Those are very reasonable arguments - I can't find any fault in them.VMI77 wrote:I agree that gun ownership is a big responsibility and I think there are probably are lot of people with guns who aren't up to it.
The agenda issue is sort of a chicken and egg question. Gun ownership is generally stigmatized by the media, by politicians, and by other people in positions of authority --like school administrators, and doctors via organizations like the AAP. The anti-gun agenda is promulgated far and wide by those in positions of authority. Who speaks for gun ownership? Essentially, gun owners, and gun owner groups like the NRA and Gun Owners of America, so the opinions of people who aren't familiar with the issues of gun ownership are influenced by the perception that people in authority are generally against gun ownership, while only the wacko self-interested gun nuts are for it.
I know several people who would like to have guns in the home, but their wives are against it. Their wives are against it for the most part because they have no experience with guns and their perceptions are colored by media and other social stigmatization. So it's not as simple as people willing to take responsibility and those who are not. If these people had guns in the home they would take responsibility for them. But for someone in this position a pediatrician telling them that guns are bad for children makes taking that step far more difficult. To the extent gun ownership is normalized there will be more support for it. To the extent it becomes something unusual there will be less support for it. In Britain most of the population had limited or no experience with guns and their ownership and use was widely stigmatized. It was easy to ban guns there.
I don't know what will produce better results here for 2nd Amendment rights but history tells a pretty clear story: where there is no history of gun ownership, or where gun ownership becomes uncommon, guns get banned. Switzerland has a tradition of militia service and broad gun ownership. In most of the rest of Europe, gun ownership is severely limited or effectively banned. America is just about the only stable country is the entire world where people like you and I can own and carry a wife variety of guns and use them in self-defense.
[/quote]VMI77 wrote: This right is under constant attack. I see this AAP anti-gun strategy as attack by attrition. It may be far less effective than I fear it is, or it may be far more effective than you think it is. The question is: is the greater effect to reduce the number of people who would otherwise own guns and handle them responsibly; or to reduce the number of people who would otherwise own guns and handle them irresponsibly? Your replies suggest you believe the latter. I frankly don't know, but given the obvious agenda at work here I think the people promoting it believe the overall effect is to reduce the number of people owning guns and to thereby reduce the support for gun ownership.
Your summary, while perhaps oversimplified, is also reasonable. I also do not know the answer to the greater effect. I guess, yes, I probably would lean toward the latter. But then I guess have a real problem with 'casual gun owners'.
A third effect that I hope would register in a statistically significant quantity, if such could be measured, would be an increase in the number of irresponsible gun owners who are reminded to consider ways to be more responsible.
It's funny you mention this because such was the case with me. It's been a process. The first obstacle was getting them in the house. Then it was working with the kids - teaching them. Then taking the kids to the range - that was a big hurdle. I still haven't gotten her to the range yet.VMI77 wrote: I know several people who would like to have guns in the home, but their wives are against it. Their wives are against it for the most part because they have no experience with guns and their perceptions are colored by media and other social stigmatization.
Now that I have pursued and gotten my CHL, a funny thing happened the other day. She teased me when we were leaving the house because we were only going to Home Depot and Walmart. Anyway, on the drive home, I asked her if she had thought at all about the fact that I was armed in those stores. She realized that she hadn't and she said something like:
"I still don't like guns - they scare me and so I'm not sure I know yet what to think about this. But I like knowing that your thinking about it and taking care of things."