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  #64  
08-11-2009, 10:27 PM
Nemo
Clakker Store Clerk
 
: Oct 2006
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Because guns are intended for killing. Cars are not.
Oh that makes it all different then. It doesn't matter how dangerous something is, all that matters is what it was made for.

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What do you have a better chance of avoiding: a speeding bullet going so fast and so small you would have been dead before you even heard the discharge, and needless to say, saw it coming; or a large, noisy chunk of metal stampeding down an open space with its headlights turned on possibly?
What has a better chance of hitting me? You can't really accurately answer this. You can take into effect how accurate the gun is, how fast the car is going, whether or not I'm facing the incoming object, if it's on a busy street, if there's anything to warn me about the bullet, what coverage there is, etc. etc.
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