are any questions on that.
Odd that you did not say a word about the topic I posted on, the logic error in the post I responded to.