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#1 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 28, 2006
Posts: 424
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Letter to my grandfather re gun control
My grandfather is very liberal, and apparently an ardent fan of gun control. We had a small discussion last night, but I didn't say nearly what I wanted to and wrote him an email today. The broader issue was where we fall on the political spectrum, but below is the part on gun control.
Thoughts? Quote:
Last edited by TargetTerror; December 26, 2007 at 10:50 PM. |
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#2 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 28, 2006
Posts: 424
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The rest:
Quote:
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: November 15, 2007
Location: Normal, IL
Posts: 60
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Nice-very well written and researched. Unfortunately, using academic reasoning to counter an emotional argument seldom works. And that's too bad.
I enjoyed it though. However, I got an "access forbidden" message when I followed the link to the Harvard study. Scott MSgt USMC Somewhere in Iraq |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 17, 2004
Location: Michigan
Posts: 733
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Excellent job!! Problem is, whenever I logically say only the criminals will obtain guns because they don't obey laws, the anti-gunners say "well if you don't have one there's one less gun for them to steal".
Their logic is the logic of sheep. Very sad. |
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#5 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: September 12, 2005
Posts: 3,733
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Quote:
You would be better off giving examples of real people who have saved lives with firearms. The recent church attack and the Tyler Texas incident. Then line up the bodies with names to show all the people who died defenseless like at VT, Luby's, and other places. There is no point using facts in an emotional argument. Finally, the odds of getting anything positive out of arguing a political point with someone your senior by 40-60 years is minimal at bets, especially if you wish to have a functional social relationship.
__________________
"Religions are all alike - founded upon fables and mythologies." Thomas Jefferson "The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason." Benjamin Franklin |
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#6 |
Junior member
Join Date: July 26, 2007
Posts: 3,668
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Since the grandfather is "not a fan of gun control," what's the point of having him suffer through all that verbiage?
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#7 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: October 28, 2006
Posts: 424
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Quote:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/...useronline.pdf Quote:
![]() I updated the post. Now it is correct. Last edited by Al Norris; December 27, 2007 at 12:02 AM. Reason: 2 consecutive posts merged |
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#8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 2, 2005
Location: Greenville, SC
Posts: 3,943
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I think your letter is well written and he may read it and respect it...
hard call. Being a liberal myself, I might suggest you go in another direction.... and that is to document and point out that in reality gun control is not about reducing crime or saving lives but about keeping minorities from having power. Gun control started as racist and still is....
http://www.firearmsandliberty.com/cramer.racism.html The key elements of the 1968 acts though seemingly about keeping cheap 'saturday night specials' out of crooks hands was really about keeping black folks in gettos from having the means to protect themselves. Think hard about the assault weapons ban.... finally... most folks firmly believe it is illegal to own fully auto weapons and short barreled rifles... and silencers. I have a good friend who legally ownes several fully automatic silenced sub machine guns... he just has the ways and means ($) to do so. |
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#9 |
Member
Join Date: March 28, 2007
Location: Wherever there's fried chicken or BBQ
Posts: 75
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Particularly when this article is read by African American proponents of diversity.
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#10 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 20, 2007
Location: South Western OK
Posts: 3,122
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Take my word for it: Do not argue with the old man over gun control. It is going to end in frustration for both of you. My Dad was a lifetime hunter and proponent of gun control. There was no changing his mind. Now i wish that the clock could be turned back and that we had talked about hunting instead of gun control.
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#11 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 2, 2001
Posts: 4,988
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Quote:
IMHO efforts to restrict citizens from owning/carrying firearms are coercive efforts on the part of the state (in its generic sense) to control them and make them dependent on the state by labeling them as political dissidents or even political criminals. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, in his Nobel prize winning book, The Gulag Archipelago discussed the use of hardened criminals to control citizens, a practice which appears to be going on in US cities where the RKBA is overly regulated and citizens risk spending jail time if they choose to carry to protect themselves and their families. My 2 cents. Edited to add that if the prospect of reading Solzhenitsyn is too intimidating there is a dumbed down and humorous version of the effect of criminalization of noncriminal behavior in Kilgore Trout's famous, and much shorter novel, Venus on the Half-Shell. ![]() |
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#12 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 28, 2004
Location: Silicon Valley, Ca
Posts: 7,116
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Yup, gun control is an emotional topic, especially for the "liberal" minded folks out there.
Instead of arguing with mountains of statistics, I've taken a different approach that seems to make anti-gun people think about the subject a little differently. We have had serious "gun control" laws since 1968 when the gov't decided to restrict sales by forcing sellers to obtain a federal license to sell guns. No more buying guns at your local hardware store, Sears or J.C. Penny's and no more mail-order catalog guns from Montgomery Wards and the like. Supporters claimed these new laws would "reduce the wave of gun crimes and make it harder for criminals to get guns". Has it worked? Next year, in 2008, we will have had ever-increasing forms of "gun control" for 40 years. If these laws really worked we should have seen a dramatic drop in armed robberies, homicides, attempted homicides and all forms of crime involving a gun. Have we? No. Instead, we've seen a steady increase in crimes, especially violent crime and the rise of mass public shootings. Well then, why? In our country's history - for 181 years in fact - guns were much easier to buy than they are today. So it can't be that guns are "easily" or "readily" available that is the problem. It's not that guns are "more deadly" than they used to be either, since in bygone days even a low-powered gun could kill due to a lack of prompt, advanced medical care. Could it be that "gun control" is the wrong solution to the problem of violence? If you were in business and hired an advertising agency to promote your products to increase sales and after 12 months your sales were actually DOWN, would you continue to use that advertising agency? Then why should we spend another day debating yet more gun control if it doesn't work? Could it be that "gun control" is a failure? If, after 40 years, we haven't seen the desired results, could it be there is a fundamental flaw in the concept of gun control? Gun control is a failure. It hasn't worked in the U.S. It isn't working in the U.K. either. Maybe it's time to back up and start from a different perspective. Think about it. |
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