An Ethical view of 2nd amendment rights An Ethical view of 2nd amendment rights
— ernest
I think this title is misleading. Your post isn't really about gun rights or the Second Amendment, it's about killing for self-defense. Conflating those two issues increases the controversy unnecessarily. — T Clark
Well the problem as I see it, given the bipolar deadlock on the issue, is now down to public attitude. When I look at posts on Facebook from gun lovers, they put 'proud to be American' over the picture of an AR-15 or some such. Frankly it seems to me this pride is a complete fabrication by the gun manufacturing lobby for two treason.
First, the fact that individuals even need lethal self defense at all is really an appalling comment on the quality of our police. Other nations do perfectly well without it.
Second, it seems an enormously displacement of conventional ethics to be proud of the ability to kill. I can't really find any philosophical basis for it at all.
So it seems to me, if people instead thought it to be something that reflects their own inadequacy, to need lethal rather than nonlethal self defense, then it would be an enormous improvement. I don't mean any offense to elderly people or otherwise hancicapped adults, in fact I personally concur with the Supreme court's decision to uphold the right to lethal defense as the current interpretation of the 2nd Amencment, because exactly those people need it.
But it would be helpful if the general public regarded shooting other people more as a sad last resort, that we all would rather avoid, than to trumpet it in parades while shooting off rounds of bullets and waving the flag. Would that I could be more nuanced to say it, but frankly, it just looks completely insane to someone raised in Great Britain. I don't mean to offend anyone by saying it, but sorry, that's how it looks.