10/15/2008 9:25:14 PM
10/15/2008 9:49:18 PM
It's a bullet. It's not a car, which can in one circumstance be used for good and in another be driven over someone. A bullet's entire purpose is to destroy something, whether it be a deer, a human, or a helicopter.
10/15/2008 10:06:57 PM
And legally, morally, there are times people need to be destroyed. Particularly, when they are attempting to destroy me.
10/15/2008 10:27:36 PM
Yeah, but you don't need a bullet that will rip someone's body in half and can hit targets over a mile away to kill a burglar in your home.
10/15/2008 10:39:36 PM
Again, your perception of my "need" is irrelevant when you're talking about something that has, to my knowledge, never been used in a criminal act by a private citizen.The prohibition of the .50 BMG is just phase one in an overall plan to eliminate firearms. You start with the least popular and work your way down in incremental levels until you wind up like Great Britain, which, despite very strict gun control laws, has (according to the International Crime Victims Survey compiled by the Leiden University in Holland) significantly higher rates of violent crime than the United States.
10/15/2008 10:55:03 PM
So, I'm guessing you don't feel ANY firearms need to be eliminated?At least, none that haven't been used in any criminal act by a citizen, right?You do realize there's probably thousands of military weapons that haven't been used in a criminal act by a citizen. Do you want these all to be freely available for purchase?
10/15/2008 11:59:05 PM
[Edited on October 16, 2008 at 12:28 AM. Reason :
10/16/2008 12:27:10 AM
Sure, it's a slippery slope, but there has to be a limit on what is available to the average joe, you would agree, right?Or do you think banning anything is a slippery slope?In fact, let's give everyone machine guns. Slippery slopes!
10/16/2008 8:51:56 AM
Out of all the issues, gun control seems like a very minor one this time around.
10/16/2008 9:18:37 AM
10/16/2008 9:26:59 AM
You're going to need a lot more than a damn pistol to overthrow the government, that's for certain. US soldiers have already become highly resistant to bullets. That trend will only continue. Armor will improve and improve. Drones will become more and more common.Maybe each of us could use a rocket launcher. (Good luck getting past the point-defense lasers.)[Edited on October 16, 2008 at 9:58 AM. Reason : use]
10/16/2008 9:49:35 AM
10/16/2008 9:52:37 AM
It's like that episode of South Park, with Family Guy and the manatees. If you take one episode off the air, the whole show gets canceled
10/16/2008 9:54:48 AM
Seriously, I think technology will make the prospect of popular military revolution increasingly dubious. We're quickly approaching the point where dudes with guns no longer pose a significant threat.
10/16/2008 9:57:36 AM
Look, I personally would love to ban all firearms. But it wouldn't make me any safer. I live in DC, where the gun ban was just lifted, but before that, it was incredibly easy to get a weapon. There are just as many shootings as there were before...no difference really.People are going to continue to go in circles on this debate, purely because there really doesnt seem to be a happy medium that exists on this issue. Certainly one of the hot-button issues that most people are on one side or the other.
10/16/2008 10:06:47 AM
OMFTechnocracy!---If you live in most major cities you don't need a car. In fact, due to the absence of parking and the heaviness of traffic, you really have no practical use for a car. You can ride the bus, cab, or subway to your destination. Because cars are dangerous and have no practical private civilian use in large cities, we should ban them.Fast food has a practical use, sure, but there are many substitutes for it that are far less dangerous. 451,326 people died of heart disease in 2004, compared to 29,569 people killed by guns the same year. So let's ban dangerous fast food and junk food and make everybody eat fruits and salads instead, because those are just as useful.Jet-skis serve absolutely no practical use. They, like most guns, are used exclusively for recreation. They're dangerous, even more so than regular boats, which should probably also be banned for most of the public who have no practical use for them and which are involved in a number of deaths each year. Also, boats are commonly used to facilitate crimes, such as drug smuggling. So let's ban boats for common civilian use. Special licenses for professional fishermen, but only if they complete an elaborate safety course.Booze. Oh, hell, booze. What possible practical use does it have? All it does is impair your health or just kill you. 16,919 died in alcohol-related car crashes in 2004. And that's just the car crashes. It doesn't include the chronic alcoholics whose organs just failed. It doesn't include the alcohol poisonings or the, "Hey guys, watch this!" incidents.I think cigarettes speak for themselves. Skydiving, bungee jumping, and roller coasters also leap to mind. And so on, and so on, and so on. These two things are not criteria for banning something:1) It doesn't have a practical civilian use, and2) It's dangerous
10/16/2008 2:43:35 PM
Let me know one reason a citizen should be allowed to own one of these: Because they use, for ammunition, the bullets that JCASHFAN was so vehemently against banning.
10/16/2008 2:53:47 PM
gun nuts are so annoying...almost as annoying as religious nuts
10/16/2008 2:58:40 PM
10/16/2008 3:10:52 PM
Yeah, it can pierce the walls of most buildings and through level 8 body armor (which is the strongest in existence).
10/16/2008 3:20:17 PM
^^ That would probably work well for assassinating Obama too, I bet.note to secret service: In no way do I endorse assassinating Obama, i'm voting for the guy, it is supposed to be a slightly tasteless, tounge-in-cheek joke.[Edited on October 16, 2008 at 3:28 PM. Reason : ]
10/16/2008 3:27:49 PM
10/16/2008 3:30:43 PM
10/16/2008 3:36:30 PM
True^
10/16/2008 3:41:31 PM
10/16/2008 4:18:38 PM
How many criminals have used nuclear weapons hidden in suitcases to kill people?Should we restrict them?
10/16/2008 8:28:06 PM
Let me know one reason a citizen should be allowed to own one of these: I mean these things go 200 mph, when the fastest anyone should go is around 70.People who own these are liable to crash and die, and probably take a bus load of kids with them. They need to be banned.
10/17/2008 12:38:32 AM
The man's right. There is no reason you should be allowed to own a car that goes more than 85 miles an hour, since that is the maximum speed limit in most states. We'll say 100 on the outside. 100 pretty much sets the high-end for "reasonable and prudent" laws in a lot of states. Plus, those things hog gas, which makes us pay more money to terrorists who just use it to buy the guns you want to ban for the express purpose of shooting us.
10/17/2008 3:26:37 AM
Yeah, the UFP will fix everything--just like the UN did on Earth. Hey, wait. . . .
10/17/2008 3:34:30 AM
AndyMac, your analogy is flawed because that same analogy can be made with almost any solid object."I can use this spoon to kill someone, therefore.."The fact is, long range sniper rifles have one purpose, and that is to deliver large and incredibly lethal bullets over extremely long distances.They can't be used to take a pregnant woman to a hospital, like the vehicle you just mentioned.They can't be used to serve food to her during recovery, like the spoon I just mentioned.
10/17/2008 8:31:06 AM
All the legal purposes that the car I mentioned can serve can also be done by slower cars.The ONLY reason to own that car over a cheaper car is to do something which is illegal anyway.You're not talking about banning all guns, you're talking about banning only the ones which have uses way outside the normal legal purposes. Well, I'm not talking about banning all cars, only the ones that go over 150 MPH, which is way outside the normal legal purposes.
10/17/2008 9:39:11 AM
That's fine with me.In fact, that's why most cars are electronically limited to go only about 140mph in the United States.
10/17/2008 11:55:44 AM
10/17/2008 1:52:21 PM
True, but then when someone blows, literally, the head clear off Barack Hussein during his commencement speech, in addition to killing Michelle because the bullet is so fucking huge, and the person is in another borough a mile away, people will want to know why something like that is purchasable by citizens.Just because your kid has never drank detergent doesn't mean you should leave it in the middle of the floor.
10/17/2008 2:05:06 PM
If something like that ever happens, I bet the weapon in question would be banned. We all would draw the line somewhere. I don't approve of state force, but I wouldn't want my neighbor to have a nuclear bomb. Unfortunately, the wonderful government has hundreds of nukes within a few miles of where I stay. (If World War III ever starts, I'm toast.)
10/17/2008 2:28:20 PM
10/17/2008 4:21:14 PM
^ Doesn't that sort of invalidate your point by showing that presidential execution is possible without spending a few grand on a weapon that would require considerable skill to use effectively at ranges beyond that of a cheaper, more commonly available gun. Why ban a rare gun in fear of a rare circumstance when it's much more likely a common hunting rifle would be used in said rare circumstance?
10/17/2008 5:53:27 PM
The fact that cheaper, more widely available, more portable, and more concealable weapons could be used towards the same reprehensible end means that their use would be signifcantly more probable. It's not to say that the 50 cal sniper rifle wouldn't offer certain advantages, but since owning a .50 cal wouldn't predispose one to assassinating the president then the most probable weapon used in such an act would be the most probably found high power rifle. Since something like the Remington model 700 would be vastly more likely to be in the hands of a crazed assassin, and political shootings haven't made high powered rifles or handguns banned so far, I wouldn't worry so much about that.What I would worry about is the justifiable but inevitably misdirected rage that would come from the black community. I would not want to be driving in a black part of town with even the tiniest confederate flag bumper sticker or even a mccain/palin sticker on such a day. So, if you're white and you hear someone talk about wanting to kill or harm Obama- strangle said person for your own safety.
10/18/2008 3:59:57 AM
Does anyone seriously think civilians should be able to able to own tanks?
10/18/2008 11:37:31 AM
Yeah, there are some people who believe that for the American people to properly defend themselves against the government's abuse of power that we should be able to own almost any weapon that the government could bring against us if it chose. Also, the question is very different if you mean an M1A2 with fully working weapons or a WWI or WWII tank with cemented cannons. What WWII buff wouldn't want to own a drivable panzer, and how dangerous would it be if they drove it on private property? It's still a nasty weapon without the main gun- you might remember a news clip of a guy in CA stealing one from an armory and terrorizing police and drivers for hours before finally getting stuck on a concrete divider.[Edited on October 18, 2008 at 11:57 AM. Reason : dyslexia strikes fascist and hippy alike ]
10/18/2008 11:46:14 AM
It's M1A2, hippy.
10/18/2008 11:50:31 AM
I don't necessarily oppose that, but I've never heard anyone demanding tanks. I agree there's a big difference between armed and unarmed tanks. I was thinking about that main gun shooting projectiles with ten megajoules of kinetic energy. That's the same as a small car going over two hundred miles per hour.[Edited on October 18, 2008 at 11:59 AM. Reason : get it right or pay the price]
10/18/2008 11:56:40 AM
There's a huge spectrum; tanks are towards the extreme end. Things that are just on the edge and actually debated include assault rifles, the .50 cal as mentioned, 20mm sniper rifles (about 100 cal), armor piercing bullets, sub machine guns, etc.Anyways, I think we generally agree- at least that the lethality and potential harm caused by a weapon is a valid concern when discussing its legality. I was arguing with people making the car analogy- those that suggest that the increased lethality of large caliber rifles is similar to the increased lethality of a powerful/large vehicle. That's just silly.I think I'm hijacking this thread so I'll stop.[Edited on October 18, 2008 at 12:02 PM. Reason : ]
10/18/2008 11:58:51 AM
10/18/2008 12:57:16 PM
There are many reasons we struggle in Iraq.A lack of military strength isn't one of them.
10/18/2008 1:04:30 PM
^So basically you didn't read the post at all? I was pointing out that no matter how powerful the military is a group of rebels with homemade bombs can cause serious fucking havoc if they have the will. [Edited on October 18, 2008 at 1:14 PM. Reason : a]
10/18/2008 1:12:52 PM
Do you what happens to Iraqi and Afghani insurgents who engage US soldiers with small arms? They commonly all die. They might as well be suicide bombers. That's not what I'm looking for in guerrilla resistance. The military claims a hundred-to-one kill ratio.
10/18/2008 1:16:19 PM
10/18/2008 1:27:50 PM
I love how threads devolve.
10/18/2008 3:57:18 PM