The "guns are made to kill and hence are inherently evil" argument is not only naive, it's nonsense. Guns are made to shoot. What you're shooting is your decision. I think we're grown enough to know inanimate objects do not have any form of intelligence and cannot make decisions on their own (well, maybe AIs and particularly clever programs can, but it's another can of worms). Human responsability is paramount, always. If you do not trust your citizens to be responsible, or if you're putting limits on their freedoms because some of them may not behave in a responsible manner, how can you trust them to vote? Might as well put shackles on them and call them slaves.
I agree with that, but I said I didn't like them because they're made for the purpose - I didn't say they were evil (and I don't think they are) (I'm assuming you were responding to me - if not then that's just me clarifying myself).
Also, trusting a person to vote ≠ trusting them with a gun. Voting is (hopefully) a peaceful process where you tick some sort of box (whether it's on a piece of paper or a computer), and your decision is added to a pile of other decisions, with the overall effect of putting another person into a position of responsibility.
Owning a gun is another can of worms. If you allow an ordinary person to have a gun, you are giving that person the ability to threaten, wound, maim or kill from a distance. Whether it's 5 meters or 500 meters, I don't care. I've read people saying that it's not so different from owning a knife - I say BS to that. I'm willing to bet that it's FAR easier to kill someone with a gun than a knife, so therefore IMO it follows that guns should be more restricted than knives. Also, I agree that it is plainly true that it's the owner's responsibility, not the gun's. But I fail to see how this means guns should be less regulated. The fact remains that by giving a person a gun, you are giving them the ability to kill a person with little or no warning, from a distance. Why do people need that ability?
Indeed, and it's important to note that mechanically, inside a firearm there isn't anything specifically designed to kill humans. A projectile might be designed to inflict the maximum amount of damage possible on a body, but it really goes back to square one in that it's up to the shooter as to where the weapon is pointed...
True, but I'm pretty sure that the number 1 trend in guns over the past few hundred years has been a steady increase in overall lethality. A gun is essentially a glorified pipe which can contain a lot of pressure for a short time, but that setup is what allows it to do damage.
And although it is of course the wielder's decision and responsibility as to what he does with the gun, why should he/she be given that responsibility?