(October 25, 2020 at 8:02 am)downbeatplumb Wrote:(October 25, 2020 at 7:00 am)onlinebiker Wrote: And Russia and China have much lower rates of per capita firearm ownership......
But you don't see the problem - right?
Where the fuck do idiots like you get these opinions?
Owning a gun makes a gun owner fearful about as much as owning a life jacket makes a sailor fearful.
It's called being prepared.
Do you wear a seatbelt because you are afraid to drive in a car?
Driving is dangerous walking around in my country is not.
Wearing a seat belt is logical because it not only protects you in the not unusual event of a crash but it is also not a danger to others. The same with life belts.
Guns however are dangerous things. How often do people shoot themselves by accident or a kid gets hold of it and shoot a sibling?
The possible benefits of a gun are outweighed by the significant downsides, the downsides are not present with seat belts or life jackets.
The only real reason to keep guns is because you like having guns.
(October 25, 2020 at 7:54 am)Sal Wrote: That's not being "tooled up", that's a safety precaution in the case of a crash. Even your analogy fails.
I remember a road safety & traffic expert in a documentary that, after having analyzed a few drivers, while driving, on how they drove their cars & trucks, had a quite poignant observation and opinion (paraphrasing): If there was a sharp metal spike right in front of and attached to the center of the steering wheel, constantly in the visual field of the driver while in sitting in the driver's seat looking at the road, instead of wearing a seat belt, people would drive with exceeding caution and responsibility and take driving around considerably more seriously than the people he had observed.
His point was that seat belts, unfortunately necessary due to the nature of driving a vehicle, had an adverse effect of people sense of security while driving. Essentially a false impression that they are less likely to crash their vehicle, because of the seat belts, which is untrue and more likely the opposite case. The likelihood of crashing a vehicle, metal steering spike or seat belt, given the conditions of driving, would be different. And the thought processes behind are certainly markedly different, which do affect how seriously people take driving.
Anyways, y'all over the pond, are "driving around" with "metal spikes" on your "steering wheels".
Can we get back to the issues about this dude in the OP article being caught, please?
That would be the "Tullock spike".
That's exactly that dude! I couldn't, for the life of me, remember his name, but I did remember what Gordon Tullock had proposed.