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Author Topic: Gun free zone  (Read 21892 times)
FirstAscent
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December 15, 2012, 07:10:17 PM
 #61

Quote from: Lethnink=topic=130900.msg1401940#msg1401940 date=1355596068
Why are people so fucking against people defending themselves?
Guns are not the only way to defend yourself. The problem with guns is that they can be used both for offense and defense with lethal consequences. Here's another way of thinking about this subject.
There are different levels of destructive powers available to people. From a simple fist to a nuclear bomb.

If you bring the argument that forbidding a kind of weapon to someone makes him/her an easy target to criminals that will find a mean to get such a weapon, do you support the right of any citizen to own a tank? carry an assault riffle around?

Although a tank (or a nuclear bomb for that matter) might not be a practical defensive weapon (not easy to carry around or purely offensive in the case of a bomb), an assault riffle is certainly better to make sure a killer is quickly inoffensive while still light enough to carry around.

If you don't want to allow citizens the advantage of an assault riffle vs a handgun, why would you allow handguns for defense while a taser-like weapon seems (at least to me) enough for defense while non-lethal?

If you start with the principle that you live in a society that can't protect you and you must do it yourself, why do you need to allow everyone to pack offensive power instead of insisting on defensive power? If I expected the chances of being attacked above negligible, I'll wear a kevlar suit and a taser at all times instead of a gun.

He also overlooks the fact that most normal people do not want to live in a society where a gun need be carried around. Who actually wants to have a pistol on them all the time?
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December 15, 2012, 07:13:50 PM
 #62

For the entirety of the Renaissance, people ran around with swords. Not a lot of "School stabbings" or "sword rampages."
Most people didn't own swords, for the most part only nobility, soldiers and cut-throats did. The nobility didn't either usually carry usable swords around, these were blunted swords with pricey decorations for show.

And if you think a sword wasn't designed specifically for killing, you need to think again.
See my point above.

You need to look at the big picture: taking the means of defense from law-abiding people only ensures that the criminal class (both of them, actually) have a disarmed, and therefore easier to plunder, target base.
I don't think so. I explained my point of view in another post: guns are not only useful for defense so it's a two-edge sword (pun intended).

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December 15, 2012, 07:18:18 PM
 #63

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Do you realize that 3D printers will allow anyone to make their own guns at home? Gun laws will not prevent this. Stricter gun laws can result in higher body counts should a shooting occur.

He also overlooks the fact that most normal people do not want to live in a society where a gun need be carried around. Who actually wants to have a pistol on them all the time?

Welcome to the human race. What's your point?

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December 15, 2012, 07:34:13 PM
 #64

If you start with the principle that you live in a society that can't protect you and you must do it yourself, why do you need to allow everyone to pack offensive power instead of insisting on defensive power? If I expected the chances of being attacked above negligible, I'll wear a kevlar suit and a taser at all times instead of a gun.

In a rational society, killing your attacker would be, while acceptable, not an optimal solution. Hard to extract restitution from a corpse, and of course, now the only worth he has to society at large is as fertilizer. Non-lethal options are also less likely to result in counter-claims from family and friends. But as in all things, encouraging the result you want, rather than forcing it, is preferable in that it gets people to voluntarily accept that result.

Insisting that everyone have the right to bear lethal defensive options is not the same as insisting that everyone bear lethal defensive options.

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gyverlb
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December 15, 2012, 07:36:06 PM
 #65

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Do you realize that 3D printers will allow anyone to make their own guns at home?

No I didn't. Maybe that's because 3D printers use plastic for printing that would blow up in the hands of a criminal. You can use them to make some parts of a weapon, not the whole weapon (look it up).
Anyway it's not a problem you seem to have currently and until somebody manages to print a real usable gun (including bullets by the way...) you may want to concentrate on what is used to kill people today.


Gun laws will not prevent this. Stricter gun laws can result in higher body counts should a shooting occur.

Doesn't seem to work that way in other modern civilized countries, what is the difference in the US exactly? Until we understand that I'm afraid there is no solution and you'll have to endure (assuming you live in the US) and we'll have to witness your suffering and offer our condolences without understanding how those things happen to you.

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December 15, 2012, 07:44:18 PM
 #66

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Where I live we don't have the right to bear guns.
...
I think you don't see the big picture either. America has been a war nation for a century, which continues to be the biggest arms exporter in the world, and continues to provide free defense capabilities for most of Europe and much of the Far East.

Without its willingness to resort to violence on behalf of others, your country and most of Europe would probably still be provinces of the Third Reich, and most of the Far East a part of the Japanese Empire. More recently NATO (which really means US military) interventions in places like Serbia and Libya would not have been possible without American support and propensity for solutions through superior firepower...

That kind of willingness to go to war cannot come from a relatively pacifist society like yours. American populace has always been relatively well-armed.

Europeans and other critics of American gun culture can't have their cake and eat it too; they can't expect American soldiers to go conduct violence in other countries on behalf of Europe/NATO, and then return to their own home land and disarm to the point that they can't even protect themselves and their children in their home, local movie theater, at a school. It's too much of a mindset change for rational citizens and soldiers of a warrior nation to make.

What i mean about the American way with guns was best said by some Texas businessman/politician; i can't find the exact quote, but it was something to the effect that "When I was a kid in Texas, all the kids had guns. We just didn't bring them to school!"

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December 15, 2012, 07:50:20 PM
 #67

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Where I live we don't have the right to bear guns.
...
I think you don't see the big picture either. America has been a war nation for a century, which continues to be the biggest arms exporter in the world, and continues to provide free defense capabilities for most of Europe and much of the Far East.

Without its willingness to resort to violence on behalf of others, your country and most of Europe would probably still be provinces of the Third Reich, and most of the Far East a part of the Japanese Empire. More recently NATO (which really means US military) interventions in places like Serbia and Libya would not have been possible without American support and propensity for solutions through superior firepower...

That kind of willingness to go to war cannot come from a relatively pacifist society like yours. American populace has always been relatively well-armed.

Europeans and other critics of American gun culture can't have their cake and eat it too; they can't expect American soldiers to go conduct violence in other countries on behalf of Europe/NATO, and then return to their own home land and disarm to the point that they can't even protect themselves and their children in their home, local movie theater, at a school. It's too much of a mindset change for rational citizens and soldiers of a warrior nation to make.

What i mean about the American way with guns was best said by some Texas businessman/politician; i can't find the exact quote, but it was something to the effect that "When I was a kid in Texas, all the kids had guns. We just didn't bring them to school!"

A predisposition to lethal violence is not something to be proud of, and the world does not need or want America to be its police force.

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December 15, 2012, 07:50:39 PM
 #68

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Do you realize that 3D printers will allow anyone to make their own guns at home?

No I didn't. Maybe that's because 3D printers use plastic for printing that would blow up in the hands of a criminal. You can use them to make some parts of a weapon, not the whole weapon (look it up).
I did.
http://defensedistributed.com/

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imanikin
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December 15, 2012, 08:19:34 PM
 #69

A predisposition to lethal violence is not something to be proud of, and the world does not need or want America to be its police force.
Agreed! Yet, those same parts of the world are not willing to kick the US military out of their territory, because the latter allow them to have miniscule "defense" budgets, and the US bases in their countries transfer considerable US taxpayer money into their local economies.

So, in deeds rather than words, those nations DO want to continue to "mooch" off the American taxpayer to police their regions of the world, at a profit rather than expense to the former.  Cheesy

The point is, it's absurd to expect real "gun-free zones" in a war nation with the biggest military-industrial complex in the world.

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December 15, 2012, 08:23:00 PM
 #70

You definitely don't see the big picture, do you?
I don't want to be the safest I can be in a rampage situation. I want to be safe which means not having to be in a rampage situation at all.

Where I live we don't have the right to bear guns.
...
I think you don't see the big picture either. America has been a war nation for a century, which continues to be the biggest arms exporter in the world, and continues to provide free defense capabilities for most of Europe and much of the Far East.

Without its willingness to resort to violence on behalf of others, your country and most of Europe would probably still be provinces of the Third Reich
We are grateful for the help of the US (or at least my grand parents were, I've never known this period) as you are of our own to you several generations earlier...
The past is the past, most people of these periods are long dead now and their willingness to fight with them. I'm not sure what people would have done in Europe without the US and the Soviet Union (don't forget them, they took a huge toll to split the Third Reich armies on two fronts), maybe the Third Reich would have collapsed from internal revolutions (after all the French and English people are more or less the firsts at successfully overthrowing their dictatorial states).
, and most of the Far East a part of the Japanese Empire. More recently NATO (which really means US military) interventions in places like Serbia and Libya would not have been possible without American support and propensity for solutions through superior firepower...

That kind of willingness to go to war cannot come from a relatively pacifist society like yours.

The fact that you are too big to not involve in conflicts like those doesn't mean we are "pacifists" (at least in the way you mean it). If our parents were pacifists we wouldn't have the blood of our colonies on our hands and we wouldn't continue to send troops/carriers/jets in recent wars ourselves.

American populace has always been relatively well-armed.

Europeans and other critics of American gun culture can't have their cake and eat it too;

I'm not sure I follow, are you describing the US as a hired gun for Europe and others? That is quite harsh for both the US and the rest.

The reality is more complex. I only know the recent history of my own country so I'll use it as an example. The only recent war we (the French) didn't participate in was the invasion of Iraq (don't mind the reason that's another messy subject, only that it was an exception). We were in Serbia, Koweit, Lybia for the last joint operations I remember. In the late 20th century we conducted several "interventions" in past colonies in Africa and Asia ourselves (not that I'm particularly proud of those, I'm not sure it helped the local populations or even ourselves), refused to be part of NATO for ages to remain fully independent (and our sorry clown of last president didn't forget to make the mistake of stopping this policy) and successfully developed a full-fledge nuclear weapon program. If you think France as a country is made of pacifists you are not living on the same planet we are (at least you didn't step in the craters left by our bombs). In fact this is understandable: our influence on foreign countries is obviously smaller and mostly disconnected from US interests with the obvious exception of oil-producing countries (everyone still wants to get a share in those).

they can't expect American soldiers to go conduct violence in other countries on behalf of Europe/NATO, and then return to their own home land and disarm to the point that they can't even protect themselves and their children in their home, local movie theater, at a school. It's too much of a mindset change for rational citizens and soldiers of a warrior nation to make.

I think it's a little bit exaggerated. At least there's no concrete evidence that soldiers can't disarm. I know several people who have served in the military, killed enemy combatants abroad and came home to start a civilian life. I won't swear they don't have some firearm stored somewhere but I can tell you that these guns almost never show up.

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December 15, 2012, 08:23:24 PM
 #71

See http://twitter.com/criminalsunion for more about laws that criminals are the sole beneficiaries of.

Saying that you don't trust someone because of their behavior is completely valid.
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December 15, 2012, 08:29:30 PM
Last edit: December 15, 2012, 08:40:14 PM by gyverlb
 #72

No I didn't. Maybe that's because 3D printers use plastic for printing that would blow up in the hands of a criminal. You can use them to make some parts of a weapon, not the whole weapon (look it up).
I did.
http://defensedistributed.com/
Which states:
http://defensedistributed.com/faqs/how-long-it-will-it-take-to-have-a-functional-printable-gun/

So I rest my case: there isn't any fully 3D printed gun available now and they don't even plan to address bullets.

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December 15, 2012, 08:31:01 PM
 #73

A predisposition to lethal violence is not something to be proud of, and the world does not need or want America to be its police force.
Agreed! Yet, those same parts of the world are not willing to kick the US military out of their territory, because the latter allow them to have miniscule "defense" budgets, and the US bases in their countries transfer considerable US taxpayer money into their local economies.

So, in deeds rather than words, those nations DO want to continue to "mooch" off the American taxpayer to police their regions of the world, at a profit rather than expense to the former.  Cheesy

The point is, it's absurd to expect real "gun-free zones" in a war nation with the biggest military-industrial complex in the world.

The notion that a country would spend millions of dollars and risk the lives of its citizens in order to protect a second country is nothing but propaganda.

Military occupation occurs because of a country's need to protect its own interests.

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December 15, 2012, 08:51:28 PM
 #74

The notion that a country would spend millions of dollars and risk the lives of its citizens in order to protect a second country is nothing but propaganda.

Military occupation occurs because of a country's need to protect its own interests.
I agree mostly: it's the number one reason today. That was not always the case, in the past personal interest of country leaders played a role and religion was a powerful force too.

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myrkul
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December 15, 2012, 08:54:10 PM
 #75

Do you realize that 3D printers will allow anyone to make their own guns at home?

No I didn't. Maybe that's because 3D printers use plastic for printing that would blow up in the hands of a criminal. You can use them to make some parts of a weapon, not the whole weapon (look it up).
I did.
http://defensedistributed.com/

Which states:
http://defensedistributed.com/faqs/how-long-it-will-it-take-to-have-a-functional-printable-gun/

So I rest my case: there isn't any fully 3D printed gun available now and they don't even plan to address bullets.


And with the right printer (specifically, a laser sinter printer, using steel powder instead of plastic), and the design that they are working on right now, you can have a fully functional, reusable weapon in just a few hours, from the press of a button. Even with plastic, you can make a "gun to get a gun," a one-shot pistol intended to get you a better weapon from one of your attackers.

Even ignoring that, if you're not too concerned with personal safety, there are plenty of ways to make a bullet projection tube (wouldn't really call it a gun) out of household objects.

The knowledge is out there. The Genie is out of the bottle. You can't stuff it back in with words written on paper.

Bullets are already easily made at home. That's why they don't plan on addressing them.

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December 15, 2012, 09:20:42 PM
 #76

...
The past is the past, most people of these periods are long dead now and their willingness to fight with them. I'm not sure what people would have done in Europe without the US and the Soviet Union (don't forget them, they took a huge toll to split the Third Reich armies on two fronts), maybe the Third Reich would have collapsed from internal revolutions (after all the French and English people are more or less the firsts at successfully overthrowing their dictatorial states).
Quote
I'm not sure I follow, are you describing the US as a hired gun for Europe and others? That is quite harsh for both the US and the rest.

The reality is more complex.
...
I am Russian, and was born in the Soviet Union. So, i am aware from people who participated in those wars that without American involvement France and other parts of Europe were unlikely to free themselves from the Third Reich. And if they did, they would have been under strong influence of the Soviet Union...

The Americans were even sending a lot of military equipment to the Russian front via Lend-Lease, which helped my people in the beginning of WW2.

The reality is only "more complex" until it was time to call for American heavy airlift, refueling and other military capabilities, which no other nation since the Soviet Union has anymore. Considering the numbers of equipment and soldiers with which the French and other countries were "in" those joint operations, these interventions were impossible without the US military.

Since it was surrounded on all sides by NATO countries, of course, France could afford to be out of NATO, and pretend that it could defend itself if the Soviet Union attacked it any better than when Germany did, for example.

That's exactly what i mean: the US has been more than a hired gun for most of Europe directly, France indirectly, and others; it has provided free defense departments for them. Nothing wrong with mooching off American defense department, if American tax payers are willing...  Cheesy

Anyhow, the point is: the average citizens of a nation that's willing to do that war after war, decade after decade, are not likely to favor or have a society in which there are really "gun-free zones" and  "guns almost never show up".

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December 15, 2012, 09:25:43 PM
 #77

A predisposition to lethal violence is not something to be proud of, and the world does not need or want America to be its police force.

That is just ignorant absolutism in response to the intelligent and rational comments by imanikin.

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December 15, 2012, 09:29:42 PM
 #78

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7EZCK-QtBY
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December 15, 2012, 09:35:45 PM
 #79

And with the right printer (specifically, a laser sinter printer, using steel powder instead of plastic), and the design that they are working on right now, you can have a fully functional, reusable weapon in just a few hours, from the press of a button. Even with plastic, you can make a "gun to get a gun," a one-shot pistol intended to get you a better weapon from one of your attackers.

Even ignoring that, if you're not too concerned with personal safety, there are plenty of ways to make a bullet projection tube (wouldn't really call it a gun) out of household objects.

The knowledge is out there. The Genie is out of the bottle. You can't stuff it back in with words written on paper.

Bullets are already easily made at home. That's why they don't plan on addressing them.
Didn't know about the laser sinter printer tech.
I'm a little doubtful about the anyone can make bullets though: the ammo includes at least the bullet, casing and gun powder, that doesn't seem so simple to produce.

But assuming all that is true or will be in the short future, why should it be legal to make weapons? A law isn't meant to say what isn't doable but what you are allowed to do for the well being of the community.
You can already make bombs/grenades in your kitchen and kill tens of people with them. Should it be allowed (the making obviously)? By the way why is it that psychopaths nearly always choose guns and almost never bombs when they are out on a killing spree? A bomb is designed to kill many people at once, seems the obvious choice, especially if you are planning to die.

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December 15, 2012, 09:39:26 PM
 #80

That is just ignorant absolutism in response to the intelligent and rational comments by imanikin.

This is just retrospective criticism and brings nothing new to the argument.

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