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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 11, 2026

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A simple argument against gun control.

For context here, they are playing chess.

Mr. Terrific: I’m trying to map the multiverse. There are infinite Earths, each with their own history based on choices our other selves have made.

Mr. Terrific: So what do you need?

Superman: More of your T-Spheres.

Mr. Terrific: May I ask why?

Superman: I want to get rid of guns.

Mr. Terrific: For use around the world 24×7, you’d need to replicate the T-Spheres on a massive scale.

Superman: I’m only concerned about one. Actually, while we designate our Earth “Earth One,” it stands to reason that our other selves would do the same. Interesting, don’t you think?

Mr. Terrific: Still, you could never get rid of all the guns.

Superman: But most. You know we could.

Mr. Terrific: Just because we can doesn’t mean we should. People would resent us.

Superman: And they’d be alive to do that. Check. Think of the lives we’d save.

Mr. Terrific: Check. Smoking.

Superman: What?

Mr. Terrific: Cigarettes kill far more people. People keep smoking even though they know what’s killing them. Their families can only watch them die, and you want to save lives?

Jail everyone who smokes. Check.

And imprison anyone who speeds. Traffic fatalities are huge. Check.

Lock up everyone who leaves a dangerous dog unchained. Check.

Finally, we kill anyone who doesn’t recycle. Checkmate.

Superman: You’re not going to help me, are you?

Mr. Terrific: No sir, I am not.

I find this reasoning really interesting, because Mr.Terrific points out how selective much of the things that are being banned for killing people actually is.

Here are some other weapons that are banned or restricted in certain states in the US, and some countries:

Switchblades, butterfly knives are banned in places like the UK, and in some states like Minnesota & Massachusetts.

Brass Knuckles are banned in about 20 states, also in the UK and Canada.

The real issue I have with these bans and restrictions on guns, and even brass knuckles or knives, is that, the outrage seems to be selective. You can probably find pocket knives that'll do the job stabbing someone to death fairly easily, you could do it with a hunting knife or a kitchen knife. You could beat someone to death with a baseball bat, (or hell, you could make brass knuckles out of some nuts from Home Depot). And as stated, some of these kill far more people than other things, that are actually meant to harm, per the fbi, a kitchen knife has likely killed more people than brass knuckles have (for this, we'll say brass knuckles would probably fall into the "blunt objects" category). And as stated by Terrific, smoking kills far more than guns.

Perhaps the argument here is just to say: Look, bro, hunting knives - tobacco - cars, etc, aren't meant to kill people, so we aren't as interested in targeting them, but thats not personally how I judge (or others) would judge these situations. If I have a psychopath, who stabs someone to death with a kitchen knife vs one who does it with a switchblade. I'm not looking to judge them off the murder weapon in a trial. The dead person before me is what actually matters. Why should we care about the means of death? Its the ends that we are passing judgment for.

If I have a psychopath, who stabs someone to death with a kitchen knife vs one who does it with a switchblade.

If you have a psychopath with a machine gun (or a truck in a tightly packed crowd) then that's a lot more of a problem. The answer is to get rid of the psychopaths, terrorists, enemies, criminals, feral hogs, pit bulls... Not the guns, trucks, drones, fertilizer, chemicals, knives...

In the 18th and 19th centuries they'd go on about good governments bringing Improvement, how obviously you're supposed to drain swamps and irrigate the land and develop agriculture and industry. That was what civilization was all about. We should be continuing with Improvements today rather than just redistributing wealth to and fro.

Guns and drones and vehicles can all be very dangerous if weaponized. Better to make schools more tolerable so nobody shoots them up, better to ensure that school shooters are not sensationalized and rendered infamous by the media... Better to imprison, expel, execute terrorists (or refrain from 'invade the world, invite the world' foreign policy) than make bollards to impede their rampages. Better to liquidate criminals than having a revolving door prison system where they get arrested 14 times and then kill someone, only to be found 'unfit for trial' due to mental illness or retardation. The goal is to render improvements, not just blindly obey a huge agglomeration of laws. The laws were written by men and are interpreted by men for achieving real world goals.

Issue with this type of argument is that it's rare to find people who are actually consistent. The US right now is bombing and killing accused drug traffickers by referring to them as terrorists. For what? For providing a substance that irresponsible people willingly choose to inject into themselves.

Guns at least have the excuse that the user can be killing others. Drug users are only killing themselves! Basically every single drug death are suicides by the irresponsible drug users, whether on purpose or on accident. People may feel shameful if their father or brother or daughter or whoever ends up as a druggie and ODs, but at least it was their fault unlike a murder. There's not many cases of someone being held down and injected with drugs against their will, that's not a thing that happens. Although if we wanted to go with that, the Sacklers could be hanged! Now that's the same thing with gun deaths, a pretty substantial portion of them are suicides too but again at least one could pretend that it's only about the murder tool aspect of them.

And what about lesser harms? Why should we not start rounding up Nestle and Coca Cola shareholders for victimizing poor Americans with obesity, because offering high sugar snacks and drinks is damaging their health. Why should we not be executing the corn and sugar farmers for mass crippling >100million Americans and damaging their health? In total cumulative damage, one could probably argue the sugar farmers and fast food and grocery stores have done more than the entire drug trafficking market just because of the overwhelming amount of people who are overweight now.

Tabacco in raw numbers kills more than 6.5x more Americans a year than fentanyl!

Tobacco use is responsible for over 480,000 deaths per year in the United States,

And at least some of those are from second hand smoke so even tobacco has a stronger argument for "it kills other people" then the drugs these traffickers we're calling terrorists often provide. Why not drone strike the tobacco companies and ban cigarettes then?

Marijuana of course is one of the best examples of this, being arguably safer than federally allowed products like tobacco and alcohol. I ain't ever hear of someone dying of marijuana poisoning like what can happen with an alcoholic!

This is the key point. If both sides are arguing from principle and you can expect logical consistency from both, then Mr. Terrific's argument makes perfect sense; at a certain point you have to decide where the line is drawn. Superman wants to draw that line. Mr. Terrific does not agree, but he won't help him draw that line.

Except consistency and principles are not worth jack in the real world; they are specific weaknesses to be attacked and exploited. Pro-gun people want guns because they don't trust anti-gun people, or people in general, and they want the ability to shoot them if they defect. Anti-gun people don't want pro-gun people to have guns because they don't trust pro-gun people, or people in general, to have guns, and they want them to be disarmed and powerless especially if they're from the other political side.

Whatever side can do to hurt and cripple the other side is the point, whatever they say to try and justify it is noise. The current state of affairs where people whine about it and bandy about the laws as if they have any real ability or desire to enforce the laws is awful, but as long as the cities of America aren't engaged in open urban warfare against their political opponents, I'm optimistic. Vigilante assassinations or edge cases aren't quite there yet, and if we escalate to shooting wars the anti-gun side will suddenly find a lot of excuses to be pro-gun and discard what principles made them think guns aren't necessary.

The steelman of the next argument is not telos, but impact: advocates of this position believe the firearms are unnecessary for normal (or sometimes all non-military, or even all) users in ways that's not applicable to pocket knives or kitchen knives. This tends to get some fuzzy exceptions, but it's not fundamentally wrong, and the same people will often bite down on the bullet regarding smoking, speeding, or dangerous dogs.

((And Terrific is strawmanning Superman's argument in that scene. It's an Injustice film, so anyone who actually watches it knows Superman is going to go off the deep end, but at this point in the movie, Superman hasn't started intentional mass killings yet, or particularly aggressive treatment of normal criminals. He's a dictator, has killed the Joker, and clearly believes himself responsible for the deaths of Lois Lane and most of Metropolis, but it wasn't inevitable.))

The intermediate response is that necessity exists for firearms, even leaving aside the 30-40 feral hogs. Self-defense and hunting are legitimate needs, and for many people can exist in situations where their counterparts are not armed. The first time Superman hears a cry for help from someone he's disarmed, rushes to save them, and finds that they've been beaten to death before he could get there... well, there's a Irredeemable joke there, but I've got mixed feelings on the comic, so meh. Marksmanship and shooting sports are as legitimate as rugby or cycling for entertainment.

The more serious response is that it wouldn't work, and that's one that people don't really like to think about. If you can press a button and make every firearm on the planet disappear, CTRLPew will be making new ones within the hour. If you can press a button and make all of the ammunition disappear, there's a furry on twitter that made it out of thin air and scrap metal for fun. If you press a button and destroy the concept of guns, the same underlying technology makes bombs. Industrial farming depends on bombs. Several cult organizations have made biological weapons for weird ideological attacks, and ricin or some basic chemical weapons are so easy to make by accident that we have guidance to not do it by accident. Ukraine has just started to show some of the mechanisms that what used to be a funny child's toy can do.

If you sit down and think, seriously think, about what someone actually devoted to maximizing fatalities could do with the contents of a typical big box store, the entire exercise falls apart. ((Further information not available here. If you see the gap, do not spell it out.)) In the setting of Injustice, that gets even more ridiculous -- a high school dropout invented the cold gun and regularly stands toe-to-toe with The Flash -- but you don't really need to go to that extent.

The next step involves discussing marginal impact: availability of firearms making murder, and especially murder committed by the stupid or incapable of planning, easier. There's some questions about how long that lasts - the school shooting did take somewhere between thirty and fifty years to develop as a 'concept' after the material technology was available - but given the modern transfer of concepts like the vehicular mass-killing, that's probably an outlier.

Typically that's about the part where people get distracted or pull back.

I'm pro gun rights, but I think there are meaningful distinctions between some of the the things mentioned and guns.

Smoking is mostly dangerous to the person doing it. Yes, yes, there's secondhand smoke, but if you're not frequently around smokers while they light up, it's not that much of a concern. Generally, little-l liberal paternalism is okay with "victimless crimes", and tobacco smoking is pretty close to a perfect example of this. You can't even make the socialized healthcare case against smoking, since it actually saves taxpayers money by killing people early.

Speeding is already illegal. However, traffic laws rely heavily on voluntary compliance with the law, since there aren't enough police in the world to catch all the people speeding. In theory, traffic cameras can also solve this issue, but if there were too many traffic cameras, people might genuinely get up in arms about it. Generally speaking, we are dealing with a bunch of trade offs when it comes to traffic laws, and it is unclear that "lock up anyone who speeds" is the best all around solution for society as a whole.

I also think we generally do make pet owners responsible for injuries and damage that are done by their animals. Tort law probably already covers a lot of the things we'd want from a legal code that deals with dangerous animals.

It really is as simple as the left needs something to blame for the bad behavior of its ethnic constituencies. They need a fake issue to distract from the fact that virtually all crime statistically speaking is either in left-controlled areas or among left-controlled demographics, or both. Hence, guns. Or knives now, in Britain. The problem must be those pointed assault knives without the civilized blunted tips, sold in a locked container with a background check.

Consider how little they punish gun crime among the criminal underclass. We have tens of thousands of gun laws. It's not as if there are no tools to combat illegal guns being carried by known felons. Just start handing out max sentences for anything involving an illegal gun or a felon in possession of one. That would do infinitely more for public safety and black lives than trying to limit the magazine capacity of full-sized handguns or the grip angle of a rifle.

All the stuff you mention isn't banned because it's dangerous, they're banned because they were part of a fantasy that we could ban a fashionable weapon among the underclass and thus eliminate crime. Fashion is always changing.