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Home care and guns don't mix

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See, that is all irrelevant and since you KNOW you lost the argument you are trying to deflect to ancient times.

Fairly fucking sure the guns were state of the art back then and you WOULD have had a chance and fairly fucking sure that the founding fathers couldn't forsee todays situation.

You're going to lose that argument too.

But I do get it, whenever you read about a kid blowing his brains out you think "that would never happen to me" until you take a phone call while having your gun out and your kid does that, then you are one of those who "did not see that coming".

But it's because of some ancient tribesmen and for some reason this ONE idea of theirs matters more than the ones that actually makes sense.

You do realize that the second is an amendment, not in the original bill of rights? You do realize that all amendments are conditional and based upon their need, right? You do realize that there was an amendment about black people being 3/5'th humans, right?

It's not sacred, if it doesn't work you change it.

All that said, I'm not an American and all I can offer is an opinion from a nation that gave amnesty for weapons and now has on tenth of the murders we used to have.


What do you mean men well versed in military history and war couldn't possibly foresee guns continuing to evolve and get faster to shoot and more accurate? Why didn't they use the word musket? Most of the rest of your post I don't think really has anything to do with the argument.
 
This says 1300 per year killed with guns (killed seems an easier-to-define category than injured, so am going with that)

http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-gun-deaths-children-20170619-story.html

It seems very difficult to find how many children are killed in pure bicycle accidents, as most sources annoyingly muddle the figure up with motorised vehicle accidents (as a huge proportion of children killed on bikes are in fact killed entirely due to the involvement of a car, so those are car accidents, not bike accidents - the correct figure to compare with the firearm figure would include only those who fell off their bike unassisted with no (moving) motorised vehicle involvement, or who collided with another bike, or a pedestrian, plus child pedestrians killed by bicyclists crashing into them).

But clearly the figure for pure bike accidents is far, far lower than 1300 a year. Given that the total death toll (all age groups, and including what are really car accidents) is only 1000 a year.

https://www.safekids.org/sites/default/files/documents/skw_bike_fact_sheet_2016.pdf

Feel free to play with https://webappa.cdc.gov/sasweb/ncipc/dataRestriction_inj.html
 
So basically since you don't have good feelings about the facts, you'll ignore them? That's pretty rational.

Where did I say I don't have good feelings about those statistics? I've said from go that I think having guns in this country does lead to more deaths. I've never said otherwise. What I also said is that I think those statistics look at things in a vacuum that doesn't really show the whole picture and that I think the statistics don't really matter either way since guns kill us relatively less than other things that no politician cares about, no voter really cares about. If it were really about saving lives and not a propaganda led attack on the 2A, then I fail to see how things like tobacco and alcohol wouldn't be brought up on forums like this and by politicians at least as much as guns are. But they aren't, they are rarely discussed, and when they are and a story comes to light that shows that alcohol or tobacco cause harm and death no one brings up further restricting them or outright banning them. But whenever a gun is shown in such a light it always becomes about limiting the right further.


As you've said, repeatedly, our society has made a decision to ignore the obvious and greater risk than benefit of firearm ownership and ubiquity. That's totally fine if that's what we've chosen, but stop trying to provide other rationalization with poor arguments or your feelings especially when society might be changing its mind.

I think I'm the one looking at this logically and not emotionally, bringing up Sandy Hook as an appeal to emotion and such. And logically, guns kill us less than other things, some that don't even have their own constitutional amendment, yet guns are held to a different standard. The bottom line is that this year cigarettes will put well over 10x as many bodies in the ground in this country as guns. Cigarettes will kill thousands more innocent victims by 2nd hand smoke than every gun suicide, accident, police shooting, and murder combined. And not one politician on the left is running on a strict anti-tobacco platform, suddenly they don't care that this killer hurts the poor at a far higher rate than the well off, but for guns that is a huge issue to them. And to say the conversation has already been mostly had on tobacco is laughable. I promise there has been more conversation around gun control the last 100 years than tobacco. And guns are already far more regulated, generally speaking.

When I look at guns in this light, compare them to other rights and freedoms we have, I can't find a lot of good argument to keep wanting to restrict them ever further.
 
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What I also said is that I think those statistics look at things in a vacuum that doesn't really show the whole picture
Define "in a vacuum" in this context, and how would you better "show the whole picture?" What are we missing?

I think the statistics don't really matter either way since guns kill us relatively less than other things that no politician cares about, no voter really cares about.
What is the number of deaths that matters? Does the "preventability" of death matter in general, and/or with regard to gun deaths? No politician cares about any other causes of death? What about all those that have rallied (historically against big tobacco), and any number of current issues regarding healthcare (or even healthcare at large)? I'm a voter, I assume many others are in this thread, we care about gun violence as well as many other causes of death (personally, I care very much about obesity and obesity related conditions), I'm still not sure why you think people don't care?

I fail to see how things like tobacco and alcohol wouldn't be brought up on forums like this and by politicians at least as much as guns are.
To be fair, we did try banning alcohol (and that turned out terribly). Show me a group of people defending tobacco as fervently as people defend firearms. Rallies for tobacco? People walking around smoking in public to "prove a point?" Not to mention neither tobacco and alcohol are defined (strictly or loosely) as rights by the constitution, so of course they wouldn't cause as much political debate, isn't that fairly obvious?

I think I'm the one looking at this logically and not emotionally, bringing up Sandy Hook as an appeal to emotion and such.
I don't think bringing up Sandy Hook is an emotional appeal at all. It's simply an example that we can have a group of children murdered by firearms, and that isn't enough to change public policy. I think that we can all agree that a bunch of children being murdered is a bad thing, but we obviously can't agree that guns were a significant problem in that (at least problem enough to act in any significant way), then I think a societal decision has been made. Again, it's not an emotional appeal, it's simply an example of the "firmness" of society's opinion. (Well.. sorta, right?)

tobacco tobacco tobacco
You really need to get off this train as it's coming off the tracks. It's complete apples/oranges. Here's a simple example; a physician is trained and incentivized to talk about tobacco cessation at any visit with a patient abusing such products, yet, Florida (for a time as I believe this was overturned) made it illegal for a pediatrician to ask about guns in the house as a safety risk for children. Not quite the same, is it?

Here's the CDCs 474 page report on smoking and health by the Surgeon General. Chapter 2 is entirely about historical efforts in the US. The majority of the report is about current efforts. Please, though, continue to argue that no one cares about tobacco and that no one has really done/is doing anything. Yep, it's only guns people worry about.

https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/2000/complete_report/pdfs/fullreport.pdf
 
Define "in a vacuum" in this context, and how would you better "show the whole picture?" What are we missing?

What I'm getting at is these types of stats look only at gun use in the crime. But there is much more nuance, the area, income, demographics, drug use, other violent crime in the area not related to a gun. When everything is combined I think guns have far less of a responsibility in the crime stats. For example, there are places in Britain that have higher violent crime rates than parts of America despite much stricter gun laws. When looking at the gun piece of it, it is an interesting data point, but I think by itself it is mostly irrelevant. But as I've said, I think we both agree that having a lot of guns and relative ease of access to them does make it easier to kill or have accidents, and very likely does add to the death totals. But as I've spent more time than I really want to, I've explained why I think it doesn't matter when compared to other rights and freedoms that do far more harm and are less restricted and not a political hot button item if even discussed at all.


What is the number of deaths that matters? Does the "preventability" of death matter in general, and/or with regard to gun deaths? No politician cares about any other causes of death? What about all those that have rallied (historically against big tobacco), and any number of current issues regarding healthcare (or even healthcare at large)? I'm a voter, I assume many others are in this thread, we care about gun violence as well as many other causes of death (personally, I care very much about obesity and obesity related conditions), I'm still not sure why you think people don't care?

You tell me, you dismissed skateboard / bicycle deaths. They were seemingly not significant enough for you. Of course we can do more than one thing at once, try and improve society taking on more than one problem at a time. But again, when compared to other rights / freedoms, guns kill us relatively less and are already restricted more.


To be fair, we did try banning alcohol (and that turned out terribly). Show me a group of people defending tobacco as fervently as people defend firearms. Rallies for tobacco? People walking around smoking in public to "prove a point?" Not to mention neither tobacco and alcohol are defined (strictly or loosely) as rights by the constitution, so of course they wouldn't cause as much political debate, isn't that fairly obvious?

Let's see if tobacco is fervently defended when the freedom to use it is attacked the way the 2A has been attacked. Until then tobacco needs no such defense, so I wouldn't expect to see one. The 2A is a different story though.


I don't think bringing up Sandy Hook is an emotional appeal at all. It's simply an example that we can have a group of children murdered by firearms, and that isn't enough to change public policy. I think that we can all agree that a bunch of children being murdered is a bad thing, but we obviously can't agree that guns were a significant problem in that (at least problem enough to act in any significant way), then I think a societal decision has been made. Again, it's not an emotional appeal, it's simply an example of the "firmness" of society's opinion. (Well.. sorta, right?)

And the biggest school massacre in our history (Bath School Massacre) was done with mostly explosives when guns were even less restricted than today. People who want to do evil will do evil.


You really need to get off this train as it's coming off the tracks. It's complete apples/oranges. Here's a simple example; a physician is trained and incentivized to talk about tobacco cessation at any visit with a patient abusing such products, yet, Florida (for a time as I believe this was overturned) made it illegal for a pediatrician to ask about guns in the house as a safety risk for children. Not quite the same, is it?

Here's the CDCs 474 page report on smoking and health by the Surgeon General. Chapter 2 is entirely about historical efforts in the US. The majority of the report is about current efforts. Please, though, continue to argue that no one cares about tobacco and that no one has really done/is doing anything. Yep, it's only guns people worry about.

https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/2000/complete_report/pdfs/fullreport.pdf

No, I won't "get off this train" and feel it is well based. I look at things in a rights vs. cost to society measure, I feel that is logical and fair. When doing so I find that guns are already restricted more and do comparatively less damage to society than other things that have been brought up here. There is absolutely room all around for improvement, and I think that's very much worth putting effort into, I don't like seeing people murdered by gun or other means any more than you. But I just cannot agree with further restricting this right when I compare guns to other freedoms that harm us more than guns and are less restricted. As long as those are not organic big political talking points by the anti-gunners, I'll feel their anti-2A view is more built on propaganda and emotion than substance.

*edit - Also, as far as "Please, though, continue to argue that no one cares about tobacco and that no one has really done/is doing anything." Ok, easy. No one cares about tobacco and no one is really doing anything on or near the scale that they are attacking guns, and tobacco kills well over a magnitude more in absolute numbers, and kills far more innocent victims. I can find lots of quotes about guns from the past election, how many anti-tobacco platforms can you find for me? How many voters were really stirred from a politician's stance on restricting tobacco? How about their stance on the 2A? To try and compare the two as even in the same ball park as far as their relevance in the election or the effort put into restricting them respectively is laughable.
 
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What I'm getting at is these types of stats look only at gun use in the crime. But there is much more nuance, the area, income, demographics, drug use, other violent crime in the area not related to a gun. When everything is combined I think guns have far less of a responsibility in the crime stats. For example, there are places in Britain that have higher violent crime rates than parts of America despite much stricter gun laws. When looking at the gun piece of it, it is an interesting data point, but I think by itself it is mostly irrelevant. But as I've said, I think we both agree that having a lot of guns and relative ease of access to them does make it easier to kill or have accidents, and very likely does add to the death totals. But as I've spent more time than I really want to, I've explained why I think it doesn't matter when compared to other rights and freedoms that do far more harm and are less restricted and not a political hot button item if even discussed at all.

This is more to the crux of the debate, right? Of course the risk is multifactorial, there are few truly unidimensional aspects to life. This is where it comes down to societal risk vs societal benefit. These discussions constantly devolve into granular stats and arguments over the numbers generally with regard to risk (injuries, death, etc.); but what about a thorough discussion of the societal benefit? Is the societal benefit greater than the societal risk at the current point in time of gun ubiquity and level of regulation? Someone mentioned earlier in this thread that the context of life for an American now is dramatically different than that of an American when the second amendment was ratified. Is that not, alone, enough to spark significant re-evaluation? Is "because I can own one" a societal benefit? If so, how much of one? How much should it matter, if it should? A rationale argument would be to decide what the appropriate risk/benefit ratio is, then decide how we get there (whether by reducing risk or increasing benefit). Obviously that's a fantasy, right? My argument is that, on the level of "America" our R/B ratio is off, and far too risk heavy. I think the data supports that argument. Because of my wanting what's best for our society, I am willing to give up some of my personal freedom for societal benefit by way of re-evaluating the second amendment.

You tell me, you dismissed skateboard / bicycle deaths. They were seemingly not significant enough for you.
To be fair, you brought it up, so I'm not sure why I should defend the point? Again, this is getting lost in granularity. It is inappropriate to compare deaths from guns to death from skateboards. A better comparison is risk/benefit from guns to risk/benefit from skateboards. At least then you're having a more informed discussion and better comparing apples to apples.

And the biggest school massacre in our history (Bath School Massacre) was done with mostly explosives when guns were even less restricted than today. People who want to do evil will do evil.

Is it reasonable to compare 1927 America with 2017 America? Is firearm technology the same, is culture the same, is the prevalence of firearms the same, etc. etc.? It's a bit of an odd comparison to make ... Although I do certainly agree with your last point there, they certainly will, and I'd like to curtail their ability to do so in degree.

No, I won't "get off this train" and feel it is well based. I look at things in a rights vs. cost to society measure, I feel that is logical and fair.
I think "right" vs "cost" is a bit of an odd comparison, but okay. Well, tobacco isn't a right, so can we stop there? It's a completely different discussion based on your initial premise. Comparing firearms to tobacco just doesn't make sense. A firearm is designed to be a weapon, a cigarette is not (despite how much damage it does). There is also a total discrepancy in degree when comparing the two in this type of discussion; I can talk about firearm ownership from single shot black powder muskets to fully automatic assault rifles - there is absolutely no analogous range to "tobacco use." So talking about curtailing one vs the other has entirely different application.

But I just cannot agree with further restricting this right when I compare guns to other freedoms that harm us more than guns and are less restricted.
Do you consider taxes restriction? Would a state gun tax be acceptable? Not that I'm suggesting it, or arguing validity, just curious.

Ok, easy. No one cares about tobacco and no one is really doing anything on or near the scale that they are attacking guns, and tobacco kills well over a magnitude more in absolute numbers, and kills far more innocent victims. I can find lots of quotes about guns from the past election, how many anti-tobacco platforms can you find for me? How many voters were really stirred from a politician's stance on restricting tobacco? How about their stance on the 2A? To try and compare the two as even in the same ball park as far as their relevance in the election or the effort put into restricting them respectively is laughable.

We've already been over this. Did you read the 400 some odd pages? There has been historically, and continues to be currently, a massive assault on tobacco use. It is ALREADY HAPPENING, so it does not need to be yelled from the pulpit (or YouTube). We as a society already agreed that tobacco is bad, and are taking steps to curtail it. We in the process of having that argument about firearms so of course they aren't happening concurrently. Your point would make some sense if we ignore everything in the Surgeon General's report.
 
Since the NRA opposes any gun regulations and you can't fight the stupidity of many gun owners, time to change the punishment. Don't throw the idiots in jail, just shoot them. Maybe they'd fear eye for an eye. You leave a loaded weapon out where a child accesses it, shoots or kills themselves or someone else, you get shot in the same place. Oh and no access to healthcare post shooting. If you die, oh well, que sera sera...
 

Though that first link still fails to distinguish between pure bike accidents and ones that involve cars, e.g., a car being driven into a child on a bike is not a 'bike accident'. Those are no more bike accidents than a car driving into someone who happens to be carrying a gun is a gun accident.

For the second link I can't quite understand how their categories are defined, but as far as I can figure it out, it seems to say there were only 15 bicycle-inflicted deaths of children in the country for 2015, but 52 if you include bicycle-motor-vehicle interactions.
(The latter figure seems surprisingly low, to me)

So nowhere near the number for firearm-caused deaths. Not remotely close.

What I don't get is why 'bicycles' or 'skateboards' were given as a comparator in the first place. When 'cars' would be a much more valid comparison. Seems that the 2015 figure for pre-teens killed by cars is much closer to the firearm related figure, at 1,159.

The only thing approaching the gun in deadliness is the car. Clearly stronger car-control is needed.
 
Though that first link still fails to distinguish between pure bike accidents and ones that involve cars, e.g., a car being driven into a child on a bike is not a 'bike accident'. Those are no more bike accidents than a car driving into someone who happens to be carrying a gun is a gun accident.

For the second link I can't quite understand how their categories are defined, but as far as I can figure it out, it seems to say there were only 15 bicycle-inflicted deaths of children in the country for 2015, but 52 if you include bicycle-motor-vehicle interactions.
(The latter figure seems surprisingly low, to me)

So nowhere near the number for firearm-caused deaths. Not remotely close.

What I don't get is why 'bicycles' or 'skateboards' were given as a comparator in the first place. When 'cars' would be a much more valid comparison. Seems that the 2015 figure for pre-teens killed by cars is much closer to the firearm related figure, at 1,159.

The only thing approaching the gun in deadliness is the car. Clearly stronger car-control is needed.
Totally agreed as I've said in so many words in other posts.
 
Totally agreed as I've said in so many words in other posts.

Yup, wasn't particularly arguing with you. Though am surprised at just how substantial the gun-deaths numbers are, compared to the other causes. I would have expected cars to take the top spot by some margin.
 
Yup, wasn't particularly arguing with you. Though am surprised at just how substantial the gun-deaths numbers are, compared to the other causes. I would have expected cars to take the top spot by some margin.

I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that guns are designed to kill and more ubiquitous than cars. 🙂 (before a gun clutcher gets all upset, I'm not entirely serious)
 
I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that guns are designed to kill and more ubiquitous than cars. 🙂 (before a gun clutcher gets all upset, I'm not entirely serious)

Ha, honestly compels me to acknowledge that I was comparing the 1300 figure from the news article with the 0-14 age group figures for cars/bikes on the official-looking site. On the latter site the actual figure you get for firearms is 443. So cars (1200) do win, but not by nearly the margin I'd have expected (given that cars are actively _used_ everywhere, all the time).

I guess the 1300 figure must relate to a slightly larger age category of 'child'.
 
What do you mean men well versed in military history and war couldn't possibly foresee guns continuing to evolve and get faster to shoot and more accurate? Why didn't they use the word musket? Most of the rest of your post I don't think really has anything to do with the argument.

Oh come ON, they couldn't even understand that slavery was wrong or that raping your slaves was wrong but they could foresee modern armaments?

Tell me, where did they predict the hellfire missile which is what you'd go up against with your rifle?

An unwillingness to accept reality is a problem that should probably ensure that you cannot own a gun. It's known as delusional disorder where what you make up is more real than reality itself.
 
This is more to the crux of the debate, right? Of course the risk is multifactorial, there are few truly unidimensional aspects to life. This is where it comes down to societal risk vs societal benefit. These discussions constantly devolve into granular stats and arguments over the numbers generally with regard to risk (injuries, death, etc.); but what about a thorough discussion of the societal benefit? Is the societal benefit greater than the societal risk at the current point in time of gun ubiquity and level of regulation? Someone mentioned earlier in this thread that the context of life for an American now is dramatically different than that of an American when the second amendment was ratified. Is that not, alone, enough to spark significant re-evaluation? Is "because I can own one" a societal benefit? If so, how much of one? How much should it matter, if it should? A rationale argument would be to decide what the appropriate risk/benefit ratio is, then decide how we get there (whether by reducing risk or increasing benefit). Obviously that's a fantasy, right? My argument is that, on the level of "America" our R/B ratio is off, and far too risk heavy. I think the data supports that argument. Because of my wanting what's best for our society, I am willing to give up some of my personal freedom for societal benefit by way of re-evaluating the second amendment.

I won't go through this line item by line item, I believe I've covered everything you've said. No matter how it is framed, guns kill comparatively less people and do significantly less harm overalll than other things no one is arguing about further restricting. As I've said, until those other things are hot political items I simply will not believe the anti-2A movement is actually about saving lives, if it were we'd see more care given to these other areas that are doing far more harm. I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree.
 
Oh come ON, they couldn't even understand that slavery was wrong or that raping your slaves was wrong but they could foresee modern armaments?

Tell me, where did they predict the hellfire missile which is what you'd go up against with your rifle?

An unwillingness to accept reality is a problem that should probably ensure that you cannot own a gun. It's known as delusional disorder where what you make up is more real than reality itself.

You are rabid in our stance, I'll give you that. But it doesn't mean it is a logical stance. No one is talking about legalizing hellfire missiles under the 2A. We are however talking about firearms, which the constitution is clear about.

Here is a repeating firearm almost 200 years older than the 2A. Slavery and its morality has absolutely NOTHING to do with the right to own firearms. I mean, because they owned slaves does that invalidate the constitution, is the 1st amendment amoral and forgettable because they owned slaves? Why would the 2nd be?

Yes, I truly believe that they had some idea the directions guns would take as they were well educated in war and I'm sure had been aware of the evolution of firearms to more reliable and deadly weapons even before and throughout their lives. I'm sure they knew the push in the firearms industry was for ever faster to reload, more reliable weapons. I'd be shocked if they didn't feel guns would go this direction.
 
You are rabid in our stance, I'll give you that. But it doesn't mean it is a logical stance. No one is talking about legalizing hellfire missiles under the 2A. We are however talking about firearms, which the constitution is clear about.

Here is a repeating firearm almost 200 years older than the 2A. Slavery and its morality has absolutely NOTHING to do with the right to own firearms. I mean, because they owned slaves does that invalidate the constitution, is the 1st amendment amoral and forgettable because they owned slaves? Why would the 2nd be?

Yes, I truly believe that they had some idea the directions guns would take as they were well educated in war and I'm sure had been aware of the evolution of firearms to more reliable and deadly weapons even before and throughout their lives. I'm sure they knew the push in the firearms industry was for ever faster to reload, more reliable weapons. I'd be shocked if they didn't feel guns would go this direction.

There isn't a single thing I've said that isn't factual, pointing out that the founding fathers raped slaves isn't rabid, it's a statement of facts. The point was that the founding fathers didn't even understand that slavery was wrong so your views on how they could envision all future is clearly wrong.

Your argument was that the founding fathers had the visionary (magical?) power to foresee modern day armaments and instead of admitting that this was a retarded argument to make you deflect.

I truly believe you are a complete idiot.
 
Yup, wasn't particularly arguing with you. Though am surprised at just how substantial the gun-deaths numbers are, compared to the other causes. I would have expected cars to take the top spot by some margin.

Compare guns to alcohol / tobacco and get back to me. There are some 15+ millions concealed carry license holders in America. Some ~35 million smokers. Some ~100 million gun owners.
 
There isn't a single thing I've said that isn't factual, pointing out that the founding fathers raped slaves isn't rabid, it's a statement of facts. The point was that the founding fathers didn't even understand that slavery was wrong so your views on how they could envision all future is clearly wrong.

Your argument was that the founding fathers had the visionary (magical?) power to foresee modern day armaments and instead of admitting that this was a retarded argument to make you deflect.

I truly believe you are a complete idiot.


You are name calling because why exactly? I disagree with you and am trying to have a civil conversation. Is your argument falling a part or something? 😉

I wonder if Henry Ford envisioned cars getting more efficient, safer, and faster? Or did he think that's it, we've topped out with the Model T? The forefathers knew of flint locks to match locks to the percussion cap very shortly after the 2A was put in place. People carried more than one and often carried very powerful guns like blunderbusses. They didn't limit it, they didn't put language in to the effect of muskets being the limit. They were clear and I think for a good reason. That being the purpose of the 2A has not changed, the people have the right to protect themselves from the government.

Everything you said is what you want reality to be, but not what reality is.
 
You are name calling because why exactly? I disagree with you and am trying to have a civil conversation. Is your argument falling a part or something? 😉

I wonder if Henry Ford envisioned cars getting more efficient, safer, and faster? Or did he think that's it, we've topped out with the Model T? The forefathers knew of flint locks to match locks to the percussion cap very shortly after the 2A was put in place. People carried more than one and often carried very powerful guns like blunderbusses. They didn't limit it, they didn't put language in to the effect of muskets being the limit. They were clear and I think for a good reason. That being the purpose of the 2A has not changed, the people have the right to protect themselves from the government.

Everything you said is what you want reality to be, but not what reality is.

For three reasons mainly. 1. You ARE an idiot. 2. You pretended that you didn't make the argument you made. 3. You pretended not to understand how your own argument was flawed.

Calling an idiot an idiot isn't an insult, it's merely a statement of fact and you ARE an idiot in every sense of the word.

The most powerful weapons they could imagine were handguns and enough people with handguns would be fine in those days.

Today a militia of untrained yahoos with handguns are not going to manage anything and anyone with two brain cells to put together know that.

So the reason for the second amendment is entirely gone. You have a standing army to protect your nation and no matter how many handguns civilians have they can never go up against the weaponry of the military. You can't penetrate an Abrams tank with that and you can't shoot down jets or even target choppers effectively while they have the ability to heat target any assembly from unmanned aircrafts.

So your guns are of no use what so ever in any situation imaginable and you still think the forefathers knew this and wrote the amendment like they did because they ... what? Didn't foresee jack shit but somehow still did and in imaginary world where you live they were right?

Just shut up.
 

I never said anything about legalizing hellfire missiles, that's just a lie. I'll be done replying to you after this. You aren't capable of having a civil conversation about this, it seems. I think everything you said is dead wrong and an argument for why the 2A is more important than ever, not less relevant, and the people need the 2A, because the government does have such powerful weapons. That is more reason for the 2A, not less. And for some 240 years America has agreed with me on this, not you. That is reality, again, which you continue to ignore. What the authors of the 2A knew is a matter of guesswork on your part and my part (though I do again have reality on my side), using what YOU THINK they knew or foresaw as the cornerstone of your argument is weaksauce bud. I'm done with you now, your argument has degraded to name calling because you have nothing of substance, just an emotional dislike of guns.
 
I won't go through this line item by line item, I believe I've covered everything you've said. No matter how it is framed, guns kill comparatively less people and do significantly less harm overalll than other things no one is arguing about further restricting. As I've said, until those other things are hot political items I simply will not believe the anti-2A movement is actually about saving lives, if it were we'd see more care given to these other areas that are doing far more harm. I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree.

... *whoosh*
 
I never said anything about legalizing hellfire missiles, that's just a lie. I'll be done replying to you after this. You aren't capable of having a civil conversation about this, it seems. I think everything you said is dead wrong and an argument for why the 2A is more important than ever, not less relevant, and the people need the 2A, because the government does have such powerful weapons. That is more reason for the 2A, not less. And for some 240 years America has agreed with me on this, not you. That is reality, again, which you continue to ignore. What the authors of the 2A knew is a matter of guesswork on your part and my part (though I do again have reality on my side), using what YOU THINK they knew or foresaw as the cornerstone of your argument is weaksauce bud. I'm done with you now, your argument has degraded to name calling because you have nothing of substance, just an emotional dislike of guns.

If you had read what I said rather than making up shit that I never said to argue about you'd understand how your argument doesn't fit at all.

The argument isn't about legalizing hellfire missiles, it's about how useless your armaments are compared to the armaments of the armed forces.

Either they are on your side and you don't need your guns or they are against you in which case your pathetic little guns are of no use anyway. Either way, you having guns or not does not matter at all.

We can't have a discussion if you ignore everything, literally every single thing in every single post and then make up shit to argue against.

OTOH, I suppose that is the ONLY way your dumb arse could ever play pretend to win an argument you are clearly not fit to have.
 
Is there nothing about freedom of movement?
Tell you what, in California to buy a firearm you have a 10 day waiting period and you can only buy 1 firearm at a time. Let's just put that restriction on 1st Amendment rights. That way a liberal Democrat can apply to say something, wait 10 days until they can actually say it, and then after they speak they can wait another 10 days before they say something else. Sounds fair to me right? That doesn't even include outrageous fees and taxes that are levied. Just apply the restrictions already in place on the 2nd Amendment and apply them to your other rights.
 
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