Aaron wrote:I don’t think you have. Tell us how you really feel, as a pro gun advocate I don't want to fall into the usual errors.
So this needs prefacing. There's a debate concept known as Offense/Defense with regards as to how to weigh arguments. There are a number of ways to understand it, but the simplest way is that Offense is a reason to do something or why doing something might cause something bad to happen (that is to say, offensive arguments have impacts to them), while Defense is a reason why a claim might not be true.
The way that this is traditionally explained is if we were hungry and you said we should go to the ice cream store to satiate our hunger and I made two arguments:
1. "Ice Cream isn't filling and won't be enough to make us not hungry."
and
2. "Ice Cream is filled with fats and sugars, and could lead to us becoming obese diabetics who die by the time we're forty."
The first is a purely defensive claim because it says that it won't work, while the second is offense because it gives a reason why we ought not eat ice cream even if it's kind of a ludicrous one. In formalized debate defense alone is never a reason to make a decision, because the risk of solvency would still justify endorsement, so even if Ice Cream might not satiate our hunger if there's no reason not to eat Ice Cream we should still do it because it might work.
To contextualize this to the gun debate, the most common argument against gun control of any sort is "This doesn't work to stop crimes!" which is a
purely defensive argument and doesn't give any reason why guns should be owned. Whatever the lunacy of the pro-gun control side at times, that argument is neither responsive nor effective as an argument.
The proper response to gun control advocates is something like "Hand guns and certain rifles offer definite protective benefits in the hands of properly trained civilians, along with personal utility through pleasure shooting, and are a boost to the economy. Banning them would decrease personal pleasure and employment for negligible gains, or a net decrease, in the realm of public safety."
Except that that would allow for 'assault weapons' bans and a number of protective provisions on guns, and we can't have that sort of moderation in public discourse.
"Is it not part of being erotically experienced, however, to know that the desire to enter the other can lead one to the wrong entrance?" - Peter Sloterdijk
"Ethics is endless, the law is terminal." - Paul Mann