steve wrote:
In my high school (Hellgate, class of '80) it was common to see kids in hunting clothes in class, and equally common for kids to bring their shotguns and rifles to school and leave them in their lockers, having already done their hunting in the morning. We even had a biathlon team (skiing-and-shooting mixed discipline). It was perfectly legal to wear a side-arm on the streets of Missoula. Guns were sold in hardware stores and at the camera desk of the Osco drugstore. Nobody got shot.
Is any of this neccesary though? I mean, maybe it is, I dont know, but it doesnt seem it. Ok, maybe shotguns for bears. But do people need to hunt nowadays?
In short, people in cities shouldn't own guns. People in the woods should be able to if they like.
If you had to choose a law though. Which of these people would you prefer to dissapoint? I mean if you could stop gun violence and rural folk didnt get to hunt, would it not be a neccesary sacrifice?
So we are left with a dilemma: Do we take a useful and (literally) harmless tool away from those who would use it, despite them not being a threat to anyone, or do we continue to allow criminals to use them for crime?
Harmless? I guess I can see why you'd say that. But, while a car is relatively harmless, a motorway for someone without a car certainly isnt. The potential is always there to end human life.
Shooting people is already illegal. It doesn't become any more difficult if we make it super-double-extra illegal because the gun used to do it is illegal. In fact, the guns used in crimes are almost all already illegally-owned, and that wouldn't change if all guns were made illegal.
If legally-owned guns (the only ones we can do anything about) were involved in all the gun crime, then there would be a measure of logic to getting rid of them. But they aren't.
Well guns being illegal would stop the guns being manufactured in or imported to your country. Ok there's already a shitload out there but eventually, maybe even as much as 50 years down the road, you could be where England is right now. In that there are a few guns, but if someone tries to mug me, or breaks into my house, I'm worried they're gonna beat the living shit out of me, but I'm not worried they're gonna kill me. (ok, they could stab me, but it takes a lot more willpower than pulling a trigger)
So, I don't think people in cities should own guns, but I don't believe there is anything we can do about it. I don't believe people in the woods should have their guns taken away from them, and anything short of that will make any other gun control meaningless.
I think, in the long run/bigger picture, the people in the woods should just have to deal with it. Or have shotguns only. Farmers can have shotguns in England, but you wont find criminals tucking them down their jeans.
And despite the continual parsing-and-interpreting, I believe the Second Ammendment does ensure that the individual civilians should be allowed to own weapons -- in case they need to form a militia to defend themselves. Or to overthrow the government. It's a crude form of a "check" to the power of a government that may become authoritarian, and the drastic implications of this were certainly understood by the framers. They had recently had to overthrow a government themselves, and wanted to make sure the new one wasn't entrenched by a toothless populace.
Any other month I'd dismiss this as "never gonna happen" but damn, the man "making political satirists obsolete since 2000" got in again. You poor fuckers.
This has the potential to degenerate into an abortion-style tit-for-tat thread, and I hope it doesn't come to that.
Yeah, seriously. I only really know the Americans point of view from Micheal Moore and Charlton Heston, and I dont really agree with either of them. I'd like to read some serious opinions.
Just as you look at the English and think "Why dont they brush their teeth?" we look at you and think "Why do they sell guns in supermarkets?"
simmo wrote:Someone make my carrot and grapefruits smoke. Please.