Quetzal
New member
It is a very basic question. What is the difference between a knife and firearm?Says the warrior princess. :yawn:
It is a very basic question. What is the difference between a knife and firearm?Says the warrior princess. :yawn:
It is a very basic question. What is the difference between a knife and firearm?
You are cherry picking. Murderers VASTLY prefer handguns to any of the above.One difference is that more murderers prefer to use a knife than either a rifle or a shotgun.
Source, please.Another difference is far more people are seriously injured by knives every year than by guns. You don't seem to care about that. :think:
It is a very basic question. What is the difference between a knife and firearm?
Really? That is it, there is nothing else that makes them different?Effective range....And that's it. Unless you wish to count that the knife uses mechanical energy (like a bow & arrow) while the firearm relies on chemical energy.lain:
Really? That is it, there is nothing else that makes them different?
I suppose the idea that I can stand 5-10 yards away with a standard clip and drop a moderate sized group of people is something worth mentioning. The fact that a firearm can cause more destruction to more individuals, faster, is something that I am not willing to ignore. You can't downplay the advantage of a firearm when comparing it to a knife.No....What am I missing?...Technological advancement?
Enthrall me with your knowledge of weaponry.![]()
You are cherry picking. Murderers VASTLY prefer handguns to any of the above.
Source, please.
Really? That is it, there is nothing else that makes them different?
You are being blatantly ignorant and dense.But murderers vastly prefer knives to rifles and shotguns. You don't care about that, so why should I care more prefer handguns to knives?
Guns are not considered hand tools, his abstract does not apply to guns.
Knives cause more disabling injuries than any other type of hand tool.
I suppose the idea that I can stand 5-10 yards away with a standard clip and drop a moderate sized group of people is something worth mentioning. The fact that a firearm can cause more destruction to more individuals, faster, is something that I am not willing to ignore. You can't downplay the advantage of a firearm when comparing it to a knife.
That advantage is enormous and the fact that it is a serious consideration in comparison to a knife is ridiculous.That is due to the fact that the firearm is a ranged weapon (As I noted, I didn't "downplay" anything, I simply gave you an accurate answer devoid of emotionalism's)....If you take away the range; the weapon loses it's advantage.
That advantage is enormous and the fact that it is a serious consideration in comparison to a knife is ridiculous.
You are being blatantly ignorant and dense.
Guns are not considered hand tools, his abstract does not apply to guns.
I am a pacifist.
The thread is about murder not being the fault of a "gun culture" but a "death culture." Guns are relatively harmless, like knives. It takes a person with a certain mindset to commit murder; the focus should be on that mindset and what fosters it rather than on guns.
The 21 foot rule does not apply if you are drawing a weapon on an unaware target.You are correct that the advantage can be enormous but....
:juggle: No....Not really. Do yourself a favor and look up the "21 foot rule" and consider that not all altercations take place in the great wide open.
No, it doesn't. It proves that a knife causes more injuries than a socket wrench. In which case, you are correct.It still proves my claim unless you can show greater numbers over the same period for gun injuries.
No, it doesn't. It proves that a knife causes more injuries than a socket wrench. In which case, you are correct.
Your first study is over a period of 18 years. The second study is over two, they are not comparable.An estimated 8,250,914 (95% confidence interval [CI] 7,149,074-9,352,755) knife-related injuries were treated in US EDs from 1990 to 2008, averaging 434,259 (95% CI 427,198-441,322) injuries annually, or 1190 per day. (Source)
An estimated 34 485 (95% confidence interval [CI], 25 225-43 745) persons (6.7 per 100 000 population; 95% CI, 4.9-8.5) were treated for unintentional, nonfatal firearm-related injuries in US emergency departments during the 2-year study period. (Source)
What more evidence do I need to prove my claim?
Your first study is over a period of 18 years. The second study is over two, they are not comparable.