As far as your feelings about leaving this country, I wish more People saw things that way, I consider that very respectable. If you don't like our culture, or our laws and traditions, there are many other places in the world to live, and unlike most countries our will let you leave when you want. I'm not asking you to leave, but do believe that more people should look at it as an option.
My family came here because America was a bastion of freedom. I was born in rural Tennessee. They love this country. I'm loathe to leave it, no matter how bad it gets. I've been watching the DNC this week, cheering wildly for my political heroes. I'm tied to this country, guns or not, and those ties are hard to cut. And as people are saying tonight, even wayward, the soul of this country is worth fighting for.
I am an American, whatever anyone says. I don't think it's American culture for everyone to be packing or that it's American tradition (and yes, I know American history well) and my beliefs on the subject are as valid as yours. You obviously do and I'll say that's a difference of opinion. You stated your opinion politely and I try to do the same. However, if I feel like I need to have a gun to be safe, it's not worth living here - I don't think its part and parcel of American culture and I won't leave just because someone says it is.
Nor will I use a gun because someone says it makes them safer. Shall we start saying "If you don't love George Bush, then if you want to leave you should? Its tradition to love the President! Everyone loved Washington!" Is that where this country is going? If you don't like it, leave? I should hope not - I can continue to cheer for the Dems and I can still oppose guns and still be American. The most American value is that an American can change this country not that he or she has to leave.
It sounds like when the right wing was calling everyone who disagrees with this president "Unamerican." If you don't like our president, leave, they would say. I call sheningans. I can be anti-gun and still be American. All I said was that if it ever becomes so bad that I have to have a gun, then I will leave. Not because I thought it was an American tradition to have guns.
Anyway, I know that some people in America will want to have guns. It is their right in this country. But I honestly think America could use tighter gun control. A lot tighter, which doesn't trample that right.
I also hold that belief that guns are bad. I don't want them in my house, under any circumstances. But in this country people do have the right to have guns, though I believe they should be better regulated.
Why do you keep comparing it to japan when there are significant differences besides just gun control? Why not compare it to south america, canada, europe, mexico, etc. etc.
Because Japan is based on a Western style legal/political system with a violent history (of 2000 years). Because Americans set up the Japanese government? It serves as a good foil to the U.S. Because I know Japan? Because Japan is the first world nation I know the most about, behind the U.S.? Because I know what I'm talking about when I talk about it? Of course if you read the National Rifleman, with its myraid of racial sterotypes, sure they will seem different. I don't believe they're so different we can't learn.
Its not child pornography if they meet the age of consent.
It is if the age of consent is different. As it is in Japan. That's exactly what Sensei said...
as long as the children involved meet the age of consent in the state or country where the pornography is produced.