• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

Psychology of Gun Lovers

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
Gun Lovers: the Enemies of Freedom and Equality

Don't get your hopes up. :newwink:
It's time for us to level set expectations. :happy:

There are times when your posts are insightful and interesting; this is not one of those times. :thumbdown:

There are also times when you rant about things to such a degree that is obvious your participation is all about the chance to rant without any real interest in contributing in a meaningful way to the conversation at hand. IMHO, this is one of those times. :violin:

So far as anyone's ranting having the capacity to cut me to the quick, it's not possible because:

(1) Sticks and stones will break my bones, but hypertext will never hurt me, and

(2) Once it is clear that another's behavior is a juvenile outburst of some kind, there's really nothing to get upset about - the whole display becomes laughable. :rotfl:

For instance, when visiting a zoo, what do monkeys do? :thinking:
They throw their feces out of their cages at the zoo's visitors. :huh:
When you see this happen it is not a trigger for anger; it is easy to laugh off, because that's what monkeys do. :yes: What else do you expect from them? They are monkeys, silly person! :laugh:

And so here we are, monkeys throw their feces at people, Mole rants in ignorant metaphors to satisfy urges for attention seeking, and as always I am having an awesome day. :moonwalk: :bananachamp: :banana2:

Thanks for asking, I appreciate it. :hifive:

Oh, and if you ever feel alone and want company during your next rant - I reccommend the "Me & My Homies" Superfly Monkey 7-Pack for $25.95 at www.buysuperflymonkey.com

Homies7pk-2.jpg


Cheers!

:cheers:

-Halla74

In Parliament, after a personal attack, we have the right to make a personal explanation -

My Parliament has successfully defeated the gun lovers, and this is the most popular decision among the electors.

We have democratically defeated the gun lovers on one whole Continent.

Naturally the gun lovers hate us for we have shown what can be done in a liberal democracy.

Gun lovers hate us because we have shown how to successfully limit the power of gun lovers.

And make no mistake: gun lovers love power.

And power tends to corrupt, and absolute power, the power of the gun, corrupts absolutely.
 

Halla74

Artisan Conquerer
Joined
Jan 20, 2009
Messages
6,898
MBTI Type
ESTP
Enneagram
7w8
Instinctual Variant
sx/so
In Parliament, after a personal attack, we have the right to make a personal explanation -

My Parliament has successfully defeated the gun lovers, and this is the most popular decision among the electors.

We have democratically defeated the gun lovers on one whole Continent.

Naturally the gun lovers hate us for we have shown what can be done in a liberal democracy.

Gun lovers hate us because we have shown how to successfully limit the power of gun lovers.

And make no mistake: gun lovers love power.

And power tends to corrupt, and absolute power, the power of the gun, corrupts absolutely.

In the United States of America, when we hear a bunch of flubber-blubber, we get bored and go off to bed... :offtobed:

Cheers to you and your homies in Parliament,

:cheers:

-Halla74
 

SD45T-2

Senior Jr.
Joined
Feb 18, 2012
Messages
4,235
MBTI Type
ESTJ
Enneagram
1w2
Instinctual Variant
so/sp
My dad is a veteran and could teach me to shoot. He has a rifle (I think he kept the one he had in the Marines) but he strongly dislikes guns because he's seen what they can do.
M1 Garand?
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
In the United States of America, when we hear a bunch of flubber-blubber, we get bored and go off to bed... :offtobed:

Cheers to you and your homies in Parliament,

:cheers:

-Halla74

You know as well as I do that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights does not give the Right to Bear Arms. And indeed, you as well as I, are signatories to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

This is why we are such a threat to you. We are a free and democratic Continent under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which is now gun free.

And, you as well as I, know you have neither a moral nor a legal leg to stand on, so you resort to personal insults.
 

Coriolis

Si vis pacem, para bellum
Staff member
Joined
Apr 18, 2010
Messages
27,193
MBTI Type
INTJ
Enneagram
5w6
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
My Parliament has successfully defeated the gun lovers, and this is the most popular decision among the electors.

We have democratically defeated the gun lovers on one whole Continent.

Naturally the gun lovers hate us for we have shown what can be done in a liberal democracy.
In a liberal democracy, laws are supposed to reflect the will of the people. The fact that some democracies permit guns while others outlaw them simply goes to show that people(s) are different. Democratic outcomes are not one-size-fits-all.
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
My dad is a veteran and could teach me to shoot.

My father was a Royal Naval Officer and retained a gun metal blue .45 Naval revolver.

And I vividly remember we all went for a picnic on the Georges River in Sydney, and when we were in the middle of the bay, my father, at my mother's bidding, dropped this gun metal blue Navy revolver over the side.

It was a poignant moment.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Messages
7,312
MBTI Type
INTJ
You know as well as I do that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights does not give the Right to Bear Arms. And indeed, you as well as I, are signatories to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

This is why we are such a threat to you. We are a free and democratic Continent under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which is now gun free.

And, you as well as I, know you have neither a moral nor a legal leg to stand on, so you resort to personal insults.

I fear Halla's assessment was too kind. Please explain how the Universal Declaration of Human Rights precludes a sovereign nation's constitution from granting additional rights.

It's especially rich for you to make this argument when Australia is in flagrant violation of Article 14:

Article 14.

(1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
In a liberal democracy, laws are supposed to reflect the will of the people.

In a liberal democracy the Law reflects the tradition of the Common Law, Statute Law, the policies of the elected government, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

And the Universal Declaration of Human Rights confers no Right to Bear Arms. The Common Law confers no Right to Bear Arms. So you justify your gun culture with a dodgy interpretation of your Constitution.

What do you take us for?
 

Ozones

Permabanned
Joined
Feb 10, 2014
Messages
237
MBTI Type
ESTP
Enneagram
783
I think having a gun in ones home for security and self defense is not a bad thing. As long as theyre in the right hands and not some guy on the freeway with road rage, im fine with it.

What everyone should be nervous about though is plastic guns that are made by 3D printers. These guns will not get picked up by security metal detectors and can impose a huge security threat in the future.
 

cafe

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
9,827
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
My father was a Royal Naval Officer and retained a gun metal blue .45 Naval revolver.

And I vividly remember we all went for a picnic on the Georges River in Sydney, and when we were in the middle of the bay, my father, at my mother's bidding, dropped this gun metal blue Navy revolver over the side.

It was a poignant moment.
I've never lived with my dad so I've never seen his rifle, but one of the books he had me read after we met (I was 27) was The Ugly American. He also had me watch Full Metal Jacket. He said it was as close as anything he'd seen to his experience.

I get the impression he probably wasn't supposed to keep the rifle, which would be why he still has it. He's not fond of our government.
 

Eric B

ⒺⓉⒷ
Joined
Mar 29, 2008
Messages
3,621
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
548
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
Gun culture is yet another romanticized aspect of the “exceptional” past society that conservatives bemoan the loss of. (like the supposed sexual morality Christians conservatives used to focus on).
Everybody wants to be John Wayne and have the “showdown at the OK corral” and blow the smoke off their pistol and ride off into the sunset; (but it doesn’t usually go quite that way in actual gun battles!)

Being that a lot of gun opposition is from politicians from big cities that have gun problems, and many of these gun advocates are the same ones that look down on other groups (especially in cities) and even gloat "see, look at their violence against each other", "they're just takers, leeches, thugs", etc; I think they want guns to be easy to get for everyone (including the criminals), in part so 'those people' in the cities can hopefully kill each other off. (While they then use the statistics to prove their point about these people and their "problems"; and of course, the gun advocate rooting for this hundreds of miles away still has their own guns to feel safe in case any of these people, or the government, ever happens to comes after them!)
Why else would they oppose so strongly just a background check? (or whatever that was the Democrats tried to pass, and was shot down; no pun intended).
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
He's not fond of our government.

No matter which Party gets elected in Oz, half of the electorate are not fond of the present government, but we would never think of arming ourselves against the present government, we wait patiently at the ballot box.

In fact the idea of arming ourselves against the Party in government seems bizarre.
 

Coriolis

Si vis pacem, para bellum
Staff member
Joined
Apr 18, 2010
Messages
27,193
MBTI Type
INTJ
Enneagram
5w6
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
In a liberal democracy the Law reflects the tradition of the Common Law, Statute Law, the policies of the elected government, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

And the Universal Declaration of Human Rights confers no Right to Bear Arms. The Common Law confers no Right to Bear Arms. So you justify your gun culture with a dodgy interpretation of your Constitution.
I am pointing out that gun laws reflect the views of the governed, as they should in a democracy. As public preferences evolve, so will our laws. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights has already been addressed by others.
 

SD45T-2

Senior Jr.
Joined
Feb 18, 2012
Messages
4,235
MBTI Type
ESTJ
Enneagram
1w2
Instinctual Variant
so/sp
These guns will not get picked up by security metal detectors and can impose a huge security threat in the future.
We already went through this 20+ years ago with Glocks.

You can print a plastic receiver. You can also print a plastic magazine. That that is not a functioning gun. In order to make a magazine work, it needs a spring, and in order for it to be reliable that spring would need to be steel. And the ammo inside it would most likely be lead bullets with copper jackets in brass casing. You also need a chamber and barrel, which would most likely be steel, because a plastic one wouldn't be able to hold up to the strain very well or have effective rifling.
 

cafe

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
9,827
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
No matter which Party gets elected in Oz, half of the electorate are not fond of the present government, but we would never think of arming ourselves against the present government, we wait patiently at the ballot box.

In fact the idea of arming ourselves against the Party in government seems bizarre.
Oh, my dad is the next best thing to a pacifist and he thinks gun nuts are crazy and stupid. It's more that he likes the idea of pilfering things to 'stick it to the man.' He's very glad he never had to shoot anyone during the war. He also told me to never believe that Americans do not commit war crimes because he's seen it happen.

It's not logical to think small arms could resist a military the size of ours or all of our militarized police forces. We could never organize such a thing anyway because all of our communications are monitored and we send the ATF after anyone who looks like they could pose any kind of threat. IMO, the government lets people keep their small private arsenals to give them a false sense of security. People think they are free and can defend themselves from government oppression as long as they have their security blanket, in this case, guns.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Messages
7,312
MBTI Type
INTJ
Being that a lot of gun opposition is from politicians from big cities that have gun problems, and many of these gun advocates are the same ones that look down on other groups (especially in cities) and even gloat "see, look at their violence against each other", "they're just takers, leeches, thugs", etc; I think they want guns to be easy to get for everyone (including the criminals), in part so 'those people' in the cities can hopefully kill each other off. (While they then use the statistics to prove their point about these people and their "problems"; and of course, the gun advocate rooting for this hundreds of miles away still has their own guns to feel safe in case any of these people, or the government, ever happens to comes after them!)

This seems a little out there to me - I'm well acquainted with this debate, and I've never seen this articulated by anyone. It seems kind of bizarre and extreme even for the staunchest NRA acolyte.

Why else would they oppose so strongly just a background check? (or whatever that was the Democrats tried to pass, and was shot down; no pun intended).

Because of who is conducting the background check. If one of the stated reasons for the right to bear arms is to prevent tyranny (and for whatever anyone thinks of the validity of that notion, it is in fact one of the stated reasons), then allowing the government to subjectively decide who can and can't have a gun is defeating the entire purpose.
 

Eric B

ⒺⓉⒷ
Joined
Mar 29, 2008
Messages
3,621
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
548
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
This seems a little out there to me - I'm well acquainted with this debate, and I've never seen this articulated by anyone. It seems kind of bizarre and extreme even for the staunchest NRA acolyte.

Because of who is conducting the background check. If one of the stated reasons for the right to bear arms is to prevent tyranny (and for whatever anyone thinks of the validity of that notion, it is in fact one of the stated reasons), then allowing the government to subjectively decide who can and can't have a gun is defeating the entire purpose.
Nobody's ever said that (that I know of); it's not one of those things the average mainstream conservative would ever admit. (we can say it's in the "shadow" of the debate!)

But the entire ghetto (as well as so-called "illegal" immigrants, now) have become pariahs to this segment of society, and you can hear it in the political rhetoric, especially after Trayvon, most recently (Again, their own shadow stoked up, they fire back "what about Chicago, Detroit"?, etc.)
I got that deduction from the fact that Bloomberg and other northern big city mayors' concern was people going to these gun areas out of state and bringing them back to use in crimes. They are not trying to take away all handguns, sports rifles, etc. the gun lobby claims the government is trying to take from them (And then comparing this to Hitler and every other totalitarian regime). They're trying to get rid of powerful assault weapons, and make it harder for people to get other guns illegally.

But the gun lobby, citing the "Constitution — 2nd Amendment"; insist all of this stuff should be readily available. They refuse to address the concern of assault weapons as well as crime, and as much as the same people like to point at urban crime to isolate (splitting, psychologically) "those people" and their "problems". (If you think I'm exaggerating, go to some conservative Facebook pages, or look at the memes and links. I see it every day, and from one or two "friends" alone!)
So for them to dismiss that concern like that I figure they would probably like for the inner cities to be filled with killing, because it reduced the threat ("those people") to themselves and supports their projection of violence onto others, and that these people are just "problems"; they won't help themselves, probably can't be helped (this is where the statistics come in; the "hard facts" as they call it), so they need to just be eliminated in one way or another; and so stop taking our tax money and giving it all to them (which itself is a greatly distorted or overhyped claim).

The past couple of years (and overall, the past 30 or more years), this is what this movement has focused on. So then, they play victim (as much as they criticize others for that), and imagine this scenario where all these ghetto people, illegal immigrants, etc. and a big bad government supporting them led by "Socialist dictator King Obama" are all coming to get them. So they want these assault weapons; so it's like they're planning an armed war against the government.

I think they're really distorting the intention of the 2nd Amendment. I've never even seen any of them really even deal with the question of "well organized militia". It seems every roadside joe wants to be his own militia. So while yes, the people should be free to oppose a tyrannical government, on the other hand,
1) the people need to be sure the government is tyrannical to begin with, or are they simply exaggerating because everything is not the way they want it.
2) Since a lot of this stuff is a matter of interpretation, projection, exaggeration, etc., the government has the right to maintain some type of order and protect itself from uprisings and seditions (Which do affect "the general welfare" of others who don't want to be apart of that stuff).

The debate is who is right. Is it genuinely tyranny, or is it a bunch of people who just want more power than legitimately granted them? Like perhaps to subject others (especially since this movement seems to think other people are such a "problem", and that the nation's past, (when these people were corralled), was so great, and we should return to it.
These may be the wannabe dictators themselves, but of course no one will ever admit that. So they claim to be the oppressed ones.

In reality, I think it's a bit of both; a nation of imperfect people being ruled over by a government of imperfect people, so no one will ever be completely satisfied, and will always want more, blame others, try to take rule over others, etc. (I attribute to my P preference being able to point out problems, inconsistencies, etc. but not being able to identify much of a better solution).

But the gun issue is something that should be addressed ore, as people I think do have a right to be able to be less worried about being shot; but many people want the romanticism of the Wild Wild West, and that's all that matters to them.
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
War Among the People and the Security State

the entire ghetto (as well as so-called "illegal" immigrants, now) have become pariahs to this segment of society, and you can hear it in the political rhetoric, especially after Trayvon, most recently (Again, their own shadow stoked up, they fire back "what about Chicago, Detroit"?, etc.)

The problem is how to justify the Security State.

Justifying the Security State when nuclear weapons have made war among States passé, is difficult, unless we replace war among States with war among the people.

And with war among the people gone global, from the killing yesterday of innocents on a Chinese railway station, to the killing of innocents on the streets of the Ukraine, and in many other countries, it seems natural to want the Security State to protect us. And it makes sense to give up some of our freedoms for security. But once given up, it is difficult or impossible to get our freedoms back.

From the perspective of the Security State, they are defending the core against the periphery. But with mass migration, the periphery is now within the core.

So now the war between the periphery and the core is beng fought within the core. And so we now have war among the people.

And war among the people justifies the Security State.
 

Eric B

ⒺⓉⒷ
Joined
Mar 29, 2008
Messages
3,621
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
548
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
That I'm aware of. As I just said, both state and private consist of imperfect humans who want power over others, and you run to one to protect you from the other, and then that one rules over you with an iron fist, one way or the other.
 
Top