Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: palehorse
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Listen up halfwit, I'm trying to have a rational discussion here but you just keep spewing the same bullshit the NRA feeds you over and over.
pssst, hey Jules... those are called
actual facts and figures; which, if I recall correctly, are what one is supposed to use to prove any point. I know that facts can sometimes be pesky little things to argue against, but you're going to have to give it the 'ole college try, m'kay?
good luck.
pssst, hey palehorse... i am merely saying that i think people shouldn't be allowed to sell a highly regulated and lethal item like a handgun privately without the buyer going through a background check which has nothing whatsoever to do with disarming law abiding citizens or making guns illegal.
I think the most pathetic part of this entire argument is the irrational risk assessment. Too many people hear "gun" and stop thinking. Recently, there was a thread about someone babysitting for someone else, and the others refused to send their kids over because the babysitter had a locked gun in the house. What anyone with a reasonable amount of risk assessment should be saying is "I'm not letting Johnny play at your house any more, because you have a swimming pool", not "I"m not letting Johnny play at your house because you have a locked gun." The sensationalism about gun crimes has really clouded people's judgments about relative risks.
And, your crap about "highly regulated and lethal item" - FAR more cars kill people in the United States each year than guns. The bullshit type of language you're using " highly regulated and lethal item" - that's just an emotional response that shows you have an agenda. Should people do a background check before selling their used cars? Which is more likely - selling a gun at nearly retail value to someone who later uses it in a crime? Or selling a car to someone with a drinking problem who later is involved in a DWI accident? There are several hundred million guns in the U.S. right now. What percent of all guns are used in crimes?