I understand it fully. You're entitled to your opinion on its validity, and I'm entitled to mine.
As the person who made the point and read your response, I'd say I'm in the better position to say whether you understand it, than the person who doesn't.
It's sort of like this:
'Our businesses are great and productive. But the government has played an important role. The bridges and roads people use to get to your business? The energy system that delivers electricity to your business? The security from threats protecting your business? You did not build that'.
'He said the business owner did not build his business!!!!!'
No, that's not what he said. He was referring to the infrastructure the business benefits from that the government was essential in building.
'No he didn't he said the business owner didn't build anything'
No, he didn't.
'Yes he did!!'
You did not understand his point.
'YES I DID!!!'
That's what it's like.
This is the same sort of invalid argument as anthrax.
Uranium is not an item generally desired or used by the average population. Banning uranium won't result in people getting uranium anyway because they never wanted uranium in the first place.
Yellowcake is in huge demand by some people around the world, some in the US.
They do use alcohol and drugs. So they find/found ways to get them. Guns are analogous to alcohol and drugs in this respect. Anthrax and uranium are not.
The number of people who want alcohol and druge is more similar to guns - and irrelevant to the point I made.
You love to change the topic, The topic was your assertion that there has never been one single item that has been banned that has not - let's quote you exactly:
"The same thing happens every time -- the items are hidden from confiscation, or made on the sly, or smuggled in. "
So, I provided ONE example which is all that's needed to disporve your universal assertion.
In response you changed the subject to irrelevant issues ignoring that you were wrong.
That's your opinion.
Mine is that reducing the availability to law-abiding citizens by 100% while reducing availability to criminals by less-than-100% is a bad trade.
And again you evade the subject by changing it.
The question wasn't which you value more. The point was that you completely neglected the issue that there is ANY reduction among criminals, implying there isn't. There is.
I can't prove that the two would be the same. I can point out the similarities in the demand for the items, and the fact that our porous borders are unable to keep out anything that's already illegal. The rest follows logically.
No, it does not. Don't abuse the word logic.
First, demand is not the only issue. There is a HUGE demand for unicorns. Show me one.
OK, also a huge demand for nuclear weapons, or nude pics of Sarah Palin, or the original constitution of the US, or audio from secret meetings in Obama's oval office negotiations. Perhaps you can point me to those.
Or are you going to change the subject back to how many people want something? OK. A lot of underage kids want cigarettes. Many get them. Can you prove that the laws restricting sales to them don't result in many fewer kids getting them than would without the laws?
And there's another issue with our 'porous borders'. They only let in things that exist. There's a reason that nearly all the guns Mexican drug cartels have are from the US, but practically no guns US criminals have are imported from Mexico - because the items have to have enough supply for the porous borders to matter. There isn't some huge supply of guns in other countries waiting to be smuggled into the US - which by the way even if there were a lot, would make them cost a lot more, where some can't afford.
Excuse me, but the comment to which you are responding above was made in reply to this comment from you: "2. No, if all guns could be made to magically disappear, it's incorrect that the only effect would be 'making violent crimer harder to protect against'. That is NOT all it would do. It would also make violent crime harder to commit."
In that context, my statement is not even remotely a straw man.
OK, I lost track of the condition that 'alll guns are gone' - after I'd just made the point that no one has suggested it and it's irrelevant, but I guess you still harping on it.
In the real world regarding your wife attacked scenario, of course, shotguns are an option.
You said: "Second, even if you magically made all guns disappear and magically prevent them from coming into the country, that doesn't get rid of violent crime. It just makes it harder to defend against."
I pointed out that that is incorrect, that it is NOT the only effect - it also reduces the supply from which criminals get their guns.
You did not respond to my point once again.
And I'll point out that there are people who want to ban all guns, and I believe the suggestion has already been made in this thread.
Point me to one person who has said they want to ban all guns, including the military, which is the conditon I stated that you responded to.
Yes, they will. Until the criminals can find a way to get them from some other source.
Which some will, but many fewer. Which is the issue at hand.
A percentage much smaller than the percentage of law-abiding citizens who won't have them.
Or, as John Ross put it succinctly: "Giving violent criminals a government guarantee that their intended victims are defenseless is bad public policy."
Wrong. Once again, first, you ignore my points about the many bad killings that can be avoided if 'low abiding citizens' don't have guns.
Second, John Ross also argues a straw man - remember the shotgun I mentioned? That is not 'defenseless'.
Third, to repeat yet again, all these guns with 'law abiding citizens' are supplying the criminials with guns used in crimes.
You conventiently want to dismiss that with a baseless claim that criminals will replace all those lost guns by making their own and smuggling them from Gunistan - wrong.