🔫 On the Second Amendment front, perhaps you’ve gone to bed tipsy and are awoken by the sound of your door crashing down. If you were sober, you might have confidence in your ability to vet that it’s intruders and not e.g. your friendly police state who got the wrong address.
🥃 On the alcohol front, extremes might be peer pressure or a medical emergency in your household or at an elderly neighbor’s home or something.
Comparing the two: I wonder if the average person can trust themselves more to remember they shouldn’t drive their friend with a broken leg to the hospital and they need to wait for EMS, compared to knowing they shouldn’t unlock their gun safe when their door comes crashing down.
Not offering any concrete proof or ironclad opinion here. Thanks for the thought-provoking response!
Extremes of both situations come to mind.
🔫 On the Second Amendment front, perhaps you’ve gone to bed tipsy and are awoken by the sound of your door crashing down. If you were sober, you might have confidence in your ability to vet that it’s intruders and not e.g. your friendly police state who got the wrong address.
🥃 On the alcohol front, extremes might be peer pressure or a medical emergency in your household or at an elderly neighbor’s home or something.
Comparing the two: I wonder if the average person can trust themselves more to remember they shouldn’t drive their friend with a broken leg to the hospital and they need to wait for EMS, compared to knowing they shouldn’t unlock their gun safe when their door comes crashing down.
Not offering any concrete proof or ironclad opinion here. Thanks for the thought-provoking response!
CC: @Cethin@lemmy.zip