Well, experience tells me not everyone cares enough about that, but for the sake of argument--right, but that's not what you said about my position, so I was clarifying, among other points. :thumb:
I actually specifically called out the fact that I agree that 'one shot kills' are the gold standard in shooting, and training /practicing with that goal in mind is commendable, I just disagree with the complete idea of yours, that that's The Best way to practice shooting. I provided a contrary view, that range time should also involve training in being a miniature artillery piece.
You're going to need to figure on another half-second per shot now, because you can't as quickly site in your target on followup shots with the kind of action you've got on your rifle, not like with a semiauto. A semiauto isn't just faster because you don't have to do anything between rounds but press the trigger again, it's also because every other action takes time, and during that time, you lose the site picture at least a little more than you do with a semiauto, ceteris paribus, which not only means that you can't fire as rapidly with slower guns than semiautos, but you also can't fire accurately as rapidly. You still have to pull the trigger on the terminator gun, just like with the semiauto, but the terminator has to spin his gun around to eject the empty and 'chamber' the next round. In the meantime maybe the terminator gets clipped by his enemy, being that the terminator 'don't real,' and can't just take bullet wounds without flinching, or without being interrupted from what they're trying to do, in cycling the action of their gun. In defense of their life. Under stress.
You'll probably never need to shoot any more than seven rounds to defend your life or the life of your loved ones, neighbors, and other innocent people, from anything, human or not, ever in your lifetime. Statistically. Statistically significantly, also, coincidentally perhaps, if not ironically.
Some shooting is for warning shots too. Sometimes covering fire. Sometimes just as a distraction. There's lot of different reasons for shooting a gun besides killing lots of people.
More general observation, empowered by common sense and the lack of the NRA promoting the heck out of the contrary idea.
The NRA has to be expedient, I understand their pressure to be like that, but it does not reflect my belief in the right to bear arms. They have to 'play ball' to defend the right to bear arms from people like you who make laws, and from people like you who vote for people like you who make laws. It's my job to figure out how to vote, since my role in this whole thing is a voter. So it's such a fraught matter, that I as a voter need to know first what it is that the right to bear arms actually means, and then to compare that with what our laws forbid, and then compare our laws to the Constitution, and to consider whether the laws are Constitutional, and to vote based upon that whole matter.
I earlier pointed out that your vocation as a whole does not agree on what the Second Amendment means, and it would be nice if that were not the case, so that along with all the people dying while we try to solve this problem, we didn't also have the challenge that our own lawyers can't even agree among themselves, what this one sentence means. There are lawyers who believe what I believe about the right to bear arms, and that we are contravening the Bill of Rights in making gun control laws.
It doesn't matter if we are in fact breaking our own law in making gun control laws, it does matter what we do about this fact. We need to address it. It is exceptionally poor practice to flagrantly break your own law, and then pretend and act like we're not doing it. It's worse than whistling past the graveyard.
Oh gesundheit I didn't realize you'd come Town with something.
It's possible that gravity won't work tomorrow, but I'm not going to make a law based on the concern.
It's logically possible. But is it practically possible? You see what I did there, by introducing the subjective word 'practical?' I am alluding to prior posts where you challenged me for introducing it, indicating that I was being a little disingenuous (or just ignorant) to do so. So here I'm introducing it again, to point out the ways in which thought becomes clearer, it's by introducing things like 'practical' and 'usual' into your thinking, so that it corresponds better to the real world, instead of constantly leaving the intellectual ground with daydreams.
I've long understood that I was arguing property rights with a Marxist, by which I mean our foundation precludes more than contest among others.
Oh now you've gone and done it. This is like the third time you've compared me with a Marxist. Marx being one of the most influential philosophers who's ever lived---I'm blushing. I had no idea my thoughts were so persuasive, but I do thank you profusely for the compliment.
As did I, and as did I in my first response to your idealistic notion. Did you see what I did there? I implied, without even saying it, that while your notion is 'idealistic,' mine must be the practical one, because idealism and pragmatism are in tension with one another.
Yeah, I express a rule, though almost any point can have that qualification and I hope by this point people understand that, since it's a topic addressed prior. Reminds me of when one of you guys tried to use South American countries as part of a counter and I noted that I'd repeatedly isolated terms to the point where I shouldn't have to keep saying Western Industrial Democracies...that if I used shorthand it should be understood, having hammered the particulars home enough to establish the reference.
:AMR: What you continue to hammer home is what we continue to dispute about. You are the one who thinks that a study that shows that making another federal "AWB" law is justified because of a tiny percentage change for the better, affecting the lives of a handful of people. I argue that the same is true for the right to bear arms to denote standard issue military weaponry, and you tell me that no, because it will only affect the lives of a handful of people. You're losing it.
Usually is a little misleading in that context though. More, with potential if extraordinarily rare exception, and as a rule. Usually can feel like 6 of 10.
So is 0.09% in your mind "usual" or "unusual." Do you see what I mean? You're losing it.
We were talking about carbines and then you suddenly changed the subject to revolvers, and now you're asking me who disagrees that revolvers are inferior weapons to carbines? You're seriously losing it.
I also was quoting you, did you know that? or did you not notice.
Like I said, troops are armed for a different thing.
They are armed for at minimum, self defense, and the defense of those around them. That doesn't sound very different to me at all.
You could be going house to house and out in the open in short order.
Yeah, like a 0.09% that you might have to do that, right. Agreed. 'Xcept, I know you're talking about the troop here, and I'm talking about the civilian, and then I went and injected the 0.09% figure that you have previously agreed is sufficient grounds to make a sweeping gun control law.
And I noted a few other reasons why a shotgun, while ideal for home defense, doesn't make sense for a soldier.
It Does make sense for a troop, Sometimes. (That's another point of disagreement between us, and I don't know what to 'chalk up' this one to.)
No, you made more and I addressed them.
No you didn't, because there weren't any. Anything else I've argued is founded upon the notion that the right to bear arms is inalienable, so they are not assumptions.
Unless you're using the wrong word, or using the word in a way I'm unfamiliar with, which is possible, but in my mind doubtful. An assumption is something unsupported by anything either logical or empirical, and I don't have any other ideas that 'assumption' could possibly refer to.
So name them if you want to continue down this path. I 'call.'
And your idea of the right and the actuality are in opposition to findings by the Court and, I believe, would be treating the right unlike any other.
'Shall not be infringed' is what the framers chose to associate with the right to bear arms, which was called out specifically into its own Amendment, the Second, the OP of this thread, in our supreme law the Constitution.
The S. Ct. has found that the Second Amendment applies to any instrument that can constitute a bearable arm, whether or not it had been invented yet in 1791, and that it specially applies to weapons that are in common use, and that it is an individual right, and that it is an expression of the non-enumerated human right to self defense.
My position is all in keeping with all of that.
It's not a belief with me, it's recognizing what exists.
Then show it to me, where is it? Point it out? Give me a picture? Or a map with a route for how I can go see it? Where is this right to bear arms? It seems mythical to me, but you say it exists---where is it? I want to Touch it.
Now as to why I think it's a good idea, there are any number of reasons, from hunting and control of animal populations to recreation that strengthens other uses, to self-defense.
Everything but self-defense is done in every other Western country, and do you know how many of those Western democracies have anything approaching 'the right to bear arms' anywhere in any of their laws? Do you have to check? or do you already know that it's none /zero. We don't even need the Second Amendment to do what you're proposing we do. Nobody else does, and they're all already doing it. They've got no Second Amendment, they've got no recognition of the right to bear arms anywhere in their law, and they're all already doing what you want us to do too.
My position's that we're disobeying the Second Amendment, just as a reminder.
But my proffer here has never been about whether there was a right, but in noting that the weapons and aids I oppose meet certain concerns of the Court and should not be a reasonable part of the exercise, which is not impeded by my inability to fire a shoulder launched nuclear weapon, if one existed.
I just think that if we don't mean what the Second Amendment says, then we should amend the Constitution and tell the S. Ct. what they should think about gun control. Right now it's up to them, and so it's up to the President, and all the President needs is a simple majority of his party in Congress to confirm a justice who agrees with me.
That shouldn't be, even if things were reversed. A justice who believes what you believe shouldn't be confirmed either, not with just a simple majority, this is too volatile to be 'jockeying for justices' here, and also with abortion. This all concerns abortion too. We should just gather up our political will and tell the S. Ct. what to think, because that's Our job.
Once we tell them what to think---they can take it from there.