So many of us disagree with you that owning guns is an addiction, so stop claiming that as a fact. Nothing negative has happened to me because I own guns. In fact, it's a very enjoyable hobby that I have spent many hours engaging in. The help feed my family and help me to keep them safe. Why should I have any desire to change that?
Owning guns does not an addiction make. However, you've repeatedly made utterly illogical statements in support of your continued ownership, argued both sides of the fence, made comparisons between something you have acknowledged is a tool for killing and things that aren't tools for killing as if they're somehow comparable in that way, and you reject any gun control suggestions. If that doesn't spell out a rather personal and intensely emotional attachment to an inanimate object that you have already admitted makes you less safe and yet somehow makes you more safe, I don't know what does.
Because YOU believe that if I do so it will somehow magically get folks who are the real problem to stop killing? You have no workable plan because it's IMPOSSIBLE to get folks to peacefully disarm if they choose not to.
Here you are making claims that I've already countered without even bothering to address my counterpoints. Also I have not discussed forcibly disarming the general populace against their will, I made my position relating to that topic quite clear in my first response to you:
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/sorry-another-gun-control-thread.2549426/page-3#post-39474088
How many countries have outlawed tobacco?
"I don't have an addiction!" "Excuse me while I compare it to an addiction"
Smoking is one of the most dangerous voluntary habits I can think of. It kills tens if not hundreds of thousands of people around the world each year, but there is very little effort being made to ban it. If the news ran stories of how many children die from second hand smoke each year you'd be up in arms over that, right? I've got a neighbor who smoked all the way through her pregnancy and is raising her son in a house with three smokers. The poor kid is behind in every developmental milestone he's reached. Where's the outrage over parents who do that?
I don't know about the US but quite a few steps have been taken to curb smoking in the UK:
1 - No smoking in public buildings, I'm pretty sure it's banned in workplace buildings as well, pubs and restaurants too
2 - No sale of such items to under 16s.
3 - Every cigarette packet is covered in public health notices and huge lettering that says this item will kill you
4 - Advertising of such items is banned
5 - I read an article literally the other day about the dangers of third-hand smoking
6 - Such items are heavily taxed
7 - Shops selling such items cannot even openly display them in the shop any more, they have to be hidden from general view.
(there probably have been other measures taken)
Which resulted in (IIRC):
Every demographic in the UK has decreased smoking except for teens.
Do you know how such a thing is possible? Because of the absense of anything like the Dickey amendment. Because those lobbyists clearly don't have that much power over politicians in the UK. Because there weren't significant numbers of people crying out that it was impossible to change. Because people listen to the evidence.
So stop calling all my arguments straw man because that's a huge cop out.
I didn't call all of your arguments straw men. Concede that point. I find it interesting that you didn't try to make a counterpoint with evidence that my accusation of a strawman was incorrect, because that would have been the logical thing to do. Honestly, please do go back and check where in this thread I've brought up how I would recommend disarming the general populace. So talking about my arguments going on the assumption that just people voluntarily giving up firearms is a strawman. There was an assumption, and it was yours. Concede that point in the interests of intellectual honesty.
You selectively choose to rail against law-abiding gun owners because you have almost zero power to stop the crimes of the sick/criminal/evil individuals who are the actual problem. Those folks don't obey laws, and don't care if they have to break the law to get their weapons of choice.
Jesus, it's the "laws don't change behaviour" argument again. Your argument runs contrary to the basic reason why we have laws: To deter people from behaviours that we wish to discourage in our societies. I'm honestly not even going to bother addressing your point. It's completely absurd.
Just to point your head in the right direction so you can see the argument of gun control advocates though: If you restrict the availability of firearms, it will logically reduce gun crime. Logically it will also have a desirable effect on violent crime in general since as you've already acknowledged, a gun is a tool; logically people will use the most appropriate tool that's available to them, and since a gun is a considerably more efficient tool for threatening people, it's logical to use that tool rather than a less efficient one. The use of less efficient tools logically reduces the likelihood of success.
And then you continue to bury your head in the sand or claim straw man argument again when we point out that even if you had the votes you couldn't enact a weapons ban without starting a civil war. And that, short of a ban, the "common sense" gun control won't do a thing to stop gun crime. WE ALREADY HAD AN ASSAULT WEAPONS BAN AND IT DID NOTHING! And like I keep saying, murder is already illegal. What further law short of a complete gun ban will stop folks intent on breaking that law?
So you're of the opinion that if you try something and it doesn't work, then try nothing else?
Most anti-gunners never stop to question if their passionate ideas for a gun-free America are even possible to achieve.
I would find it pretty surprising if no gun control advocates anywhere have ever discussed how to go about disarming America (though AFAIK that's not the aim of most gun control advocates in America). I personally have never discussed the topic at great length with anyone because a) I don't live there, and b) discussing it with a like-minded person to myself (ie. I've never owned a gun, I've never seen the point in it, so therefore my experience of the topic is limited) will result in what tends to happen with echo chamber thinking: Piss-poor solutions that fail to take in many factors of the problem and critically examine the solutions from as many angles as possible.
Discussing it with someone who has considerably more experience of gun ownership and gun owners than I do (and ideally some experience of acquiring firearms in shady fashions) and sees the merits of reducing the availability of firearms in some way would make a lot more sense.
Discussing it with you however should be something that even you can acknowledge is utterly futile: You've already rejected basically all the underlying arguments that would be the basis of far less extreme measures of gun control let alone disarmament. Nothing about your position so far suggests to me that there's even any gun control measure that you would honestly consider as the arguments you've put up have logically ruled them out as well.