

Moderator: carlson1
You are quite right in several respects, and this topic has been discussed many times.stroo wrote:You can't trust most of the "statistics" you see about the danger of having a gun in the home. They tend to only count the deadly incidents and not count the times when guns have saved lives.
stroo wrote:You can't trust most of the "statistics" you see about the danger of having a gun in the home. They tend to only count the deadly incidents and not count the times when guns have saved lives.
OK. Buckets kill one child at a time. My point is that most people don't give a second thought to having a bucket or even a swimming pool, but many children drown in buckets and swimming pools.tallmike wrote:And, Seamus, of course guns are more dangerous than knives, power tools and buckets or else we would all carry buckets on our hips for protection.
I agree with THOSE statements 100%.seamusTX wrote:OK. Buckets kill one child at a time. My point is that most people don't give a second thought to having a bucket or even a swimming pool, but many children drown in buckets and swimming pools.tallmike wrote:And, Seamus, of course guns are more dangerous than knives, power tools and buckets or else we would all carry buckets on our hips for protection.
In fact, one might rightfully ask why the Bradys with their "if it saves one child it's worth it" slogan aren't campaigning to ban swimming pools and buckets.
In countries like China where ordinary people cannot easily obtain firearms, lunatics do quite a bit of harm with knives.
Fires caused by an arsonist or negligence of some sort can kill a hundred people within minutes and leave survivors in a lifetime of pain and disability.
- Jim