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| This is wrong on so many levels... |
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m c
Member #5,337
December 2004
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Specter Phoenix said: Difference between you and the police is that they are trained in hand to hand, required to pass firearm proficiency tests, and are trained in non-lethal and lethal ways to handle situations. Police officers are incompetent and have little skill. Navy seal three time veteran. (\ /) |
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Specter Phoenix
Member #1,425
July 2001
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m c said: Police officers are incompetent and have little skill.Navy seal three time veteran. So Navy Seals are incompetent too? Most of our police and sheriff departments are made up of retired and active military branches.
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raynebc
Member #11,908
May 2010
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If the government took away peoples' right to have a gun, then only criminals and police would have them. That makes me feel safer just thinking about it (sarcasm). |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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George Orwell said: We sleep safe in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm.
They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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Thomas Fjellstrom
Member #476
June 2000
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SonShadowCat said: TF: Yes, I do more safe now that I can carry a concealed weapon on me. I have been mugged twice and that weight on my hip provides a reassurance since I know I at least have the possibility of defending myself now(either through using it or by simply having the weapon). Or the next mugger gets the gun from you and shoots you with it. Or has one himself, and shoots you the second you try to pull the gun. -- |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Thomas Fjellstrom said: Or the next mugger gets the gun from you and shoots you with it. Well, if you can't walk and chew gum at the same time maybe you should just stay home, away from the big bad world. {"name":"40170.strip.gif","src":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/a\/6\/a69b71097339439a8143894694fc249e.gif","w":640,"h":196,"tn":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/a\/6\/a69b71097339439a8143894694fc249e"} They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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Slartibartfast
Member #8,789
June 2007
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raynebc said: If the government took away peoples' right to have a gun, then only criminals and police would have them. That makes me feel safer just thinking about it (sarcasm). If the government took away people's right to have a gun, then criminals would have a harder time getting guns. If the number of criminals with a gun were halved but I didn't have a gun, I'd feel much safer than with a gun and "fighting" twice as many armed criminals. ---- |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Slartibartfast said: If the number of criminals with a gun were halved but I didn't have a gun, I'd feel much safer than with a gun and "fighting" twice as many armed criminals. Try that in a first person shooter (using difficulty levels to adjust number of "criminals") and get back to us on that. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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23yrold3yrold
Member #1,134
March 2001
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Slartibartfast said: If the government took away people's right to have a gun, then criminals would have a harder time getting guns. Laws have never impacted how easy it is to get a gun. Just how easy it is to get one legally (and since when did criminals care about that?) -- |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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23yrold3yrold said: Laws have never impacted how easy it is to get a gun. Just how easy it is to get one legally (and since when did criminals care about that?) I'm pretty sure he meant the total supply would be reduced. But as I said above, you can make a zipgun pretty easily. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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Gun laws have been strict in Canada for 20+ years, and we still have drug dealers shooting up children's hospitals during gang rivalries. The criminals still have guns, even if you think they don't. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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Slartibartfast
Member #8,789
June 2007
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Arthur Kalliokoski said: Try that in a first person shooter (using difficulty levels to adjust number of "criminals") and get back to us on that. If you live in a first person shooter then you are much much worse off than most people. I'd worry less about getting a gun and more about the fact that every single person in the world wants to kill me. And I'd probably choose to run and hide rather than try killing many simultaneous opponents. 23yrold3yrold said: Laws have never impacted how easy it is to get a gun.
How do you figure that? Just the fact that there's a gun store drastically increases the options of stealing one; I can break into the store and take a gun, I can steal one in transit or in storage, I can pay off the weapon delivery guy etc. All of those options are impossible when there's no place to buy a gun. Arthur Kalliokoski said: I'm pretty sure he meant the total supply would be reduced If gun sale is illegal than the number of guns in the country is around K where K is the number of armed policemen + soldiers, which means you can very easily control all of the guns in the country, and if one is stolen you'd notice quickly. Quote: you can make a zipgun pretty easily
So even if you can easily make a homemade weapon, criminalizing firearms would still reduce the number of armed criminals (and I believe that quite drastically so). I would probably consider legalizing the sale of guns to people to be equivalent to legalizing the sale of nuclear weapons to countries, so that my country can defend itself again some criminal country waving around its big nuclear weapon unless I give it my ---- |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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It's not the idiots that you have to worry about. They're unlikely to hit you, let alone kill you. It's the career criminals that have been handling guns all their lives. And it's the career criminals that stash guns away, trade them around with each other, and smuggle them into the country, etc. Tons of illicit narcotics are smuggled into the USA on a daily basis, despite it being highly illegal, carrying very serious punishment if caught. That right there basically proves that they couldn't control guns if they wanted to. Append: Statistics gathered in the USA have already demonstrated that gun-related crime increases when guns are restricted. The problem is that the criminals still have their guns. They are criminals: by definition they break the law, so making laws isn't going to deter them. Unfortunately, the law abiding citizens are made practically defenseless against the criminals, and the criminals know it. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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SiegeLord
Member #7,827
October 2006
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I'd be fine with gun possession of any kind if the self-defence safe harbor laws were repealed. Feel free to possess your gun, but if you shoot someone and they die, you must be charged with at least manslaughter, no matter how threatened or provoked you were etc. "For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increases knowledge increases sorrow."-Ecclesiastes 1:18 |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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SiegeLord said: Feel free to possess your gun, but if you shoot someone and they die, you must be charged with at least manslaughter, no matter how threatened or provoked you were etc. It'd still be better to be tried by twelve than carried by six. [EDIT] Might as well hang that on the cops and soldiers too. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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Specter Phoenix
Member #1,425
July 2001
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If the government made laws to make firearms illegal it wouldn't make a difference. Drug cartels would just start importing firearms from other countries and make a profit selling them to criminals. Look at our past. They made liquor illegal (during the prohibition era) and the mobs started underground bars to make a profit off the demand for alcohol. Same would occur with guns/drugs/etc if there is a demand for it someone will fill that demand. You can never get rid of them, but getting a weapon to feel safe after a crime is a terrible idea.
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Karadoc ~~
Member #2,749
September 2002
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Arthur Kalliokoski said: Try that in a first person shooter (using difficulty levels to adjust number of "criminals") and get back to us on that. Holy shit, dude. Are you seriously trying to arguing using a comparison of FPS to real-life? That's completely messed up, man. There are so many reasons why that comparison is crazy. I can hardly imagine what you must have been thinking when you put that point forward as part of your argument. Let me give you a hint for one of the reasons why it is messed up: killing people is part of the goal in FPS games, both for you and for your opponents. Real life doesn't have goals like that. ----------- |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Karadoc ~~ said: Let me give you a hint for one of the reasons why it is messed up: killing people is part of the goal in FPS games, both for you and for your opponents. Real life doesn't have goals like that. Exactly why I said that. Play an FPS while trying to be a pacifist and see what it gets you. The bully types (cops included) will come after you even faster IRL. [EDIT] I believe you pacifist types are unaware of any aggressive attitudes within yourself, so you think that everybody else must be that way? Let me take you to certain localities in my cab. "You look like you want to fight!" They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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Karadoc ~~ said: Real life doesn't have goals like that. If I had room I'd sig this out of context. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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Karadoc ~~
Member #2,749
September 2002
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Arthur Kalliokoski said: Exactly why I said that. Play an FPS while trying to be a pacifist and see what it gets you. The bully types (cops included) will come after you even faster IRL. Games are usually deliberately written so that being a pacifist does not work - because fighting and killing is often a core part of the gameplay. Real life simply isn't like that. And in real life, if someone pulls out a gun to threaten someone, it would be a bad thing if a bunch of bystanders decided to pull out their guns as well for 'defence'. All that does in increase that chance of people being killed. And again, let me emphasize that deaths in real-life are somewhat more important than deaths in a computer game. Quote: I believe you pacifist types are unaware of any aggressive attitudes within yourself, so you think that everybody else must be that way? Let me take you to certain localities in my cab."You look like you want to fight!" Are you trying to imply that that situation would be somehow safer, or better, if both of those ordinary people were holding guns? Look, maybe 'pacifist types' do have some internal aggression, which could burst out at any moment and cause them to rampage, or whatever. So then, isn't that a good reason to not let those people have guns? If someone is going to lose their temper from time to time, I'd rather them be unarmed. Wouldn't you? And supposing someone does go berserk, and they somehow have a gun. If you had a gun as well, what are you going to do? Shoot them? Threaten to shoot them? Do you think that would calm them down? Do you think they would let you point your gun at them while they are pointing their gun at you? Do you think you can safely disarm / kill someone with a gun without accidentally shooting someone else (or yourself)? -- And even if you are confident of your abilities in this, are you confident in the abilities of every gun owner in the country? -- ... I didn't actually mean to get involved in this debate. All I came here to say was that the FPS comparison was ludicrous. The issue of gun control is not simple, but I would have thought that the craziness of that FPS comparison was obvious. I thought you'd recognise your mistake right away, and then try to put forward a more reasonable position. But you didn't. I don't think you or I are going to be able to change each other's mind. Apparently our basic understandings of the world are too different. ----------- |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Put yourself in the bully's shoes a minute. Would you be less likely to hassle someone if it could get you shot? Did you even read that link I posted above? They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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Specter Phoenix
Member #1,425
July 2001
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Arthur Kalliokoski said: Play an FPS while trying to be a pacifist and see what it gets you. The bully types (cops included) will come after you even faster IRL. That is easy to do in multiplayer FPS games, so it kind of blows your argument out of the water. I've played tons of games where players would just sit around letting the other teammates do the killing and normally their k:d counts were a lot lower than those of us that charged head first into finding the other team. I remember playing Modern Combat on PS3 one night where we had a player that didn't do anything (mainly because my team was laughing about his kill/death ratio compared to ours). We all had like 30+ kills/deaths while he had 2 kills and 5 deaths. Being a pacifist in a game has about the same results as real life, you will find some that shoot you just to shoot you and other confrontations you will avoid because they may not even see you sitting their. Also like real life, if you run into a confrontation you will have more damage (you will either kill/injure the attacker, they will over power you and kill/injure you, or a bystander will be hurt). Even police tell you not to fight back in those situation because they can go bad real fast. Being mugged twice and buying a gun is giving you a false sense of safety plain and simple. IRL if you are killed by a mugger, unless someone saw everything, the police will drag their feet finding the killer...even more so when the ballistics say it was your gun that killed you. On the other hand, if you do kill them, you get to have fun being roasted and potentially being tried for murder instead of self-defense. You are playing with fire, and by your remarks, not understanding the full magnitude of what could happen the next time you are mugged. [EDIT]
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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When you die, can I have your computer? They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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Specter Phoenix
Member #1,425
July 2001
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Arthur Kalliokoski said: When you die, can I have your computer? No, though, I should clarify, one of the .45s and one of the 9mm my father-in-law owns are mine. I don't get a sense of safety having them though so I never bothered with getting a permit. Though, I've been arguing the scenario of someone shooting you. We haven't even got into the issues of depression, uncontrolled rage, or accidental death by assuming it was empty and shooting yourself or someone. There are more scenarios of you being killed with your own gun than there is of you defending yourself with it successfully. Shooting at harmless targets is a lot easier than shooting a human being. It is normal, even after years of training with it, to hesitate which could result in you being overpowered. Soldiers even say that, "no matter how much training they have, it is nothing compared to when you have a real person down the barrel from you, you know they mean you kill you, but the human part of you makes you hesitate, which could cost you your life and possibly the life of your troop members."
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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My congenital cheapness keeps me from having a gun, but that doesn't mean I won't attack someone threatening me with one rather than depend on his mercy. Yes, that's already happened. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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