Viewed through this lens, a lot of the anti rhetoric makes more sense (from its own standpoint at least). Of course gun owners must be trigger-happy, Dirty Harry-wannabe yahoos. Of course banning guns will bring us closer to the promised land of peace and safety. Of course a State monopoly on weapons and force is and should be the goal of a civilized society. And the thing is, this would almost make sense in a society that was already so nearly violence-free that eliminating weapons would mostly affect the tiny number of true psychos out there.
So how does one address this mindset? Instead of nitpicking debates about the details, one must question their fundamental axioms:
- Gun ownership is paranoid, regressive, or pathological? Only to those who have a deep mistrust of freedom from government control.
- Killing and murder are wrong? Well of course they are, but legitimate self-defense isn't murder- or do you prefer the pseudo-pacifist strategy of letting the State do your dirty work for you conveniently out of sight?
- The State can provide security? Gun ownership and carrying has increased in popularity in direct proportion to the perception that the State is failing its guardianship role.
- The State can be trusted with a monopoly on weapons? For how long? Crooked leaders and corrupt police working together to oppress the people is a plague worldwide.
In short, the debate is rather like a debate with vegetarians: you can go over the individual pros and cons of a meat-inclusive diet, but you're unlikely to sway the minds of people who somehow think that killing poor innocent animals is wrong. You'll always regard them as squeamish and irrational, they'll always regard you as a troglodyte.