RE: Unregulated guns are a catastrophe!
May 13, 2013 at 12:12 pm
(This post was last modified: May 13, 2013 at 12:22 pm by A_Nony_Mouse.)
(May 13, 2013 at 3:06 am)Minimalist Wrote: So you are okay with 138 kids per year accidentally shooting themselves or someone else?
I'm not.
Especially when the UK can manage to get through a whole year with just 50-odd murders for everyone.
Tell you what. We will send all of our drug dealers to the UK and then you can tell me about the murder rate. Despite being politically incorrect we can also ship our residents and citizens whose ancestors were not of northern European origin and watch you cope. If it could be done we might also connect Latin America directly to the UK so they can walk into the UK bringing their drugs with them.
Quote:http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/cri...32069.html
As to that decrease so also the US has experienced a decrease in the murder rate for the last two decades. No one knows why two such different countries are experiencing the same decrease at the same time.
Quote:There is something wrong with this fucking culture of ours. It isn't the "criminals" who are so much of a problem. It's the people who keep guns in their homes where they can escalate a domestic argument into a homicide at the drop of a hat. You see...they become "criminals" after they pull the trigger...not before. And they probably bought the gun because they listened to some asshole who told them it would keep them "safe."
The US is not the UK and never can be. The Indian wars ended little more than a century ago. Some American officers during WWI actually fought Indians. Many of them fought Mexican bandits. Some did not make it to Europe because they were fighting Mexican bandits.
If you want a parallel take swords from the Japanese. Their sword culture ended completely in the late 19th c. with some suicidal charges against guns making it roughly the same time ago as Indians and bandits made guns a necessity when the army was not around which was most of the time.
Further the US only got picky about immigrants in the 1920s-30s. Other than a few famous small gangs all the criminal organizations were brought to the US by immigrants. Often they came from countries which also had a gun culture like Sicily with their warring families.
Additionally the crime rate using guns compared to the hundreds of millions of guns is incredibly low. And most of that crime rate is in connection with other crimes mainly drugs. There is no hope of keeping guns from criminals as it is already illegal for them to have guns but they do.
In comparison car seat belts save more lives each year than guns take in a decade. Eliminating guns in accidental child deaths completely would be in the noise, a change less than the change from year to year. Much simpler and more effective campaigns such as what is kept unlocked under kitchen sinks would save more children's lives but other than a rare PSA you would not think anyone cares.
IF the concern is for children's lives then the effort should be applied to the greatest cause of death. And that cause has nothing to do with emotional or constitutional issues. That cause has NO ONE supporting it, no one claiming the cause should exist.
Note the IF conditioning the rest. Note it is 138 out of 80,000,000 or so. Last I looked that is more than the entire population of all of GB not just the 20/life expectancy category. Pick your age for child and redo the numbers for 330,000,000 total pop.
And as with people who choose the risk of keeping guns in the home the majority of Americans are willing to take the risks entailed with gun ownership. Laws should never be passed for emotional reasons.
Most gun owners were in favor of closing the "loophole" in background checks even though it not have prevented any of the prominent deaths in the news. The NRA leadership was against it. That is the way it is. There in an NRA election coming up soon. Perhaps the members will vote for a change in leadership policies.
(May 13, 2013 at 1:20 am)Cinjin Wrote: Here we go again. Yet another pointless gun thread.
<yawn>
I wonder how many people are going to be compelled by the arguments and statistics offered from both sides and end up changing their position?
True but keeping in practice with the rhetoric is a good exercise.