Ok, Gandalf, keep in mind I'm speaking as an American here.
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 29
th, 2013 at 2:42pm:
Chard wrote on Apr 29
th, 2013 at 1:33pm:
Quote: It appears very much more complicated than that. The biggest factors concerning homicide death is without doubt desperation and poverty.
Which are major causes of crime everywhere. The difference is the US doesn't have anywhere near the social welfare programs to cushion the impact of poveryy that other first world nations have. Turns out people are less likely to commit crimes if they're not quite as desperate because their government makes an effort to hold up its end of the social contract.
People are far too eager to dismiss valid arguments on the basis that "oh its far more complicated than that". Well I say thats a copout. No one is saying there isn't more deeper, complex issues at play than mere access to guns, but my argument would be, if you are not willing to tackle these deeper socio-economic issues (which the US demonstably isn't), then you have to look at the things you
can tackle.
Only you're not solving the problem by doing so and you're doing this at the expense of the rights of law abiding citizens.
Quote:No doubt you are right - that if the issues of poverty, unemployment, inadequate welfare etc were improved, then the gun crime rate would drop without having to implement gun laws. But that is not happening is it? So we have a situation where there's this massive underclass of impoverished who resort to gun-related crime. Given that the root causes are not going to be addressed, the next best thing is to restrict access to guns.
We already have some fairly comprehensive and restrictive gun laws already. Earlier you brought France and Germany as examples of nations with "good" gun control laws, yet I can think of several examples where the equivelent US law is more restrictive than German or French law, yet we still have multiple times their rates of firearms crime. So if the regulation in there and doesn't solve the problem then maybe it's yime to actually deal with the real causes and stop this placeboesque bullshit?
Quote:Also Chard, if you are looking for evidence, I suggest you start with the US study I linked to earlier. Again, its limitations have been acknowledged. With regard to evidence for my "saturation effect", really, the comparison between the US and virtually all other comparable (ie 'first world', western) is compelling enough. I would also add the phenomenom we are seeing in Australia today, where although overall gun crime has decreased, the one area where it is spiking, is in hand-gun violence - and this is the one type of gun that has the least restrictions.
The study you linked to doesn't have anything to do with what I asked for, which was evidence that the number of firearms stolen from law abiding gun ownets is a high enough percentage of firearmes used in the commission of a crime to justify a ban.
Also, handguns here are the third most heavily regulated class of firearm after weapons with a fully automatic fire capability and weapons covered by the "other destructive device" clause of the National Firearms Act. You guys are doing it seriously wrong if the most concealable and portable class of firearm is the least restricted.
Quote:Finally, you mention how these "mass shootings" are so rare, therefore they shouldn't be a factor in considering gun laws. Well it depends what you want to define as "rare". In Australia there were maybe 6 or 7 "lone wolf" type random shootings (off the top of my head). Personally I would consider that 6 or 7 too many - especially if they were entirely preventable.
I could make the same argument calling for banning all vehicles that run on gasoline because of the remote possibility the car could explode. Banning something that happens so infrequently as to be considered abnormal isn't a solution, it's just more jerking of the knee.
Quote: What outraged Australians so much in the wake of Port Arthur was the fact that Martyn Bryant purchased his weapon and ammunition entirely legally. In this case the matter is perfectly simple and clear cut: if the gun laws were in place then, the weapon would not have been purchased, and more than likely the massacre would not have happened.
Yes, a clinically retarded man with psychiatric issues should never have been allowed to purchase firearms. That's the fault of whoever issued the permits, not the fault of firearms. Thanks to an irrational, emotionally based response law abiding Australians get punished instead of doing the rational thing and fixing the system to prevent the same thing from happening.