I would kill every one of you sons of bitches for a donut.The conclusion is (Guns/Amount of training) x (Cultural value of property/Cultural value of life) x Violence of culture should be kept at a low value.
How about those of us born from human parents?I would kill every one of you sons of bitches for a donut.
I think it's been pages and days since a female partook in this thread - if at all, my memory's a bit fuzzy going that far back. As for born from humans, I'll believe that when I believe that.How about those of us born from human parents?
*edit* and how 'bout the daughters of bitches, huh? SEXIST! Someone light the Charlie Symbol!
You're assuming most of us aren't female. Pictures can be faked. We're all jsut hiding our femininity because we're suppressed by the patriarchal society we live in. *cough*I think it's been pages and days since a female partook in this thread
The Libertarian Future - people killing each other for bite-sized morsels of something to eatI would kill every one of you sons of bitches for a donut.
I'll trade you 3 Howitzers, an Abrams and 5 ICBMs for a bowl of soup.The Libertarian Future - people killing each other for bite-sized morsels of something to eat
Actually, I'm fairly certain most of you would require more than one bite, and not leave room for the donut afterwards.The Libertarian Future - people killing each other for bite-sized morsels of something to eat
holy shit my dog-whistle just went off ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, monocultural values, .
*shrug*holy shit my dog-whistle just went off ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Certainly not monoethnic, but the cultural differences are highly exaggerated (also, Romansch are a poor example - there's so few of them, being one is a matter of national pride; it's sort of like being Native American without the recent history of genocide). 4 different national languages is a lot less interesting when 65% of the country speaks one of them as a primary, and every Swiss high school student learns at least two of the others in school as a matter of course since elementary.
Which means that, unlike your country Bubble, the Swiss won't spend most of the war wondering what the fuck their own leaders are saying.
I feel like this would also fulfill the "Well regulated militia" part too, so THAT argument can be put to rest once and for all. Make them undergo a week-long series of training classes (or something like that) to learn and get it drilled into their head. Then the certified instructor (who is licensed and bonded by the state/federal government) signs off on them if they don't act like fucking idiots. Give them a card/make note of it on their Driver's License. It wouldn't be a perfect system, but at least it help weed out the most idiotic, irresponsible, and mentally ill.So our general consensus is everyone should have a gun and be trained on its use?
So what you're saying is...the real problem is the French.But hey, all Flemish children still have to take 8 years of French class, so we understand them. The Wallonian children still have to choose between English and Dutch - can't blame them for taking English, really, but it does mean they don't understand us all that good. The German-speaking mostly speak French as their second language, too.
haven't we known that all along?So what you're saying is...the real problem is the French.
Oh, I think everyone should be trained, but not everyone should have one. That way the unworthy will gain caution and respect,So our general consensus sans the willfully ignorant is that everyone should have a gun and be trained on its use?
So you're saying we should throw people in prison for having a firearm they obtained legally? Banning firearms will mean only the criminals will have them then. When you get robbed by somebody with a firearm, you'll wish you had some effective means of defending yourself. "All they do is kill people"? That's like saying pencils give people bad grades and spoons make people fat.Guns have literally never done anything productive in human history. All they do is kill people or destroy things. Ban them all, put any gunowner in prison longer than every drug offender.
This thread can be the lightning rod for the political mess coming out of the Massacre in Aurora this morning.
No, not really. Without getting into the discussion at hand, that's what guns are designed to do, not a sideffect, unintended consequence or secondary use people give to them."All they do is kill people"? That's like saying pencils give people bad grades and spoons make people fat.
I thought we covered this already... I obviously don't support throwing every current gunowner in jail. That's the order. Ban them, allow some exchange program or something, some period of time for this whole deal to happen, THEN when its' clear they're illegal and people have had time and opportunity to get rid of their deadly weapons, then put them in jail if they persist.
That seems to be the case. Japan turns out to be one of the most restrictive, here's an excerpt from a really interesting article comparing the US with Japan in terms of gun culture:There are almost no countries on Earth (that I know of) where firearm ownership is outright banned.
Even the most basic framework of Japan's approach to gun ownership is almost the polar opposite of America's. U.S. gun law begins with the second amendment's affirmation of the "right of the people to keep and bear arms" and narrows it down from there. Japanese law, however, starts with the 1958 act stating that "No person shall possess a firearm or firearms or a sword or swords," later adding a few exceptions. In other words, American law is designed to enshrine access to guns, while Japan starts with the premise of forbidding it. The history of that is complicated, but it's worth noting that U.S. gun law has its roots in resistance to British gun restrictions, whereas some academic literature links the Japanese law to the national campaign to forcibly disarm the samurai, which may partially explain why the 1958 mentions firearms and swords side-by-side.
Of course, Japan and the U.S. are separated by a number of cultural and historical difference much wider than their gun policies. Kopel explains that, for whatever reason, Japanese tend to be more tolerant of the broad search and seizure police powers necessary to enforce the ban. "Japanese, both criminals and ordinary citizens, are much more willing than their American counterparts to consent to searches and to answer questions from the police," he writes. But even the police did not carry firearms themselves until, in 1946, the American occupation authority ordered them to. Now, Japanese police receive more hours of training than their American counterparts, are forbidden from carrying off-duty, and invest hours in studying martial arts in part because they "are expected to use [firearms] in only the rarest of circumstances," according to Kopel.
Headline from June 1st, 2012 (yes, two months ago) from the BBC: Venezuela Bans Private Gun OwnershipThere are almost no countries on Earth (that I know of) where firearm ownership is outright banned.
This true, but countries with strict gun control usually make it incredibly difficult and/or expensive for the average person, thus effectively banning firearms from the average person.There are almost no countries on Earth (that I know of) where firearm ownership is outright banned.
I'm not disputing that they primarily made to kill people, you failed to understand my point. By saying "they kill people" is like saying they have a mind of their own, they just get up and kill people, which is not true. It's like saying "spoons make people fat."No, not really. Without getting into the discussion at hand, that's what guns are designed to do, not a sideffect, unintended consequence or secondary use people give to them.
wut?People say a gun makes it easier to kill people. In the middle east they kill just as many people if not more with IED's and other crude explosives. So that argument is invalid.
A fork doesn't make it easier to eat ,because you can eat without a fork too. Yes, the circularity of the logic is stunning.wut?
Maybe I didn't elaborate enough. But this idea that a gun makes mass killings easier to do is not true, because in the middle east they kill more people with bombs in 1 attack than usually 1 person with a gun does.A fork doesn't make it easier to eat ,because you can eat without a fork too. Yes, the circularity of the logic is stunning.
Maybe I didn't elaborate enough. But this idea that a gun makes mass killings easier to do is not true, because in the middle east they kill more people with bombs in 1 attack than usually 1 person with a gun does.
I'll take a crack at it for you.Yeah, look, if you don't see the logical flaw in that argument, I'm not even going to try, I'm in a bad mood and I'm just going to be either snarky, condescending, or insulting, which isn't my intention. But believe me, that's a fallacy if ever I saw one.