Apes with Guns
Footballguy
which one?I am so tired of hearing about this delusional fantasy.
which one?I am so tired of hearing about this delusional fantasy.
At least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
I am allowed to drive a car without doors, they are called Jeeps. I am also allowed to drive a car without seatbelts. Many older/classic cars do not have them. A manual safety on a gun doesnt make it safer simply because it has the safety. That safety has to be used. My guess is that in this case it wouldnt have been used. In the case a months ago where the little boy shot his sister with a loaded rifle proped up in a corner that rifle had a safety and it either wasnt engaged or was switced off by the child.Are you allowed to drive a car without doors, breaks, and seat belts?Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
How is mandating the most elementary safety standard on a gun overreaching? Why are guns the only dangerous thing that seem to auto-immune from any attempt to make the things themselves safer? Why is this so readily dismissed?
Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
of course it would be tall odds, but if it ever got to this point, there wouldn't be an alternative. if it was enough to get me to pick up a gun and shoot someone to death, it wouldn't be a world I would want to live in, anyway.Even with the amount of guns in the US a citizens uprising would have to overcome tall odds if the military did not pick their side...Me? I don't personally feel that my government is ruled by tyrants.Do you consider spying oppressive? Or is it more physical oppression? Or denial of Habeas Corpus?Oppressive rule of government. I don't think the definition has changed. YWIA.Define tyranny in the 18th century and today. TIAI agree with you here. The reason gun ownership is an important right in America is to make sure that the government knows that if tyranny is taken too far, the people still have some means to change it.Obviously this makes a lot of sense.Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
The answer to your question, though, is that people are frustrated by these stories. They want to do something. The maddening thing about guns is that there is very few practical things that can be done. And the few reasonable proposals that exist are treated by NRA types as the beginning of a slippery slope that will result in a dictatorship. This is one of those issues where there doesn't seem to be too much common sense on either side.
I realize that might not be a popular opinion, but it is one that was recently reinforced to me after a discussion with a friend, and something I'd completely overlooked before.
But the spirit of my point isn't about what I feel. It's about what we feel. If we feel like the government is tyrannical, we can demand change. If they refuse, we will have some power to do something about it. At the very least, we won't have to beg the French for help, so there is that.
Frankly, I think this line of thinking is delusional and in the way of making progress on gun issues in general.
because that should have already been taken care of during voter registration.Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
How many people have died from accidental voting?Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
Relax there Chaka Kahn, i feel for you-feel for you.....How many people have died from accidental voting?Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
So that would be zero, right?Relax there Chaka Kahn, i feel for you-feel for you.....How many people have died from accidental voting?Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
I guess i could always google it, but im feeling a tad lazy today....So that would be zero, right?Relax there Chaka Kahn, i feel for you-feel for you.....How many people have died from accidental voting?Yes and suprisingly dont need any form of ID to vote lolAt least we require licensing of drivers and registration for cars.I've always wondered whether or not enough familiarity with a gun- handling it so frequently on a day to day basis- helps serve to break down the respect/fear you might start out with when dealing with a gun. Much like how we can come to take driving around a few thousand pounds of steel for granted.
Just because you can't solve for 100% of a problem doesn't mean you refuse to try and solve it.I am allowed to drive a car without doors, they are called Jeeps. I am also allowed to drive a car without seatbelts. Many older/classic cars do not have them. A manual safety on a gun doesnt make it safer simply because it has the safety. That safety has to be used. My guess is that in this case it wouldnt have been used. In the case a months ago where the little boy shot his sister with a loaded rifle proped up in a corner that rifle had a safety and it either wasnt engaged or was switced off by the child.Are you allowed to drive a car without doors, breaks, and seat belts?Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
How is mandating the most elementary safety standard on a gun overreaching? Why are guns the only dangerous thing that seem to auto-immune from any attempt to make the things themselves safer? Why is this so readily dismissed?
Uhm...yeah. But there's no problem to solve so why are you trying to fix it?Just because you can't solve for 100% of a problem doesn't mean you refuse to try and solve it.I am allowed to drive a car without doors, they are called Jeeps. I am also allowed to drive a car without seatbelts. Many older/classic cars do not have them. A manual safety on a gun doesnt make it safer simply because it has the safety. That safety has to be used. My guess is that in this case it wouldnt have been used. In the case a months ago where the little boy shot his sister with a loaded rifle proped up in a corner that rifle had a safety and it either wasnt engaged or was switced off by the child.Are you allowed to drive a car without doors, breaks, and seat belts?Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
How is mandating the most elementary safety standard on a gun overreaching? Why are guns the only dangerous thing that seem to auto-immune from any attempt to make the things themselves safer? Why is this so readily dismissed?
You are here posting in a thread about a 3 year old that shot herself and you don't think there's a problem to solve? Thousands of children killed accidentally by firearms every year is not a problem in your mind? WTF?Uhm...yeah. But there's no problem to solve so why are you trying to fix it?Just because you can't solve for 100% of a problem doesn't mean you refuse to try and solve it.I am allowed to drive a car without doors, they are called Jeeps. I am also allowed to drive a car without seatbelts. Many older/classic cars do not have them. A manual safety on a gun doesnt make it safer simply because it has the safety. That safety has to be used. My guess is that in this case it wouldnt have been used. In the case a months ago where the little boy shot his sister with a loaded rifle proped up in a corner that rifle had a safety and it either wasnt engaged or was switced off by the child.Are you allowed to drive a car without doors, breaks, and seat belts?Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
How is mandating the most elementary safety standard on a gun overreaching? Why are guns the only dangerous thing that seem to auto-immune from any attempt to make the things themselves safer? Why is this so readily dismissed?
My mistake. The problem is with the parent, not the gun.You are here posting in a thread about a 3 year old that shot herself and you don't think there's a problem to solve? Thousands of children killed accidentally by firearms every year is not a problem in your mind? WTF?Uhm...yeah. But there's no problem to solve so why are you trying to fix it?Just because you can't solve for 100% of a problem doesn't mean you refuse to try and solve it.I am allowed to drive a car without doors, they are called Jeeps. I am also allowed to drive a car without seatbelts. Many older/classic cars do not have them. A manual safety on a gun doesnt make it safer simply because it has the safety. That safety has to be used. My guess is that in this case it wouldnt have been used. In the case a months ago where the little boy shot his sister with a loaded rifle proped up in a corner that rifle had a safety and it either wasnt engaged or was switced off by the child.Are you allowed to drive a car without doors, breaks, and seat belts?Florida has a law requiring gun owners to keep their weapons in a locked box. This guy had no criminal history. This happened in his home. What exactly are people hoping for?
He was not following the law, which tends to happen in most killings. His gun didn't have a safety, but that's not illegal. Should it be? If Florida wants to make it so, good for them, I guess. But the idea that we should have a federal law that says someone with no criminal history is not allowed to <em>own</em> a gun that does not have a safety seems pretty overreaching. Aren't there better uses of Congress' time? Why in the world would this be a federal issue and not a state issue?
How is mandating the most elementary safety standard on a gun overreaching? Why are guns the only dangerous thing that seem to auto-immune from any attempt to make the things themselves safer? Why is this so readily dismissed?
Link?Clifford said:You are here posting in a thread about a 3 year old that shot herself and you don't think there's a problem to solve? Thousands of children killed accidentally by firearms every year is not a problem in your mind? WTF?
Go back and find it. Page 1.Link?Clifford said:You are here posting in a thread about a 3 year old that shot herself and you don't think there's a problem to solve? Thousands of children killed accidentally by firearms every year is not a problem in your mind? WTF?
I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
Link?Link?Clifford said:You are here posting in a thread about a 3 year old that shot herself and you don't think there's a problem to solve? Thousands of children killed accidentally by firearms every year is not a problem in your mind? WTF?
Kickstarter?Here is an article on the exact kind of safety feature I am proposing. It is already being used by campus police in at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9234905/Could_smart_gun_technology_make_us_safer_
Excerpt
NJIT is a leading, and early, developer of smart gun technology. For more than a dozen years, it has been testing a Dynamic Grip Recognition technology that Sebastian claims is 99% effective in preventing unauthorized use of a gun.
another
Development has been slow, however, because funding has lagged, with little interest so far from venture capitalists. In fact, current prototypes are based on 10-year-old microprocessors because of a lack of funds, Sebastian said.
Imagine what could be achieved with proper funding and new processors.
So Tim, Drifter, others, how impractical is this idea now?
thisCriminally negligent.And they should be called?These types of shootings shouldn't be called "accidental".
I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
Would you be in favor of raising taxes so that the cost of personalized handguns are not passed on to the consumer?I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
We can try to do two things, neither of which are ever even considered
1. Pursue technological advancement in guns that make it much more difficult for anyone other than the purchaser of the gun able to fire it, or
2. Pursue strategies to keep guns out of the hands of irresponsible people
safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
But that's gun control!safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
Why in the hell would "expensive feature" be allowed to have any bearing on device made to kill?What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
Civil Rights down?Why in the hell would "expensive feature" be allowed to have any bearing on device made to kill?What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
Just b/c people were complaining that there was no link. All links are to the CDC.In 2010, there were 31,672 firearm deaths.it's not 5 deaths per year...there are over 30,000 handgun deaths per year..that's not insignificant and not an anecdote. but lets keep doing what we're doing, it's working great.
Maybe buy backs, non-manditory, government funded..What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
That seems pretty reasonable to me.Maybe buy backs, non-manditory, government funded..What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
You can still own it. You are not guaranteed cheap goods or anything.Civil Rights down?Why in the hell would "expensive feature" be allowed to have any bearing on device made to kill?What about guns already manufactured?safeties should be mandatory for gun manufacturers. It's not an expensive feature..
Why even argue the point? safeties aren't expensive.. "what if they were expensive".. Well, they aren't, don't try to make an argument where we don't need one, we have plenty to argue about..
Pesky facts!Just b/c people were complaining that there was no link. All links are to the CDC.In 2010, there were 31,672 firearm deaths.it's not 5 deaths per year...there are over 30,000 handgun deaths per year..that's not insignificant and not an anecdote. but lets keep doing what we're doing, it's working great.
11,078 of those were homicides (of 16,259 total homicides).
The other 19,392 firearms deaths were suicides (of 38,364 total suicides).
I believe it will notI believe very strongly that universal background checks, and possibly universal registration, will reduce gun violence. As far as preventing accidents like this one, I don't see how to reasonably accomplish that.So you believe in something you don't believe exists? Or are you saying gun control laws are incapable of preventing accidents with guns?As I wrote earlier, I believe and promote reasonable gun control laws. In fact, some of the gun defenders in this forum seem to regard me, incorrectly, as the poster child for anti-gun around here. But I fail to see how any of this applies to this situation.The same logic would have prevented every advance in auto-safety because we can't stop accidents from happening.It's a silly and frankly irresponsible pov. The fact that we are so permissive when it comes to gun ownership means we have a responsibility to try anything and everything we can to limit the collateral damage of that stance.Look, we live in a society where people are free to own cars in their driveways, for better or worse. That means that these sort of car accidents are inevitable. If they were especially common, they wouldn't be news items. And there are no reasonable steps that we can take, IMO, to prevent them from happening.
You have to understand that guns are already very safe, and it's the owners's inability to practice safe techniques that leads to these unfortunate accidents. If this story was exactly the same, except the 3-year old fell on a knife left in the child's reach, it would be just as tragic. But most people keep knives out of the reach of children, and in a safe place. Should we make knives safer? Or should people just be more aware not to leave dangerous things where kids can easily get a hold of them?And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
In the UK, there are specific knife laws.. They cracked down on guns and knives.. At one point they were even toying with the idea of limiting the size of kitchen knives.You have to understand that guns are already very safe, and it's the owners's inability to practice safe techniques that leads to these unfortunate accidents. If this story was exactly the same, except the 3-year old fell on a knife left in the child's reach, it would be just as tragic. But most people keep knives out of the reach of children, and in a safe place. Should we make knives safer? Or should people just be more aware not to leave dangerous things where kids can easily get a hold of them?And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
If you don't have a problem with federally mandated safety standards such as childproof caps but do have a problem with federally mandated safety standards on guns to keep them from being fired by children, then I think you have a logical fallacy you need to examine and think about.I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
Hell no. Why should I be? Purchasers of the product can bear the cost for the safety feature, same as every other product on the market.Would you be in favor of raising taxes so that the cost of personalized handguns are not passed on to the consumer?I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
We can try to do two things, neither of which are ever even considered
1. Pursue technological advancement in guns that make it much more difficult for anyone other than the purchaser of the gun able to fire it, or
2. Pursue strategies to keep guns out of the hands of irresponsible people
How many children die each year because of falling on knives or similar knife accidents? What reasonable safety standard could be implemented on a knife that would make them safer?You have to understand that guns are already very safe, and it's the owners's inability to practice safe techniques that leads to these unfortunate accidents. If this story was exactly the same, except the 3-year old fell on a knife left in the child's reach, it would be just as tragic. But most people keep knives out of the reach of children, and in a safe place. Should we make knives safer? Or should people just be more aware not to leave dangerous things where kids can easily get a hold of them?And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
As far as I know, the FDA doesn't regulate guns.If you don't have a problem with federally mandated safety standards such as childproof caps but do have a problem with federally mandated safety standards on guns to keep them from being fired by children, then I think you have a logical fallacy you need to examine and think about.I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
Because in my scenario, the options are "no change in the law" or "require personalized handguns but taxes must be raised to cover the full cost." If you believe "something must be done to stop this" then I would assume you would have picked the latter, but that's why I asked the question.Hell no. Why should I be? Purchasers of the product can bear the cost for the safety feature, same as every other product on the market.Would you be in favor of raising taxes so that the cost of personalized handguns are not passed on to the consumer?I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
We can try to do two things, neither of which are ever even considered
1. Pursue technological advancement in guns that make it much more difficult for anyone other than the purchaser of the gun able to fire it, or
2. Pursue strategies to keep guns out of the hands of irresponsible people
Bull#### sidestep.As far as I know, the FDA doesn't regulate guns.If you don't have a problem with federally mandated safety standards such as childproof caps but do have a problem with federally mandated safety standards on guns to keep them from being fired by children, then I think you have a logical fallacy you need to examine and think about.I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.
Do you think we should all be paying taxes for airbags and crash tests? If you don't you're being intellectually dishonest here. Your scenario is bs.Because in my scenario, the options are "no change in the law" or "require personalized handguns but taxes must be raised to cover the full cost." If you believe "something must be done to stop this" then I would assume you would have picked the latter, but that's why I asked the question.Hell no. Why should I be? Purchasers of the product can bear the cost for the safety feature, same as every other product on the market.Would you be in favor of raising taxes so that the cost of personalized handguns are not passed on to the consumer?I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
We can try to do two things, neither of which are ever even considered
1. Pursue technological advancement in guns that make it much more difficult for anyone other than the purchaser of the gun able to fire it, or
2. Pursue strategies to keep guns out of the hands of irresponsible people
Do you think we should all be paying taxes for airbags and crash tests? If you don't you're being intellectually dishonest here. Your scenario is bs.Because in my scenario, the options are "no change in the law" or "require personalized handguns but taxes must be raised to cover the full cost." If you believe "something must be done to stop this" then I would assume you would have picked the latter, but that's why I asked the question.Hell no. Why should I be? Purchasers of the product can bear the cost for the safety feature, same as every other product on the market.Would you be in favor of raising taxes so that the cost of personalized handguns are not passed on to the consumer?I am not suggesting we can change behavior. Or that current attempts to change behavior are even successful.Clifford I agree with you that if we can do something that makes sense, then we should. I also agree 100% that this tyranny talk is nonsensical and it makes the pro-gun types sound much more crazy than they actually are.
But I just think that most of your proposals are not only impractical, they won't achieve the goal you desire, which is less accidental gun deaths. We can't force people to use the weapons safely. Some people are always going to be stupid.
We can try to do two things, neither of which are ever even considered
1. Pursue technological advancement in guns that make it much more difficult for anyone other than the purchaser of the gun able to fire it, or
2. Pursue strategies to keep guns out of the hands of irresponsible people
Probably 85% of the handguns in America don't have safeties that need to be disengaged to fire. They are virtually unheard of on revolvers, which are commonly recommended to new shooters. Many law enforcement agencies deliberately avoid them, with some of the larger ones being able to get manufactures to change designs to remove them.I would not purchase a gun that didn't have a safety on it. I think the vast majority of folks who buy guns should buy guns with safeties on it. But I don't think it should be a federal crime for someone to own a gun without a safety on it. There's an enormous amount of things that I wouldn't do, and that I would advise someone not to do, that shouldn't be a federal crime.And since you can't place federally mandated safety standards on people, wouldn't it make more sense to put them on guns?
What floors me, again and again in this discussion we have had a billion times, is the absolute refusal from some to even consider any effort at all to make the guns themselves safer. Even my brother in law, who owns tons of guns, and is very responsible in using, caring for, and storing them, wants to see guns themselves made safer, specifically for this type of scenario.
For Chase to suggest that even having safeties be standard equipment on guns is an overreach, yet there is a slew of products far less deadly than guns that have far more of both user-behavior and in-product safety measures, to me highlights a complete failure of logic when guns are concerned.
I used the car analogy but just about anything would work: imagine someone stating that our government mandating that cleaning chemicals have to have child-proof caps being a massive overreach of federal power, and that it should be a states right issue at best. It would be laughed off the page as ludicrous. Yet you say guns shouldn't be forced to have safeties, and suggesting otherwise is what is viewed as ludicrous, because we expect people to be completely, 100% responsible.
Furthermore, there are a slew of people who will reference one or two incidents where a child got past the child-proof cap, and instead of suggesting that the child-proofing be improved, they suggest that child-proofing is a pointless exercise.