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biggest mistake we make is failing to take the moral high ground on our
issue, and letting our enemies
define the terms.
THEY
SAY: "We'd be
better off if no one had guns."
WE
SAY: "You can
never succeed at that, criminals will always get guns." (FLAW: The
implication here is that if you
COULD
succeed, it would be a reasonable plan.)
WE
SHOULD SAY: "So,
you want to institute a system where the weak and elderly are at the mercy
of the strong, the
lone
are at the mercy of the gang. You want to give violent criminals a
government guarantee that citizens are disarmed.
Sorry,
that's unacceptable. Better that we should require every citizen to carry
a gun."
THEY
SAY: "Those
assault rifles have no sporting purpose. You don't need a 30-round
magazine for hunting deer --
they're
only for killing people."
WE
SAY: "I compete
in DCM High Power with my AR-15. You need a large-capacity magazine for
their course of fire.
My
SKS is a fine deer rifle, and I've never done anything to give my
government reason not to trust me, blah, blah, blah."
(FLAW:
You have implicitly conceded that it is OK to ban any gun with no sporting
use. And eventually they can replace
your
sporting arms with arcade-game substitutes.)
WE
SHOULD SAY:
"Your claim that 'they're only for killing people' is imprecise. A
gas chamber or electric chair is
designed
for killing people, and these devices obviously serve different functions
than guns. To be precise, a high capacity
military-type
rifle or handgun is designed for CONFLICT. When I need to protect myself
and my freedom, I want the most
reliable,
most durable, highest capacity weapon possible. The only thing hunting and
target shooting have to do with
freedom
is that they're good practice."
THEY
SAY: "If we pass
this CCW law, it will be like the Wild West, with shoot-outs all the time
for fender-benders, in
bars,
etc. We need to keep guns off the streets. If doing so saves just
one life, it will be worth it."
WE
SAY: "Studies
have shown blah blah blah." (flaw: You have implied that if studies
showed CCW laws equaled more
heat-of-passion
shooting, CCW should be illegal.
WE
SHOULD SAY:
"Although no state has experienced what you are describing, that's
not important. What is important
is our
freedom. If saving lives is more important that anything else, why don't
we throw out the Fifth amendment? We have
the
technology to administer an annual truth serum session to the entire
population. We'd catch the criminals and mistaken
arrest
would be a thing of the past. How does that sound?".
THEY
SAY: "I don't
see what the big deal is about a five day waiting period."
WE
SAY: "It doesn't
do any good, criminals don't wait five days, it's a waste of resources
blah blah blah." (FLAW: You
have
implied that if waiting periods DID reduce crime, they would be a good
idea.)
WHAT
WE SHOULD SAY:
"How about a 24-hour cooling-off period with a government review
board before the news is
reported?
Wouldn't that prevent lives from being ruined, e.g. Richard Jewell? And
the fact that this law applies to people
who
ALREADY own a handgun tells me that it's not about crime prevention, it's
about harassment. Personally, I want to
live
in a free society, not a 'safe' one with the government as chief
nanny."
THEY
SAY: "In 1776,
citizens had muskets. No one ever envisioned these deadly AK-47s. I
suppose you think we should
all
have atomic bombs."
WE
SAY: "Uh, well,
uh . . ."
WE
SHOULD SAY:
"Actually, the Founders discussed this very issue - it's in the
Federalist Papers. They wanted the
citizens
to have the same guns as were the issue weapons of soldiers in a modern
infantry. Soldiers in 1776 were each
issued
muskets, but not the large field pieces with exploding shells. In 1996,
soldiers are issued M16s, M249s, etc. but not
howitzers
and atomic bombs. Furthermore, according to your logic, the laws governing
freedom of the press are only valid
for
newspapers whose presses are hand-operated and use fixed type. After all,
no one in 1776 foresaw offset printing or
electricity,
let alone TV and satellite transmission."
THEY
SAY: "We require
licenses on cars, but the powerful NRA screams bloody murder if anyone
ever suggests licensing
these
weapons of mass destruction."
WE
SAY: Nothing,
usually, and just sit there looking dumb.
WE
SHOULD SAY: "You
know, driving is a luxury, where firearms ownership is a right secured by
the Constitution. But
let's
put that aside for a moment. It's interesting you compared guns and
vehicles. Here in the U.S. you can AT ANY AGE
go
into any state and buy as many motorcycles, cars, or trucks of any size as
you want, and you don't need to do anything if
you
don't use them on public property. If you DO want to use them on public
property, you can get a license at age 16. This license
is good in all 50 states. NO waiting periods, no background checks,
nothing. If we treated guns like cars, a fourteen-year-
old
could go into any state and legally buy handguns, machine guns, cannons,
whatever, cash and carry, and shoot
them
all with complete legality on private property. And at age 16 he could get
a state license good anywhere in the country
to
shoot these guns on public property."
Final
comment, useful with most all arguments:
YOU
SAY: "You know,
I'm amazed at how little you care about your grandchildren. I would have
thought they meant
more
to you than anything."
THEY
SAY: "Huh?"
YOU
SAY: "Well,
passing this proposal won't have a big immediate effect. I mean, in
the next couple of years, neither Bill
Clinton
nor Newt Gingrich is going to open up internment camps like Roosevelt did
fifty-odd years ago. But think of your
worst
nightmare of a political leader. Isn't it POSSIBLE that a person like that
MIGHT be in control here some time in the
next
30, 40, or 50 years, with 51% of the Congress and 51% of the Senate behind
him? If that does happen, do you
REALLY
want your grandchildren to have been stripped of their final guarantee of
freedom? And do you really want them
to
have been stripped of it BY YOU?"
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