So your perception that this is all on the up and up should be blindly accepted by everyone else. I see what you're saying. You're the voice that matters, because you're a . . . safe gun owner? Defining assault weapon or assault rifle are not relevant to the argument. It's a way to mislead the person you're arguing against into believing that they don't have all the facts, that their argument is wrong. It's coercive. The only difference between an M-16 and AR-15 is the name--public perception. That's what matters to you in this argument, not that both of them will put a round through someone's head just as easily as the other. That's the underlying truth of this argument that you're avoiding.
There is no reason for it. None at all.Of course I was speaking in terms of general gun ownership or self defense use. I don't know why they'd be carrying at the House of Representatives either, I'm guessing laws there are different, because where I live it would be illegal and not allowed.
I thought I had made my position on that clearer. I'm not against concealed carry. I'm against citizens carrying unsafe firearms in public. I'll guess you don't put a trigger lock on your piece when you're out and about? I don't see locks on the weapons in the photograph. That makes it unsafe to the public in its vicinity. How? Anyone can take that weapon from you, and use it.Obviously, you seem to be against concealed carry. For the record I have a concealed carry permit and do indeed carry most of the time when I'm out. The only time I don't carry is when I know I'm going to a gun-free area. You said earlier (basically) that you feel a good guy with a concealed gun is just as dangerous as a bad guy with a concealed gun. We're just going to have to agree to disagree on that. I have a feeling nothing I say will change your mind on that, and I know knowing anyone says will change my mind.
With equal force. That's all. If someone tries to throw a punch at you, you throw one at them. Someone has a stick, you ok to have a stick. But if someone threatens you with a stick, are you saying it's ok to pull out your gun and shoot them? Because that's what it sounds like.Do you think a person has the right to defend themselves if they are attacked or threatened? I'm not specifically talking with a gun, could be your fist, a stick, or a knife.
Short answer no. Long answer, no I do not.Is it OK for someone to defend their life with a gun?
Should that gun be allowed for defense only when the person is at home?
What if a woman coming out of that local grocery store is grabbed in the parking lot, pulled into a van, where the bad guy tries to rape her?
Should she tell the rapist "please take me home so I can get my gun to defend myself" or should she pull out her concealed handgun and blow this scumbag's brains out?
What if a woman coming out of a local grocery store is followed through the parking lot, by a man. He follows her right to her driver's side door, she thinks he's reaching to grab her, drops her groceries, pulls out her piece, and shoots him. He dies because he parked beside her, and was putting his groceries on the front seat. She should tell his wife and kids, oh I'm so sorry, but I was certain he was about to attack me, and rape me. No, I don't think the average citizen really has the capacity to assess situations in moments of high stress with clear and rational thought. I really don't think most cops are able to. But I feel a lot safe around someone who has been professionally trained to deal with the stressful situations that you're choosing to exemplify.
So, your information is based on statistics from fellow gun advocates. Right.My source was primarily the link I posted (which notates the original sources of the info provided). I also got some of it from "NRA News Cam & Co" TV show and "Guntalk Radio" & "Downrange Radio" podcasts.
Again, I thought this was more clear. I'm not denying your right to OWN a gun. I believe every home should have a hunting rifle or a bow. What I don't advocate is citizens owning weapons that are easily converted to fully automatics. If these weapons weren't available to the general public, they wouldn't be on the streets in the hands of gang members, and criminals. That's a fact. I grew up around guns, I'm not a stranger to the world, and I'm not uneducated about firearms. I don't believe there is a need for semi-automatics to be made available to the general public.I wasn't trying to be snarky or an asshole either by asking the same question. I legitimately don't understand why someone else's right to NOT own a gun, if they choose, should override my right to own one. No one is being forced to own a gun if they don't want to. I have never heard of a pro-gun person or group trying to force someone to own a gun against their will. However, almost every anti-gunner tries to completely disarm legal gun owners against their will.
I'm not an "anti-gunner" as you call it. I'm against any average citizen carrying a weapon to an area where there isn't a firing range. I'm against any asshole walking past my kid's school with a pistol in the small of his back, or a rifle slung over his shoulder. I'm against any citizen taking a firearm into a building where the officials that I elect are trying to run my city, province, state, or country. That should be completely clear now.
Speculative based on personal and obvious political bias. But that's fine.That wasn't what I was saying exactly, but they do often report stories from a slanted perspective or edit footage to give the story a totally different meaning. I can think of 2 specific stories in the last couple weeks. I'll have to find those later for you, I've got to get to sleep for now.
CNN is just as bad as MSNBC if not worse. I don't watch any of the mainstream news programs as I don't trust them to be unbiased.
I've said all I'm saying on the matter. Feel free to carry on the great gun debate, as people have since the birth of black powder.
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