Which says exactly what I have been saying; gun violence has to do with the social climate (or we could say socioeconomic climate) rather then regulation.
I'm not talking about regulation, if I was to take the stance against firearms, it'd be elimination, NOT regulation. I also believe it is possible, it would not be extremely easy, but it would take sacrifice and patience.
To do it safely, it'd probably require some sort of stepping system, possibly regulation that gets stiffer and stiffer and then eradicates them all together. This makes it a steady slope meaning there is less chance of it all going to hell in a hand basket.
Eventually life would go back to normal (probably quite quickly if it's setup right) and gun violence and crime would go down because of a lack of guns to do said crime. It'd be just like Japan, the UK or Canada which have much lower gun violence even if you take population into account.
And unlike what some forum users tend to believe it wouldn't lead criminals to all grab firearms and take the citizenry hostages as this simply doesn't happen in countries with huge restrictions on firearms. Even if the criminals who had weapons now and refused to turn them in, in a small amount of time they'd become quite rare as many weapons are picked up daily by LE and would be disposed of.
Are there risks? Definitely. Everything worth doing has risks or will cause damage to some extent, this is how we justify war and medical research with the deadliest viruses known to man.
THis is where the belief is inherently flawed. It is flawed because it is rooted in the fantasy of "gun elimination." This is an impossibility. We can't erase the technology for firearms anymore then we can time travel. Yes, it would be cool to time travel back to the 80's too and invest in tech stocks; but none of this is going to happen in reality.
Also, countries like UK and Japan still have gun violence. It is just that violence through other means has taken over to me more prevalent then through firearms (again, survival of the fittest rather then allowing law abiding citizens protect themselves). But the reason that they are "less violent" then we are in the US has nothing to do with gun regulation or availability. Crime as a whole is less in these areas, not just gun crime.
We here in the US have a culture of violence that runs deep in our societal structure, and that is our problem. Gun control would actually only complicate this.
But the with the way it is in these other countries, the law abiding citizens are helpless against a threat to their communities, to their families, or to themselves. And these threats happen all the time in these areas. They now have to live in a culture of fear, denial and/or paranoia because they have been stripped of their rights to defend themselves.
Yet, they still have violence and crime. So I am not sure what the trade off is here, and if any trade off would be worth that fate.
If it's not illogical, but you claim it's untrue? How can this be so? It would need to be illogical and would need some sort of precedence to be not factual and thus would be illogical, no? Not to get picky, but I felt this statement could easily be rewritten as "No, your wrong."
This is an easy one to address. If your premise or data is wrong, you can make a logical conclusion that is wrong. So, if there was a study that was done that shows that Cheerios prevents heart disease, it would be logical for me to assume that if I eat Cheerios, that I reduce my chances of heart disease. If that study was flawed and turned out to be wrong, then my assumption would be wrong, even though it was logical.
So, the problem isn't that you are not being logical. You are correct; if there was a way to eliminate guns completely (or even mostly), then gun violence would disappear. This is logical. Yet, it is wrong because there is no way to "eliminate" guns. Furthermore, it is wrong because you are making the assumptions that less guns in a society means a safer and better society. This is logical, and would be correct if guns were the root of violence. Since they are not, and it is the social climate that determines violence, then gun elimination does nothing to make society safer. It instead backfires, because you now have a "survival of the fittest" environment where the weaker person has no means of defending themselves. This is not a safer or better society by any means. This is a society built in fear, paranoia, denial, and cowardness. So, even though the assumption that gun removal=safer/better is logical, it is incorrect. The opposite is true.
In the Unites States it's an amendment to carry a gun, I don't understand how there could have ever been a restriction on carrying firearms? Or do you mean an "open carry" law? I'm pretty sure that many people carry handguns despite laws if they have them available just as I know a percentage of Canadians carry pocket knives for protections which is against the law here. Just because a law states something it won't happen, thats why guns would need to be eliminated, not giving people an option.
As for Australia, I understand that at first it would be extreme, thats why a step system and there would need to be a period where it'd probably be a little rougher, thats progress. A small amount of discomfort for a period of time would outweigh the safety matters afterwards. Hell I don't even carry cash on me, so mugging me would be futile. I don't see much sense in mugging anymore, I can see B&E, but that can be done with or without a firearm. I think it'd pass but I can understand you'd feel uncomfortable without having a firearm.
Well, you say that regulation isn't the answer, but to get anywhere near your ideal situation (elimination), you would need heavy regulation.
So, this would be implimenting a non-answer (regulation) to try to reach an impossible goal (elimination).
I understand what you mean, we have that her ein Canada, it's illegal for me to even give my wife mace or pepper spray (there is a whole thread saying it's useless anyway but just for example), I feel at times this is unfair. But I could consider having an RPG at my side for safety as well in case some crazy lunitic wants to hit me with his car. It sounds crazy, and it's just as crazy as the firearm thing if you think about it. Where do you draw the line when it comes to self-defense?
See, this is the common illogical assumption that many gun control advocates make.
In what way could carrying a pistol concealed equate to having an RPG in your vehicle?
The idea is that you allow people to carry what would reasonably allow them to defend themselves. The only thing to reasonably and safely equalize a lethal attack is a firearm. RPG's, tanks, missles, or whatever other heavy peice of artillary one would like to mention does nothing to stop an immenent lethal threat. I am not going to stop someone from trying to ram me with a car by getting set up with an RPG and doing away with him. That is, of course, unless we exist in a Chuck Norris movie. Since we don't, and we live in reality, these other items are not in the least bit reasonable.
I think a better weapon to mug people with would be a vial of blood. Personally I find that rather scary, if you didn't know where it came from you may think he has AIDS or some other disease. More scary to me than a knife. I'd also like to see some statistics on that (I'll google them later) as to me, someone just has to pull a trigger to kill me, if they ahvea knfie they have to get close enough to me and somehow jab or slice me with it.
I also think that your conclusion that they'd just stab an old man instead of threatening him with a gun is based soley on opinion as I've seen many cases where they just opened fire then took the money. It's about the person, I don't think either has a disposition to make it more violent or not, in fact I think guns would give criminals more confidence as it's so easy to use in comparison to a knife.
Yes, a gun gives a criminal more confidence. With less confidence, they have to compensate. They will do this through physical acts of violence.
Yes, some people just open fire. But, a much lower percentage of gun crimes involve the attacker firing on the victim compared to bludgen or edged weapon crimes. In blunt or edged weapon crimes, they are actually used much more of the time. Guns are used to posture because the criminal is confident that they will achieve the goal through posturing. This is not the case with other weapons.
So again; not sure how this is a "better" situation for anyone.
I think guns are a short term fix, when eradication of guns is a long term one. When it's so easy to hurt someone, and you can do it from a distance, it removes fear and it removes compassion. If you stab someone have have their blood run all over your hands, you get a more personal experience than if you were to fire a gun at someone running away from you in fear from 30 yards. Especially when video games make killing people with guns so damn fun and addicting.
Once again, eradication of guns is an impossibility rather then a long term fix. And, once again, I am not sure what we would be "fixing," considering that it is violent people, not guns, that are responsible for violent crime.
I'll jump over to this point:
And no, I'm not saying no criminals would carry guns, sure there would be. Just like I'm sure some carry fully automatics now. It's all a matter of escalation and supply and demand. Criminals NEED guns? They'll get them.
Safety of yourself and loved ones is a necessity, but again where do you draw the line. RPG? Hand grenades? Bullet proof vests for everyone? How about armored vehicles?
I have a hard time seeing how an inanimate object in someones possession could cause them to act honourably and feel the need to be responsible. Not all criminals carry firearms illegally, many murders every year are by people who have legal firearms they sued to perform the murders which makes them criminals. The same white supremacists and militia extremists you talked about for instance. The same Iraqis you were referring to who are having issues keeping their weapons in their home.
I am fine with people carrying guns, but I feel it's an all-or-nothing approach. I plan to own a pistol, and a scoped rifle for protection (in severe cases such as looting or revolution) and firing ranges, so I'm not all anti-gun or anything, just debating a point and would favour any REAL ideas to the issue at large. However the governments of today are lacking and leave me with a sour taste in my mouth, so it'd have to be one hell of a plan, that's for sure.
Well, you are saying right here that elimination of guns is an impossibility. Furthermore, you are saying that you don't want to be a victim of violence from people or government, and that you want the means for self-protection. We are also in agreement that guns are not the cause of crimes.
Given this, where does gun regulation/elimination fit in with this perspective? Either you believe and want the freedom to protect yourself, and you want other good citizens to have the same freedoms, or you want guns to be eliminated. Because, in reality, both cannot cohexist.
So, I think that you probably have a lot of thinking to do on this. This is a good thing, though; that is how we grow...