You're doing it again. You say you don't do it, but you do. You did it to me the other day and, just as you did to me, you'll deny it.
There are names for people like you.
The obvious answer is that you don’t want to see children molested. Somehow I was able to deduce that but check my logic:
I’m pretty sure you think that, after careful consideration, a gun operated by an amateur is not the best way to defend children from sexual interference.
Another safer more reliable method, if we had it, would be just to call the transporter room and have the child beamed up to safety. While transporter accidents are possible, it is safer for the child than firing some 20th century projectile weapons.
And this is the key part: because it’s safer for the child, it’s no longer discretionary. It becomes a
moral imperative to discard the projectile weapon and whisk the child to safety with the transporter beam. To not do so is a sign of irresponsible parenting, or if you prefer the hyperbolic approach: if you would rather shoot a gun than beam the child up, you
want the child to be molested.
Moreover, while we do not have a transporter beam, we have a moral imperative to consider whether there is any technology, or social arrangement, or innovation, to protect children from sexual abuse. And gsdx, contrary to the ad hominem straw man nonsense hurled back at you, I’m betting you feel there is a whole package of safeguards, social norms, institutions, laws, and even technologies that meet two criteria: they’re possible (unlike the transporter beam) and they’re effective (unlike the gun).
If that’s your position then you might agree with me that we do have a moral imperative to protect children from abuse, and it’s precisely because gun nuttery falls so far short of that duty that we have a responsibility to speak up. It’s because guns are such a poor implement at protection, such a makeshift halfarsed attempt at helping, tarnished with such a shoddy track record, that we’re compelled to oppose them.