That's good, because the people who are for gun control clearly don't think so either. And that should have been obvious. When someone raises the number of deaths caused by guns, they shouldn't have to add something like, "we have a greater interest in preventing a death caused by murder than we do in preventing a death caused by eating too much sugar."
They don't have to add that. I think you are confused as to what happened.
Here is the argument Spy put forward that started this.
Why do we have to put up with deaths? Guns are a net negative for personal safety and this is very well established in the empirical research. If the idea is that we have to have 30,000 people a year die in order to preserve a means of self defense that makes us overall less safe what sense does that make?
His argument for banning most guns is because we should not put up with 30,000 dead because some people want to use guns for defense even though net its more likely that your gun will be used against you.
In that is 30,000 is too many deaths for the right to have access to guns because the net benefit is less than the net cost.
So, if that is his argument, swap total deaths with that of obesity and access to guns with access to obesity causing foods. Is the total net benefit of good tasting food worth the obesity and inevitable deaths. You will see that was also exactly what I said.
Same could be said of food in terms of obesity. Why should we put up with foods that we know are making people fat? Why should we allow the freedom of unhealthy food that kills almost 600,000 people a year? What logic do you have that allows you to take away guns but not bad foods? If the justification is that 30,000 deaths is too many for the benefit of guns, than what justification do we have for almost 600,000 deaths from things tasting good?
That argument was never addressed beyond say it was stupid. He never explained why, just that it was stupid and that he would not respond to it. His premise is flawed and the analogy shows that, but he never modified his premise which I think can be done.
As I said, the underlying distinction is too obvious for words. Which is why some of us are becoming frustrated by these analogies which are being used to deflect the issue. It's either not the right time to discuss gun control or there is something else we should be discussing first. Nonsense. As I've said before, I'm not a big advocate for gun control but these kinds of deflections are just muddying the issue rather than providing clarity.
If the argument is that we need to remove things from society when the cost is too high vs the benefit, then how can we take away guns and not fatty foods?
Answer that question and you likely answer the question posited by pro gun people.