dscott8 wrote:The most fundamental right in a free society is the right to defend yourself. If you can't fight back against thugs, you have anarchy. If you can't fight back against oppressive governments, you have tyranny. If you can't fight back against foreign invaders, you have no country anyomre. All of the other rights -- freedeom of speech and conscience, freedom to worship as you please or not at all, etc. -- must be defended, because there will always be someone who wants to take them from you.
The right to self-defense is meaningless without the tools to exercise it. Those who ignore rights and laws will have weapons regardless of any laws against them, so laws banning weapons are impractical. They do not work. How can you enforce them? With the same methods that have kept our streets free of illegal drugs for decades?
I live in the state of Florida in the USA. I know very few people who do not own a firearm, and I'd say that probably 60 - 70% of my acquaintances have concealed weapons permits. Aside from drug and gang related stuff (bad guys versus bad guys), there is very little violent crime against the person here, because there is a huge chance that the bad guy will wind up looking down the barrel of a gun in the hands of a law-abiding citizen who is guaranteed by law the right to put a bulllet through him. This is called deterrence. It works, and in the few cases where the bad guy is too stupid to be deterred, it is he, not the law-abiding citizen, who gets shot.
A win-win situation, if you ask me.
As someone brought up with a very differet perspective, your view just doesn't make sense to me. The fact that guns are very tightly controlled in my country doesn't mean I live in an anarchic, tyrannical non-country. It is very rare for me to even see a gun (as even the police don't normally have them).
I can see many good arguments for the legality of guns (mostly on the practial side - hunting etc). But to me two of the biggest I so often hear from Americans just don't stand up. Firstly, the crime one - ie 'if we outlaw guns then the only people with them will be criminals and we'll have just increased the potential victim pool', just doesn't hold up when you look at international crime rates vs gun availability. Secondly, the defense against government tyranny doesn't work for me either. It may have used to make sense when we were talking about muskets, but in the modern day it just wouldn't work. In a modern-day coup/revolution in a first-world country it wouldn't matter. It would all come down to which side the military came down on. If they joined the side of the revolutionaries then it wouldn't matter, if they joined on the side of the state then it still wouldn't matter how many assault rifles or antique machine guns the civilians had. The whole 'armed citizenry keeps the government in check' thing doesn't work unless that citizenry has access to SAMs, tanks, drones etc.