And are you further using that false and unstated premise to criticize an analogy making a valid point that you don't like?
And are you further implying that having a gun indicates fear of home invasions whereas having a fire detector doesn't indicate fear of fire and having a carbon monoxide detector doesn't indicate fear of carbon monoxide poisoning?
You make a very serious slur against another DUer's character here:
It's much more likely that you will hurt or kill a loved one or a family member than protect yourself from an assailant.I doubt you are aware of it, but this is tantamount to stating that the person addressed is a long-term criminal and a felon or has serious mental health issues. There is a lot of very poor, amateurish pseudo-criminological "research" being performed by doctors skilled in epidemiology--the study of diseases and how they spread. (That's similar to physics research being done by CPAs.) Among them is a thoroughly debunked body of work by a "scientist" purporting to show what you say above.
Here I quote real criminologists (not an MD working far outside his area of expertise):
Ordinary PeopleAnother scientific fact: ordinary people rarely murder. Very rarely.
Local and national studies dating to the 1890s show that in almost every case murderers
are aberrants exhibiting life histories of violence and crime, psychopathology, substance
abuse, and other dangerous behaviors. Looking only to prior crime records, roughly 90
percent of adult murders had adult records, with an average adult criminal career of six
or more years, including four major adult felonies.{37}
We are often told that most murder victims know their assailants. We are supposed to infer that normal,
law-abiding people kill their friends and loved ones because a sudden rage—accompanied by the
availability of a gun—is too severe a temptation. This may be true of gang members, drug dealers, and
armed robbers, but it is very rare among normal people. And we are never told the rest of the story—
national data on acquaintance gun murders in homes show that “the most common victim offender
relationship” was “where both parties knew each other because of prior illegal
transactions.”{38}
The most rational response is to ban felons, the insane and habitual drug abusers from possessing guns.
Harsh general restrictions are inefficient. A National Institute of Justice funded study concluded that “there
is no evidence anywhere to suggest that reducing the availability of firearms in general likewise reduces
their availability to persons with criminal intent. . . .”{39} Note: In order to see the sources and read the footnotes, go to www.obamaonsecond.com and search for the section entitled "Ordinary People."