Good to hear, Dan. I'm excited to check it out. Is that where your Youtube vids are shot?
I agree with xcentrix.
Cars and all their ancestors, buggys, wagons etc, were designed to transport things across distances. All their decendants (cars, dump trucks, trains, space shuttles, etc) still, primarily, do that. Collisions and vehicular manslaughter aren't their intended design, but a possible consequenses of automobile use.
Knives were designed as a utility tool. Whether it was cutting fibres, meat, wood, etc, its primary function has always been to cut. They can be straight bladed, serrated, shearing, etc. They can be a weapon, and kill, but that's not what they are necesarily designed for.
Guns, were designed to fulfill the purpose of killing things at a distance. It has usually been military advancements that have prompted development, so it wouldn't be crazy to suggest they were designed for specifically killing humans. They can also be used for hunting, which fills a huge niche. In fact, guns are so integral to modern hunting, we should consider it another primary function of guns. So we have 1a) Killing humans 1b) Killing prey. Not to capture or slow, their primary function is killing.
That's why police carry them. That's why people use them for home protection. That's why soldiers use them. If you are ever faced with a life or death situation, they give you access to the ability to end someone else's life to save your own/family's/comrade's life.
And there's nothing wrong with that. If someone physically threatens my life, I'd like to have the ability to at least even the odds. Guns are the best equalizer.
But no one is fooling anyone when they claim that a gun's primary function isn't to kill. You can shoot at paper or metal, but they were designed to be shot at living creatures, killing them.