No discussion on the theater shooting?

We're not even through January, and you've already won Mr Reductio ad Ridiculum, 2014. Congratulations: what an honor.

Was the question not relevant? Why didn't any of them provide an answer?

How would you answer? If someone is holding a gun at you and intends to fire, would you prefer to have a gun on you or not?
 
I asked a very simple question and neither you answered one way or the other. This makes me think you would rather not have that weapon. If I'm wrong, just let me know and I'll edit.

You took a more complex situation and stripped it down to a single, simplistic situation that doesn't really apply. That's why no one answered your silly question.
 
That an individual in possession of a gun is a better defender (against a mad man with automatic weaponry and tactical body armor) than an individual who is simply bare-knuckling it.

Well, with such a narrow, circumstance-blind context, it may appear "very sound logic"; but the bare-knuckler, in view of actual circumstance, is—while less likely to disable or eliminate the maniac threat—also a lot less likely to cause additional, if accidental, harm and death. This is likewise sound logic—even if you think it isn't a necessary and foregone conclusion that collateral damage to innocents would have occurred.
 
Was the question not relevant?

Yes: it is an irrelevant question. It masquerades as simple, ho-hum "got ya there" wisdom in an attempt to distract from and obscure the broader complexities that you (I hope) know exist in this discussion. It's textbook reductio ad ridiculum, and I will repeat: your question was not relevant.
 
You took a more complex situation and stripped it down to a single, simplistic situation that doesn't really apply. That's why no one answered your silly question.

It's not a single, simplistic, situation that doesn't apply. It happened to my own dad in Baltimore right in front of my brother. My dad simply showed that he had a gun and the mugger retreated into the dark.

You can ignore the question all you want. You ignore it because the answer is obvious but it would dispute your liberal la-la land ideology. So you ignore it and insult me. Good for you. But if in that situation, you prefer to be unarmed, then you're a ****ing idiot.
 
It's not a single, simplistic, situation that doesn't apply. It happened to my own dad in Baltimore right in front of my brother. My dad simply showed that he had a gun and the mugger retreated into the dark.

You can ignore the question all you want. You ignore it because the answer is obvious but it would dispute your liberal la-la land ideology. So you ignore it and insult me. Good for you. But if in that situation, you prefer to be unarmed, then you're a ****ing idiot.

Your single anecdote does not equate to the overwhelming empirical boom, mother-****ers that you think it does. It's just as possible the sight of a weapon could have caused the mugger to, ahem, jump the gun on brandishing his own.

But it's not fallacious because "It could never happen—eeehhhhrrrmrrrrghrrrdd wait it did!"; it's fallacious because it ignores—willfully, I'm going to be kind enough to assume—the broader issue of gun-violence in the US to score a mean and petty little point regarding the impulse to self-preservation in a very specific, narrowly-defined moment of danger that by no means ramifies across, or redresses in a meaningful way, the substance of the actual conversation.
 
LOL... I always love it when people refuse to answer a very simple question.

Wake me up when the mass-shooting at a gun show occurs. There's tons of dumb southerners with unlimited access to guns... Any day now.
 
If someone is pointing a gun at you and intends to fire it, would you rather have a gun or not?

LOL... I always love it when people refuse to answer a very simple question.

Well, to be fair—as you can see above—you asked a nice, reductive, hyperbolic statement and then pretended to be downright shocked—shocked, I say—when it wasn't taken seriously.

But I'll answer the question in the same spirit you "asked" it: I'd prefer not to have have someone pointing a gun at me with the intention to fire (or otherwise, for that matter).
 
Well, with such a narrow, circumstance-blind context, it may appear "very sound logic"; but the bare-knuckler, in view of actual circumstance, is—while less likely to disable or eliminate the maniac threat—also a lot less likely to cause additional, if accidental, harm and death. This is likewise sound logic—even if you think it isn't a necessary and foregone conclusion that collateral damage to innocents would have occurred.

So at absolute best, the bare-knuckler equals out with the maniac, because there's the existence of this fear of the armed defender potentially shooting an innocent?

I take still take the armed defender, collateral and all, because there's the chance (which is not as infinitesimal as you and others have tried to construe it) that he takes out the shooter and protects many, if not all of the victims. Again, considering all the circumstances which would legally allow a concealed weapon into a movie theater (excepting an outlaw felon, which is outside of my control) we're looking at the armed defender having a much higher degree of skill with his firearm.
 
Well, to be fair—as you can see above—you never asked a question, simple or otherwise. You made a nice, reductive, hyperbolic statement and then pretended to be downright shocked—shocked, I say—when it wasn't taken seriously.

But, I'll rephrase your assertion in the form of an actual, punctuated question: Would you prefer to not have a gun if someone is holding a gun at you?

Then I'll answer the question in the same spirit you "asked" it: I'd prefer to not have have someone holding a gun at me.

Page 5

If someone is pointing a gun at you and intends to fire it, would you rather have a gun or not?
 
So at absolute best, the bare-knuckler equals out with the maniac, because there's the existence of this fear of the armed defender potentially shooting an innocent?

I take still take the armed defender, collateral and all, because there's the chance (which is not as infinitesimal as you and others have tried to construe it) that he takes out the shooter and protects many, if not all of the victims. Again, considering all the circumstances which would legally allow a concealed weapon into a movie theater (excepting an outlaw felon, which is outside of my control) we're looking at the armed defender having a much higher degree of skill with his firearm.

Well, (a) I personally never said nor construed the likelihood that the gun-hero "takes out the shooter" was infinitesimal in this highly speculative thought-experiment; instead I simply (b) don't think the chance, whatever its percentage-likelihood, is enough to not only discourage any consideration, discussion, or implementation of further gun-control measures but to moreover justify encouraging greater gun ownership as a response to fears of maniac murder-sprees and vigilante wannabees.

Not to get all sturg-style anecdotal, but I've known way too many foolhardy, rash-acting totally legal gun-owners in my limited lifetime to allow me to think that Maybe the Aurora dude might have been stopped sooner (with no accidental injuries/fatalities from stopping him)! is satisfactory justification for More people need to be packing! If anything, gun laws are too constrictive! But, hey—I was born and raised in Florida, so maybe that's coloring my data-set.
 

You're right: I missed that first volley, which was in fact technically phrased as a question. I've emended my post accordingly.

I did, coincidentally, respond to the question in question.
 
Guys... the answer is yes... I would like to have a gun if someone is about to shoot my ass. It shouldn't be that hard to answer sturg's question. You would be a moron not to want a gun. Just answer his question and move on.

It doesn't mean that a society where most people carry guns is better than what we have now. Because certainly it increases the risk of random arguments turning into shootouts.
 
Weso, while more guns in hands will increase random arguments turning into much more, more guns will also keep crime down.
 
Sure it could easily make a difference. It's ok to admit that sturg is right on this one. If you had a theater full of guns then the dude probably wouldn't have even tried it in the first place. Now that doesn't mean that a society where most people carry is a good thing, but it would certainly help prevent some of these mass shootings. Of course mass shootings are very rare and only make up a very small amount of US homicides. The best answer is to just try to keep guns out of the hands of those that shouldn't have them. Don't ban guns, but use better regulation.

And it could just as easily not make a difference. I've overstated my point in saying "If everyone had a gun," but if there's an element of surprise, how many people are going to have to be carrying--and trained--for the fact that there are guns "against" the perpetrator is going to matter?

Hawk, I'm not buying the fact that people who carry are necessarily "trained." They know how to handle a firearm. They have to pass a test to show they are aware of the laws pertaining to firearms. But is that training to defuse a dangerous situation? The training to carry is really a low bar and I don't think it's relevant here.
 
If sturg had the ability or desire to read through the lines, he'd see that his question has essentially been answered. What I'm trying to explain, along with jpx, is that simple example he poses is completely devoid of context, while the issue we're discussing isn't, so what's the point in the question? It's useless, and while he feels he proves a point by him asking and us answering, he truly does not. Instead of addressing jpx's POINTS (not useless questions), he all he says is "answer the question!"

A mass shooting at a gun show and a mass shooting in a movie theater are not the same things. I don't know, AGAIN, exactly how that comparison or suggestion is useful. It taking one circumstance and comparing it to a completely different circumstance. It seems like simple-mindedness.
 
Weso, while more guns in hands will increase random arguments turning into much more, more guns will also keep crime down.

Debatable.

No evidence to support that. I can only imagine more guns on the street would lead to more shootouts, not people minding their own business.

More shootouts means more murders and attempted murder, so I don't think that would deter crime.

You underestimate the rage of the human brain and the self-defense adrenaline mechanisms it possesses.
 
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