Gun control logic

by Gregor 174 Replies latest social current

  • dawg
    dawg

    There's empirical evidence to refute the orginal post... every country where gun controls are enforced there's less gun violence than those that don't have such legislation... excluding Canada... But I'm a gun owner, so I'm not actually for complete gun control... as for the constitution.... it doesn't mention guns at all, it says arms... a nuclear weapon is an arm also, does this country have the right to keep it's citiznes from owning nuclear weapons-darn right it does... and so this country has the right to enforce a limited amouont of gun control for that reason... its called judicial review, what did the framers mean when they wrote the second amendment? THey were talking about flintlocks not Uzzis, there needs to ba a limited amount of gun control, debating how much is useful but whatever laws that are made should be useful by empirical evidence.

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC
    it says arms...

    You understand the word "intent" do you dawg?

    Less gun related violence: I guess the mafia starts using slingshots ya? Yes I will submit to the idear that if less people had guns, then less people would be inclined to do stupid things with guns. I just say if you do a stupid or illegal thing thing with a gun (or slingshot or car) the law ought to come down on you like a ton of bricks. If you are responsible with your gun, slingshot, or car. You ought to be left alone.

  • Brother Apostate
    Brother Apostate

    Q: Is there a direct correlation, for each country, between the number of households with guns and the Gun Death Rate?

    A: There is no correlation.

    Finland has no prohibitions on gun ownership, and 16%more guns per capita than the US, yet they have roughly half the Intentional Gun Death rate of the US.

    Denmark has one fifth as many guns per capita as USA, yet Denmark’s Gun Death Rate is three quarters the per capita Gun Death Rate of the US

    Northern Ireland has only one-fifth as many guns per capita as the US, yet the Gun Death rate is one third the per capita Gun Death rate of the US

    USA has 21 times as many guns per capita as Netherlands, yet Netherlands’ Gun Death Rate is only one forth the per capita Gun Death Rate of the US

    Norway has three quarters as many guns per capita as the US, yet the Gun Death rate is less thanone third the per capita Gun Death rate of the US

    Australia has 40% as many guns per capita as the US, yet the Gun Death Rate is 21% the per capita Gun Death Rate of the US

    USA has 4100 times! as many guns per capita as Singapore, yet Singapore’s Gun Death Rate is 56 times! the per capita Gun Death Rate of the US

    I could go on and on, but I believe I’ve made my point. You do the math.

    What does this tell us? There is no correlation between gun ownership per capita and murder rate per capita, its all over the map. It is a cultural thing.

    From the chart below, the last column gives the correlation, which is all over the map, and not at all linear. The last column is a ratio of how many households have firearms per country, vs how many intentional deaths by gun per country.

    Table 1 - International Firearms Regulation, Access and Death

    Country

    Licensing of gun owners?

    Registration of firearms?

    Other

    Households with firearms (%)

    Gun Homicide (per 100,000)

    Gun Suicide (per 100,000)

    Total Intentional Gun Death Rate per 100,000

    Correlation

    Ratio of HHWF%

    To

    TIGDR

    Japan

    Yes

    Yes

    Prohibits handguns with few exceptions

    0.6

    0.03

    0.04

    0.07

    0.12

    Singapore

    Yes

    Yes

    Most handguns and rifles prohibited

    0.01 (795 in the country)

    0.07

    0.17

    0.24

    24.0

    Taiwan

    N/A

    N/A

    N/A

    0.15

    0.12

    0.27

    N/A

    Kuwait

    N/A

    N/A

    N/A

    0.34

    0.03

    0.37

    N/A

    England/Wales

    Yes

    Yes

    Prohibits handguns

    4.0

    0.07

    0.33

    0.4

    0.10

    Scotland

    Yes

    Yes

    Same as England and Wales

    4.0

    0.19

    0.30

    0.49

    0.12

    Netherlands

    Yes

    Yes

    1.9

    0.27

    0.28

    0.55

    0.29

    Spain

    Yes

    Yes

    Some handguns and rifles are prohibited

    13.1

    0.19

    0.55

    0.74

    0.06

    Ireland

    Yes

    Yes

    N/A

    0.30

    0.94

    1.24

    N/A

    Germany

    Yes

    Yes

    8.9

    0.21

    1.23

    1.44

    0.16

    Italy

    Yes

    Yes

    N/A

    1.16

    1.11

    2.27

    N/A

    Sweden

    Yes

    Yes

    Restrictions in some regions

    20

    0.18

    2.09

    2.27

    0.11

    Denmark

    Yes

    Long guns only

    8

    0.23

    2.25

    2.48

    0.31

    Israel

    Yes

    Yes

    N/A

    0.72

    1.84

    2.56

    N/A

    New Zealand

    Yes

    Handguns. Proposed for long guns

    20

    0.22

    2.45

    2.67

    0.13

    Australia

    Yes

    Yes

    Banned semiautomatics unless good reason

    16.0

    0.56

    2.38

    2.94

    0.18

    Belgium

    Some

    Yes

    Some rifles are prohibited

    16.6

    0.87

    2.45

    3.32

    0.20

    Canada

    by 2001

    All guns by 2003

    Assault weapons and some handguns

    26

    0.60

    3.35

    3.95

    0.15

    Norway

    Yes

    Unknown

    32

    0.36

    3.87

    4.23

    0.13

    Austria

    Yes

    Yes

    Some handguns and rifles are prohibited

    16-18%

    0.42

    4.06

    4.48

    0.26

    Northern Ireland

    Yes

    Yes

    UK legislation applies

    8.4

    3.55

    1.18

    4.72

    0.56

    France

    Yes

    Yes, except sporting rifles

    22.6

    0.55

    4.93

    5.48

    0.24

    Switzerland

    Yes

    Yes

    27.2

    0.46

    5.74

    6.2

    0.23

    Finland

    Yes

    Yes

    No prohibitions

    50

    0.87

    5.78

    6.65

    0.13

    USA

    in some states

    Handguns in some states

    Some weapons in some states

    41

    6.24

    7.23

    13.47

    0.43

  • dawg
    dawg

    Ip-Sec-I see that point and agree, there are many things that are dangerous that are legal. The problem with the gun control argument is like many others-everyone tries to make the issue black and white but it's not that simple... a slingshot, my 38 special and my shotgun aren't as dangerous as a banna clip Uzzi; you're rigght that we need to debate what should and shouldn't be legal, but that should be the debate... I'll start with an extreme, I think nuclear "arms" shouldn't be legal. I also don't care for the fact that Uzzis can be bought legally... but here's the argument-whether you agree with that shotguns or sidearms should be leagl or not, to deny one a right to buy a nuclear "arm" is perfectly constitutional becasue our framers didn't have knowledge these things were going to be invented. They also didn't know that Uzzis swould one day be made... since they didn't know these things they wern't talking about them when they pinned the 2 amendment. WHat say you?

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC

    Dawg

    First: It is black and white. "If you harm no one you have not broken the law" (this would be my basic legal tenant were I despot of my own little country)

    Second: Guns as arms and nukes as arms are apples and oranges. Guns can serve a purpose of sport, defense, livelihood, and offense (ala Vtech). Nukes serve no purpose but offense and mass destruction.

  • Brother Apostate
    Brother Apostate

    Dawg,

    Your argument about uzzis being more dangerous than handguns holds no water- It's not the gun that's safe or dangerous, it's the person behind the gun.

    Also, you need a lesson on the second amendment. In reality, the concept was partially to provide for citizen militias to combat threats to state or national sovereignty from without, or within.

    In other words, the citizens actually would have the right to arm themselves with whatever their potential enemy might bring to bear in a conflict.

    Now, the courts have ruled otherwise, but that was clearly the intent of Madison, Jefferson, et al. Read about it.

    BA- Clarifying things.

    PS- That dawg won't hunt.

  • heathen
    heathen

    yeppers I think you're nuts if you think the only thing they had in mind with the right to bear arms was in order to preserve and protect the republic . Not even an argument there, since people had to use them for hunting and also enjoyed sport .

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC
    yeppers I think you're nuts if you think the only thing they had in mind with the right to bear arms was in order to preserve and protect the republic .

    They may have had other things in mind but this is the stated reason they protected the right.

  • Warlock
    Warlock

    Does anyone remember the "anarchy" DURING and AFTER the L.A. riots? Did anyone see those people being beaten, almost to death at Florence and Normandie? Did anyone see the Korean merchants protecting their property? With slingshots? No. With guns.

    After Katrina, would you rather have a butter knife for protection, or an AK 47?

    How about the stories that came out of Florida after that huge hurricane a few years back? Those people protected themselves from looters. How? With guns, guns, and more guns.

    Like I said, I don't have guns at the moment, but it sure is nice to know I could go get one, or two, today, if I wanted. To shoot up the neighborhood? NO! For self-protection. For just in case.

    Warlock

  • heathen
    heathen

    It may be worded that way but there's no way in hell that was the only reason for gun ownership .

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