08-04-2018, 06:17 AM | #67 | |
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Of course, context matters. If you choose to pursue a career path in the illicit drug trade, your personal risk of being killed by a gun is greatly increased over someone who pursues a career path in the culinary arts. If you never swim in any natural body of water, your personal risk of being attacked by a shark in your lifetime is very nearly zero. However, there has to be a way to discuss the general risk (or incidence, call it what you like) of events like these occurring randomly within a certain population, and that's what fravel was expressing. Pedantry doesn't weaken his point. Being murdered by firearm in the United States is a rare event, even more so if we take context into account. |
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08-04-2018, 02:38 PM | #68 |
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TL/DR every post on statistics regarding guns in society, so maybe I’m missing something. But to me, discussing violent crime statistics as a means of advancing gun control policy arguments misses a fundamental point: Freedom is not free. A free and open society in which people are citizens with individual liberty rather than subjects of the State carries with it a number of risks that we willingly tolerate as a price we pay for freedom. The right to keep and bear arms is certainly one such risk. It has resulted in a country that has hundreds of millions of firearms in circulation. There are so many guns in this country that attempting to purge them from our society—even if it were Constitutionally permissible and desirable from a policy standpoint (which it isn’t)—would be virtually impossible. Thus, we must recognize that attempts to limit access by law abiding citizens to firearms will have little impact on the bad guys, who will always be able to get them anyway.
There are many other examples of the tolerance of risk as a price of freedom. The fourth, fifth, and eighth amendments all operate to increase the likelihood that bad guys, including violent criminals and deranged Muslim jihadists, will escape detection, prosecution, and conviction for their crimes. But these are very important rights that we should not be willing to give up based largely upon emotional reactions to highly publicized, but statistically insignificant, events, or contorted analyses of statistics in general, which are easily manipulated anyway.
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08-04-2018, 05:52 PM | #69 | |
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Edit: there's also no such thing as "general risk". By using such a term, you're just conflating incidence with risk, which as I have shown, are different concepts. |
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08-04-2018, 06:33 PM | #70 |
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08-05-2018, 11:59 AM | #71 |
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I'm apparently in late on this, but does all the skepticism mean that I wasted the $700 worth of legos I bought to make this? Please reply quickly, I need to go underground before I'm swept up by the Hasbro commission on conspiracy charges.
https://www.brickwarriors.com/produc...ngton-r4-c.jpg |
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08-06-2018, 05:01 PM | #72 | |
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08-09-2018, 11:40 PM | #73 |
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What happened to a 3D printed gun at the range
https://www.wfaa.com/mobile/article/.../287-581760605 (Via WFAA) |
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08-10-2018, 12:54 AM | #74 | |
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08-10-2018, 08:56 AM | #75 |
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whoever thought making a 3D printed plastic gun was a good idea didn't think the physics through.....
Now with that said....I think what needs to be brought up is people making these, creating a mold, and mass producing these guns in a more durable material... EDIT: They do have metal |
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08-10-2018, 09:24 AM | #76 | |
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You are talking about the risk of gun ownership or use in the US. The gun related deaths (not purposefully self inflicted) in the US / the population of the US is a pretty decent risk metric. If you disagree - what metric do you think would be better? edit: how about % of the population that owns guns? Well, that has actually dropped over the last 50 years while the gun related deaths has increased over the same period. That is more of a correlation than a risk metric, and we all know correlation <> causation, but it's a stab at trying to think of what you might be looking for here.
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08-10-2018, 09:31 AM | #77 | |
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08-12-2018, 10:49 AM | #78 | |
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08-28-2018, 12:51 PM | #79 |
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Well States are suing the feds for not putting an end to this, and the courts have agreed so this whole idea of digital plans to print a gun are all on hold again.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/fe...D=ansmsnnews11. I think we will all agree this is heading to the supreme court. Congress will need to put a law in place which says you are not allowed to print a gun. Plastic gun are only illegal from a detection standpoint. From the Federal law stand point it does not say you can not make or own one, just not allow to carry it somewhere that does not allow it to be detected by a screening system. https://www.atf.gov/firearms/qa/fire...t-made-plastic |
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08-28-2018, 03:12 PM | #80 | |
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08-28-2018, 04:37 PM | #81 | |
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From the looks of it the lower courts will ban everything and the Supreme Court will just through it all out. Congress is the only ones who can really stop this if they want to. |
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08-28-2018, 04:52 PM | #82 |
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That’s simply not true. All you need is a tax stamp and state law permitting, many of which do. Perfectly legal to own a full auto.
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08-28-2018, 04:53 PM | #83 |
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It’s also not as simple as Congress passing a law. The law would need to be Constitutional.
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08-28-2018, 05:14 PM | #84 | |
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Reagan made owning a fully-automatic weapon manufactured after 1986 illegal, the federal government capped the supply making the guns left in circulation prohibitively expensive. S.49 - Firearms Owners' Protection Act https://www.congress.gov/bill/99th-c...senate-bill/49 So there are laws which limit ownership of various classes of guns. |
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