How to win an argument with a gun

Discussion in 'Gun Control' started by jmpet, Jun 10, 2012.

  1. ravill

    ravill New Member

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    Commie Liberals.

    I can see how frustration can lead to name calling and escalation myself!

    We have certain unalienable rights and, yup, that is an acceptable price for me to pay to keep them.
     
  2. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    People are alienated from their supposed "inalienable rights" everyday.

    "Inalienable rights", natural rights, god given rights, are all imaginary.
     
  3. ravill

    ravill New Member

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    This is your opinion sir. Thankfully, it wasn't the opinion of the good folks who wrote our constitution.

    And well, your first sentence is "inalienably" true. And that is a travesty.
     
  4. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    They are imaginary. Rights differ from government to government. We have rights that other countries do not have, and vise versa.

    If gun ownership were God given right, then why is the US the only country in the world that recognizes that right?
     
  5. BleedingHeadKen

    BleedingHeadKen Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Natural rights derive from self-ownership. If you don't own yourself, who does?

    You also misunderstand the word "unalienable". It means something that cannot be taken by lien, or by contract.

    So, what is your principle, if you have any? For example, why should people be allowed to practice any religion other than a government religion? Don't give me the Constitution angle, that's a 200 year old dead letter and it doesn't describe morality. If, as you fundamentally believe, might is right, how can anything government does be wrong?
     
  6. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    So the six million Jews who were killed, their rights were not taken away?

    If being herded into a gas chamber is not a suspension of basic rights, what is?

    What harm comes from allowing people such freedom? Assuming they keep it out of government, such beliefs are largely benign.

    Rights are decided by the majority.
     
  7. BleedingHeadKen

    BleedingHeadKen Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    No. They were denied their natural rights. If you are made a slave, does that mean someone actually owns you and controls your thoughts and your body and the identity that you is you no longer exists? Of course not, what they have is the power, granted by government, to use whatever method of coercion is necessary (or desired), including violence, in order to obtain compliance from you. Natural rights stem from self-ownership in that they provide a framework for identifying when one is being prevented from fully exercising one's self-ownership.

    I would argue that it's the same for owning a gun. There is no harm in owning one. Assuming they don't use it to threaten or harm an innocent person, ownership and possession is entirely benign.

    And, why should they keep it out of government? If the majority wants religion, it's right, and your belief that it is wrong is irrational.

    The majority of whom? Who decides what is a majority? The fact is, "the majority" has no power at all. Power is concentrated in the hands of the few, and if they choose to listen to "the majority" they will do so, if they choose otherwise, how will "the majority" stop them? If the majority could direct power, then it would not change my contention that your basic principle is that might is right. I'd also ask you then, how you would declare it wrong to put Jews, or anyone else, into gas chambers if the majority agree that it is a good thing to do it?

    If you have no objective determination of right and wrong for human interaction, then you have the same problem as a religious person. Your morality stems from pure emotion and is irrational, or it is guided entirely by demagogues/priests.
     
  8. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    My argument is based on what is observed in reality. In reality right and wrong is decided by the majority (this is demonstrable), and right come from that. I do believe that certain rights are objective, however reality and the processes of society point towards subjectivity.

    The majority of California voters decided to deny homosexuals equal treatment under the law. Whether or not that is right or wrong has little bearing on the outcome. The only way the "right thing" can occur in the situation is if the majority decide to change the law. There are checks and balances in government to prevent total majority rule, but that has little relevance to my point.

    Rights are invented by man. We decide what rights do and do not exist. What we do not need as a deluded idea of "God given" rights or natural rights. None of which exist unless the government at hand recognizes them. This is not a theoretical argument, but an argument based on fact.
     
  9. BleedingHeadKen

    BleedingHeadKen Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    [/quote]

    I dispute the claim that is demonstrable. You have yet to define what you mean by a majority, and I would be curious to understand how you believe the majority demonstrates right from wrong.

    "Processes of society" is rhetoric for what? Please be more specific. Society is not a thing that exists in reality and can be a label for many different groups of people.

    Is that what "they" all decided exactly, in unison, or did each individual have his or her own reasons for it? I'm surprised that you believe that you can think for that many people, including what their exact decisions and motives were for checking a box on a ballot.

    Well, by your assertions, it's right that gays be excluded from equal treatment under the law because a) you believe that the majority decides what is right and wrong and b) you believe that the majority believes that gays should be denied that equal treatment. It's irrational to hold that the majority decided wrongly since the majority makes right. Or so you say. Are you an irrational person?

    Well, I'm not one to consider the system of government to be the arbiter of right and wrong or of morality and more than I consider a system of religion to be the same. What you seem to have done is invested all the trappings of religion into the state. Instead of a book, like the Bible, making right and wrong, there are legislators who perform that function.

    That does not mean that natural rights aren't objectively derived. If you want people to have equal treatment, then a framework for ethics is necessary. Otherwise, your desire for equal treatment is based on pure emotion and is no more valid than the closeted Christian's desire to avoid hell by avoiding his homosexual urges.

    Why do you consider natural rights to be deluded? Is it because it is a system created by man? The scientific method is also a system created by man. Science can be done with out. Discoveries about natural phenomenon can be made and theories developed, but the system provides a clear path for empirical observation. Would you call the scientific method deluded?

    If you hold that rights can only come from government, then the source of rights is might makes right. I asked you how you would argue that it was wrong for Germans to shovel Jews into ovens. Can you answer it?
     
  10. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    By majority I mean a majority of those who are involved in making decisions. Government.

     
  11. ravill

    ravill New Member

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    This is because, even with all our flaws, with all our alienation of inalienable rights, The US is still the BEST country to live in. When that changes, then I'll either a) fight to change that or b) move to the country which IS the best to live in.



    This is the oldest rule in the book. The guy with the biggest stick makes the rules.

    And a bunch of (what Wolverine and many others think) old backwards nonapplicaply thinking guys (ie the founding fathers) saw this, and thought that we should be able to make a nation where we don't have to be ruled by the tyranny of a guy (ie king) or bunch of other guys (government, criminals, etc...) and made it so We The People could have "might" as well.

    Sadly, our government has eroded this right.

    This is, very sadly, true. And simply because "the government at hand" doesn't recognize them, does not make them alienable.

    The fact that someone is taking your rights away, doesn't mean you shouldn't have those rights.



    It is touching, and reveals that you have thought about it, that you think it is "nice" that people have "natural rights". I am just thankful that someone, somewhere decided that it wasn't just "nice" and it was worth dying for. Those "someones" where those who made our constitution and fought for our country.
     
  12. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    America says America is the best country to live in. I am not really interested in what is the best country to live in, it is relative when considering first world nations. Europe would be awesome.

    Which is the product of the government deciding what rights are right and what rights are "unnecessary".


    I don't make the argument that we should or shouldn't have certain rights. My argument is that unless the government recognizes them, they do not exist.

    I should be able to buy an M-16 for a little less than $20,000. But I can't. So what use is should?

    None of this contradicts my position, but serves to only add to it.
     
  13. ravill

    ravill New Member

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    Actually, what I should have wrote was that "I, ravill, think The US is the best country to live in!" ;-)

    I think we are agreeing here really.

    It seems to me that you are coming from an apathetic point of view of "you are screwed 'cause your government took, is taking, is gonna take your so called silly rights so deal with it!" It seems pragmatic actually.

    And I am coming from "yup they are, and it ain't cool" point of view.
     
  14. Wolverine

    Wolverine New Member Past Donor

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    We just disagree on the origin of rights.
     

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