1/23/2013 7:42:10 PM
So would it be safe to say you view your gun (that you keep for personal safety) as a potential threat to the safety and well being of your daughter?
1/23/2013 8:12:59 PM
Would anyone argue otherwise?
1/23/2013 8:19:16 PM
I would hope not, but reading this thread? I dunno, maybe.But doesn't that logic sort of fly in the face of the "I need a gun to protect me and my family" argument that is repeatedly trotted out during these debates? (Note: I don't recall you specifically making that claim, perhaps you have, but I'm not sure). But it's an interesting point, nonetheless.
1/23/2013 8:22:53 PM
What I'm getting at, basically, is that it's interesting that a tool that people need to "protect their family" is simultaneously such a liability to their safety.
1/23/2013 8:25:16 PM
I mean, there is that conflict that you have to weigh and resolve (for example, the decision process I outlined above about why I keep a 9mm on my person or at arms length at time, and locked away in a safe at others), but I don't see how it's even difficult to see how there is no dichotomy.It's like saying "I don't see how chemotherapy can cure people of disease, when its entire mechanism is that of human toxicity."We analyze risk (weighing both likelihood and severity) versus potential benefit all the time. Broadly, things that are a net asset in one circumstance are a net liability in others. Guns are no different. Do I have the analysis nailed? I don't know, but I've certainly given it thought and made my best effort to make the best choices I can.Should you ever keep a gun on your nightstand (or at all)? I don't know, there are myriad variables that I don't know about your situation, and wouldn't make such a judgment. If you judged it a net benefit, would it actually warrant the purchase of a gun if you don't own one? I don't know. What I'm saying is that a view that guns are by their very nature a net liability is just as irrational and ridiculous as the view that nearly everyone ought to be armed to the teeth all the time.[Edited on January 23, 2013 at 10:12 PM. Reason : ][Edited on January 23, 2013 at 10:15 PM. Reason : ]
1/23/2013 9:57:22 PM
In an extreme, simplified, example, when I was college, my grandmother was diagnosed with a rather rare blood disorder. Essentially, the doctors told her "Untreated, this disorder will be fatal. There is a very expensive experimental drug that, if successful, will lead to long-term suppression of the disease. However, there is a 50% chance that the drug will kill you."She elected to take the drug treatment, and died within a week or two of it. I don't think it's difficult to see that the drug was very much a "liability to her safety" or a "threat to her...well being", but I think we can pretty easily agree that she very reasonably took it to "protect" herself. Now, whether or not the odds it offered were worth the cost, again, that's a personal decision based on priorities and individual means that isn't easily quantified.About the only difference from our gun debate is that the statistics are much less clear and static on what the external threat is to each individual in each situation, and how much protection and liability a gun represents. I do think that people allow emotion and political biases to affect their judgment of how to optimally handle this, in either direction. I would say that emotion is arguably a legitimate factor in terms of peace of mind, but both sides allow it to generate irrational decision-making.Introspectively, being as objective as I can, I think that maybe I am guilty of being a little irrational on the dollars and cents leg of the analysis, but part of it is that I just like guns and shooting. The money I have spent on guns is partly for safety and partly for sport. That part isn't irrational. I have probably spent a little more money on a couple of guns that are very specifically for defense (as in, I don't shoot them for sport, other than just occasionally for...proficiency.) I don't, however, feel like I am irrational at all in my usage/employment/whatever you want to call it. I recognize that it is exceedingly unlikely that I will need to use a gun in anger, and yet, various states of readiness are reasonably warranted, in my opinion.[Edited on January 23, 2013 at 10:47 PM. Reason : ]
1/23/2013 10:27:49 PM
1/23/2013 10:46:14 PM
[quote(side note: I actually find this kind of funny, that you're both aware of the damage you could inflict during this fog, but nevertheless have a sort of "aw fuck it" attitude about it prematurely firing it while in your less lucid state).[/quote]First, I think I'd be pretty damned awake and lucid by the time anyone got into my house and I had the need to shoot...but even accepting the possibility that I might be a little less lucid than normal, when it's just me in the house, and nobody but me has a key, and nobody has any reason to be coming in...I think that it's incredibly unlikely to happen, but totally reasonable to shoot anyone else in my house in the middle of the night. There wouldn't be anything "premature" or "aw fuck it" about it; that decision would hardly require 100% lucidity. I just hope that I would be "with it" enough to land all the rounds in vital areas.
1/23/2013 11:05:48 PM
why are you guys still contesting? Jesus already won.
1/23/2013 11:08:03 PM
1/23/2013 11:12:19 PM
I just don't understand a world where we just shoot every unexpected visitor[Edited on January 23, 2013 at 11:42 PM. Reason : Take the trolling to Chit Chat. -theDuke866.]
1/23/2013 11:40:14 PM
I'm not trolling. I was directed to this thread by qntmfred. My comment was serious. you're going to accidentally kill a family member or a friend with your current self defense strategy.[Edited on January 24, 2013 at 6:42 AM. Reason : disagreement isn't trolling]
1/24/2013 6:41:35 AM
1/24/2013 12:03:53 PM
Because when they fantasize about it they always are, it never goes wrong
1/24/2013 12:04:45 PM
1/24/2013 12:39:49 PM
There are varying weights to the consequence of failure in his mind I imagine. Like the cost of failing to prevent his child from killing herself with his gun is much higher than the cost of him dying in a home invasion because he couldn't get to his gun on time.However, when the kid is not around, that cost comparison is unnecessary.That's how I feel about it at least. I don't own a gun but if I did and I were in his situation (partial custody of a young child) I'd probably do exactly the same thing.
1/24/2013 12:46:07 PM
And what about when that child is old enough to conceivably get into an argument with her mom and decide to come crash at her dads place late at night unannounced? Or old enough to leave the house without notice and come back late at night? Would you (or he), keep your hypothetical (or his real) gun on the nightstand then? The "anybody who's at my residence who isn't me can reasonably be shot" attitude is cavalier and lacking nuance, in my opinion. I can't help but think that the likelihood of someone coming to my home unannounced has just as high a probability of being someone I know and care for as it does being an unwanted intruder.
1/24/2013 1:05:13 PM
But someone coming to your home unannounced doesn't mean they have a 100% chance of shooting themselves with my hypothetical gun. You're moving the goalposts but then acting like it's still a toddler that would end up exposed to a gun not locked away. I can't speak for Duke's calculus but if I would judge the likelihood of how unstable my child is and how likely they would be to try to gain access to my gun in my decision matrix, of course.
1/24/2013 1:28:21 PM
I wasn't talking about the child shooting himself/herself.I was talking about you accidentally mistaking your child for an intruder.
1/24/2013 1:32:14 PM
the list of 150 scary looking guns which includes shotguns has come out. no mags over 10 rounds. you have to register grandfathered guns also
1/24/2013 1:36:28 PM
^^Well, I don't know about Duke but I wouldn't even point the weapon until I've identified the target for that very reason. Even in broad daylight you don't want to shoot something you're not absolutely certain needs to die. I doubt Duke's plan is to fire at any noise in his dark house without first saying something to the effect of "GTFO or I'm going to kill you."[Edited on January 24, 2013 at 1:39 PM. Reason : .]
1/24/2013 1:39:13 PM
Couldn't he conceivably shout that while he's getting the gun out from his safe?
1/24/2013 1:57:33 PM
I don't understand why he (or hypothetical disco_stu) would need to be Quickdraw McGraw and have it by his night stand if he's going through every other precaution to prevent him from pulling the trigger so quickly.
1/24/2013 1:59:43 PM
I also wouldn't be about to reveal my location to a potential intruder until I at least have a weapon. There's a gulf between getting armed and killing someone that I think you're glossing over here.
1/24/2013 2:05:19 PM
1/24/2013 2:26:49 PM
1/24/2013 2:33:17 PM
You could hear the shit out of me moving 15', stupid creaky old ass house
1/24/2013 2:35:58 PM
JHC is making this thread unbearable.
1/24/2013 2:41:39 PM
I'm sorry for ruining your fun by presenting you with an alternate viewpoint.
1/24/2013 2:48:01 PM
I don't mind alternative viewpoints at all, I welcome them. It just really seems that you're arguing the extreme just to argue.
1/24/2013 2:49:11 PM
1/24/2013 2:50:43 PM
For a tough guy with a gun, you sure are sensitive.
1/24/2013 2:51:11 PM
^my point exactly. i don't think i'm a tough guy. what's the point of that? you're just being an anonymous argumentative jerk on the internet because it makes you feel good for some reason.
1/24/2013 2:54:54 PM
1/24/2013 2:55:11 PM
Is that what you're arguing now? I honestly can't keep up, your points keep changing and moving.
1/24/2013 2:56:10 PM
1/24/2013 3:00:09 PM
1/24/2013 3:03:51 PM
The picture you probably have of me in your head is so wrong. i've really hardly argued any of those points. again, your bias is causing you to be completely irrational. i am not a "gun-nut" like you're probably picturing in your head. for whatever reason, because I happen to own a gun, you've concluded I'm crazy and fantasize about killing people. Most of your stereotyping, assumptions and arguments are absurd and it's really not worth arguing with you. If you're trying to change minds or make points, you're failing.
1/24/2013 3:08:31 PM
1/24/2013 3:09:03 PM
1/24/2013 3:09:55 PM
haha, you're really coming across as a bitch. troll away man.
1/24/2013 3:14:14 PM
^^^^^ no that is the part when you came in and ruined the thread...
1/24/2013 3:41:33 PM
^I have no idea what you're trying to prove there.But I find it amazing that a topic as controversial as gun control can only be discussed in this thread (and in this country) within the parameters set forth by gun owners. And to step outside of that tiny spectrum of debate is somehow blasphemous. It's a broad and polemical topic, so quit trying to put it in a tiny little box.Look, you own the guns. If you really feel strong in your convictions, then you should be able to answer any line of questioning that challenges your viewpoint. To simply dismiss it as "unbearable" or "retarded" (or whatever choice word you have in your limited vocabulary) is lazy, and does nothing to elevate the discourse.If you're only comfortable discussing the topic and nibbling around the edges without first defending the foundation of your beliefs, then you really don't have a leg to stand on, and you're in no position to demand mutual respect from others.So maybe instead of casting aside criticism that questions the desire to own guns, why don't you actually force yourself to defend your fixed beliefs? Give it a try. You might actually grow.
1/24/2013 4:11:18 PM
if you were to see past your blatant biases and try to have a rational discussion and not be a dick and stop arguing for the sake of arguing and quit trolling for responses and emotion, i'd have mutual respect for you. however, you're biased, irrational, and a dick about it all (whcih you proudly admit). try to be a little more rational. give it a try. it'll help you on internet discussion boards and in real life!
1/24/2013 4:18:45 PM
1/24/2013 4:40:17 PM
1/24/2013 5:21:05 PM
1/24/2013 6:08:36 PM
Short of being knocked out drunk, I'm sure you'd wake up pretty fast if you thought there was an intruder in the house.Either way, why's it so unreasonable for Duke to put his gun in the safe when his daughter's around? It could be a samurai sword, pepper spray, taser, kitchen knives, etc. You wouldn't leave any of those things out with kids around (whether or not they're for self-defense).How do YOU plan to protect yourself if you get robbed?
1/24/2013 6:52:29 PM
have you ever noticed that most really jacked people (non roiders) are really nice?just because they have muscles doesn't mean they wanna beat someone down right?i own tons of guns and can't even bring myself to hunt animals...sooo.... that kinda defeats that argument.
1/24/2013 7:10:34 PM