Brightbird
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How/why are guns so readily available to criminals in America?
How/why are guns so readily available to criminals in America?
There are two main problems I have with guns for myself and many people who weren't raised around them (or had extensive training with them.)
The first is that I'm not the most coordinated person around, and I've been told many times that I'm an accident looking for a place to happen. I'd say I'm a prime candidate for accidentally shooting myself or someone else by dropping, bumping, grabbing wrong, or who knows whatever clumsy things I could do with a gun. I have an advantage over many people because there would seldom be any reason to have to touch one while anyone else was in my home. Since nobody else lives here, and I never have children around, it would most likely be me that I accidentally shot.
The other reason, which I think applies to a lot more people, is that a gun doesn't really do a lot of good unless you're willing to kill someone without hesitation. If you aren't willing to shoot when someone knows you have a gun pointed at them and tries to attack you anyway, you'll probably end up dead (possibly by your own weapon.) The same is true if you try to just injure the person rather than kill them. First, you'd be more likely to miss if you're just aiming at an arm or a leg, and second, many people can ignore pain and would still come at you after being wounded. If you don't shoot a place that will stop them in their tracks, you're probably better off without the gun. I don't think I could do that.
All MOO, as always.
Because of inadequate regulation, and the sheer volume of guns in the US. The US is about 5% of the world population, but owns 50% of the world's guns.
http://www.thewire.com/politics/2012/12/guns-in-america-statistics/60071/
How/why are guns so readily available to criminals in America?
It all seems so circular to me. People don't want regulations partly because of a perceived disadvantage against a criminal with a gun. Lack of (effective) regulations make it easier for a criminal to get a gun. And then this increases people's perception they need a gun for defence. Surely America, with all it's intelligence, can find a way to stop so many guns falling into the wrong hands. I'm going to put my tin foil hat on for a moment and suggest that an industry that sells 50% of the worlds guns to 5% of the worlds population doesn't care whose hands they're in.
The other reason, which I think applies to a lot more people, is that a gun doesn't really do a lot of good unless you're willing to kill someone without hesitation.
It all seems so circular to me. People don't want regulations partly because of a perceived disadvantage against a criminal with a gun. Lack of (effective) regulations make it easier for a criminal to get a gun. And then this increases people's perception they need a gun for defence. Surely America, with all it's intelligence, can find a way to stop so many guns falling into the wrong hands. I'm going to put my tin foil hat on for a moment and suggest that an industry that sells 50% of the worlds guns to 5% of the worlds population doesn't care whose hands they're in.
Sales, corporate growth, capitalist ideals are the driving forces behind this .. most of the arguments we see around gun ownership are actually a marketing campaign. Of course the USA gun lobbyists the NRA want more sales, that's what they are lobbying for after all - more $$$$
The NRA only wants legal gun sales.
Gun-grabbers like California Sen. Leland Yee want illegal gun sales. Yee, and people like him, are the ones putting guns in the hands of criminals. And the ATF. They have a pretty dismal record with their storefront stings.
True, because that is the only way to ensure the profits go back to the companies which pay for their services.
The NRA only wants legal gun sales.
Gun-grabbers like California Sen. Leland Yee want illegal gun sales. Yee, and people like him, are the ones putting guns in the hands of criminals. And the ATF. They have a pretty dismal record with their storefront stings.
Worldwide, there is no discernible correlation between rates of gun ownership and homicide rates. This is pretty much the whole darn cherry tree:
View attachment 66848
Let's take the third world, underdeveloped and war torn countries out of the equation. Is that really what you want to compare America to?
Here is a more accurate picture of the correlation between gun ownership and homicide:
Hmmmm..... Did you know that knife crime has skyrocketed in both England and Australia since they enacted their gun bans? To the extent that both countries are now officially concerned about knife crime, and are enacting knife-control laws to try to get it under control?
so wait, first you accuse me of cherry picking, then you want to start cherry picking to make your own point.
Anyway, since we're apparently allowed to use populations of our own preference for comparison, i'll go next: if you take the inner-city gangbangers out of the equation -- those who commit as much as 80% of all violent crime in the u.s. -- the u.s. Rates are better than most of europe. those inner-city hellholes are our own third-world countries. The rest of the country, where legal gun ownership is high, has respectably low crime rates and firearm crime rates. The large cities where strict gun control laws are in effect and few people own guns legally, have the highest violent crime and homicide rates.
Hmmmm..... Did you know that knife crime has skyrocketed in both england and australia since they enacted their gun bans? To the extent that both countries are now officially concerned about knife crime, and are enacting knife-control laws to try to get it under control?
That's because overall homicide rates and other crime rates are not affected by gun bans. Criminals who want to kill people or hurt people continue to do so at the same rates as always, they simply use different weapons. Are 100 people killed by knife crime somehow better, or more acceptable, than 100 people killed by gun crime?
View attachment 66880
But everywhere I look, the statistics show us that in places where the availability of guns is lower, there is a lower incidence of people dying from guns. Including murder, suicide and accidental death.
Isn't that what everybody wants?
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