"Need" is unfortunately a wedge-word (some call it a 'weasel word'). To even have the argument, one must accept the premise that a person's 'need' (as defined by others) is a valid reason for restriction - of anything. What a person 'needs' is not generally accepted as a valid means for restricting any legal behavior or private property. How big a house do you 'need'? How many calories do you 'need'?
I tried to be clear about the use of the term "need." Personally, as I wonder whether anyone "needs" a 30 round cli... I mean magazine, I also wonder why anyone "needs" a lot of things. The simple distinction I was trying to make clear is that, whether someone "needs" something or not has no bearing on whether it should be legal or not. I don't think most people need to drive a Hummer, but I'm not in favor of making them illegal.
I think we need to work on better ways of detecting and intervening when people become mentally unstable. In very few cases that I can recall has a person just 'snapped' for no reason and no one saw it coming (it has happened, I acknowledge). It seems that often people are interviewed after the fact and say "I saw it on TV and I just knew it was Joe."
Didn't the guy in Arizona purchase his pistol within a very short period of time prior to the shootings?
I agree, but I'm not sure how that can be done. We have had waiting periods and background checks, but how effective are these? Are we looking for the right things? My impression (and I'd welcome correction if I'm wrong) is that the background checks are largely token and riddled with loopholes.
The liability insurance thing is interesting, but I think a non-starter. There are two issues there. The first is the mandatory purchase of a good or service in order to exercise a constitutional right; not sure that would fly. The second is that this would essentially act as a restriction on the right of the poor to own guns to defend themselves. The third thing I can think of is that as always, criminals are not going to buy the insurance. Very few illegal shootings are done by previously law-abiding citizens; most are performed by people who are already criminals (and not allowed to own guns legally anyway). It's not a terrible idea, but I don't know how it would be implemented in reality.
Like cars, you don't have to own a gun. The distinction between cars and health insurance is that you don't have to buy a car, so you're not being compelled to buy auto insurance. Compulsory liability insurance for gun owners would be as constitutional as compulsory liability insurance for automobiles.
Regarding insurance, I probably shouldn't have brought it up as it's a tangent. I'll try to explain a little better what I meant. Legally purchased weapons are involved in just about every accidental firearm injury or death. Hunting accidents, when a kid shoots his friend on accident showing off his dad's pistol, when a kid takes his dad's gun to school and accidentally shoots a couple people (as happened just a few days ago). These are all situations where mandatory liability insurance would be helpful to the victims' and their families.
According to the CDC, there were 18,610 non-fatal,
unintentional gunshot injuries in 2009. In 2007 (the last year available for mortality statistics), there were 613
unintentional, firearm fatalities.
Liability insurance wouldn't keep crazy people from doing the things like what happened in Arizona. But it would help compensate families for their loss in cases where they are injured. The parents of the deceased child may not have life insurance for their 9 year old who was shot in AZ. Now they're looking at funeral bills along with other legitimate expenses (as a quick example). The people who survived are looking at physical and mental health care bills, possibly lost work and other related expenses.
Will it ever get passed? Of course not. I think it's a reasonable idea, but the gun lobby is strong and while this would in no way infringe upon anyone's right to bear arms, it smacks of "gun control."
Cruentus, you kind of came off as both unconstructive and insulting in your post. Maybe I just don't get it, but the only thing I really got from your post is you believe that because your own opinion has evolved over time, anyone who doesn't share your opinion is uninformed.