Harvey Newstrom wrote:
> > Eric Ruud [ejruud@ucdavis.edu] wrote:
> > >I refuse to believe that
> > >a bathroom is more dangerous than a gun, which is what you seem to be
> > >suggesting.
>
> <mark@unicorn.com> wrote:
> > Many, many more people are killed in bathroom accidents than
> > gun accidents... that's reality.
>
> You both are right. There is no contradiction in your claims.
>
> Bathrooms are much safer than guns. The rate of bathroom accidents is
> much less than gun accidents. Using a bathrooms is less likely to
> result in an accident than using a gun. Bathrooms are used safely much
> more often than guns are used safely.
This is yet to be determined. It also depends on what you define as 'gun use'. I say since it is a deterrent device, any time it is within close enough proximity to be available for quick deployment for defensive use, it is being used. Eric seems to think that its only being used when it is actually being fired. He also ignores the fact that when a gun is actually either brandished or fired, it is in a situation fraught with a prexisting danger that the gun has no bearing on, only in that it can change who the danger becomes applied to. Being faced with an attacker with a knife you are far more likely to be killed if you do not have a gun, while the attacker is much more likely to be killed if you have a gun. The two deaths are not equal in my mind, while anti-gunners count them as if it does not matter who dies and who lives. This is obviously fraudulent science they are engaged in.
> However:
> Bathrooms are used much more often than guns. More people use bathrooms
> than guns. There are more bathrooms than there are guns. Everybody
> must use the bathroom multiple times per day, while not everybody is
> involved in a gun incident or activity multiple times per day.
Lets see, there are 200 million guns in the US, posessed in 60 million homes (for 3.3 guns per home). There are less than 100 million households in the US, with an average of 1.25 bathrooms per house. Thus there are fewer bathrooms than guns, although the guns are owned by fewer people than those who own bathrooms. Because there is universal bathroom ownership, all understand the benefits of bathroom ownership, are comfortable in their bathrooms, some even like their bathrooms, they even sleep in their bathrooms, and some even collect bathroom fixtures as hobbies, it is hard to get people to admit that their bathrooms are more dangerous than, say, a gun. They are emotionally attached to and invested in their bathroom. They could never imagine that their bathroom could be turned against them, betray them in such a way as to seriously injure or kill them or others. They think that the right to ones bathroom outweighs the potential risks, if there are any.
Since only 60%+ of households own guns, the remaining 40% or less who do not own guns don't seem to develop the same sort of feelings about guns like they already do with the bathrooms they own. However, if bathrooms were subject to the same sort of regulations that exist and that anti-gunners would like to see, we would have the following:
Now, in this theoretical society, only 60 million of the 100 million households would actually have bathrooms, so you would get the following reactions:
a) those people without bathrooms would say: 1) why does anybody need a bathroom anyways? 2) why would anyone need more than one? 3) an outhouse is all you really need. Automatic flush toilets are just tooout of control and complex and dangerous. Law abiding citizens have no need of such technology.
There will also be those bathroom owners who won't admit to owning
bathrooms, for fear of the outrage from their liberal peers. Men won't tell
their wives that there actually is a bathroom in the house. Many bathroom
owners will buy into the bathroom control memetic hype, thinking:
1) "Well, I know that I'm responsible enough to handle my own bathroom, but
I don't trust anybody else in one."
2) "Some people just should not be near bathrooms."
3) "its those automatic flush toilets that give all bathroom fixtures a bad
name."
When someone asks to use your bathroom, you will first decide whether you
know them well enough, then you will bring them into the bathroom, go
through all of the fixtures, making sure none are loaded, and ensure that
the person knows how to use them all.....
> Although the chance of an accident per use is lower with a bathroom than
> with a gun, there are more total bathroom accidents than gun accidents.
> Bathroom accidents are more frequent than gun accidents. In total,
> bathroom accidents are statistically more likely than gun accidents.
> Statistically speaking, a person is more likely to have an accident in
> the bathroom than to have an accident with a gun.
>
> Each side seems to be assuming that these conclusions are incompatible,
> and therefore that the other side must be lying. There are no
> incompatibilities here, and neither side is lying.
not quite lying, but it depends on what your definition of the word 'is' is.......
Mike Lorrey