Joat42 wrote:It's strange that he doesn't talk about gun control in the context of who can buy a gun. He touches upon it when talks about mental health issues but doesn't give an opinion at all about it, which I feel is a cop out considering he owned a gun store.
That is one of the first gun-control fallacies he debunks.
You can’t stop anybody from buying a gun. They go downtown, hand Pedro the Pusher a few hundred bucks, they’ve got a gun. We can’t stop Pedro from selling drugs, WHY do you believe we can stop him from selling guns?
The ‘war on guns’ would be every bit as effective as the ‘war on (some) drugs’ and the criminals would win.
Joat42 wrote:The pro-gun people always seem to equate "gun control" with "ban all guns" which he amply demonstrates in his post.
Because that is what the anti-gun politicians tell us they want. Their 'reasonable gun control measures' are just steps towards their end goal of banning all those scary guns.
Fireflair wrote:The notion that an armed populace in the modern western world could effectively stand up to the military if it was turned on the populace is ludicrous
It is illegal for the United States government to turn its military against the populace. It is illegal to give such orders to United States military officers, illegal for the officers to follow them, and most unlikely that they would want to. Our military is made up of the same American citizens the government would be trying to oppress.
Daryl wrote:Our system in Australia generally works well. We have had a couple of mass shootings in the past few years, but nothing remotely like the US experience.
You have less than one-twelfth the population. Would you say you have about one-twelfth as many shootings? A couple of shootings in Australia equates to 25 or 26 in the US.
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Firepower is not a thousand bullets that miss. Firepower is one bullet that hits.