Hope of Glory said:
Most people who break into your home will be within a few feet of you at some point. If you are unarmed, they will intentionally approach.
They are, after all, criminals intent on robbing you, and that's the way you do it. Mugging isn't done from across the street.
Still, the point is, he has to
get within a few feet of you to be able to harm you with a knife or bat. If you see him first, you might be able to keep him at bay, or get away. Not so if he has a gun (and you might not even have a chance to reach for yours, while we're at it!)
Also, the same with this ideal "everyone armed" situation, where everyone pitches into stop the bad guy, and bullets are flying all over the place. Now, you're talking about innocent bystanders being in danger.
Part of my training includs improvised weapons, and I can tell you that the only way to ban all weapons is to force everyone to go naked.
Oops! Then we still have rocks and sticks.
There's a reason that the number of murder committed with knives and blunt objects is several times higher than that of guns. Many things are potentially deadly.
They are all equally dangerous in the wrong hands. Some just have the potential for being much more spectacular in their ability to create destruction.
And that's the point. Because of the gun's potential range, it is generally, overall, more dangerous.
Glee? From whom? I don't relish the thought of being put in the position of having to kill someone for any reason, but I do relish the thought of being able to protect my family from a criminal.
Even that is not something we should "relish", as if it were a good event we are
hoping will happen. That is something we should hope and pray
never has to be used. Again, it is the attitude, and we must remember our natural inclination to glory in our own strength and power.
I guess most of the "glee" I spoke of was on the other Christian board I was on. But even puns like this from p.3 of here: "But then again I define gun control as a firm grip, careful aim, and a slow squeeze of the trigger", seem to make light of the whole issue, as if it is something one would be happy to do, rather than a serious matter that should not be undetaken lightly. It also reminds me of something one might hear on a gangsta rap.
Fear and anger? No fear. But, it does anger me that someone wants to harm my family! It angers me that this psycho murdered 32 innocent people, then took his own life, and it could have been prevented by permitting the fact that he was a mental case be reported, or barring that, if that first professor had been armed.
It's fear too; that's just as much apart of the survival instinct. It's just being buried beneath the strong "anger" front, and "gung ho" aggression.
I trust God to keep my aim true if/when I find the need to shoot someone or something. Whether to defend myself or feed my family, it's only that God has given me the ability to perform well that permits either.
So, pointing out that murder is self-suicide and very egocentric and does have far-reaching consequences, is somehow wrong?
Somehow, in your mind, self defense is murder?
You're missing the point. You missed the key word from yesterday; the
ATTITUDE I am seeing, of "tresspassers will be shot, survivors will be shot again" (even though that particular statement wasn't made here) is what is possibly murderous, AND egocentric. (Again, arguing all kinds of guns should be legal, because I'm gonna to pack my pistols, and wipe outthat violating scum and ride off into the sunset).
So people came down on all suicides as going to Hell for being "egocentric" and "not trusting God", and show no mercy or compassion, yet they are reacting to the same survival mechanism that drives one to want to kill an enemy. (Escape from pain or potential harm). So by the same token, it can be argued that many of the same people seem to be trusting in a gun itself, the same way anyone can make an idol out of something, even if provided or allowed by God. The difference is that killing others has under certain circumstances been allowed in the Bible, while killing onesself was never. Still, since it is a survival mechanism, we have to be careful, even with what God provides or allows. Just like with food, money and sex; it is of our "natural" (fleshy) nature, and thus possible to be egocentric with it, and it become just as much sin as what God doesn't allow. So we should be careful of judging another the way people did with suicides.
Again, the attitude I am seeing seems to be more "gung ho; wild wild west" than scriptural reflection. (Notice, the Bible and God hardly even come up in the discussion, and the Constitution becoming almost like a replacement, as Andre pointed out). Remember, the villain to us, is first, a lost soul who needs Christ. If he deserves to die for being in your home, we all deserve to die for our sins as well. We must never forget that, and get into the mindset of many nonbelievers and mainline nominal Christians that one is "good" because they never killed anybody.
So, you think we need to "play fair" and wait until they shoot first?
Perhaps we should give them two or three warnings first in addition to a stern lecture before defending our families?
I actually was thinking in terms of the event where shooting occurs, not "lecturing" or "being nice". That is nowhere in any of my statements. Again, a knee jerk emotional reaction of hearing things the other person didn't actually say.
Him dying is unfortunate, but self-defense is stopping the threat.
If you had ever had any training in self-defense, you would know that "playing nice" is not part of stopping the threat. Center mass is stopping the threat in most cases; in some, even that is not enough.
Self-defense, contrary to your misguided notions, is not always a counterattack.
And this is what I mean. It's no longer "defense" then. You want to be judge, jury and executioner. And others do not even seem to be arguing "if necessary". It's just "if he comes into my house, he's dead".
Again, issues like this (just like the free market" one last fall) it always comes down to "either my way, or you're a radical liberal; nothing in between". So it's deliberately try to kill him, or you're "playing nice". There are ways to stop the threat, but it seems people want to kill, whether they have to or not.
Thankfully, the Bible doesn't agree with you. Neither accidental manslaughter nor self-defense nor capital punishment are considered murder.
Problem is; again; what some are describing is no longer accidental.
Second of all, you need to read the law. There's no "getting out of it". The law specifically permits you to shoot first, ask questions later, if someone is illegally in your home. No trouble to need to get out of.
I will modifiy it a bit, though, and state that if you had gone through the training, you would know that the law permits you (without fear of legal fallout) to defend yourself or others from the threat of death or severe bodily harm. So, if an unarmed person is twice as big as your wife and is beating her, and he's big enough to beat you as well, guess what? You may defend yourself and your wife, even if he's unarmed.
I don't know much about that law, but from what I have heard, deadly force is something to be used with serious reservation. Remember, the cops when they arrive there do not know what happened, or who belonged where. They have to make sure it was not a homicide, so you are kind of "suspect", and we all know that the law may say one thing on paper, but in practice, it might be much more complicated.
Just like you ignore all those people who were killed by cars and excusing it because cars are A-OK in your book.
Now that's a non-sequitur, and another knee-jerk reaction that overgeneralizes in its comparison. Like you said, any object can be used for killing. But we can't get rid of every object in the universe. Some however, are
made specifically for killing. That is what is being debated. This is basically a "cut your nose off to spite your face" kind of reasoning. Because we can't get rid of all potentially deadly objects, then why not just allow even deadlier ones to proliferate.
Actually, no one ignores those who are injured in firearm related incidents, whether accidental or intentional. There are many safety training programs that are available, and your pro-second amendment groups want the justice system to do their job and get the criminals off the street.
Safety programs won't help those caught in the crossfire, if we just encourage everyone to start shooting in situations, and if criminals are allowed to get all sorts of weapons, and even with your training, you are outgunned. That is the main concern of gun control.
rbell said:
Andre,
To every stat/study that you've been shown, your response has been, "But that doesn't account for all the factors."
Since we cannot account for all the factors (it would be impossible to consider every single variable, then we are at an impasse. You leave us no way to prove our point...because, every stat we offer cannot account for every single variable.
Circular reasoning.
Again, to pick up on a point I made. Andre is right, and you even acknowledged it. We cannot always account for all the factors. That is really our ultimate point. That's why answers to issues like this are difficult, and nobody has all the truth. Yet, we keep seeing one side claim not only to be the absolute truth, but also lump everything else into a diametric "opposite extreme" of total error. Things in life are almost never like that. And we won't get anywhere as long as we pretend they are.