TummyDragon
TMF Expert
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2001
- Messages
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a good dialogue..
I look at gun control from the perspective of someone thinking about that nut who walked into a McDonald's and blew away 18(?) people, and the other nutbag who strolled into a restaurant and capped about 22 I think it was. Now, while these events are the not the norm, obviously, if I were sitting in a restaurant when some idiot opened fire, I'd like to at least have the chance to live. The chance to defend myself. The chance to keep my wife, son, or even complete strangers from dying at the hands of a maniac. It's very hard to stop a bullet with a cheese burger, but you might have a chance to stop the maniac with a shot of your own.
When a signed piece of paper can actually remove the guns from the hands of those who would harm others, I'll gladly support gun control. I'd love to live in a place where the strong do not prey on the weak. Hell will spring into existence and then freeze over first. I do believe that there is an absolute right to self defense. Is that written anywhere? Highly unlikely.
I've seen countless gun control studies for statistical analysis labs in my college yesteryear. There wasn't a single study that showed a reduction in crime due to a piece of gun control legislation anywhere. This doesn't mean one or several do not exist. The best the pro gun control advocates could come up with was a study where residents "feel safer" because of a piece of legislation. The actual crime rates increased in every study I was privvy to.
The only study which did show a reduction in crime across the board was from Kennesaw, Georgia where a law was passed requiring every household to have at least one firearm (this is for real, check it out). Violent crime overall in Kennesaw dropped by 87%. Home invasion dropped by 93%. Armed robbery dropped by 91%. Crimes committed while in the posession of a firearm dropped by 94%. Criminals seemed to avoid Kennesaw. I'm sure these numbers could have been padded so I take them to be a bit exaggerated, but, even if they are exaggerated, I think it does prove that when the sheep become tigers, the criminal tigers tend to go elsewhere to find more sheep.
I believed then, and still do today, that the gun control hype is a "feel good" political maneuver politicians use to try to make the herds of the masses believe they are safer when in reality, all it has accomplished is the removal of the herds ability to protect themselves.
Good discussion.
I look at gun control from the perspective of someone thinking about that nut who walked into a McDonald's and blew away 18(?) people, and the other nutbag who strolled into a restaurant and capped about 22 I think it was. Now, while these events are the not the norm, obviously, if I were sitting in a restaurant when some idiot opened fire, I'd like to at least have the chance to live. The chance to defend myself. The chance to keep my wife, son, or even complete strangers from dying at the hands of a maniac. It's very hard to stop a bullet with a cheese burger, but you might have a chance to stop the maniac with a shot of your own.
When a signed piece of paper can actually remove the guns from the hands of those who would harm others, I'll gladly support gun control. I'd love to live in a place where the strong do not prey on the weak. Hell will spring into existence and then freeze over first. I do believe that there is an absolute right to self defense. Is that written anywhere? Highly unlikely.
I've seen countless gun control studies for statistical analysis labs in my college yesteryear. There wasn't a single study that showed a reduction in crime due to a piece of gun control legislation anywhere. This doesn't mean one or several do not exist. The best the pro gun control advocates could come up with was a study where residents "feel safer" because of a piece of legislation. The actual crime rates increased in every study I was privvy to.
The only study which did show a reduction in crime across the board was from Kennesaw, Georgia where a law was passed requiring every household to have at least one firearm (this is for real, check it out). Violent crime overall in Kennesaw dropped by 87%. Home invasion dropped by 93%. Armed robbery dropped by 91%. Crimes committed while in the posession of a firearm dropped by 94%. Criminals seemed to avoid Kennesaw. I'm sure these numbers could have been padded so I take them to be a bit exaggerated, but, even if they are exaggerated, I think it does prove that when the sheep become tigers, the criminal tigers tend to go elsewhere to find more sheep.
I believed then, and still do today, that the gun control hype is a "feel good" political maneuver politicians use to try to make the herds of the masses believe they are safer when in reality, all it has accomplished is the removal of the herds ability to protect themselves.
Good discussion.



