Doug wrote:The Croatians were not disarmed, the Guatamalan guerrillas were not disarmed, the Rwandan Tutsis were not disarmed. So "to the extent that they are effective, are a contributing factor to genocide" suggests that since they were not effective, the gun control laws were not a factor.
But the
were effective. To a very great extent in Rwanda and Yugoslavia. (I don't know enough about Guatemala to say.) In Rwanda, disarmed civilians were what made it easy for govt
and non-govt militias to kill. In Yugoslavia, victim disarmament laws made it easy for former soldiers with guns (not subject to disarmament laws) to kill minorities. Croatians were a privileged group allowed to join the govt army - for this reason some had guns.
Your statement that, if gun control laws are ignored and unenforced (are not effective) is trivially true, but that does not contradict the claim under discussion: gun control laws (to the extent they are effective) contribute to genocide.
Barbara, as you know, by the mid-1800s it was generally illegal to sell guns to Indians. Gun control laws certainly contributed to the extermination of the plains indians. You are correct that European diseases were the main killer of North American indians, but it's a stretch to call that genocide. Much of that happened accidentally. The recent History Channel show on the Pilgrams pointed out that many of the local indians had
already died from Euro-plagues by the time they settled at Plymouth rock. Apparently all it took was a few trappers and explorers.
not Darrel wrote:Here is how the Cancer Society group did their little game. They looked at all of the instances of lung cancer (actually I should check and see if they purposely missed any others, as Barbara points out), then they looked to see if there had ever been an instance of tobacco smoking in the patient's history. Just imagine. Of course, 90% of the time, maybe more, you are going to find that. So rather than a correlation showing smoking "facilitates" lung cancer, they are just finding something that you find 90% of the time anyway. It's like me discovering that that 90% of my piano tuning customers are right-handed and thinking there is something profound in such a mundane and expected statistic. Sigh.
I might add that for both cigarette smoking-cancer and victim disarmament-genocide, there is a causual explanation that adds weight to the connection. For the former, there is a
toxics in smoke causing mutation explanation, for the latter there is a praxeological explanation. This
laws of human action-based explanation was outlined in another unrelated thread. I'll copy it in here:
Do you believe that people prefer more of a good to less? I confess; I have no idea why you don't recognize "gun control facilitates genocide" as an obvious truism. To me, it is a rather obvious application of the praxeological law that (ceteris paribus) people prefer more of a good to less (and less of a bad to more.) My reasoning:
A State's gun control laws provides penalties (a bad) for violation. (def of gun control law)
Thus, ceteris paribus, there will be a reduction in gun ownership. (Prax Law 1)
A reduction in gun ownership makes genocide easier. (since it is easier and safer to kill unarmed people than armed people.)
Ergo, gun control facilitates genocide.
(Note that this argument is analytic; it requires virtually no empirical data, just simple definitions and a law of human action.)
As I read him, Darrel is now graciously admitting that
gun control laws contribute to genocide, but he disputes whether they contribute to any significant degree.