(12-16-2012, 07:43 PM)arnie Wrote: So far,I am somewhat disappointed with the replies because nobody answered my 2 questions I posted (satisfyingly). Neither has any of the replies so far acknowledged that a shooting like last is too high a price to pay for the so called right to bear arms. Unless and until we can acknowledge that it is too high a price to pay can a dialogue be fruitful. If we do not acknowledge that, then one has to draw the logical conclusion that one agrees that it is a justifiable and acceptable price to pay (and that it was just an event that can be justified with a shoulder shrug and "move along nothing to see here"). It is therefore a basic philosophical premiss and requirement that needs to be fulfilled to be able to move forward in a constructive dialogue that tries to identify what aspects of the current gun ownership law(s) require to be changed.
Alright, I tried to remain out of this discussion, but I can't.
Respectfully, Arnie (you know I love ya!), I think the logic you present above is based on a presupposition that needs to be examined
before we can accept your conclusions.
The presupposition that you've accepted without question -- and drawn your entire conclusion from -- is where the discussion needs to start. And the underpinning philosophy/presupposition that comes before your argument is:
"Guns are pointless and serve no purpose, therefore every death that occurs by a gun is pointless and could have been prevented."
And thus the whole argument, at its core, goes back to whether one believes guns serve a useful purpose or not.
There's where the meat of the debate is: do guns serve a purpose? Because if they don't, then every death by gun
is pointless -- much the way every death by alcohol is pointless.
But if they
do serve a purpose, then what we are willing to accept in terms of loss is much different -- and that point is easy to illustrate, by using cars as an example. Nearly 40,000 Americans are killed in car wrecks each year -- but because we view cars as serving a purpose, you don't hear cries of: "Another life lost pointlessly in a car wreck! WHEN WILL WE COME TO OUR SENSES AND BAN THESE DANGEROUS MACHINES???"
Gun deaths pale in comparison, so we know that objection to guns is not really about the loss of life -- it's about whether we feel the losses outweigh the gains and vice-versa.
And that, my friend, is partially a philosophical question. At its deepest, it challenges my rights as an individual to protect myself and my family -- and therefore the answer to that question should not be presupposed and skipped over.
The opposing philosophy to that presupposition says:
"Guns serve a purpose as a tool for self-protection, for protection of others, and for hunting. Unfortunately, most tools have some inherent danger if abused -- but there is simply no solution for this, because the problem
isn't in the tool itself, the problem is in the individual who wields the tool."
And, in fact, the very same deranged individuals who use guns to kill are part of the reason that many "sane" individuals want guns to remain legal. The logic is simple: a madman isn't going to "live and let live" simply because he doesn't own a gun. If he can't find a gun, he'll use a knife. If he can't find a knife, he'll use a rock. Or he'll poison bottles of Tylenol, or lure kids into his basement, or he'll build mail-bombs... or any of a million other ways crazy people inflict harm.
You're not going to stop him by banning guns, because his intention is to hurt or kill others. The tool he uses is secondary to that intention.
But, by banning guns, you
will make him harder for other people to stop.
Will gun laws stop someone from killing? Well, we've already got laws against murder... and usually these laws carry the harshest penalties we can imagine. So the answer is: no, gun laws will not stop criminals from killing. Gun laws are completely and utterly pointless as a deterrent to gun crime, we know that with simple logic. Someone who's going to kill someone else is, by definition, NOT CONCERNED WITH THE LAWS. This seems self-explanatory.
However, by passing laws against guns, you do keep the sane people (the law-abiding people) from protecting themselves against the crazies
who don't play by the rules anyway.
To boil it all down: Each year, a number of people are beaten to death with hammers. Yet, no one is out parading for a "Hammer-Free America." That's because even people who don't own hammers can see they serve a useful purpose.
People who see the purpose served by guns don't want them banned (and people who see no point in passing laws against guns when we've
already got laws against murder don't want guns banned).
People who see no purpose in guns
do want them banned.
So... that's where I think the true debate lies: do guns serve a purpose, or not?