Re: Nigel bloody Farage sinks hope of pistol ban repeal
Posted: Sun Jan 26, 2014 10:15 pm
We're up against two very good arguments from the antis at the moment.
Need: This one seems (in my limited experience, YMMV) to come up from people in Scotland. I was talking to a Scottish girl in her 20s from a family of shooters the other day. She's not a shooter herself, although she's tried it and describes herself as "not anti-shooting". Yet she thinks nobody "needs" a gun and that's good enough grounds to impose a general ban, despite acknowledging that her own family were perfectly safe and responsible, along with having first-hand experience of ranges and safety rules herself.
The gas oven argument: Years ago lots of people committed suicide by sticking their head in the oven and turning the gas on. We changed the type of gas we used; suicide rates fell. The antis' argument goes that by removing firearms from society altogether we will lower the suicide rate and make everything "safer". Flip side, by legalising anything we raise that risk and it's too great a risk to take, in the antis' little minds.
I can just about fight the second argument (suicide with licensed firearms is vanishingly tiny) but I don't really have an answer to the first. I guess there's the competition argument (UK as a whole is pretty damn good at target rifle on the international stage - not sure about other disciplines as I don't follow them so closely) in our favour...
What I'm getting at is that a slim majority of people aren't hardcore antis, like members and voters of the Labour party are. They're mostly ordinary folk who are suspicious of things they've only seen used in TV and films to cause harm. How do we win them over? How do we change their views and get Joe Public to support (or at least not campaign against) repealing the pistol ban?
Need: This one seems (in my limited experience, YMMV) to come up from people in Scotland. I was talking to a Scottish girl in her 20s from a family of shooters the other day. She's not a shooter herself, although she's tried it and describes herself as "not anti-shooting". Yet she thinks nobody "needs" a gun and that's good enough grounds to impose a general ban, despite acknowledging that her own family were perfectly safe and responsible, along with having first-hand experience of ranges and safety rules herself.
The gas oven argument: Years ago lots of people committed suicide by sticking their head in the oven and turning the gas on. We changed the type of gas we used; suicide rates fell. The antis' argument goes that by removing firearms from society altogether we will lower the suicide rate and make everything "safer". Flip side, by legalising anything we raise that risk and it's too great a risk to take, in the antis' little minds.
I can just about fight the second argument (suicide with licensed firearms is vanishingly tiny) but I don't really have an answer to the first. I guess there's the competition argument (UK as a whole is pretty damn good at target rifle on the international stage - not sure about other disciplines as I don't follow them so closely) in our favour...
What I'm getting at is that a slim majority of people aren't hardcore antis, like members and voters of the Labour party are. They're mostly ordinary folk who are suspicious of things they've only seen used in TV and films to cause harm. How do we win them over? How do we change their views and get Joe Public to support (or at least not campaign against) repealing the pistol ban?