Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Yesterday, in one single day, 116 people were killed by automobiles. That's more than were killed by firearms. Should we ban cars too? They aren't necessary, people can just use public transportation.
While I tend towards the pro-gun side of the equation, the firearm<-->automobile comparison that gets trotted out every single time the gun debate starts is tired and dripping with fallacy.
Automobiles are necessary. Our economy, heck, our society depends upon them heavily. With a couple of decades and many billions of dollars in improvements, we might be able to rely on public transportation, but not now...not by a long shot.
There are at least 238,000,000 privately-held, legal firearms in the United states. Every day, 99.9985% of firearms are handled in perfect safety (i.e. they cause no injuries and no deaths). That's a staggeringly good safety percentage. Higher than many things that we use every day and take for granted as "safe".
What percentage of firearms even get touched in any given day? How about in any given week or even month? You don't know and neither do I but we both do know that only a tiny percentage of those 238 million firearms ever get used in any given month, let alone a day. The vast majority are in storage, locked in a safe or a cabinet and might get, at most, handled unloaded and a once-over with an oily rag in any given year.
Now what percentage of automobiles get used over the time timeframe? The percentage is much, much higher as we both know.
Poll a solid cross-section of U.S. firearm owners and ask them if they could get along more easily without their guns or their cars. What would the result be?
You're living in a fantasy world if you think that banning firearms will remove them from people' hands.
No argument from me here. This statement is especially valid in the United States.
Targeting the firearms is targeting the symptom, not the disease. Removing the firearms will not remove the violent tendencies of the criminal element.
Civilized society has been targeting this disease for hundreds of years and the disease still thrives. Yes, anyone who thinks that firearms actually cause violent crimes is a nitwit, but the presence of firearms obviously has the potential of making any given violent crime more violent and mor devastating.
When the hoi polloi flips on CNN and they hear that the jagoff in Pittsburgh was wearing body armor and shooting 100+ rounds out of an "AK-47", many of them wonder 'how on earth could someone even get a gun like that???' It's a legitimate question and comparing guns to cars is not the answer they are looking for.