• @Naich
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      775 months ago

      You can’t murder a room full of children with pgp.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        -355 months ago

        I already have a chainsaw for that kind of thing, that does this have to do with guns and encryption?

        • @Naich
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          285 months ago

          Yeah, that’s the point. What do guns have to do with encryption? I could say “If you outlaw beards, only outlaws will have beards” and it will make as much sense as your original post. I appreciate that you have a weird fetish for violence but you don’t have to shoe-horn it into every conversation.

          • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            -145 months ago

            Privacy and guns can be used for defense. Beards generally don’t affect that (though Alexander was of a different opinion and made his soldiers shave so that they couldn’t be grabbed by the beard ; I think same was the reasoning for Roman soldiers shaving their beards and other hair).

            • @Naich
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              125 months ago

              You can’t murder a room full of children with pgp.

              I’ll just say it again in the hope that it might dawn on you that the two things are not even remotely similar enough that you can say “this also works for guns”.

              • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                -95 months ago

                I’ve already described specifically how they are similar, it might dawn on you that repetition doesn’t strengthen an argument. Not hopeful though.

                • @Naich
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                  75 months ago

                  What? That they can both be used for defense? Name something that couldn’t ever be used for defense. Your comparison is pointless because the only trait they share is one which is also shared by pretty much everything else on the planet. Like beards, to bring up an earlier example.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        -255 months ago

        What? You think criminals don’t have guns in yours?

        By the way, a country can’t believe anything, it’s an artificial concept on a map.

        • @RogueBanana@lemmy.zip
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          105 months ago

          Unironically yes. Out of 1000 crime news I hear about here, maybe one of them is about gun violence. Also I have never ever heard about mass killings here like USA seems to have every week.

            • @RogueBanana@lemmy.zip
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              35 months ago

              Lol is it really that hard for you to believe? I am not just talking about media channels, also just word around the block, multiple YouTube channels and such.

              • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                25 months ago

                Not that hard. I’d say organized crime will have guns regardless. Usual hooligans will do with many things one can imagine.

        • @Tja@programming.dev
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          45 months ago

          That’s what I think. That’s what I observed (anecdotally) and what statistics show. When the sentence for having a gun is higher than robbery or drug dealing or whatever, even criminals avoid that shit.

          Why would you think criminals DO have guns in other countries?

          • Mubelotix
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            -45 months ago

            You can be anti-guns but he is still right. Criminals do have weapons where I live, even though it’s illegal. Fortunately, we don’t have many criminals since the country is rich

              • Mubelotix
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                -15 months ago

                I don’t care if you are a woman, I didn’t even know. Also, you are the one being wrong

                  • Mubelotix
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                    15 months ago

                    You already said that to the other guy, and it was already ridiculous back then

          • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            -95 months ago

            That’s a weird answer, I didn’t say that obtuseness\pedantry can believe in something.

            You made nobody fail, accusing someone of these traits just means their correctness is socially unpleasant for you.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        15 months ago

        I’ve always been reluctant to rely on papers like any constitution as a base for my perceived rights.

        Maybe as an argument, in the sense of “smart people have said that it should be and made some points in its favor”.

        But in general it’s a horrid mistake to rely on a paper. Some people you haven’t given any consent will stamp a few saying that you are a slave and oops.

        The reality is that there’s no way to consistently defend a right suppressed by legal arguments. If you can check the chain of laws giving you some right or taking it, you’ll always come to the point where it’s just “we all decide that’s law” and you were not part of that decision. And if you go the opposite way and just accept what’s made law, then you are dropping the idea of rights in its entirety, making decisions made by someone else a law for you.

        My point is that this is unsolvable and one can’t replace good and evil with legal arguments. Laws will never be sufficiently good for that, even constitutional laws.

        So I’m for right to arm oneself, but I don’t think there’s any magic allowing to universally prove that a thing is legally right or wrong.

        Which is why, again, a journalism which isn’t outrageous is just public relations, a protest that doesn’t harm economy and break laws is just a demonstration, an a principle which can be overridden by a law or a threat of force is just virtue signalling.