ballz said:You're calling me ILLOGICAL and yet you're comparing a smoke detector to a firearm? The last time I checked, none of those things were meant to be lethal weapons, and very efficient lethal weapons at that. The only way a smoke detector ever killed anybody was if the batteries were dead...
They are all safety implements, specific to the circumstances for which they were designed.
A firearms would be valueless in a housefire, however, just as a fire extinguisher would be valueless in a self-defence situation.
If you have the misfortune to be attacked, the most effective means of assuring that you come through alive and unscathed is to have and use a firearm.
"Use" does not necessarily mean fire, however. In most self-defence situations, simply displaying a firearm is enough to discourage an attacker and send them looking for easier prey - like Lieberal and NDP supporters.
The fact is that firearms are merely tools. Like anything, they can be misused and abused for criminal purposes, but in the hands of trained, law-abiding citizens be they police, military, or civilians, they can be lifesavers.
And that is why the police carry them.
Police are not imbued with magical powers, however - and neither are we in the Armed forces - so I do not see why you differentiate between these two groups and ordinary citizens screened and trained to a suitable standard, the one that I suggested being the RCMP fireaarms training programme. Police, military, and civilians are all bound by the same laws. Trained to the same standard, they are all equally effective and safe in a defensive situation. The difference is that there are very few police and military around, even if we were permitted to carry concealed, and we are not responsible for your safety, morally or legally.
The only people guaranteed to be present during a criminal attack are the predator and prey, the thug and you. The criminal will have armed himself as he wishes. You are prevented by law. Who is likely to win? If you feel comfortable in such a situation, fine. Your choice. Others do not.
Do you think that there is something wrong with civilians, ttrained to the RCMP standard, being granted the means to exercise their "right to life, liberty and security of the person"?
If so, what exactly is it, and why?
Again, I point out that the very citizens that you seem to fear are already in possession of far more firearms than all of the police and military personnel in this country, yet they commit virtually no crime despite having the means to do so. There is no bar to them taking their firearms out of their houses for any reason, except their tendency to follow the law, no matter how ridiculous it may be. Granting them permits to carry concealed after appropriate training - such as the RCMP standard - is not going to make them more dangerous, is it?
Credible research in the US proves this: every state in the US that has adopted "shall-issue" concealed carry laws has seen significant drops in all categories of violent crime. The deterrent value of a relatively small number of armed citizens is tremendous, as criminals can never know who is carrying and who is not. They do not like that uncertainty. Concealed-carry permit holders shoot more criminals per capita than do the police, as they are present during crimes while police are not and they generally spend far more time on the range, and they shoot far fewer innocent bystanders per capita than do the police, because they have more time to assess a situation and determine who an assailant is, and also because they spend far more time on the range. They are also less likely to be arrested for and convicted of crimes than police are, as they are unscrupulously law-abiding. In most states, any infraction, even non-firearms-related ones, will cost them their permit.
ballz said:I don't know why suicide is getting brought into this.
Because it is another side of the same coin.
ballz said:You're right, guns have no effect on suicide.
Thank-you.
ballz said:If someone wants to do themselves in, they could use almost anything.
And by extension, should they wish to do somebody else in, they could use almost anything else as well.
ballz said:But what about MASS MURDER, since that's what this topic is about....
Car driven into a crowd and high speed. Home-made explosives (Oaklahoma City). Fire (Bluebird cafe in Montreal, Canada's worst mass murder committed purely on Canadian soil)...
Society has developed such an unreasonable and unhealthy fear of firearms over other equally effective means of mass murder that the mental defectives responsible overwhelmingly choose firearms as they know that they will garner more headlines and notoriety.
And mass-murder is merely a variation on a theme.
Serial killers are just as dangerous.
But back to the mass-variety...
Gamil Gharbi (Marc Lepine's real name) could just as easily have hidden in a women's washroom and bashed in heads as they entered one or two at a time.
A significant fact in mass-murder incidents is that the killers specifically select locations where they know that large numbers of defenceless victims will be gathered: schools (US-federally mandated "gun-free" - except for the murderer's of course - zones), US Postal facilities ("gun-free" zones), and malls and other businesses in the US displaying "gun-free" zone signs. Areas with high rates of gun possession are relatively immune - police stations, gun shows and gun shops, ranges etcetera. Mass murderers tend to kill themselves when confronted by armed resistance, especially when wounded. Immediate armed response is the only means of limiting casualties in a mass-murder incident where the killer is shooting.
In the absence of such a a response, large numbers of casualties are guaranteed. The only deciding factor in that number is the killer himself. We have been most fortunate that all such murderers who have not been stopped by armed resistance have stopped shooting and killed themselves before they ran out of ammunition or we'd have seen cases with hundreds dead. Perhaps their trigger fingers grew tired. We'll never know, but sooner or later one is going to be more persistent.
ballz said:Does Canada's (not sure of your nationality but this is "Canadian Politics") constitution outline a "right" to bear arms? I just read it, and can't find anything of the sort.
That is a defect in the Charter.
It does not eliminate that right either, though. It is just too vague and open to interpretation.
ballz said:but if you or anybody else carrying a gun has the potential to endanger myself or anybody else, then the Charter of Right's and Freedoms is made to protect US against THEM and not the other way around.
It does not do that.
Neither do laws which prohibit rape, robbery, and murder.
The only method of protecting "US" against "THEM" - and by "THEM", I mean the real threat, you know, the ones who ignore prohibitions against rape, robbery, and murder as well as idiotic "gun control" laws - is by being at least as well armed and constantly aware of one's surroundings. Expecting the "law" to protect you is naive and unrealistic.
In any case, the Charter is there to limit government interference in the rights of citizens. You might want to study it a bit further before misusing it.
ballz said:No, no it is not any less of a crime... But if someone randomly stabs a baby in the head, a gun probably couldn't have prevented it either.
Firstly, guns themselves do not protect. Humans with guns protect. But, as you say, there are no guarantees - just as there are no guarantees that fire extinguishers, smoke detectors, and sprinklers will guarantee that nobody's house will not burn down or that they will not die in such a fire. Those other safety devices will, however, reduce the likelihood of such things happening, and reduce the overall losses.
In a mass-murder situation, immediate armed response is the ONLY way of limiting casualties.
ballz said:And sure, it would be nice to be able to pop that guy off right there in the middle of the street if he killed your kid, no doubt,
It would be highly illegal. You have the lawful authority to use up to deadly force to protect yourself and others, and this is clearly defined, but not to use it in revenge. If the act is in progress, you may use it; once it's over, you may not. You may arrest the attacker, and you may use force to do so, and again this is clearly defined.
ballz said:All these "one kill" scenarios are null and void...
The evidence is against you. Thousands of people successfully defend themselves against criminal attack annually across North America, usually without firing a shot (which is why you never hearing about these cases: "Rapist Ran Away" is less of an attractive headline for newspapers as "Woman Raped and Shot; in both cases a firearm is used, but guns get blamed for crime purely because of the second incident).
ballz said:If I have a gun, I'm not any safer if I'm the specific target.
Yes, you are, because of the deterrent value (most criminals like to avoid death and injury as much as anybody) and because of your ability to use it effectively. Again, this does not give a guarantee, but it ups the odds in your favour.
ballz said:If someone has a knife, and they want to kill me and me only, then the gun isn't going to save me.
No, it won't - ever. It has no autonomous capability. Your effective use of it, or the deterrent value provided by that, could quite likely however.
ballz said:I'll be bleeding out of 5 or 6 stab wounds in my back long before I get a grasp on my gun.
Presuming, of course, that you are attacked from behind and this attack remains undetected until it is too late. Not all atacks conform to that scenario. You are narrowly limiting the nature of such things in a vain attempt to bolster an indefensible position.
ballz said:This whole firearm stuff is only related to mass murders, since that's what guns allow for over knives and bats and stuff.
No, it isn't, or else the police would have no justification for carrying firearms given the extremely low statistical probability of their ever being confronted with a mass-murder situation.
ballz said:Would a firearm, in the hands of a properly trained individual such as many of you on here, being on hand when somebody goes postal be able to neutralize them and save a few lives? Yes, absolutely.
Then why are you arguing to limit that capability to react effectively and save lives?
You are not only illogical and ignorant of fact, but inconsistent.
ballz said:Would making more firearms available and more accessible to the general population for these reasons, probably cause more of these incidents that require some...intervention? In my
opinion, yes.
Your opinion is not based upon fact and evidence, and is therefore of no value.
Such opinion forms no valid reason or justification for public policy.
ballz said:Look I didn't read the 7 pages prior for the reason that
You prefer to operate from a position of ignorance.
Did you view the links that I provided?
ballz said:I've had the firearms discussion with so many people on so many occassions on another site I'm sick of it.
Then why are you arguing about it here?
I am re-evaluating the evidence being presented for a "crazy" assessment.
ballz said:I've seen the facts and stats for both sides, I've heard the arguments for both sides
Apparently not, or at least not enough, or expended insufficient effort to properly evaluate them.
ballz said:IMO making guns available to the general public is not going to make anybody any safer.
They are already available to the general public. There are, based upon reliable estimates, about five million Canadian citizens who own firearms yet do not shoot up schools, malls, and Jane-Finch neighbourhoods, and collectively they own fifteen to twenty million firearms with which they do not shoot up schools, malls, and Jane-Finch neighbourhoods.
ballz said:In the hands of our off-garrison personnel, off-duty RCMP, absolutely it would make the general public safer.
Why? What magical powers do we possess?