Before I begin I'd like to make a few things known:
1. I am not well versed in the subject of guns and their handling, so if I say something nonsensical about them I apologize.
2. I am inexperienced when it comes to discussions and debates.
3. I am rather tired so I apologize for mistakes in writing.
Anyway,
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There are tools, and collector's items, and materials stored up to have options. Having too much yarn or spices or books is having lots of options. Collector's items are mostly historical in the case of guns or anything else, I think --- dueling pistols or flintlocks would be a reasonable collector's item even for guns. But modern functional assault rifles? Calling them collector's items is phoney.
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I own a variety of knives, both those I use as tools in woodcraft, and those that were originally designed to pierce chainmail, find gaps in plate, and overall make another human have an unfavorable day. Do I collect these because they are weapons? No, I do not. I merely admire the craftsmanship, appearance, and, in some cases, historic and sentimental value.
Whether something is collectable or not is an area of opinion. Many of the things another might consider collectable I consider worthless or strange. There is no true 'phoney' category.
Aren't guns really just tools? They have a function, and if you buy them for tools, you should want to use them for their purpose, but if you use an assault rifle for its purpose, you'll be arrested by a SWAT team. I garden a lot and thinking about this I realized I have ten shovels. I never "collected" them -- I just acquired them at need throughout the years. And I use all of them, every year, for their actual purpose: the go-to pointed shovel for regular digging, the light grain shovel for snow and straw-mixed light manure and black compost, the little Sears shovel as a sort of large trowel for big pots, and so on through the list.
There are those who would buy tools simply because they like the look of them, never intending to use them. An old friend of mine was notorious for this.
A side note: It is amazing how many tools one can end up with pursuing any hobby.
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My point is that if people have more guns than they can actually USE, there is something very, very weird and suspicious about that. One wonders about their motivation, and their anger level. And whether they are fantasizing arming the neighborhood when the riots or the revolution starts. It's not an innocent hobby, buying lots and lots of guns and high-capacity magazines and ammo: it's basically about wishing and hoping to kill people. Right? Is there any other motivation besides wishing for the chance to kill lots of people?
I would like to own several guns. Among them are what you consider 'assault rifles'. I intend to use them as intended: firing a projectile at a target, exactly the same as my rather anachronistic longbow. That target in this case is merely a piece of paper. Does owning and wanting these weapons mean I want to kill people? No. I have no desire to so much as point a weapon of any kind towards another person, let alone use one against them. Are there people out there with fantasies such as those you mentioned and worse? In all probability, yes. Are they the majority, or even a significant amount? I don't believe so.
Here's an example of how hobbies are not always innocent.
Suppose you had a hobby of collecting bondage S&M equipment? You got your whips and your rattan canes and you've got the leatherhead zipper-mouth mask and handcuffs and footcuffs and ...so on.
So a date finds all this stuff organized neatly in a bondage safe and she .....well, for some reason she seems suspicious! I can't THINK why. And she leaves, and later when there is a rape killing in the area, you are visited by police, who have somehow found out about your interesting collection, and though you tell them it's just your COLLECTION, see, somehow they don't seem to believe you.
No, of course they don't. Because those are tools, too, and if you've got them, people assume you want to use them and may well use them, just as when you've got AR-15 rifles and lots of high-capacity magazines people assume you want to mow down as many civilians as possible.
Because that IS what these tools are for.
I'm afraid you lost me here. I don't see how a person's
assumption of what someone will do has anything to do with what that someone
will do.
....These AR-15s are designed to kill as many people as possible, people They aren't for hunting, they aren't for target practice, they are only for killing large numbers of people in one rampage mass murder.
Some hobby.
Also, I'm relatively sure no firearm has been designed specifically for "killing large numbers of people in one rampage mass murder." Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong about that, I'm not a gun historian.
No, those are wildly bad examples. There is nothing murderous or criminal or perverted about cars, so why shouldn't Leno have all the cars or yarn or books or horses he can collect? Teapots and stamps, too.
Perhaps not the best examples, but not wildly bad in either case.
The problem is when you collect evil things meant to hurt people: assault rifles, perversion toys, torture instruments.
You've lost me again. First, I do not believe there are any tools that are evil. It is those who use them who choose what acts are performed, good or bad. The use of firearms can save lives, several of our current medical technologies arose from torture devices (The '?Stretching Rack?' -> Traction, Oil from peppers -> primitive form of a numbing agent.)
Some people enjoy the use of 'perversion' toys on themselves. I don't believe this makes them or their partners evil.
You know -- or it may not be the sort of book you would read -- how 1930s classic English mysteries ALWAYS had country houses with weird collections of weapons on the wall? Usually foreign curvy dagger types from the Empire, or maces and battle axes from the Middle Ages of England itself.
Without exception, if the collection was described, a weapon from that wall was snatched up by the murderer and used to kill someone at some point during the house party. Point: collections like that are FOR killing people, and therefore are to be used for that.
Yet people are not dying because of the presence of those weapons. They die because there is a murderer amongst them. If the weapons were not there a chair would be used, or a fork, bowl, wrench, candlestick. Even should every conceivable object be secured in the house there is still the murderer. The human body is as much a weapon as a knife or gun, it merely lacks range.
In Joe Hill's wonderful "Heart-Shaped Box" his retired lead rock singer collects mass murderer memorabilia -- Seven Dwarfs drawn by John Wayne Gacy, the clown killer of little boys, and several others including a real snuff film. He gets into soooooooo much trouble because of those --- because basically, they are evil. And he's responsible for owning the evil.
Same deal with assault weapons.
Owning a snuff film? You've got me, I can't argue it's a bad thing to have. Memorabilia of a figure of some fame or infamy? Go ahead so long as it isn't needed for evidence somewhere. I admit, if I came across someone who had a few framed pieces of H.H.Holmes little hotel of nightmares, books on the man, alongside collections of other infamous figures I'd be a little disturbed, but that doesn't make the owner evil, nor the objects evil. Now if the owner wanted to emulate said figures or the memorabilia gained sentience we'd have a bit of a situation.
This argument, on the other hand, is AWFUL. Cars are not intended as murder weapons, so they are "innocent." They may kill people by accident, but that is definitely not their intended purpose. It IS the intended purpose of assault rifles and high-capacity magazines.
You could, I suppose, bash somebody on the head with a large teapot and kill them; or strangle them with my best Japanese yarn. But that would not be what they are intended for and so the guilt would be purely yours, and no blame attaches to the collector of innocent objects.
But torture tools, S&M equipment, assault rifles and all that are intended to kill or hurt people: that's their natural function. So you can't just say, "Whoopie! I'm a collector, isn't it cool?" Because it's like collecting a lot of pit bulls or anything deliberately created to hurt people: it's wrong. It's immoral.
The main thing I disagree with here is the idea of any object being 'innocent' or not. They are objects, they do not think, they do not make choices, those who hold them do. Also the use of the word immoral. Unethical to you perhaps. Immoral? I don't believe any human
knows a damn thing about morality, they merely have opinions.
Here's another example of a non-innocent collection that is a serious ethical issue.
The current New Yorker has one of their long articles on child pornography. They are asking, is it fair to charge people with a crime they haven't done yet?
So here's this movie star, he's got a lot of photos of little boys being raped on his computer. He was tracked from a Website for trading these photos. The police come in and take his computer, search his apartment, research his life, and find that he has never acted on this, he just ----------------------------- has a collection! Of photos of little boys being raped.
This is very like the moral dilemma of the assault rifles. Because he himself doesn't rape the little boys, he just...enjoys the photos. But SOMEBODY has to abuse the children so he gets his photos. No abuse, no photos. This is like people stealing your assault rifles to shoot up the school or movie theater or mall. You didn't do it, but you were the one indirectly guilty. Everybody in the country blames Adam Lanza's mother, after all.
If there were no assault rifles, all these AR-15 rampage mass murders wouldn't have happened. If there were no child pornography, all those children wouldn't have been raped.
So I'd say no, if the "collection" is not innocent, if it is involved inextricably with hurting and killing people, no one connected with it can be innocent. These are not the good guys who have pornography and assault rifle collections.
I do not see the connection between the theft of firearms and child pornography.
Who the country blames I don't care about. The one who committed the crime is responsible, regardless of where the weapon came from. Now if the mother convinced the bastard to do it then she is guilty as well.
I agree, good people do not have child pornography.
However, there
are good people who own assault rifles. Is every owner good? No. Is the majority of owners? I can't say for sure, but I think we'd have far more crime if they weren't.
Here's another example of "collections" that are immoral --
Viscious dogs.
Some people breed and keep pit bulls, Rottweilers, and Dobermans -- these are dogs that have been bred for a very long time to be dangerous attack animals, like assault rifles are manufactured to assault.
Then these dogs get loose and savage young children and pregnant women and kill and maim them.
"Oh, it's not my fault!" yells the owner of these dangerous animals, but of course it IS his fault, and nowadays a lot of these dog owners go to jail after their dogs make kills.
Same deal with the assault weapons -- they get loose by the gun-owner's schizophrenic teen stealing them and using them to kill everyone in his family, like that minister's kid did the other day, or someone else stealing them to shoot people. Seems to me if people have assault weapons somebody uses to shoot lots of people, he should be held criminally liable for having cool weapons designed to shoot lots of people because it tempted this teen to steal them so he could be a cool people-killer too.
Can't say I approve of hostile dog collections. They, unlike firearms, think for themselves. An owner can guide them perhaps, but never fully control them. Dogs of any type are a potential danger even without a human being nearby. Guns are not much of a danger without an operator.