So every time a major shoot occurs, the subject of gun control always comes up. The problem with this whole issue is that it is always made with the mindset that if only we tightened up the restrictions of firearms, it would stop the criminals from getting them. There's also the argument that people should not be allowed to own "military-grade" firearms. As a generally very pro-gun person, here are the problems I see with these types of arguments.
One of the biggest pieces of mis-information going through the media reports regarding the Colorado shooting were that James Holmes was armed with an "AR-15 assault rifle." The problem is that the AR-15 is not an assault rifle. Another thing people say is that "military assault rifles need restrictions, people shouldn't just be allowed to go out and buy them."
This has to be one of the biggest misconceptions about firearms, that assault rifles are readily available to civilians. They aren't. The problem is that too many don't know just what an assault rifle is.
Simplified, an assault rifle is a rifle with automatic fire capability that fires rounds from magazines. It is thus classified as a machine gun (a gun that fires rifle rounds automatically---a sub-machine gun fires pistol rounds automatically), and is not protected by the Second Amendment. The word "arms" in the Second Amendment does not cover machine guns. M-16s and AK-47s that have automatic fire capability are assault rifles. Yes, you can buy them, but doing so involves the following:
1) 6 - 9 month waiting period
2) Background check
3) Fingerprinting
4) A bunch of paperwork and approvals
5) About $10K to $20K
Owning them is a privilege. Now, the AR-15 (one of the weapons Holmes had) is the civilian variant of the M-16. It looks the same, but mechanically it is not. It has no automatic fire capability. It is a semi-automatic rifle that fires rounds out of a magazine. For comparison, numerous hunting rifles are also semi-automatic and fire rounds out of a magazine. In fact, there's now even a lot of crossover between the two as there are AR-15s meant for hunting now and hunting rifles that are based off of military platforms. In fact, hunters have been adopting military rifles to use for hunting since World War II. Some weapons are used for multiple purposes, hunting, police, military, sport shooting, home defense, etc...The AR-15 is thus not an assault rifle. It's just a semi-automatic rifle that fires rounds from a magazine. Yes, it may "look" military or menacing, but that means nothing.
Here is a Browning BAR (semi-automatic hunting rifle that uses magazines):
Here is an AR15 (semi-automatic rifle that uses magazines):
Now the AR-15 may "look" menacing or "military" but it mechanically at its core is no different than the Browning BAR. There isn't something that magically makes the AR-15 more dangerous then the Browning BAR. IN FACT, the standard AR-15 is too weak to even be used for hunting, as the rounds are too small. The hunting variants use a larger-caliber round. Which means many a "civilian" hunting rifle are actually more powerful and can do more damage than a regular AR-15 (as it takes a more powerful weapon to take down a large animal than a human). And the one shown in the picture above isn't even a full rifle, it's what's called a carbine, which is a shortened version of the rifle that can fire the same rounds, but at a slower velocity and less range.
Here is the AR-15 Predator hunting rifle:
Now here is version of the Remington 870, a pump-action shotgun that Holmes also had:
Looks like a "civilian" gun. Now here's another version of the same gun:
All the same weapon, but some models look "civilian" while others look "military." Again, how the weapon "looks" doesn't tell what kind of weapon it is. Remington 870s are used for everything, hunting, home defense, sport shooting, military, law enforcement, etc...
Regarding the word "arms" in the Second Amendment, they are defined as the following:
"Weapons commonly owned by ordinary law abiding citizens that they would be expected to muster to militia conscription with."
In the event of such a thing, you'd expect to see people showing up with AR-15s, various other semi-automatic rifles, shot guns, pistols, and so forth. All of this is important because had Holmes gone in with a fully-automatic weapon, say an M-16 with a 100 round drum, and cries for gun control were occuring, the ridiculousness is that such weapons are already heavily regulated. Regulating people's ability to buy weapons such as the AR-15 thus wouldn't do anything to address the issue of criminals acquiring assault rifles.
People such as Senator Dianne Feinstein who talk about how people shouldn't be allowed to buy "military-grade assault weapons" just do not understand what they're talking about. As said, there is nothing about an AR-15 that makes it some special deadly military weapon that can kill far and above other rifles. She is going by the appearance of it. She said people shouldn't be allowed to buy weapons meant for "close-quarters combat," weapons meant to kill people. Well first off, a rifle is a rifle, hunting rifle or military platform. In the hands of a skilled person, it's not going to matter much. Two, there isn't some special difference between humans and animals. Biologically, humans are animals. A high-functioning animal, but still an animal, and quite a savage one in its raw state (we invented civilization so as to be able to live peacefully and even within those, violence occurs). A rifle meant for hunting is going to kill a human just as it will kill animals. Not all rifles designed for military use can kill large animals (regular AR-15s are bad for this), but when adopted to use larger rounds, they can, and a regular AR-15 is fine if you need to shoot small animals.
In addition, does Senator Feinstein think hunting rifles are only meant for shooting at long-range? Does this make hand guns, meant for close-range, "military-grade assault weapons?" Weapons meant for close-range fighting are not more dangerous than ones meant for long-range shooting. Sub-machine guns like the Uzi and MP5 (which fire pistol rounds) are meant for close-range fighting, but you would not do infantry work or go hunting anything big with one of those. They are used when you need a really small weapon where distance and caliber aren't that important. SWAT teams sometimes use MP5s for example.
Something that should also be remembered is that the Second Amendment isn't about hunting. It is so that citizens can form militias when required, protect themselves, and in extreme cases, resist a tyrannical government. During the times the Second Amendment was written in, citizens were expected to own literal military arms. The difference of course is that then military arms were muskets and at most cannon, today military arms are everything from battle tanks to attack helicopters to nuclear weapons and so forth. But by this, one could probably make the argument that fully-automatic assault rifles are protected by the Second Amendment, even though legally right now it has been determined that they are not.
If you buy more then two firearms at once, I believe that such a purchase must be reported to the government by the seller (so if you buy four AR-15s in one purchase, the government will learn about it).
Some other things to consider:
1) The 1997 North Hollywood shootout, where two guys clad in body armor and assault rifles were fighting the police. This during the Assault Weapons Ban, in one of the most anti-gun cities, in the most anti-gun state in America. A lot of good the laws did in stopping those guys.
2) A year ago to this week, a man killed 78 people in Norway, a country with very strict gun laws.
3) Tear gas is not legal for civilians, but Holmes still somehow acquired it.
Gun Crime in the United States
So for the claims made by people such as myself who say that gun control laws mostly result in the disarming of the law-abiding citizens, why is it that the United States has such high levels of gun violence? The simple answer is certain socio-economic factors:
1) Inner-city crime. Most gun-violence in the United States occurs in the major metropolitan areas (ironically the areas with strict gun control), and of those, mostly in the inner-city areas. The inner-city areas tend to be populated by poor black people where gang violence is very common. This is due to a long-list of things ranging from social engineering policies that created bad incentives for poor women to give birth to children without a father, to the problem of drugs being prevalent in these areas, which not only leads to many men impregnating women and then not sticking around to help father the child, but also outright warfare over the drug trade.
2) Unlike some of the European nations which are relatively uniform race and culture-wise, the United States is a huge salad-bowl of races, ethnicities, cultures, languages, religions, etc...many of which do not like one another. This leads to more violence and makes the country more complex to govern then say Sweden. An example for example could be the outright race war that has been occurring between blacks and Hispanics in certain major cities in California.
3) America overall, for other reasons, has tended to have higher rates of crime and violence than other nations. For example, even back when England had gun laws akin to what the United States had, violence was still less in England (which today has more restrictive gun laws). It would be wrong to say that guns drive violence, as the Swiss own outright assault rifles in large numbers, and the Israelis also have a large ownership of guns, yet both of these nations experience low levels of gun violence.
Gun violence is not so much "gun" violence as it is violence due to racial and ethnic hatreds, drug warfare, and so forth in which guns just happen to be used. Such violence would occur regardless. Humans have been slaughtering one another for thousands of years without guns, so lack of guns is not going to stop anything. And this is making the HUGE assumption that one could actually eliminate the black market for guns. Drugs are already illegal, but they are prevalent. Alcohol was once outlawed, but it was prevalent. Drunk driving is illegal right now, but yet thousands of people get killed by drunk drivers every year. When a wolf slaughters sheep, further disarming the sheep is not the answer.
Rants, Thoughts, Commentaries, and Tirades
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Friday, July 20, 2012
Prayers Out to the Folks in Colorado
Prayers out to the folks in Colorado who lost loved ones and/or were wounded from the shootings that took place.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
President Obama is Wrong
So as anyone who has been following the news lately will know, President Obama recently made statements talking about how the government contributes to economic growth through infrastructure and how it is wrong for business owners to insinuate that they themselves are the ones who've built their businesses up.
However, in my opinion, he took it way too far when he said, literally, that if you have a business, "you didn't build that." Here are my arguments on this:
1) Technically, yes, government could be said to contribute to economic growth via infrastructure development, funding of research and development, and so forth. But I don't think anyone really argues this point except for hardcore far-right libertarians (who would have been the types against say the Interstate Highway System as being too socialist). It is a complete strawman to use this as an argument in favor of higher taxes the way he is. They are two completely separate issues, especially considering that we have no direct way of knowing what the government would even spend the additional tax money on.
If we were a country with virtually no infrastructure, then you could make an argument perhaps for some higher taxes for a revenue-starved government under the argument that the money spent on infrastructure would eventually be paid off from all of the economic growth and investment that would result from the infrastructure. But we are not such a country right now. Regarding upgrading our existing infrastructure, well this is a president who blew almost $1 trillion dollars in the name of stimulus and didn't focus it on infrastructure upgrades when he had ample opportunity to.
2) Who is he to talk about what it takes to build and run a business? This is a man who has never so much as run a 7/11. Businesses do not just arise out of nowhere. Even those businesses that utilized the research and development that was funded by the government to create new products and services, well the actual creation of those products and services was done by the businesspeople themselves, not the government.
3) He points out that the Internet was "created" by the government. Well a few things on this. Yes, it was started by the government, via DARPA (at the time ARPA, Advanced Research Projects Agency, itself created by the space program), in order to have a wya to keep the national communications infrastructure from going down in the event of a nuclear strike. But much of the development of the Internet today was created and developed further by private companies. Furthermore, it wasn't really "the government" in the way he thinks of it, but the defense department, which he is seeking to cut in funding right now.
4) Much of our modern technology is attributable to infrastructure and research and development from the space program and defense. Well if that's the case, then by Obama's standards, shouldn't we gun up the defense budget and the space program even further? Why cut them? He is arguing for raising taxes to bring the government more money on the idea that it is the government that drives economic growth, but then he is cutting the two major areas of government that legitimately have helped drive economic growth.
5) A great point (attributable to Greg Gutfeld on the Fox News show "The Five") I thought is that claiming that the existence of infrastructure means the government deserves some credit for the creation and growth of businesses would be like claiming that the government is also responsible for any murders conducted by criminals who have used the roads and bridges to drive around and kill people.
However, in my opinion, he took it way too far when he said, literally, that if you have a business, "you didn't build that." Here are my arguments on this:
1) Technically, yes, government could be said to contribute to economic growth via infrastructure development, funding of research and development, and so forth. But I don't think anyone really argues this point except for hardcore far-right libertarians (who would have been the types against say the Interstate Highway System as being too socialist). It is a complete strawman to use this as an argument in favor of higher taxes the way he is. They are two completely separate issues, especially considering that we have no direct way of knowing what the government would even spend the additional tax money on.
If we were a country with virtually no infrastructure, then you could make an argument perhaps for some higher taxes for a revenue-starved government under the argument that the money spent on infrastructure would eventually be paid off from all of the economic growth and investment that would result from the infrastructure. But we are not such a country right now. Regarding upgrading our existing infrastructure, well this is a president who blew almost $1 trillion dollars in the name of stimulus and didn't focus it on infrastructure upgrades when he had ample opportunity to.
2) Who is he to talk about what it takes to build and run a business? This is a man who has never so much as run a 7/11. Businesses do not just arise out of nowhere. Even those businesses that utilized the research and development that was funded by the government to create new products and services, well the actual creation of those products and services was done by the businesspeople themselves, not the government.
3) He points out that the Internet was "created" by the government. Well a few things on this. Yes, it was started by the government, via DARPA (at the time ARPA, Advanced Research Projects Agency, itself created by the space program), in order to have a wya to keep the national communications infrastructure from going down in the event of a nuclear strike. But much of the development of the Internet today was created and developed further by private companies. Furthermore, it wasn't really "the government" in the way he thinks of it, but the defense department, which he is seeking to cut in funding right now.
4) Much of our modern technology is attributable to infrastructure and research and development from the space program and defense. Well if that's the case, then by Obama's standards, shouldn't we gun up the defense budget and the space program even further? Why cut them? He is arguing for raising taxes to bring the government more money on the idea that it is the government that drives economic growth, but then he is cutting the two major areas of government that legitimately have helped drive economic growth.
5) A great point (attributable to Greg Gutfeld on the Fox News show "The Five") I thought is that claiming that the existence of infrastructure means the government deserves some credit for the creation and growth of businesses would be like claiming that the government is also responsible for any murders conducted by criminals who have used the roads and bridges to drive around and kill people.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Irony
So I find it rather ironic that two days after my post in which I point out that scientists have yet to find the "God particle" if you will, scientists announce they believe they have found said particle, the Higgs boson.
Monday, July 2, 2012
The Arrogance of Scientists
So during a panel at the SETIcon II conference in Santa Clara, California recently, the physicists there got into a debate about whether or not a god or divine power was needed to have created the Big Bang. The answer from most of them was "No." Some said for example that the Big Bang could just have occurred as a result of the laws of physics being there. Which of course then prompts the question, "What created the laws of physics?"
Now the thing that gets me with this entire discussion is, does it not occur to these physicists that maybe this is a question that is literally beyond the ability of humans to answer right now? There is a saying that goes, "Show me someone that has all the answers and I'll show you someone that hasn't asked all the questions." I think that aptly applies with this fundamental question. In truth, BOTH answers I find rather ridiculous personally, which really just means that humans are not capable of answering this question.
Think about it:
We have this MASSIVE, gigantic, super-enormous universe that is SO enormous that we can barely comprehend it. I mean just to go from one end of our galaxy to the other side, at the speed of light, takes at least a hundred thousand years (maybe two hundred thousand). So going at 186,282 miles-per-second, you'd cross the galaxy in a hundred or so thousand years (and that's assuming humans could reach that speed, which technically no physical object can). Of course, there are billions (yes billions) of other galaxies out there, some of them much larger than our own galaxy. Our own galaxy has at least hundreds of billions of stars in it. "Nearby" Andromeda galaxy has an estimated two trillion stars in it. And the galaxies themselves are millions of light-years apart.
Then we have those oddities called black holes, which are singularities. We have the force known as gravity, which we can understand in a quantitative sense, but not necessarilly a qualitative sense. At the sub-atomic level, things also get really, really weird as far as how nature works. Scientists keep searching for a "smallest" particle, and have thus far discovered thousands of tiny particles, but no one has found a tiniest particle yet. We also have the electromagnetic force, which somehow causes a positive force and a negative force to attract one another (again, understood quantitatively, but not really qualitatively, as no one can really picture just "what" that force is that pulls a positive and negative together, they just do).
And we have other aspects of the universe that we do not understand, such as "dark matter." The galaxies, one might think, are held together by the gravity of their stars. For example, that the gravity of our own Sun is intertwined with the gravity of the other stars in our galaxy. And then our own galaxy, as a whole, has gravity, which causes some smaller galaxies to orbit it. But as it turns out, that gravity isn't enough. If all you account for is the gravity of the individual stars in a galaxy, then the galaxy in any computer simulation flies apart. The stars are just too far apart. So the question is then, "What holds the stars in a galaxy together?" Scientists really have no clue, so they call it "dark matter," which they believe is a form of matter that we simply cannot detect at the moment. It's either that or our theory of gravity is actually wrong.
Well I am going way off-track, but I mean the universe is so complex and magnificent in scope, that it sounds rather ridiculous to just say that there was no creator involved in it. All of this can't just have "come about" on its own. There has to have been SOMETHING that created it all, right? But this becomes a very problematic argument, because then one is obliged to ask, "Who created the creator?" Now religious people will just say, "God doesn't need a creator! He's God." Well that may satisfy religious people, but to me it makes no sense. You can't say that the universe is so complex that it needs a creator, but then reason that the creator themself did not also need a creator. Of course, then who created the creator? And who created the creator of the creator, who in turn created the universe?
If you reason that the (obviously) very magnificent creator of the universe did not itself need a creator, well then technically you could just reason that the universe itself did not need any creator. I mean why should the universe have needed a creator but the creator itself not need its own creator as well?
So what we really are seeing here is the limitation of human brain power. Logically, it doesn't make much sense to say that the universe had no creator, but it also doesn't make much sense to say that it did have a creator. So the true answer is actually beyond the reasoning capability of humanity. I was once talking about this with a guy who said that he thought this line of reasoning, that the ability to answer such a question is beyond the capability of the human brain, was a cop-out. But in thinking more about it since then, I think he had it completely backwards. Realizing that this question is not answerable with the current human reasoning is not a cop-out, it's just an acknowledgement of the limitations of human reasoning.
In my opinion, the true cop-out arguments are that the universe just somehow magically appeared out of nowhere, the laws of physics, the matter, everything, it just all somehow magically appeared. That's a cop-out. It does away with answering the hard question of how did everything begin. But the alternative, that a divine power created everything, is also a cop-out. Because then, as said, you must ask who created the divine power. And if you reason that the divine power doesn't need a creator, well then neither did the universe itself, thus eliminating the requirement for a divine power and returning us to square one.
Thus both arguments are rather ridiculous I think. Saying that the question isn't answerable isn't a cop-out, it's just acknowledging that we aren't capable of answering it right now. I think some scientists over-estimate the capability of the human brain. In comparison to all the other animals on the Earth, the human brain is the most developed. But who says that it couldn't be more developed? Just because we can't understand something doesn't mean it won't be understandable if we get more brainpower. For all we know, our trying to answer this question is like a chimpanzee trying to understand calculus or nuclear physics. No matter how smart the chimpanzee, it won't happen, because they lack the requisite brainpower.
Let the human brain evolve up another level, to the point that modern homo sapiens are the equivalent of chimpanzees in comparison to what this next level of evolved brain would be. We might find a lot of these questions and physics issues become a lot more understandable. It thus amazes me though that these physicists don't recognize this. No one can answer with a resounding "Yes" or "No" about whether there was a divine creator regarding the universe.
For all we know, what we think of as "the universe" may not even be the true universe, as our Big Bang might just be the inside of a black hole in some other "universe" somewhere (as the Big Bang was a singularity and a black hole is a singularity, so do black holes create Big Bangs on some other side?).
To read an article on these physicists, go here: LINK
Now the thing that gets me with this entire discussion is, does it not occur to these physicists that maybe this is a question that is literally beyond the ability of humans to answer right now? There is a saying that goes, "Show me someone that has all the answers and I'll show you someone that hasn't asked all the questions." I think that aptly applies with this fundamental question. In truth, BOTH answers I find rather ridiculous personally, which really just means that humans are not capable of answering this question.
Think about it:
We have this MASSIVE, gigantic, super-enormous universe that is SO enormous that we can barely comprehend it. I mean just to go from one end of our galaxy to the other side, at the speed of light, takes at least a hundred thousand years (maybe two hundred thousand). So going at 186,282 miles-per-second, you'd cross the galaxy in a hundred or so thousand years (and that's assuming humans could reach that speed, which technically no physical object can). Of course, there are billions (yes billions) of other galaxies out there, some of them much larger than our own galaxy. Our own galaxy has at least hundreds of billions of stars in it. "Nearby" Andromeda galaxy has an estimated two trillion stars in it. And the galaxies themselves are millions of light-years apart.
Then we have those oddities called black holes, which are singularities. We have the force known as gravity, which we can understand in a quantitative sense, but not necessarilly a qualitative sense. At the sub-atomic level, things also get really, really weird as far as how nature works. Scientists keep searching for a "smallest" particle, and have thus far discovered thousands of tiny particles, but no one has found a tiniest particle yet. We also have the electromagnetic force, which somehow causes a positive force and a negative force to attract one another (again, understood quantitatively, but not really qualitatively, as no one can really picture just "what" that force is that pulls a positive and negative together, they just do).
And we have other aspects of the universe that we do not understand, such as "dark matter." The galaxies, one might think, are held together by the gravity of their stars. For example, that the gravity of our own Sun is intertwined with the gravity of the other stars in our galaxy. And then our own galaxy, as a whole, has gravity, which causes some smaller galaxies to orbit it. But as it turns out, that gravity isn't enough. If all you account for is the gravity of the individual stars in a galaxy, then the galaxy in any computer simulation flies apart. The stars are just too far apart. So the question is then, "What holds the stars in a galaxy together?" Scientists really have no clue, so they call it "dark matter," which they believe is a form of matter that we simply cannot detect at the moment. It's either that or our theory of gravity is actually wrong.
Well I am going way off-track, but I mean the universe is so complex and magnificent in scope, that it sounds rather ridiculous to just say that there was no creator involved in it. All of this can't just have "come about" on its own. There has to have been SOMETHING that created it all, right? But this becomes a very problematic argument, because then one is obliged to ask, "Who created the creator?" Now religious people will just say, "God doesn't need a creator! He's God." Well that may satisfy religious people, but to me it makes no sense. You can't say that the universe is so complex that it needs a creator, but then reason that the creator themself did not also need a creator. Of course, then who created the creator? And who created the creator of the creator, who in turn created the universe?
If you reason that the (obviously) very magnificent creator of the universe did not itself need a creator, well then technically you could just reason that the universe itself did not need any creator. I mean why should the universe have needed a creator but the creator itself not need its own creator as well?
So what we really are seeing here is the limitation of human brain power. Logically, it doesn't make much sense to say that the universe had no creator, but it also doesn't make much sense to say that it did have a creator. So the true answer is actually beyond the reasoning capability of humanity. I was once talking about this with a guy who said that he thought this line of reasoning, that the ability to answer such a question is beyond the capability of the human brain, was a cop-out. But in thinking more about it since then, I think he had it completely backwards. Realizing that this question is not answerable with the current human reasoning is not a cop-out, it's just an acknowledgement of the limitations of human reasoning.
In my opinion, the true cop-out arguments are that the universe just somehow magically appeared out of nowhere, the laws of physics, the matter, everything, it just all somehow magically appeared. That's a cop-out. It does away with answering the hard question of how did everything begin. But the alternative, that a divine power created everything, is also a cop-out. Because then, as said, you must ask who created the divine power. And if you reason that the divine power doesn't need a creator, well then neither did the universe itself, thus eliminating the requirement for a divine power and returning us to square one.
Thus both arguments are rather ridiculous I think. Saying that the question isn't answerable isn't a cop-out, it's just acknowledging that we aren't capable of answering it right now. I think some scientists over-estimate the capability of the human brain. In comparison to all the other animals on the Earth, the human brain is the most developed. But who says that it couldn't be more developed? Just because we can't understand something doesn't mean it won't be understandable if we get more brainpower. For all we know, our trying to answer this question is like a chimpanzee trying to understand calculus or nuclear physics. No matter how smart the chimpanzee, it won't happen, because they lack the requisite brainpower.
Let the human brain evolve up another level, to the point that modern homo sapiens are the equivalent of chimpanzees in comparison to what this next level of evolved brain would be. We might find a lot of these questions and physics issues become a lot more understandable. It thus amazes me though that these physicists don't recognize this. No one can answer with a resounding "Yes" or "No" about whether there was a divine creator regarding the universe.
For all we know, what we think of as "the universe" may not even be the true universe, as our Big Bang might just be the inside of a black hole in some other "universe" somewhere (as the Big Bang was a singularity and a black hole is a singularity, so do black holes create Big Bangs on some other side?).
To read an article on these physicists, go here: LINK
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