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America's Gun Control

493 replies

wonderingdaily · 28/03/2023 16:07

Gun violence, I really don't understand it, well i do, but the arguments "for" guns are very weak at best.

How is this still going on, why have they not tightened gun control similar to the UK and other countries.

My heart goes out to the people affected by the recent school shooting.

OP posts:
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14
Britinme · 01/04/2023 21:55

By definition anybody who shoots up a school is a criminal. Most of the weapons used in school shootings have been bought legally,including the most recent.

Florenz · 01/04/2023 22:14

Forget about the war on drugs, there needs to be a war on crime. All over the world.

Britinme · 01/04/2023 22:20

Make drugs legal. That'll reduce crime considerably.

Florenz · 01/04/2023 22:23

Make theft legal too, that would reduce crime even further.

CJsGoldfish · 02/04/2023 01:07

@Britinme

I'm not sure why an article posted by 'Campus Security' in Jan 2022 is relevant. You are only focusing on school shootings and the article is somewhat misleading.
There have been 64 school shootings since that was published. That's a lot of data to leave out. It also doesn't examine gun laws in place at the time. For example, how many shootings have there been following the roll back in 2016 of the previous governments gun laws? Did mass shootings increase when the ban on assault rifles expired in 2004
Data alone means nothing so I'm not sure why we need to 'look at some data'

Another example: the highest number of school shootings have taken place in areas with the tightest gun control laws.
Again, misleading. You've said that California, Texas and Florida have the highest up until early 2022? Texas and Florida tightest gun control laws? Abbot removed any requirements to have either a permit or training for concealed carry. So surely we should look at whether the lax laws there have impacted the number of shootings? Here's a clue. Robb Elementary School

Here's another fun fact. The states with the strictest gun laws are often surrounded by those that don't. So no real barrier if someone wants a gun.

Here's an article that may be of interest
https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/strictest-gun-laws-by-state

Seriously though, we could post a million 'stats' but it doesn't change the fact that this isn't a 'crisis' it is just 'normal' for the US. Dead kids are acceptable collateral damage and they are ok with that. Protect the unborn at all costs but who gives a fuck once they're here on earth.

Strictest Gun Laws by State 2023

https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/strictest-gun-laws-by-state

CJsGoldfish · 02/04/2023 01:11

I said 'concealed carry' when I should have said 'open carry' No need for a permit or training to carry a gun openly.

DdraigGoch · 02/04/2023 02:16

Britinme · 01/04/2023 21:55

By definition anybody who shoots up a school is a criminal. Most of the weapons used in school shootings have been bought legally,including the most recent.

They're only a criminal once they actually commit the crime. Most school shootings were committed by people with no criminal history so you need to worry about the 'law-abiding' gun owners as well as the ones known to be criminals.

  • 2021 had the greatest number of incidents, with 249. The next highest year was 2019 with 119.

2020 was only marginally lower than 2019 because schools were temporarily shut down so there were fewer opportunities. In 2018 (equal to 2019) the number of incidents was double any previous year on record. 2022 had 303 incidents (more than 5 times the 58 in 2017, which at the time was almost exceptionally high) and if 2023 continues the grisly trend set in the first quarter then that record is likely to be outstripped.

This is a rapidly growing issue. I don't know if each incident inspires more or whatever, but something has changed in the last five years.

queenofarles · 02/04/2023 02:29

Guns is part of the problem but not the whole problem, school attacks will happen no matter what, there are other equally horrible ways to hurt people , and it seems to be a very American problem ,Mexico for example had 8 in the last decade , the US had 300 in 2022 alone,
there should be more investigation for the reasons behind this, what makes young adults <usually former students of the school > go on a rampage and kill small children?
But both sides in the US don’t want to address the issues and are just concentrating on Guns, pro and against ,

StarmanBobby · 02/04/2023 06:43

Open carry is absolutely ridiculous.

Parker231 · 02/04/2023 08:58

StarmanBobby · 02/04/2023 06:43

Open carry is absolutely ridiculous.

We were at a US National Park last summer and there were signs about no open carry in the toilet blocks. Made you realise how ridiculous the US gun policy is that anyone would think of walking into toilets displaying their gun - but there were people - men and women who did!

Britinme · 02/04/2023 13:11

@DdraigGoch "They're only a criminal once they actually commit the crime. Most school shootings were committed by people with no criminal history so you need to worry about the 'law-abiding' gun owners as well as the ones known to be criminals."

That's rather the point I was trying to make but obviously not clearly enough. But legal gun owners don't perceive themselves as potential criminals - see Florenz's posts on this thread.

Look, all these comments about how ridiculous and insane American gun laws are may make you feel better but you're not saying anything that those of us who live here and would like to change them don't already know. But they do sweet FA to actually help. The problem is that the genie is out of the bottle. There are at least 393 million guns floating around in the population, in a country which has a tradition of using them (legally) that is far greater than that in most countries, and has a populace that is more viciously polarised than I have ever seen it and has few affordable ways of tackling mental health issues.

The practical political possibilities of bringing about change are few. There are organisations - Everytown and Moms for example - that are working for change but all most of us can do in practice is keep voting for Democrats (as the Republicans know they'll be primaried out to even more extreme candidates if they work for gun reform) at both the state and federal level in the hope that there will eventually be enough force behind the desire for change, especially involving assault-style weapons. But it won't ever be a UK-style ban because the desire just isn't there and the practical need is greater regardless of how friendly you think we should be to our wild animals and reptiles.

Britinme · 02/04/2023 13:26

I should add - not all Democrats. Look up the execrable Larry Summers, recently having his arse handed to him on Twitter for bemoaning why so many young Americans are dying compared to other countries (with more sensible gun laws).

DdraigGoch · 02/04/2023 17:38

That's rather the point I was trying to make but obviously not clearly enough. But legal gun owners don't perceive themselves as potential criminals - see Florenz's posts on this thread.

@Britinme it's a bit like the thing about men in women's changing rooms. The threads where some entitled dad decides that he's got the right to change his daughter in the female changing room rather than taking her with him into the men's):

"I can't take her into the men's, there are strange men in there"
"To us you're a strange man in a space we're trying to change in"
"But I'm a good guy, I'm not going to do anything"
"How the hell do we know that?"

People just won't accept that rules exist to protect people and cannot be written to differentiate between "bad guys" who need strict control, and "good guys" who ought to be allowed to do whatever they like because they wouldn't do anything bad, or so they say.

Or maybe the second amendment evangelists do recognise that one size must fit all, but genuinely think that being able to do whatever one wants must always take precedence over anything, even the safety of children, so that one size must be "freedom for all, even bad guys". It's a worrying thought.

StarmanBobby · 02/04/2023 19:01

‘We were at a US National Park last summer and there were signs about no open carry in the toilet blocks. ‘

The very people who want to open carry are exactly the ones who shouldn’t be allowed to.

Frankola · 02/04/2023 22:13

I'm incredibly anti-gun. And I totally agree the US need a radical change around gun laws.

But the problem isn't simple. There are loads of elements to it. The US political parties have been significantly funded by donations from the NRA in the past - particularly the Republican party. Democrats steer clear of the NRA nowadays but they heavily funded as recently as Trumps campaign.

Then you have Americans who strongly believe in their right to bear arms. Their second amendment rights. They'd consider gun laws as taking away their freedoms.

On top of this you have the cycle of violence that many US citizens are deeply embedded in. They choose to buy guns to protect themselves. They're scared of others with guns. So they get guns. If you look at NRA figures, it's well known that after school shootings the sale of guns goes up. During covid the sale of guns went through the roof.

America is a very paranoid nation. But at the same time, wouldn't you be paranoid if there was a possibility of encountering some idiot with a gun on the street? It's a vicious cycle.

AlwaysRight991 · 22/10/2023 15:42

route111 · 28/03/2023 16:35

The gun culture in the US is obviously awful, but YABU to suggest the majority of Americans are stupid. No more stupid rather people here. I'm not from the UK and I frequently, especially in recent years, find myself thinking most Britons are incredibly stupid, voting in the Tories for the past 13 years and believing whatever bulls..t they are fed by them, Brexit, Stop the Boats etc etc. Also most Britons are ignorant and poorly educated by international standards.

Britons are literally BETTER EDUCATED by most international standards. They have the best higher education system in the world, and were right to vote for Brexit. Thinking that stopping boats of unvetted military-age men from entering your country illegal is somehow wrong, rather shows your own lack of intelligence route111. Obviously the majority of Americans are stupid and Brits are smarter. I mean, average national IQ 98 vs 100.

Imagine being that thick and accusing others of being ignorant and poorly educated. Now that you've been somewhat educated by someone smarter than you, you can run along.

AlwaysRight991 · 22/10/2023 15:44

Florenz · 01/04/2023 22:23

Make theft legal too, that would reduce crime even further.

That's not how the argument works. They're talking about USING guns illegally, there are not an act, like theft, they are an actual object.

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