I have. From a dude who competes.And I still rent my handguns at the range, because there's no way in hell I'd want to own one so I could introduce a firearm to a confrontation. I'll buy an XD45 as soon as I'm certain the cost will be less than the price of all my future rental fees. But only then. I'm more likely to buy a Mossberg 500, but only as a $200 insurance policy against truly crazy apocalyptic stuff going down.
3/15/2010 9:19:47 PM
3/15/2010 9:31:12 PM
3/15/2010 9:44:35 PM
not to mention that it's also illegal to taser or pepper spray people who aren't threatening you.[Edited on March 15, 2010 at 10:03 PM. Reason : there is no slippery slope like you describe, you fucking retard.]
3/15/2010 10:03:13 PM
those other items you listed have primary uses that aren't murder
3/15/2010 10:05:41 PM
so does my SigSauer
3/15/2010 10:06:45 PM
sometimes I'd like to take my Springfield, unload it, and then proceed to pistol whip the shit out of mambagrl. That way she could realize that guns serve more purpose than just shooting people.
3/15/2010 10:24:01 PM
True, but at least that wouldn't be an impulse pistol whipping. The same could not be said of an impulse murder.Don't you think if restrictions were implemented to make owning guns, especially handguns, more difficult, that gun crime would go down? We will never get to the point where "criminals are the only ones who have guns," so that argument is pretty foolish. I can't think of the number of times I have heard on the news about someone who owned a gun legally committing some horrible offense. I don't think that these people represent the average gun owner (the pawn shop owner is someone who probably prevents crime through the open display of his weapon), but as the number of gun owners goes up dramatically, and guns are more accepted in our culture, then the small percentage of offenders who use their guns inappropriately represents a larger and larger absolute number of incidents.Part of the problem in my mind is that gun owners are so vehemently opposed to any sort of regulation, for the most part. The "you can have my gun when you pry it from my cold, dead hands" mentality leads to a huge polarization. Maybe if gun owners were responsible for paying the societal price in some way for those who commit crimes with guns (for example, a gun tax that goes to pay for restitution to victims of gun crimes, or housing prisoners who used guns to commit offenses...I know it won't happen, just a thought), they would start to take a little more ownership over the fact that unless they step up and agree to better tactics for limiting the use of guns, esp. handguns, in violent ways, then their freedoms to own any gun are going to have to be limited in some way.
3/15/2010 10:38:15 PM
3/15/2010 10:43:21 PM
i'm for reasonable laws so long as they are not emotionally based, things like deciding which gun is an "assault weapon" based on how scary it looks is straight out retarded. i have no problem with background checks, no problem with not allowing felons or mentally unstable people to have guns, what exactly are you suggesting? the tax thing? as far as taxes, i don't see the point. the criminal should be liable to pay restitution to a victim, not innocent people. for example, this:
3/15/2010 10:46:43 PM
3/15/2010 10:50:17 PM
3/15/2010 11:41:23 PM
^ All the proposals that are reasonable are already law. What more do you want? And your tax idea is offensive. Punish the guilty, not the innocent. If you want a law punishing gun owners with a stiff fine for allowing their guns to be stolen, that sounds like a good idea.
3/16/2010 2:01:52 AM
3/16/2010 2:58:42 AM
I've seen a few people this tax season listing "guns for business protection" on their information when they bring it in.Pharmaceutical sales is a tough world - I didn't know salesmen were spending $80 annually in ammo for protection.
3/16/2010 8:26:23 AM
3/16/2010 8:32:21 AM
Not that I'm necessarily agreeing with mambagrl, but didn't the US-supplied anti-aircraft missiles help? Not exactly small arms.
3/16/2010 10:09:41 AM
3/16/2010 10:29:35 AM
^^ The vast majority were armed with WWI-era Lee-Enfield rifles and even older weapons. Though they would often capture modern soviet small arms they favored the bolt-action enfield because it was ideal for sniping and could easily punch through soviet body armor.Eventually the soviets began executing anyone they found armed with an enfield.
3/16/2010 3:21:17 PM
ya all those russian tanks got taken out by rifles.
3/16/2010 4:20:45 PM
3/16/2010 4:24:55 PM
3/16/2010 4:43:29 PM
I have nothing to add to the second amendment discussion, but I just wanted to note that I found this quote to be absolutely ridiculous, regarding burglars:
3/16/2010 5:00:25 PM
Just today some crackhead tried breaking into my house through the backdoor. Luckily my roommate heard him, grabbed his USP .40, opened the door for the would-be thief, and watched the guy run for the hills.
3/16/2010 6:01:44 PM
3/16/2010 6:18:17 PM
3/16/2010 6:27:00 PM
If you decide to rob people, one of the job risks is being shot.
3/16/2010 6:28:23 PM
3/16/2010 6:30:31 PM
people making their own rifles or smuggling them in have nothing to do with the original argument
3/16/2010 6:53:48 PM
3/16/2010 6:55:35 PM
To really defend yourself, wouldn't you need nuclear weapons and such? I mean what if Iran decides to attack you?
3/16/2010 7:16:44 PM
3/16/2010 7:39:04 PM
3/16/2010 7:43:42 PM
3/16/2010 7:45:24 PM
3/16/2010 7:49:27 PM
3/16/2010 7:55:07 PM
The military works fine from miles and miles away. We have intel, RADAR, satellites, and standoff weapons.
3/16/2010 7:55:20 PM
I can see people who believe that guns are a necessary evil, to prevent further evil.But doesn't it seem like a lot of the comments are less about you HAVING to defend yourself in a way that results in a loss of life or serious bodily harm to someone else, and more about WANTING to? It's like people relish the fact that they might end up killing someone.I guess it's just me, but my attitude is that whenever someone ends up dead, that's not a good thing. It happens sometimes, and in some cases it's the best of the bad alternatives, but there's just a little too much pleasure being taken from the whole thing here for my tastes. If we are really the kind of people who think it's cool to kill someone else, instead of it being a regretful scenario, then whether it's guns or not is secondary to other, larger questions.
3/16/2010 8:04:32 PM
this planet is overpopulated, and some of these fucktards need to go. When I hear about some douchebag criminal getting killed by his would-be victim, I rejoice a little bit inside. That doesn't mean I want to be the one pulling the trigger unless it's unavoidable. However, I'm not like some of the bitchass liberals in here who would rather just lay down and become a statistic instead of entertaining the possibility of fighting back and protecting their own life.
3/16/2010 8:34:37 PM
I know in the Marine Corps, being pepper sprayed and then having to fight is not that uncommon. They do it in infantry officer course, martial arts instructor courses, higher level martial arts courses, and I think in MP school.I mean, pepper spray sucks a lot, but it isn't incapacitating in the way that multiple rounds of .45 acp hollow points are.http://www.militaryspot.com/news/item/blind_fury_future_mcmap_instructors_fight_back_tears/just one example.
3/16/2010 9:00:02 PM
^That is a perfect example of what I just mentioned.Just an FYI, the world isn't absolute. Everyone doesn't think that you should either gut someone with a knife or let them murder you and rape your wife, because we don't want to hurt anyone. That type of mindset doesn't further your ideas at all, it just trivializes the debate and reduces it to two opposing sides who have no desire to even discuss a workable solution because each side is so angry at the other.
3/16/2010 9:00:28 PM
OK, about this solution...What do you want to see enacted that isn't already in place?
3/16/2010 9:04:25 PM
Well, to be honest, I don't think heavily about the gun issue, most of my responses have just been based on gut reaction and looking into things based on what has been said in the thread, so my ideas aren't exactly fleshed out.I can say that I think fewer guns is better, but my main concern is the use of guns in crimes. Maybe a twofold response, because I think that dealing with the gun issue heavily would increase the load on our criminal justice system, and without relaxing that load, it would become overwhelmed.First, decriminalize many drug crimes. Apparently a lot of crime comes from drug seeking behavior and related actions. That would allow us to more heavily prosecute ANY sort of crime committed with a gun. I thought the punishment for Plaxico Burress was strong, but it says that NYC doesn't fuck with unregistered and illegal guns. That's a good message, if you have the room in the system to actually send it.Eliminating all the gun show sales and other unregistered weapons. I'd be fine if we developed a way to tie every gun that is made or imported to a dealer, and that dealer was responsible for making sure it was properly licensed to an individual, or they lost their own license.Do those sound like options that would work in some way, or do you have other suggestions?
3/16/2010 9:13:22 PM
any situation that requires defending my life and justifies me defending myself is a situation that justifies me defending myself absolutely. i have a pretty strong christian faith and would never want to kill someone, but if i ever needed to use my gun to defend myself it would be a situation where i felt my life was at danger and the best way to protect myself is multiple rounds center mass. that's probably going to be fatal, but i imagine that i wouldn't have a lot of time to try to incapacitate someone in a way that wasn't fatal. there seems to be this line of thinking among people who have never fired a gun that you should just be able to shoot them in the leg or something to stop them... it doesn't work like that. i would only ever be pulling my gun out in a situation where i felt my life was at risk and in that situation i am going to do everything i can to make sure that threat is reduced. i'm sorry that means that the criminal may die, but when you violate that social contract i stop worrying about your well-being.^just fyi, beyond any dealer (gun show or brick and mortar) there is no standard mandatory licensing or registration. some places have mandatory registration, but not all places. you may know that but your response made it sound like you weren't clear about that. if you are proposing mandatory gun registration i would disagree with you and im sure many of the other posters in this thread would as well. [Edited on March 16, 2010 at 9:18 PM. Reason : .]
3/16/2010 9:15:53 PM
I figure that many gun owners would not like that, but can you tell me why that requirement would be so onerous, other than the general Big Brother argument? I know that most people who heavily advocate gun ownership are also very conservative and usually distrustful of government, but is there a rational argument against registration?
3/16/2010 9:25:35 PM
the argument from that perspective is that it is an unnecessary invasion of privacy.
3/16/2010 9:41:15 PM
3/16/2010 9:44:53 PM
3/16/2010 10:04:37 PM
3/16/2010 10:17:04 PM
3/16/2010 11:09:11 PM