Hain’t we got all the fools in town on our side? and ain’t that a big enough majority in any town?
~ Mark Twain
My wife and I are very fortunate: we have two automobiles that have the kindest, and most congenial and responsible dispositions. In the years that we have owned them, they have neither gotten us drunk and crashed us into a busload of schoolchildren, nor have they driven us along a freeway at 120 mph, weaving in and out of traffic. I might add that none of our previous cars engaged in any such acts, leaving me thankful that they have chosen not to endanger our safety, or that of our children and grandchildren. Perhaps my wife and I know how to select "nice" vehicles; cars with a pleasant state of mind; unlike those that manage to extend their powers of causation to other drivers.
As I write this article, I am informed that a van carrying Chinese kindergarten children plunged into a pond, killing eleven youngsters. Are we to conclude that Chinese vehicles are more inclined to destroy human life than are those in the West? We do know that there are various substances – such as alcohol, drugs, and tobacco – whose use forces men and women into an irresistible submission to their powers. We are also being told – by those who most of us accept as being more knowledgeable than ourselves (e.g., politicians, academicians, people in the mainstream media) – thatguns also have this capacity to exercise their wills over us; to make us do their bidding.
Why are so many of us inclined to accept the proposition that inanimate things and forces in the universe have the capacity to act through intentionality; to substitute their will for ours, and to make us do things we might never choose to do on our own? The answer to this question can be traced back to the patterned conditioning to which we were subject in early childhood. Like our tribal ancestors, we modern humans embarked on institutionally-defined and centered social systems, and have been conditioned to think of ourselves as extensions of the organizations that have succeeded in setting their purposes above our own. In so doing, we have not only made ourselves subservient to institutions, but have become what David Riesman defined as "other-directed" persons. Truth, moral principles, useful standards of conduct, our sense of being and purpose in life, and all other considerations bearing upon human motivation and behavior, are qualities prescribed and enforced by authorities in the organizational hierarchy.
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Yes, people are killed by cars every day. But the fundamental difference between cars and guns is that guns are designed ONLY to kill people. This is patently absurd.
ReplyDelete"that guns are designed ONLY to kill people". Actually, they seem destined only to fuel the fires of a lot of nut jobs in this country who, unfortunately, end up being the source of killing of our children. Let's have an Obama workshop shall we? What kills people?: Other people, drugs, guns, knives, the parent's kids, Government killing training, religion, bigotry. Just how may people can you blame death on without offering up a solution. For out crowd? Few...
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ReplyDeleteHMMM I think not. Guns provide food for many people in the US that have been left behind by the government. Deer Meat comes to mind.
Guns protect law abiding citizens, without having to kill by detering crime to begin with.
Guns in the hands of the honest can far detere the dishonest.
And yes some people get killed by guns, many innocent people. Its a shame.
But those killing with guns will obtain them no matter any law.
Just think about that.
Thank you 918, for bringing reality to the table. A statement that refers to guns are only for killing people is at first ludicrous, as my belt knife is my carpenter's pencil sharpener, fine trim in wood moulding, as well as a great grocery shopping tool for the woods during hunting seasons. But, yes, guns are made for killing people, too; hence the necessity for the 2nd Amendment. The British used their guns to steal outrageous amounts of taxes from those who worked the land, and for controlling their lives. Luckily, all were armed with equal weaponry,and the good guys won our liberty, which may have to be won again in the near future.
ReplyDeleteRead History, kids!