thelordharry wrote:Speaking of guns and the gun debate, did they ever have to prise the gun from Charlton Heston's cold, dead hands?
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thelordharry wrote:Speaking of guns and the gun debate, did they ever have to prise the gun from Charlton Heston's cold, dead hands?
His point does have merit but like much in the "gun debate", the devil is in the details. What kind of neighbourhood, what kind of firearms? For example the neighbour to my right I wouldn't trust to own a BB gun, he's a drunk and a former crack head. The neighbour to my left is a professional female that commutes to Ottawa every day.Tyyr wrote:I'm not being obtuse. I get what you're saying, however I want some proof that you're talking about a "real" risk. My kids running around with a metal toy held in the air probably increases their risk of being struck by lightning on any given day but I don't take their metal toys away because it's not a '"real" risk. It's something that is so unlikely to happen that getting uptight about it is just ridiculous.
The odds of someone owning a gun, having it AD, having that errant round leave the gun owners house, having the round leave with enough velocity to do damage, and then have the path of that round intersect a person... I don't even know how to quantify those kind of odds. If the guy likes to wave the guns around and fire them off into the air at random, or hand them to neighbor kids to let them get a feel yeah, the guy's an idiot and probably poses an actual risk. However the idea you've put your children at risk by having a gun owner move into the neighborhood is ridiculous.
Indeed, tis not something I advertise to the locals.And you'll pull this magic trick off how? None of my neighbors know I own a firearm and if the asked I wouldn't answer.
Dude, you're about a year too late with those jokes.thelordharry wrote:Speaking of guns and the gun debate, did they ever have to prise the gun from Charlton Heston's cold, dead hands?
I, last year, wrote:Now, if you'll excuse me I'm off to pry that gun out of his cold, dead hands.
Damn it, I set an alarm for a year in the future to use that joke again, you know, when everyone had forgetten about it. CURSE YOU, DANGERMOUSE!!!Rochey wrote:Dude, you're about a year too late with those jokes.thelordharry wrote:Speaking of guns and the gun debate, did they ever have to prise the gun from Charlton Heston's cold, dead hands?![]()
I, last year, wrote:Now, if you'll excuse me I'm off to pry that gun out of his cold, dead hands.
I'm not saying that the presence of a gun doesn't bring with it the possibility of an accidental discharge and that that discharge could be dangerous. However, given that the best number I can find is only 650 accidental gun deaths a year in the United States, which includes hunting accidents and accidents while using them, and that the vast majority of injuries due to accidents are to the person who's messing with the gun, I just find it hard to believe that anyone could consider the mere fact that someone in the neighborhood owns a gun is putting their children at any real risk. Car accidents, choking, that sort of thing to me are real risks to my kids. A one in twenty million chance is not something that to me is a real risk as in something to go basing decisions off of.Cpl Kendall wrote:His point does have merit
For various reasons it's not something smart to do. The most important of which is that it's simply none of their damn business.Indeed, tis not something I advertise to the locals.
Tyyr wrote:I'm not saying that the presence of a gun doesn't bring with it the possibility of an accidental discharge and that that discharge could be dangerous. However, given that the best number I can find is only 650 accidental gun deaths a year in the United States, which includes hunting accidents and accidents while using them, and that the vast majority of injuries due to accidents are to the person who's messing with the gun, I just find it hard to believe that anyone could consider the mere fact that someone in the neighborhood owns a gun is putting their children at any real risk. Car accidents, choking, that sort of thing to me are real risks to my kids. A one in twenty million chance is not something that to me is a real risk as in something to go basing decisions off of.Cpl Kendall wrote:His point does have merit
Additionally, it's just not possible. It's not like you're going to ever be able to live somewhere that there are not going to be guns around you, legal or otherwise. To me that puts this risk into the same realm as something like a lightning strike. An act of god you can't do anything to really prevent.
True enough.For various reasons it's not something smart to do. The most important of which is that it's simply none of their damn business.
Tyyr appears to be correct; I can't find any higher figures for accidental gun deaths, except for 1999 with 824.Cpl Kendall wrote:650 a year? That's it? I would have thought it would be much higher, human stupidity being what it is.
What if I'm the homeowner and you're the civvie gun fetishist? If I didn't know you, I mean. Let's say some guy moves in next to me and my two kids who keeps both overpressure and Hydrashock ammo onhand "just for... whatever." Am I supposed to feel safe?
You owning a gun is immaterial and not even what we're talking about.No. I think (correctly) that my kids have a greater chance of getting shot with guns in the neighborhood than with no guns in the neighborhood.
Yep. Nothing to do with what I was talking about either.Tyyr wrote:You owning a gun is immaterial and not even what we're talking about.
You will never find a perfect person or organisation which never makes mistakes and contains no corruption.Tsukiyumi wrote:That's why I'm happy to live in the US, and in Texas; everyone can feel free to criticize things that are actually wrong with this country, but I refuse to live anywhere that would deny my fundamental right to protect myself. Cops, in my experience, are generally morons.