this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2023
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I understand the intent, but feel that there are so many other loopholes that put much worse weapons on the street than a printer. Besides, my prints can barely sustain normal use, much less a bullet being fired from them. I would think that this is more of a risk to the person holding the gun than who it's pointing at.

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[–] EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Just with household items you could already come up with half a dozen options that are better than a gun, kitchen knife, or explosives.

Security is fragile and we are kind of lucky that there aren't too many intelligent manicas.

[–] PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

If any of those (conspicuously unnamed) household items were used to kill even half as many people as guns, there would absolutely be legislation to reduce the public safety risk.

If that legislation failed as routinely as America's gun laws do, it would be improved or replaced until it worked.

[–] EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Say goodbye to your pipe clog cleaner.

Baking lye roll at home? That's NaOH too.

Old car battery or battery acid somewhere? H2SO4

Chlorix? People have accidently killed themself by releasing Chlorine. That's why there are warnings to not mix it with other cleaning agents.

There is far more in a normal household and don't even touched on the old stuff still laying around.

You might say those are not lethal: Panic is a strong weapon and an attacker has the advantage that he chooses the where, when and how with as much planning/preperation as he likes.

[–] PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yet with all these amazing weapons of mass destruction in their pantry, every single domestic terrorist just goes and buys a gun instead.

I'm sure the executives over at Chlorox are thrilled to hear that if radicalised psychopaths started killing and maiming thousands of people a year with their products, you'd fight to protect their profits.

But I'm not interested in solving every vague act of violence you're able to inflict on the people in your imagination, I'm interesting in solving the violence that is happening right now, to real people, using a specific tool.

[–] EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The British have an issue with acid attacks. Absolutely devastating to a life: Death is death. It's just over. Those people on the other hand life for years with it and will never fully recover.

Oh, current Clorix accidents are the results of our lackluster education. Shouldn't be too difficult to understand why hypochlorite releases Chlorine when mixed.

[–] PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago

I honestly can't imagine being so self-absorbed that I felt entitled to choose death for other people.

Of course, it's apologist bullshit anyway, which means you've had a single thought about it and decided "job done".

Most people being murdered in America aren't being killed with that level of premeditation. Someone (usually a man) has a gun on their person or laying around their house, they lose control of their emotions, then they shoot someone.

People don't tend to have a cup of acid in their bedside drawer but in the extremely likely event acid attacks became even a fraction of gun deaths, you have my full support to change the laws to address it.

Because I'm not on a death cult.