You’ll probably be surprised to hear me say this, but you got that judgment of my thoughts there dead right. But you got one major part wrong; you didn’t use my words, I never said guns. I said the environment, which can’t be treated the same policy wise as guns. Believe it or not there are a lot of things that require far different policies, and with which we can’t switch words and presume the meaning hasn’t changed. I’m not a single issue voter, I don’t tie one aspect of the left or right to all the others, and seldom believe issues should be painted with the same policy or brush. That’s painfully simplistic thinking.
There are aspects I believe can’t be left to the individual to decide, as self interest will too often be put before the concern for broader perspectives and the good of the whole. That’s human nature. And there are aspects I feel are fully within the responsibility of the individual, and reasonably so. A gun I trust to the individual, the exceedingly minor risk to the whole I can accept. The environment is a far bigger scale and scope, and to say because Ted Turner can buy as much land as he wants, he (or we) should be able to bulldoze everything on it to the ground because well, we have sheets of paper... isn’t at all the same thing as saying Ted Turner shouldn’t have guns.
If you feel it is, you’re unwittingly (benefit of the doubt) using the tactics populists, antifa, and the ####ty sides of the left and right use to try and paint everything as black or white; with us or against us. The reality is life is grey, and if you see it as black and white, you need to broaden your perspective. We can’t use copyright law to manage guns, or the environment. And we can’t pull a political template that allows one freedom which then by default means all other aspects of concern require the same freedoms. Freedom can be toxic, and everyone here will agree there is such a thing as too much. I shouldn’t have the freedom to squat on your land and call it mine if I have more armed friends.
The environment effects every single human and animal on earth. Almost nothing else has that scope, to say gun laws should be parallel in how they’re treated to environmental law is so embarrassingly simplistic I’m not going to attack it in proper as again, I’ll give the benefit of the doubt and presume it was a misspeak or ill considered thought. Far different problems require far different treatment.