Again, none of the potentially lethal things you mention were designed with the PRIMARY PURPOSE OF KILLING THINGS. None of them are sold in places which also sell large numbers of people-shaped targets. I have a large selection of kitchen knives, all of which I could easily kill people with, but they don't have rapid fire and 30 blades each and my chopping board does not have a silhouette of a man on it. Fertiliser isn't sold with a bomb-making recipe (though I bet plenty of NRA members have, know or know where to get the recipe). Yes, cars kill a huge number of people, but the number where a car is deliberately used as a weapon is very small, and there are very strong legal restrictions to prevent people using cars when they are drunk, high, medicated or impaired by mental or physical impairment. You need a government controlled licence and insurance to drive a car, there are traffic lights, stop signs, speed limits etc. Cars have airbags and impact zones to reduce harm, they don't have dumbdumb bumpers or armour piercing steering wheels.
Please can you name a legal, non-military/law enforcement scenario where the need to fire more than a single bullet at a time is an absolute necessity? (Firing a machine gun at shit because firing machine guns at shit is fun doesn't count).
To get a firearm that can fire "more than one bullet at a time" requires a heck of a lot more government paperwork than having a car -- as I've said, a guy who has such a license considers the process of getting one about as pleasant as getting a "hostile enema".
I would have no problem with laws against shooting drunk -- or even having a loaded weapon when drunk. The right to keep and bear arms is aimed at enhancing the security of a free country, and being armed while drink doesn't enhance security in the least.
Compared to the number of firearms, the number of times that a firearm is deliberately used against people is vanishingly small. Even compared to the number of times firearms are fired, the number is vanishingly small.
You probably are safe than any randon gun owner off the street. You probably never will kill or injure anyone accidentally or deliberately. But what happens if you stop taking your expensive medication or your condition changes. One of the more serious consequences of bi-polar disorder is suicide. Your personal arsenal will make it too easy for you should you feel the need. For your one psychiatrist who thinks you are safe I suspect there would be dozens whose opinion would differ. Are you singularly unique in that you have such an understanding and control of your own mental health that your gun ownership is completely without a higher degree of risk than a non bi-polar gun owner? I admire your confidence. Or is it arrogance. Surely you couldn't possibly be one of the "loonies" you spoke of earlier.
i.e. you admit that when it comes to guns and their use, you are not 100% convinced of your own rational decision making ability.
LOL I don't think you really read what I wrote. I am TOTALLY convinced, because I can't wrap my mind around the idea of using a firearm against a person who has not attacked me. That confidence comes from psychiatrists who have assured me that I am safer with a firearm than a random gun owner off the street, for the very reason that I can't wrap my mind around using a firearm to commit aggression. If I were offered a billion dollars to shoot someone I can't stand, I would stare blankly at the person making that offer, because the concept doesn't make sense to me. That's not what firearms are
for.
And, again, statistically a legally owned gun is more likely to cause an unintended death or injury due to accidental mis-use or suicide than it is to be used to prevent a crime. It also makes the intended killing (i.e. murder) of another person far easier should you or any other legal gun owner be taken by murderous intent.
That statistic is a lie. If it were true, then there would be hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of accidental misuse or suicide every year in the U.S. And me having a gun makes the chance of someone murdering me less, not higher.
Which category do you fall into? Are you dangerous with your guns? In which case you probably should not have them. Or are you afraid of them? In which case you probably should not have them. Or do you have that special mental illness which makes you more rational and more in control of your actions, no, wait, I forgot you have already stated this is not the case.
You're just making crap up now -- or not actually reading my posts, just mining them for things you can spin.
How does your opinion of Bloomberg have any bearing on this particlar quote? Do you disagree with the notion that the NRA and gun lobby has had a massive influence over gun laws in America over recent decades and that many people see that influence as a negative thing? Until there is a National Victims Association with the same lobbying clout as the NRA, then they will continue to have too much influence.
It's not my opinion of Bloomberg, it's the opinion of the US Department of Justice and several states, most notably Virginia (the officials of which couldn't understand why a mayor in another state would be spending his law enforcement budget on interfering with investigations in another state and were understandably rather pissed).
The NRA qualifies as a National Victims Association. They're the driving force behind severe penalties for the misuse of firearms, for compensatory damages imposed to aid victims, for training in firearm safety.
OTOH, today's liberals are a National Victims Association, in that they fight to make everyone a potential victim, to empower the criminal while making people just targets.