noxiousdog wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2018 12:44 pm
El Guapo wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2018 12:40 pm
Chrisoc13 wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2018 12:19 pm
noxiousdog wrote:Fireball wrote: Thu Feb 15, 2018 12:08 pm
There is no justification whatsoever for any civilian to own these sorts of weapons.
Other than that pesky freedom word I suppose.
I used to see it that way. I'm done with that argument. This isn't freedom.
More to the point I think is that that answer (freedom!) is question-begging. It could be used to justify literally any weapon (or object of any kind), including things like bazookas that no one (almost no one) would argue civilians should be able to own. So we inevitably wind up in some sort of individual welfare vs. societal cost of the mass ownership of these kinds of weapons.
Right. And therefore to outlaw it, you better justify that it's a significant problem and banning it will cure more ills than it creates.
Hopping to the default of "There is no justification whatsoever for any civilian to own these sorts of weapons" is how we wound up with Prohibition and a drug war that has killed and destroyed the lives of far more people than school shootings. I would argue that our gun loving society is a direct result of those two authoritarian regimes.
Showing that mass ownership of guns like this (and more to the point, the ease with which they can be acquired) is a significant problem seems relatively easy. We're at, what, 45 mass shootings in 29 days in 2018? We have way more mass shootings than pretty much any other country. That's pretty solid evidence that our public policy on the ease and convenience of gun acquisition and regulation is way off where it should be and a matter of social cost.
As for individual benefits, my understanding is that the evidence of the utility of guns (both in general, and especially for automatic / semi-automatic weapons) for self-defense (which I think is the most compelling individual justification for owning a weapon) is pretty thin. And while I am sure that gun ownership for the purposes of hunting and gun-range shooting is enjoyable, I don't find that an especially compelling justification for individual gun ownership. For one, if people want to use a given type of weapon (including an AR-15, say) for hunting, I don't see why we couldn't just ban it for individual ownership purposes, and then have people rent them from gun ranges / hunting management companies.
In any event, if I were actually in charge of gun policy in this country, I'd set up a commission to study gun regulations and their implementation internationally (especially Canada, Europe, and Australia), and then implement the ones that seemed the most sensible and effective. But I think the core of the frustration for people who favor greater gun regulation is not that the AR-15 and other weapons are not getting banned, but more that gun policy in the United States continues to move against any sort of regulation at all.
Black Lives Matter.