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- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!dg-rtp!spam!cochran
- From: cochran@spam.rtp.dg.com (A. Jing Hippy)
- Subject: Re: More Gun Control
- Sender: usenet@dg-rtp.dg.com (Usenet Administration)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.132452.1981@dg-rtp.dg.com>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 13:24:52 GMT
- References: <fB8js*xZ0@prolix.apana.org.au> <C12EEr.64r@vcd.hp.com> <1jhbv0INNaa6@umbc4.umbc.edu> <1993Jan19.230523.28900@igor.tamri.com>
- Organization: A Suffusion of Yellow
- Lines: 65
-
- In article <1993Jan19.230523.28900@igor.tamri.com>, donb@igor.tamri.com (Don Baldwin) writes:
- |> In article <1jhbv0INNaa6@umbc4.umbc.edu> potler@umbc.edu (Laura Potler) writes:
- |> >>Although TV news won't tell people this, gun accidents are less frequent than
- |> >>deaths on a bicycle. Still, with proper training from your local gun club
- |> >>or the NRA, no such accidents will happen. We've had guns in our family for
- |> >
- |> >ay, there's the rub... no, lower... mmmmyes there, uh, oh, sorry, where was
- |> >i... ah! people *don't* get proper training when they get guns. they don't
- |> >practice. they don't! we all know that the average joe or josephine is a bdi.
- |> >do you want to trust the moron going 46 in the left lane (with the obligatory
- |> >left blinker blinking) with a gun? i think not.
- |>
- |> It seems as if you're addressing the gun accident issue here. The thing is,
- |> Laura, that where accidents are concerned, guns are way down there in the
- |> noise.
- |>
- |> In 1990, there were 46,300 motor vehicle accidents,
- |> 12,400 deaths in accidental falls,
- |> 6,500 accidental deaths by poisoning,
- |> 5,700 accidental drownings,
- |> 4,300 accidental deaths in fires,
- |> 3,200 accidental deaths by choking/suffocation
- |>
- |> and only 1,400 firearms-related accidental deaths. Another thing you
- |> should know about that number is that it's HALF the number of accidents
- |> from 1970, this despite a massive increase in the number of firearms out
- |> there.
-
- Once again, I can't *believe* that I'm watching where I'm going and yet am
- about to step into this anyway. I'll just leave my shoes on the front porch
- when I get home.
-
- Note the difference in the types of accidents reported above. It's difficult
- to get around these days with some sort of motor vehicle transportation,
- especially in the more rural areas such as the one where I live. People will
- accidentally fall. People will ingest things that seem perfectly safe and
- yet are poison due to mislabelling or improper preparation/packaging. Even
- if people stop swimming or boating, there will be the occasional slip in the
- tub or falling into water that will lead to drowning. Fires happen for all
- sorts of reasons that may or may not be preventable. Choking or whatever?
- Well, that's anatomy for you. It happens sometimes no matter what.
-
- But we don't *need* the guns. If they weren't around, then that's 1400
- people that would still be here today. Since 1970, it must be in the
- thousands. I'm sure that you could cite the astoundingly low number of
- accidental deaths that occur from bungee jumping or leaping out of a perfectly
- good plane with a parachute on your back, but that doesn't make the
- activity any more defensible or intelligent.
-
- "There have been zero deaths since 1970 that occurred from backing naked
- into glowing pot-bellied stoves with a piece of dynamite stuck up your
- butt. Therefore, this is a perfectly safe activity in which we can all
- participate as long as we are properly trained."
-
- Peeve: "Logic" that says that as long as it hasn't killed *too* many people,
- then it's ok.
-
- +--------------------------------------------------+
- |Dave Cochran, Data General Corporation, RTP, NC |
- |cochran@dg-rtp.dg.com |
- +--------------------------------------------------+
- |If you could choose between the body of a 20-year |
- |old or the body of a 50-year old, where would you |
- |keep it? |
- +--------------------------------------------------+
-