RE: Gun control
October 3, 2013 at 8:23 pm
(This post was last modified: October 3, 2013 at 8:24 pm by Zazzy.)
(October 3, 2013 at 4:20 pm)Chas Wrote: Yes, thoughtful post, TBD.This is the problem, right there. It's so bad that I can't often ask for education on guns without getting insulted- it's like because I have never held a gun I'm the enemy, and to my own liberal peeps I'm the enemy for even asking gun owners to educate me. I can't win.
We (TBD and I) have made several attempts to discuss gun control on another forum, but it always seems to get derailed by extremists on both ends of the spectrum.
Having a thoughtful, polite, constructive discussion has been difficult.
That's why I'm really enjoying this thread- because all the voices are so calm and rational, yet still state opinions with force- and it's teaching me. It's rare.
How does this kind of conversation happen in the real world? Can it?
Quote:But the problem is not guns, per se, it is violence.I agree that these are obvious steps. Taking these steps would fix much more than just gun problems. I'm just not sure we as a culture are ever going to be invested in these things for any reason.
The underlying problems are poverty, ignorance, and mental health.
The largest steps we can take to reduce gun violence are social: mental health care, equitable opportunity for education and employment.
Quote:There should also be more rational firearms laws. Banning "assault weapons" is not constructive. The federal "assault weapons" ban did nothing to reduce gun violenceWhat should those laws look like? If you were in charge, what steps would you take?