ChicagoBlue
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 10 Jan 2009
- Messages
- 18,231
The problem, of course, is that me giving up my firearms, which are a threat to no-one, is a fart in a tornado.You’re right — they won’t have disappeared. That’s precisely the point. They can’t ever disappear because, as all and sundry are so fond of telling us, criminals will always try to get guns.
But non-criminals don’t have to buy them. If non-criminals decide not to, what happens to legal demand? Ask tobacco companies — and they sell a physically addictive product — even harder to give up than guns!
I’m not saying all smokers nor gun owners are bad, at all. But fixing the problem STARTS with gunowners. It’s starts by sacrificing your “freedom” to own — to do something that benefits you and you only — for the greater good.
That’s how nearly all positive change in the world starts, isn’t it? Someone sacrificing themselves for the greater good? Sacrificing a little safety, a little peace of mind?
No gunowner I know looks at it this way.
They should start.
As to me sacrificing a little safety, I feel like I do that every time I go outside into a gun soaked society without a firearm…which I do every day.
I have Concealed Carry, but unless there is a compelling reason, I don’t carry. For instance, most stores and restaurants in IL can put a “Firearms prohibited” sticker in the window, so if I’m doing either thing, I don’t carry.
Idealistic as it may be, voluntarily relinquishing one’s weapons is not only not THE answer, it’s not AN answer.
Chicken meet egg, I guess, to some, but I honestly feel no-one has anything to fear from my firearms, and until the law changes dramatically, nothing is going to change for me.
I will always maintain lawful ownership, unless and until the laws reflect a serious change that makes my 99.9999% non-threat firearms of significantly lower personal utility.