I believe you believer that.
I believe that because it's true
What authority has most academic being of a Keynesian bent? Citation?
So you'll agree that if we find out that most people with a post graduate degree believe in government intervention in the economy on the scale we see today, or more, that we could consider them to have a lack of virtue and wisdom?
Completely true.
No, that's not what I wrote.
It's exactly what you wrote.
It is what you wrote.
They aren't, universally.
They are, universally.
That's why the U.S. is the least safe place to live within the context of Western democracies and gun laws.
It's only the least safest place if you go to certain areas, which consequently, have low gun ownership rates. If you go to places with high gun ownership rates one will tend to be in a safe place.
Now you can tell me that your kitchen has a lot of guns and it's really safe. But your kitchen isn't as sound a source as a larger sampling. When you understand how samplings work in validating data you'll get my point.
Your example is poor. You would do better to use an analogy. If one were to use all kitchens, and all rooms, and all properties in the data... then you'd simply have higher resolution data than we have with the county data.
You think people are confused about what defending themselves means? I don't.
I think you would use a legal definition in order to confuse people. It is why you wouldn't say what the definition of self defense is.
Beyond that, I think only you, and people with your elitist mindset, are confused about what defending themselves means. Most people understand what it is and it is consistent with my definition.
It doesn't, supra and prior.
It does, supra and prior.
Yes, do keep tabs on your irony.
Answered in the point and on the rhetorical distortion you use to frame it.
So who owns the guns? The government or the people that bought them?
Are they being taken because no one is being murdered? and if it's because people are being murdered, do you consider murders to be evil?
Rebutted prior. When you wave goofy notions of upending the foundation of law you know or should know you're not really proposing anything meaningful. It can't and won't happen. So you might as well simply support the status quo.
You never rebutted. You only ignored.
But now that you bring it up, what is the foundation of law? Isn't it life liberty and property?
No they don't. The opposite is observably true, both in our country and compared to every other Western democracy.
Yes they do. In the majority of studies they do. And the minority of studies where they don't those studies are infamous for releasing their data slowly and hiding behind convoluted definitions.
Interesting charts. You should try tying them into something I wrote. Something you can quote and then say, "See, this rebuts that contention."
They were tied to the quote under which they appear. Your uncharitable approach causes you to miss the connection.
No, I'm still talking about gun violence and mass shootings.
No, you are talking about the correlation between areas where there are concentrated poor and violence.
We have never had a time when the types of guns we have today were affordably saturating the marketplace. The gun market has done a marvelous job of promoting and lowering the cost of ownership on increasingly deadly guns.
Affordable or not, more households had the same powerful guns we have today when the homicide rate was much lower.
I'm not trying to interfere with ownership rates. I never have.
Except by taking everyone's gun and making them re-buy lesser guns in their place... after they are approved to do so by the government. Do you really think that doesn't have the intention of lowering with ownership rates?
There was literally nothing emotional about noting that anyone who is against child labor laws doesn't require a rebuttal on the point. It's on par with noting that I don't believe anyone arguing for segregation really needs to be rebutted, only noted.
I can see you aren't emotional - you're as cold as ice in light of your willingness to send kids to be prostitutes and to be mutilated because of apathy. Or do you think Krugman hasn't documented the results of banning child labor?
Who said you should send your kid to school to build their character? That's your job.
Any education that isn't based on teaching character first is teaching anti-social behavior. It's no wonder we get the horrible results we do from government schools.
Or let me ask you this. Do the schools expect the children to cheat or not cheat in their homework? Do the schools expect the children to listen in school? Do the schools expect the children to get their work done on time? Do the schools expect the children to respect school property? Do the schools expect the children to be nice to one another while in school?
If you answer yes to any of these questions, you are expecting the schools to teach character.
Well, no. No, I don't. And if you're going to assert the point you have to demonstrate why that's true. You haven't.
"For a local look, figures by the National Institute for Literacy indicate that 21 percent of the adults in Genesee County read at a first-grade level, and in Flint, the number is 36 percent (one of the highest illiteracy rates in Michigan with the statewide average at 18 percent)."
Do you think if we get the rest of the report by NIL that it will show dramatically different results for the rest of the country?
The reason government schools do such a horrible job is intrinsic to the system. And you want this same system to run a government gun licensing/registration/education program.
Funny coming from someone who dismisses mass murder as statistically insignificant. But never let it be said a little irony or a want of introspection got in your way.
No, you said it: "mass shootings, horrific as they are, aren't anything like the rule, so they won't dramatically impact the overall arc of violence in this or any nation"
The statistic varies by year. That's the high end as I've witnessed the data.
And the low end is 75%. That's just as bad. And it proves a bias in the courts.
I've also noted prior that in most cases the physical custody of the children is overwhelmingly decided upon between the parents, and not by the courts.
You really think 75% to 80% of fathers don't want their children? The will of the courts is well known, and divorce lawyers will give a father the chances of winning to their best ability knowing the court is biased toward mothers - so fathers, being men and having a tendency to do good math, don't waste money trying to do something that has a very low chance of succeeding. Or perhaps you don't know how much a custody battle costs on average these days... or for the last number of decades.
Citation to authority in support? And you realize that if the overwhelming majority of kids are in single mother homes then comparing the results can be a bit misleading.
You ignored the evidence. It showed that single motherhood vs single fatherhood was accounted for.
Maybe God knew that most of the time a child wouldn't be without their mother. Maybe the problem is in your reading and your bias.
oh, right, God had no idea that the result of single motherhood would be the greatest indicator of delinquency.
How many decades and compared to which? Citation to authority?
The evidence you ignored showed the poverty rate evened out in the 70's, while government spending on programs that rely on income levels has skyrocketed.
I think it's funny that you believe that.
You didn't answer the question. You noted that the custody battles are only in about 10% of divorces. You noted that mothers tend to be home more before the divorce.
But most notably, you implied that mothers are best for children in cases of divorce with no support, and ignored the evidence that fathers are best for kids in case of divorce.
So that you think it's funny that I believe that is nothing but your elitist attitude showing through again.
If I said "most" I stand corrected. I wasn't considering the drug trade.
So now that you realize you were wrong, the evidence leads you to understand...
I don't believe it is right for anyone to own weapons that made the Las Vegas mass murders possible. I favor weapons that more closely resemble what the founders thought reasonable, even if most of the reasons for possession of them have fallen by the wayside and no longer find a larger, societal good served by them.
But you don't. You believe anyone that needs a gun for their job should have one that is at least semi-automatic. And you believe criminals won't love putting their semi-autos up against breach loaders?
Actually they had a lot of guns, as I've noted before. The attempt was late in the day relative to the Nazi's move to create ghettos and camps. And I've spoken to the problematic nature of guns as instruments of revolution. And we're not talking about uneven penalization of a group within our society. At least I'm not.
I think you miss the point of the Nazi gun control program. It's not that the Jews would have been able to resist the regime, but that they were targeted because of registration. That is a part of history, and not a "what if" scenario.
Rather, I note that where you have concentrations of poor and poorly educated you have more crime and violence. It's part of the same conversation, in foundation.
Correct. So insisting on only referring to "gun violence" and "mass murder", as opposed to solving the problem of violence and murder is wrong on your part.
Yor believes that suggesting we wipe existing law off the books and retool our entire approach to justice is the way to go.
I don't believe that. But certainly your elitist mindset would lead you to believing that I do.
Given that's about as feasible as personal monorails to ease traffic congestion, he's essentially a status quo supporter.
A status quo supporter would want to keep things as they are. I want things to change for the better.
He opposes mandatory gun safety courses, gun registration, and any attempt to limit the type of weapons commonly used in mass shootings
This is correct. For good reason.
And I answered you on the notion. Primarily the problem is you're creating your own reason why it's reasonable to draw the line, but however you go about justifying the line it's a restriction and the only real difference between you and anyone is the argument for it.
The justification is correct. Therefore, the line is correct.
Well, no. Nothing in what I said in response to your stating that the measures I support wouldn't impact murders is wrong. To believe as you purported to would be to believe that the fellow in Las Vegas would have found a way to kill as many by another means. It's possible, but is it probable? Is it probable for most of the people involved?
What you've said is that the same trend line on homicide and violence would continue. It's exactly the same kind of argument that discusses what a right to privacy will allow and exempt the discussion of when a human begins in light of that right.
I've spoken to the pointlessness of attempting to frame banning a thing as a form of theft.
Then don't use the word theft. If you prefer "taken by force" then we can continue.
That is literally contradicted by quote you chose to respond to...In the fuller quote I noted a number of different wellsprings for the act, evil among them.
No, I didn't, though my argument isn't predicated on the reason why men commit the act.
So if the murder rate in the US was the lowest rate of western nations, you wouldn't propose taking non-government people's non-breach loading guns by force?
Because an evil act is one of intent and understanding that some who are mentally ill lack. If you lack capacity you're a lot like a hurricane.
But somehow, where guns have a high ownership rate, hurricanes don't happen.
I've already posted and noted countries and states that do better and have dramatically better results for their efforts.
They had the same results before they banned/restricted guns. It's not the guns
No, you're not following or you're mischaracterizing my response to your attempt to negate the effort within a larger stream of violence that would subsume it. In point of fact we can and I've repeatedly noted you can mark the difference between nations and states with tough, universal gun laws and those without them, that gun violence and mass shootings are markedly reduced.
And if we don't discuss when a human begins, then we can discuss whether it is OK to terminate a pregnancy.
You cannot divorce the gun murder rate from the murder rate knowing the murder rate won't change.
Yes, supra.
Let's say you force everyone (not in the government) to give up their non-breach loading guns and the murder rates don't go down. Do you think the same people in power will just say "Oops, sorry, that didn't fix anything so here are all your guns back." No, the move is not reversible.
You have no way of knowing or demonstrating that mass shooters go on to become bombers or find another means.
Yes I do. The murder rates stay the same.
[quote
Yorzhik said:
It's all true. My solutions, from small implementations to every point in the entire country, are not only reversible, but measurable.
Town Heretic said:
Answered prior and more than once.
[/quote]
Never answered. You never showed how what I propose couldn't be implemented slowly and be reversed if necessary. And I showed you the measurement you could judge me by.
Stepping around the whole evil thieving government rehash, the fact remains that the right isn't jeopardized by the laws I support, that the citizen living under them would be better armed than those citizen soldiers of the Founder's day and they seemed to believe that was sufficient to protect themselves.
And the measure would not be reversible.
No, if a measure doesn't show a positive change, then it should be reversed. And your measure will have a bad effect for reasons listed before.
I can't speak to the source for you "change the law to this" approach. I'm simply noting that the ideas I've advocated originated elsewhere and have been tested elsewhere over decades...and echoed here to good effect.
The ideas I advocate originated with God Himself and have been tested with positive results for millennia.
Yeah. It's a pretty long running series of testing grounds. Generational even.
And my testing grounds run to ancient history. They're better.
See, I didn't just say that. I showed you how and where. You should try that.
I did show you how and where, but your elitist eyes can't see it.
To the contrary or we'd be the safest country on the planet instead of being markedly the opposite on the point among all the Western democracies.
We are safer in areas where gun ownership rates are higher. We should spread those gun ownership rates to areas where the murder rate is high so we'll have lower murder rates as a country.
And there are any number of ways to express that, but you chose poorly by drawing one where the impact was violence where the actual impact is its opposite.
There's no better analogy than the cliff analogy.
I think you're charitable enough with yourself for both of us and I absolutely realized the point.
Yes, your response was directly uncharitable. You definitely got the point. Echoing Picasso, you know how to be charitable like a pro so you can be artistically uncharitable.