Yes,
lengthy, but read if you choose. These are just some of my personal
views and logical analyses toward the emotional impulses being applied
to the improper use of inanimate tools. This was originally a private
exchange with a friend:
The statistics that we have in the
United States do not match the emphasis that is being placed on rifles.
The legislation is focusing on rifles, specifically, yet
rifles account for very few of the homicides that occur every year. If
they want to be true to the statistics on deaths caused by firearms,
then they should crack down on handguns, instead, but that still won't
affect anyone who doesn't care about obeying the laws of the land, such
as career criminals and gang members.
So if we have to get rid
of the tools that are being used inappropriate and causing harm, then
why is there no initiative to confiscate knives or baseball bats, both
of which are frequently used for homicides. A tool is a tool. *An
inanimate object cannot kill.*
On the contrary, an inanimate
object in the hands of someone who has a good heart can be used to help
and defend, whereas an inanimate object in the hands of someone with an
evil heart will be used to hurt and destroy. The tool is the not problem
and removing the tool from the "good" people only opens the door for
its exclusive use by the "bad" people.
Yes, we have had some
concentrated tragedies recently, and they are tragedies, but to focus on
one tool over another tool, when other tools have been abused on a far
greater frequency over the years, is not logical. It is emotional. Long
term problem are never resolved by emotional impulses, when those
emotional impulses only focus on short-term symptom and fail to diagnose
the long-term cause.
If legal civilians are forced to turn
over their guns, then they will, because they believe in obeying the
laws, but the individuals who are committing the homicides, burglaries,
assaults, etc, don't care about the laws and will thrive on the
defenseless citizens who were already obeying the laws and striving to
be upstanding citizens.
Disarming the good people only gives
free reign for the bad, because the bad don't care if they act contrary
to the laws of the land. If the good are left defenseless, then who will
protect the innocent?
Might I add that I have never been a
"gun advocate". I only have a couple and have rarely gotten to shoot
them in fifteen years, because I didn't have a safe place to do so. I
may not be a gun advocate, but I believe absolutely in the right to
protect my family with whatever means are necessary, when peaceful
withdrawal is not an option.
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