Heathrow said:
I suspect that you are closer to understanding than you think you are, after all you have made note of the dichotomy between any item which can be used to kill and tools designed for killing.
Can you not take one further step and see why the force that motivates our race to create tools used for the express purpose of annihilating life might be justifiably frightening? Or do you draw comfort from a world where such a tool is common and mundane?
That is the only bridge to cross, if you find death in anyway abhorrent you should be able to stand where I do.
Quickly: I find it interesting that you claim my opinion isn't objective, yet you type "That is the only bridge to cross".
Seems a bit hypocritical.
"Death" isn't abhorrent.
Death is a natural part of life, regardless of what philosophy, religion, or worldview you subscribe to.
"Killing"
can be abhorrent, but it's naive to assume that all killing is.
If I watch a bear kill a deer for food, one can hardly call that abhorrent, unless you are sheltered enough to not understand whats at work there. That's the beauty and wonder of nature at work, and yet: It's killing. It's death. The bear is struggling to survive, and is doing so by it's means. As the deer is also struggling to survive.
Both the deer and the bear have a right to life, so who lives?
If the deer is 'allowed' to live, then the bear dies.
If the bear is 'allowed' to live, then the deer dies.
In both cases, death and killing are present. Neither are abhorrent (Again: barring some naive, sheltered worldview).
Humans having tools for the purpose of killing isn't abhorrent, either. I don't "take comfort" in such tools existing, but I understand their purpose and use. Like a bear's claws, or a shark's teeth, humans have made tools for killing so that they may live. Be it a bow, a snare, a spear, or a firearm.
Now: The abhorrent part comes when man sets upon each other in violence. Believe it or not, I'm actually a bit of a pacifist. I don't like fighting, I don't like war, I
abhor (To steal a word from you) murder. Man killing fellow man out of revenge, a lust for power, a self-centered idea of justice, ANY idea of justice (I'm against the death penalty)...all those things are, as you say, abhorrent.
The difference here isn't the tools used, but the intent behind them.
Again: Firearms aren't to blame for the evil, ignorance, or neglectful use of the wielder.