| > Education, combined with testing I'm okay with this, to an extent. > and in many case, restrictions on which kind of "tools" are deemed an acceptable "tool" for one of the tasks it can achieve, outside of death and injury to other humans. I'm not okay with this. Who are you to declare from on high which tools are acceptable for a given task? > No one needs an AR-15/etc for hunting deer or bears or whatever other lesser animal needs to die No one needs an AR-15 to kill people, either. Indeed, the vast majority of gun violence (among civilians at least) is with guns that are very much not "an AR-15/etc". If you actually care about reducing death by guns, you'd be going after the Glocks, not the ArmaLites. Bringing up the AR-15 betrays an opinion driven mostly by emotion and irrationality. It's a gun that "looks scary" despite being no more lethal than any other semiautomatic .223 rifle (among which there are a lot, and despite your implied belief to the contrary, the .223 is a very common caliber for hunting/varmint rifles, and semiautomatics - while not as common as bolt-actions - are still pretty mainstream for hunting). Again: who are you to declare from on high which tools are acceptable for a given task? > It'd be like if you decided to buy a 400ton mining truck, and drive it on the road. No, it'd be like if you decided to buy a Tundra instead of a Tacoma (the Tacoma here being, say, a Ruger Mini-14). A "400ton mining truck" in this context would be something more like the GAU8/A. > Gun control laws does not equal a ban on guns. Not yet, but anyone with a basic understanding of what the Overton Window is can see the writing on the wall. > Those that do impose an age limit I can't think of a single place where there's not an age limit to buy either the firearm itself or the ammunition thereof. I don't require a permit to purchase here in Nevada, for example, but I still had to present ID and go through a background check. And Nevada's among the most gun-friendly states in the US, even after the Las Vegas shooting. > so you can buy a tool to murder your neighbours but you can't buy a bud light. You can do a lot of things before you can buy a Bud Light that you can't do before you're an adult. Quite a few over-the-counter drugs, for example, fall into that category. I fail to see how that's relevant (unless you're arguing to lower the drinking age, in which case I'd have no real objection). |
> I'm okay with this, to an extent.
Why would you not be fully on board with educating people when they want to use a deadly "tool"?
Edit: removed snippiness.
> Who are you to declare from on high which tools are acceptable for a given task?
Well, it isn't me though is it? I mean I'm writing the text but what I'm writing is what other governments have implemented successfully, based on simple logic.
Perhaps you could try less attacking me, and more explaining why a semi-automatic is required to hunt deer or shoot targets?
> If you actually care about reducing death by guns, you'd be going after the Glocks, not the ArmaLites.
... Still a semi-automatic dude.
> Bringing up the AR-15 betrays an opinion driven mostly by emotion and irrationality.
As I mentioned in a reply to another user: I mentioned it because most people know it. That's all. In reality the point is about all semi-autos, either long barrel or pistols.
> the .223 is a very common caliber for hunting/varmint rifles
I don't know whether you're unaware that .223 is used in bolt-action rifles too, you just want to ignore that aspect because it makes your argument stronger, or you actually just meant .223 semi-automatics are common for that "task" - it's irrelevant. My point is that it's unnecessary - you don't need a semi-automatic to hunt, unless you're fucking shit at it.
> who are you to declare from on high which tools are acceptable
Again: you need to explain why a semi-automatic is required for hunting or some other non-people-killing activity. Unless Americans uniquely have decided that "hunting" now means mowing into a crowd of deer/what have you in some kind of perverse attempt to justify the use of a semi-auto for "hunting".
> No, it'd be like if you decided to buy a Tundra instead of a Tacoma (the Tacoma here being, say, a Ruger Mini-14).
Well given that both are semi-autos, and you just compared two 'pickup trucks' I guess at least the analogy is somewhat correct but you've missed the point, and keep somehow obsessing about a different semi-auto rifle just because it's less popular with Americans. That doesn't make it not a semi-auto.
> Not yet
Seriously, slippery slope argument?
> I can't think of a single place where there's not an age limit to buy either the firearm itself or the ammunition thereof.
Well federal law stipulates 18, but I have zero clue how you enforce that on private sales without any kind of licensing or permits required.
> I don't require a permit to purchase here in Nevada, for example, but I still had to present ID and go through a background check. And Nevada's among the most gun-friendly states in the US, even after the Las Vegas shooting.
Well you (Nevada) need a permit for concealed carry and background checks are required (by the state, it seems some counties are ignoring that law), so no you aren't among the most 'gun-friendly'. Plenty of states require no background check, no permits for concealed carry, etc.