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SecularMotion

(7,981 posts)
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:12 AM Jun 2016

Gun Violence Is a Full-Blown National Crisis

On a bright winter morning more than five years ago, I was nearly murdered with a gun. At a meeting with my constituents in Tucson, Arizona, a troubled young man opened fire, injuring 12 others and killing six. I was shot in the head from three feet away. The bullet tore through the left side of my brain, an injury that is almost always fatal. Somehow, I survived.

Today, speaking is still hard for me. My eyesight isn’t very good, and despite hours and hours of physical therapy, my right arm and right leg remain mostly paralyzed. And I had to resign from a job I so loved: representing southern Arizona in Congress.

But I don’t spent a lot of time focusing on what I can no longer do. Instead, I’ve moved ahead and chased big goals. I’ve learned speeches and delivered them in front of crowds and cameras. I’ve gone skydiving. I’ve started relearning Spanish. For the first time in years, I’ve taken my French horn out of its case. And this past November, I rode 40 miles in Tucson’s annual charity bike ride, El Tour de Tucson.

Along with another opportunity at life, I was also given a second chance at service. At first, the path was unclear. My husband, Mark, a Navy combat veteran and retired NASA astronaut, and I asked each other: How can we make a difference? How can we still serve? How can we use our voice? The murder of 20 beautiful children in their classrooms at Sandy Hook School gave us our answer. It shocked us into action.

http://www.vogue.com/13442030/national-gun-violence-awareness-day-national-crisis-gabby-giffords/
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Gun Violence Is a Full-Blown National Crisis (Original Post) SecularMotion Jun 2016 OP
''Gun Violence Is a Full-Blown National Crisis'' Shadowflash Jun 2016 #1
It is in some neighborhoods. 68 people were shot Memorial Day weekend in Chicago alone lostnfound Jun 2016 #4
Yeah. Shadowflash Jun 2016 #5
Chicago knows what the problems are. Hopefully they can solve them. jmg257 Jun 2016 #11
Chicago is not the entire nation Travis_0004 Jun 2016 #76
Sarcasm aside, homicide-by-gun is way down since 1969... Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #61
Katie told me so.....LOL ileus Jun 2016 #2
Guns have killed more Americans EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #3
They didn't do it on their own. beevul Jun 2016 #29
It's a distinction without a difference EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #30
Any attempt at "confiscating them all and locking them up" would kill more people... Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #31
Of course it wouldn't. EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #34
In fact, I think that would be a low estimate. Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #36
We agree EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #38
On that point, but mostly we don't. Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #43
well EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #44
No, you "know" nothing of the sort about what I think. Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #48
Of course I do EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #102
Laughable. Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #103
poor me EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #104
"a lot of people would cop on..." jmg257 Jun 2016 #50
that would be fine, since gun owners are considered enemies. ileus Jun 2016 #41
No, it really isn't. beevul Jun 2016 #33
Right so EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #35
Taking the guns from beevul or Lizzie TeddyR Jun 2016 #37
First EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #39
My problem with your approach TeddyR Jun 2016 #40
no EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #45
That didn't address my question TeddyR Jun 2016 #51
No EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #94
Yes. beevul Jun 2016 #52
This message was self-deleted by its author EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #47
Yep, I like my gunz and I will be keeping them for many years. And then when I'm gone my Waldorf Jun 2016 #89
Tradeoff... sarisataka Jun 2016 #42
Here's the thing EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #49
You do realize sarisataka Jun 2016 #53
no EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #56
I am not only speaking sarisataka Jun 2016 #63
I live in a country now with no guns, gejohnston Jun 2016 #71
lol EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #78
in Europe, gejohnston Jun 2016 #84
The US has the highest per capita gun ownership rate in the world TeddyR Jun 2016 #55
And there you go, almost as if from a script... beevul Jun 2016 #46
here's the thing EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #54
When confronted falsely attributing to others... beevul Jun 2016 #62
I've lived outside the United States, and you are full of shit... Marengo Jun 2016 #90
Not literally EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #93
This is nothing more than an argumentum ad populum, with a dash of cultural cringe friendly_iconoclast Jun 2016 #96
That same argument EdwardBernays Jun 2016 #99
Mainstream where your are (or not), it's *still* argumentum ad popularum friendly_iconoclast Jun 2016 #107
Two words in re the value of public opinion: Proposition Eight friendly_iconoclast Jun 2016 #108
Dozens of people in one region is not the world, so don't try to pass it off as that... Marengo Jun 2016 #98
Thank you, that was put very well friendly_iconoclast Jun 2016 #106
I'm a bit confused discntnt_irny_srcsm Jun 2016 #75
Some of those triggers were pulled by cops. JonathanRackham Jun 2016 #101
After Sandy Hook Republicans passed laws that make it easier to have more guns around Botany Jun 2016 #6
But in Japan... discntnt_irny_srcsm Jun 2016 #7
Inner city Milwaukee keeps electing pro-gun Sheriff who asks constituents to buy guns HereSince1628 Jun 2016 #8
because they know Milwaukee city police can't gejohnston Jun 2016 #18
Crimes done with firearms, as well as all violent crime is at the lowest it's been in decades. Ikonoklast Jun 2016 #9
Don't you dare bring facts to this! Indydem Jun 2016 #10
In 2015 we had 258 mass shootings* Botany Jun 2016 #13
What's the historical trend? Nuclear Unicorn Jun 2016 #15
What's the historical trend? Botany Jun 2016 #16
Is that what it's really about? Deaths? Or is it just guns you don't like? Nuclear Unicorn Jun 2016 #19
I have hunted and owned guns for years thank you very much. Botany Jun 2016 #23
Cool story. Is it about the deaths or just the guns? Nuclear Unicorn Jun 2016 #25
What is a "gun humper"? Marengo Jun 2016 #91
"2 20 guage pump shotguns, 1 .22 HR bolt action, & 1 30-30 winchester. " beergood Jun 2016 #97
One person every three days dies from towmotor accidents in this country. Ikonoklast Jun 2016 #24
those are fake statistics from Reddit. gejohnston Jun 2016 #58
The NYT got those numbers from a subreddit called "Guns Are Cool". They are not actual statistics. Ikonoklast Jun 2016 #20
Funny I don't see the humor Botany Jun 2016 #21
Can I make stuff up, and you'll believe it if I get the NYT to print it? Ikonoklast Jun 2016 #22
"Those "statistics" also includes suspects shot or wounded by LEO" beergood Jun 2016 #95
So basically a very tiny segment of gun-related deaths. Lizzie Poppet Jun 2016 #32
America, full of dumb-ass Machine Gun Kellys. nt valerief Jun 2016 #12
How many incidents involve machine guns? Nuclear Unicorn Jun 2016 #14
1050...no 800....115....38...one? maybe none? ileus Jun 2016 #17
Piers Morgan says the guy at UCLA used one....so that's gotta count for Press Virginia Jun 2016 #26
Morgan... discntnt_irny_srcsm Jun 2016 #28
I can think of a few... discntnt_irny_srcsm Jun 2016 #27
I believe the N Hollywood thugs killed no one. But THEY got dead via rifles... from a gun shop. Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #67
And they were not legal machine guns. Travis_0004 Jun 2016 #81
Nope. Easier to smuggle than jerry-build. Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #83
not always. gejohnston Jun 2016 #85
Yeah, I guess so, esp. with the personal use CNC machines. Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #86
No CNC necessary. Kang Colby Jun 2016 #92
As I recall, Clyde stole most of his BARs from National Guard armories... Marengo Jun 2016 #100
I think you're just being overly critical... discntnt_irny_srcsm Jun 2016 #105
Interesting perspective, plus there would be the advantage that no controller... Marengo Jun 2016 #110
A crisis that the SCOTUS exacerbated and encouraged with guillaumeb Jun 2016 #57
Heller did not overturn any SCOTUS precedent. gejohnston Jun 2016 #59
You are incorrect on the first claim, guillaumeb Jun 2016 #60
Wrong. beevul Jun 2016 #64
The Second Amendment refers to "a well regulated militia". guillaumeb Jun 2016 #66
It makes a reference... beevul Jun 2016 #69
An interesting argument that you attempt to make. guillaumeb Jun 2016 #72
Theres no attempt about it. beevul Jun 2016 #73
The collective rights theory is only dead until the SCOTUS rules again. guillaumeb Jun 2016 #80
Again, this is your own very flawed perception. beevul Jun 2016 #87
C'mon TeddyR Jun 2016 #77
I trust that I do not have to explain that the SCOTUS is guillaumeb Jun 2016 #79
I understand that the Supeme Court TeddyR Jun 2016 #82
They did... beevul Jun 2016 #88
I'm correct on both counts. gejohnston Jun 2016 #65
"Exacerbated?" Gun-homicides have been dropping. What are you thinking?? Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #68
The crisis your interlocutor refers to... beevul Jun 2016 #70
I wish they would take seriously my theory of the turn-around heat-seeking missile... Eleanors38 Jun 2016 #74
The only "National Crisis" where it's half of what it was 20 years ago DonP Jun 2016 #109
Half of what it was 20 years ago, yet they're pushing twice as hard... beevul Jun 2016 #111
That's sheer desperation you see from them DonP Jun 2016 #112
If I said that LYING about our "epidemic of violence" was a full-blown national crisis...... pablo_marmol Jun 2016 #113

jmg257

(11,996 posts)
11. Chicago knows what the problems are. Hopefully they can solve them.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 08:00 AM
Jun 2016

"In a city of 2.7 million people, about 1,400 are responsible for much of the violence"

Mr. Johnson said, and all of them are on what the department calls its Strategic Subject List.

So far this year, more than 70 percent of the people who have been shot in Chicago were on the list, according to the police, as were more than 80 percent of those arrested in connection with shootings."

In a broad drug and gang raid carried out last week amid a disturbing uptick this year in shootings and murders, the Police Department said 117 of the 140 people arrested were on the list.

“We are targeting the correct individuals,” Mr. Johnson said. “We just need our judicial partners and our state legislators to hold these people accountable.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/us/armed-with-data-chicago-police-try-to-predict-who-may-shoot-or-be-shot.html?_r=0

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
61. Sarcasm aside, homicide-by-gun is way down since 1969...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:31 PM
Jun 2016

MSM's bleeds-it-leads coverage of this greatly reduced number of murders is full-blown, however.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
29. They didn't do it on their own.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 12:29 PM
Jun 2016

Nor could they.

But it IS typical in that you focus on the guns rather than the people, less than 1 percent of gun owners, who misuse them.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
30. It's a distinction without a difference
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 12:34 PM
Jun 2016

However I'd HAPPILY remove the human equation by confiscating them all and locking them up somewhere safe.

Problem solved.

As for the 1% it does matter. The 1% are responsible for killing as many people every 5-6 weeks as died on 9/11. I don't care what percentage of gun nuts did that. Because. As long as there's hundreds of millions guns in America the death spree will continue. And gun nuts everywhere will continue to make excuses for thousands of dead kids a year, just so they can keep their deadly toys.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
31. Any attempt at "confiscating them all and locking them up" would kill more people...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 12:42 PM
Jun 2016

...than decades of gun violence. You get that, right?

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
34. Of course it wouldn't.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:35 PM
Jun 2016

Unless you think it would over half a million people in 20 years. Which it wouldn't.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
36. In fact, I think that would be a low estimate.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:40 PM
Jun 2016

Entirely hypothetical, obviously, as such an attempt will never be made.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
38. We agree
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:47 PM
Jun 2016

Americans are extremely ok with the number of children gunned down annually. That won't change.

And I seriously seriously seriously doubt that 30k people would die a year - for decades - as a result of gun confiscation. Many many many millions of people are absolutely not willing to die to own a gun. Most gun owners I'd suggest wouldn't even be willing to go to prison to protest, much less die.

And as it became obvious that removing millions and millions of guns off the street was ACTUALLY lowering gun deaths a lot of people would cop on; not being dead and lowering the number of toddlers killed by guns is better than shooting it out with the Feds and ruining you and your family's life.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
43. On that point, but mostly we don't.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 02:24 PM
Jun 2016

Just what "Feds" do you believe would be enforcing such a plan? The military? That would probably require a constitutional amendment, and definitely a massive change to US law (and the current military is skewed alarmingtly conservative is is extremely pro-gun in general...). The ATF? There are under 5000 total ATF employees. The FBI? c. 35k, only a portion of whom are trained in arms. Hell, there are only about 850k LEOs (armed and with arrest powers) of any type in the country.

There are, however, c. 85 million gun owners. It wouldn't take a huge number electing to resist confiscation to outrageously outnumber the available manpower to conduct those confiscations...and that's assuming all of the latter would follow such orders (and extremely dubious assumption). Nightmare scenario, all around, obviously...

So yeah, actually you're probably right about confiscation producing fewer deaths: they'd quickly run out of cops willing to die for that cause.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
44. well
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:01 PM
Jun 2016

I am more optimistic about our nation's ability to change than you... people said the same thing about school desegregation and yeah it wasn't pretty, but... I'm glad enough brave people tried and made it happen.

I know you think it's totally normal for a country to lose thousands of children a year to gun violence, but it's not - nor should it ever be. Outside of the US Americans' attitudes toward guns is seen as borderline mentally ill, which it is. It's akin to any other cultural shift though, like gay marriage or segregation, etc., etc.; eventually people will wake up and realise that there's nothing freeing about many thousands of civilians dying for no reason annually.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
48. No, you "know" nothing of the sort about what I think.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:12 PM
Jun 2016

*sigh*

Ah, well...it was a lovely rarity (a civil conversation with a gun ban advocate), but I should have known it couldn't last.

Bye.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
102. Of course I do
Sat Jun 4, 2016, 04:01 PM
Jun 2016

actions tell the whole story... you rail against the only avenue available to stop an epidemic. I don't need your words to know what you think.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
103. Laughable.
Sat Jun 4, 2016, 04:16 PM
Jun 2016

That you don't seem to realize that is telling, really...

It's also insulting, so off to Ignore you go. Bye, Felicia...

jmg257

(11,996 posts)
50. "a lot of people would cop on..."
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:14 PM
Jun 2016

This was my thoughts originally...that most people are lawful and lawful people would turn them in (if a plan to ban & confiscate was enacted) rather then face the legal consequences.

But then you see the results of a law like the NY Safe Act AWB, where only like 5% complied to a fairly unpopular law - and that was just mandating registration. There will be attrition of course, but nationally we are talking 80 million owners and 350 Million guns - and counting.

Then you have what should be the primary targets of confiscation - the criminal elements which are 70-80% of the gun violence problem, who aren't going to do shit about suddenly becoming lawful. Obviously consequences don't matter to them. And like illegal drugs and alcohol that enough people want, if there is a market there will be criminal organizations and suppliers, along with the associated violence. Guns will be available, with the majority possessed and used by the worse people.


Tough situation.

ileus

(15,396 posts)
41. that would be fine, since gun owners are considered enemies.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 02:10 PM
Jun 2016

You think it would phase a banner to see a half million of their enemies vanquished?


 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
33. No, it really isn't.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:17 PM
Jun 2016
It's a distinction without a difference


No, it really isn't. A gun is an inanimate object which does not and can not function on its own. Without some form of behavior that amounts to interaction with a gun, nothing happens with a gun.

However I'd HAPPILY remove the human equation by confiscating them all and locking them up somewhere safe.


Because you are a self admitted anti-gun extremist. Well, its not going to happen in this country, and you have no vote here.

As for the 1% it does matter. The 1% are responsible for killing as many people every 5-6 weeks as died on 9/11.


And yet your issue isn't with the 1 percent, its with the instrument they choose. Also, your assertion is only true if you include suicides, which have a different solution that homicides, assuming you actually care about them, and aren't just using them as a crutch to prop up an argument that has and always will fail.

I don't care what percentage of gun nuts did that.


Of course you don't. You're an anti-gun extremist, and as such, its about the guns. And fuck the 80+ million gun owners that don't commit gun violence, right?

Well, you go right on ranting, and I will go right on proving you wrong and doing everything in my power to both discredit the anti-gun movement, and grow the pro-gun movement, with the goal of the pro-gun side getting so big and powerful that people like you will have no choice but to deal with the people making bad choices because you're powerless to attack the people that aren't the problem or the guns they own.

And gun nuts everywhere will continue to make excuses for thousands of dead kids a year, just so they can keep their deadly toys.


Blame the people who aren't committing gun violence some more, wont you?

Its worked out great so far.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
35. Right so
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:38 PM
Jun 2016

You are happy for thousands of kids to continue to die each year so that you can have access to a gun.

I am not.

I am an anti-gun extremist aka a normal person everywhere but America.

You obviously can't stop crime but by removing 300,000,000 guns off the streets you can reduce gun deaths to the levels they are in other Western countries. I see no harm in that tradeoff. Because I value 30k Americans live a year more than you having a gun. By a very very wide margin.

 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
37. Taking the guns from beevul or Lizzie
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:43 PM
Jun 2016

Wouldn't do a damn thing to reduce gun violence because they aren't shooting people. You want to reduce gun violence then we need to figure out what to do to reduce poverty so that people aren't committing crimes. We also need to get guns out of the hands of felons. Doing those two things would vastly reduce gun violence.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
39. First
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:52 PM
Jun 2016

That's not true.

A huge number of gun deaths are suicides and any mental health professional will tell you that taking away guns will DRASTICALLY lower that number almost instantly.

Second, another source of gun violence is domestic violence. And that's certainly NOT all about the gangs.

Third, accidental gun death and injury - and that's thousands of kids a decade - would drop dramatically.

I know you probably don't care about the hundreds thousand plus people that would save in a decade but I do.

Finally, if the only people that had guns were gangs, and no legal guns could be purchased, the number of actual guns in the hands of criminals would collapse relatively quickly. Obviously. Right now buying an illegal gun is relatively trivial, because there's 300,000,000 guns in circulation. Lower that number to even 150,000,000 in 10 years and so so so much violence - especially accidents and suicides - would disappear.

But I know I know. Ya gotta have yer gunz.

 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
40. My problem with your approach
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 01:59 PM
Jun 2016

Is that it ignores the root causes of most of the murders and suicides that occur. "Gunz" don't shoot someone on their own. We should hold people responsible for their actions, not inanimate objects used to commit a crime. With respect to suicides, guns aren't causing someone to kill themselves. Japan has a much higher suicide rate than the US but almost no private guns. Are you going to blame "gunz" for Japan's suicide rate?

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
45. no
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:09 PM
Jun 2016

And we know wht you've said is wrong because in Western countries without guns murder rates are lower.

As for suicide, what your saying is based purely on ignorance, so I won't take offense, but a little research will show you that guns play a HUGE part in a countries suicide rate. If Japan had hundreds of millions of guns it's suicide rate would be much higher, and when guns are removed from the equation suicide rates drop and successful suicide attempts drop dramatically. And of course most people attempt suicide once. And usually within a few minutes of deciding to try. If they fail they don't try again. They don't get that option if a gun is involved.

With the focus on who dies by suicide, these experts say, not enough attention has been paid to restricting the means to do it — particularly access to guns.

“You can reduce the rate of suicide in the United States substantially, without attending to underlying mental health problems, if fewer people had guns in their homes and fewer people who are at risk for suicide had access to guns in their home,” said Dr. Matthew Miller, a director of Harvard Injury Control Research Center and a professor of health sciences and epidemiology at Northeastern University.

About 90 percent of the people who try suicide and live ultimately never die by suicide. If the people who died had not had easy access to lethal means, researchers like Dr. Miller reason, most would still be alive.


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/10/health/blocking-the-paths-to-suicide.html?_r=0

Numerous prevention efforts were launched, hundreds of millions of dollars spent on studies and task forces, resilience programs and increasing access to mental health care.

Yet eight years and hundreds of deaths later, the suicide rate hasn’t improved. The number of suspected suicides in 2012 among active-duty soldiers was 166 at the end of October, surpassing the 165 total for all of 2011.

What’s gone wrong? Why hasn’t the Army or Defense Department been able to reduce the number of suicides?

Experts say it’s because efforts have ignored the most evidence-backed, proven prevention method: making suicide harder by restricting access to lethal means.

“There are two ways to reduce suicide: You can make it harder for them to die in an attempt, or you can heal underlying distress,” said Dr. Matthew Miller, the associate director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center at the Harvard School of Public Health.

“The idea is to restrict methods that are the most lethal, to provide a second chance,” Miller said.

“Means restriction,” as it’s called in public health, has been proven to reduce the suicide rate in a wide variety of places.

In 2006, after years of suicides among young men in the Israel Defense Forces, authorities forbade the troops from bringing their rifles home on weekends. Suicides dropped by 40 percent, according to a 2010 study by psychiatrists with the IDF and the Sheba Medical Center.

Those attempting suicide for the most part act on impulse, often after surprisingly brief periods of deliberation. But the impulse also passes. A survey of people who deliberated about killing themselves but did not act found that for about half, the suicidal period lasted less than an hour, according to Miller.

Among people who made near-lethal attempts, 24 percent took less than five minutes between the decision to kill themselves and the actual attempt. Seventy percent took less than an hour, according to a 2001 University of Houston study of 153 survivors.

Although people who attempt suicide often suffer from psychological distress, Miller said, they don’t act until a “last straw” — a loss, a humiliation, an arrest.

“That’s the time when you can lose control of your ability to act in a sensible way,” he said. “When you are at your wits’ end, what you can reach for determines whether you live or die. All you have to do to die is lose control for one minute.

“If you’re in a house with a gun, there’s a lot more of a chance you’re going to die,” he said.

Living in a home with a gun increases the suicide death risk two- to 10-fold, Miller said.


http://www.stripes.com/news/experts-restricting-troops-access-to-firearms-is-necessary-to-reduce-rate-of-suicides-1.199216

IF we gut gun suicides by 2x we'd save 7500 people a year aprox. In the last decade we would have saved 150,000 people - but I know I know teh gunz.
 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
51. That didn't address my question
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:15 PM
Jun 2016

Japan's suicide rate is much higher than the US's, despite the fact that they have very few guns. Would you agree that this fact proves that guns are not causing suicides?

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
94. No
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:22 PM
Jun 2016

Look at all the data. If Japanese people had access to guns like Americans their suicide rate would shoot up.

Time and time again experts in suicide say removing guns will greatly lower the number of suicides. You can choose to ignore that data but it's you ignoring it, not the data being wrong.

Suicide is often impulsive. Guns make it almost a certainty. Poison is frequently survived as is wrist slitting. People that survive almost never try again.

A common location to kill yourself in Japan is in a forest near Mt Fuji:

"Police records show that, in 2010, there were 247 suicide attempts (54 of which were fatal) in the forest'

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_in_Japan

If everyone of those people had used a gun you'd be look at 5x more suicides in that one location. You can PRETEND that isn't true but only gun nuts believe it's not. Even STRIPES magazine says access to guns greatly increases suicides. The Israeli military said the same thing and greatly reduced troop suicides by preventing troops from bringing home their weapons.

The data is extensive and incontrovertible... Unless you value your toys more than 15000 US lives a year... Then it's nothing but another thing to have to ignore so you can sleep.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
52. Yes.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:16 PM
Jun 2016
If the people who died had not had easy access to lethal means, researchers like Dr. Miller reason, most would still be alive.


Spoken as if guns are the only lethal means available. See Japan. So many words signifying basically nothing, is how your post might be properly described.

Then again, I respect peoples choice to end their own lives as they see fit. I don't presume to own or have a controlling interest in other peoples lives. An alien concept to you, I know.


Response to TeddyR (Reply #40)

Waldorf

(654 posts)
89. Yep, I like my gunz and I will be keeping them for many years. And then when I'm gone my
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 07:01 PM
Jun 2016

sons will have them for many years. And so on, and so on........

It;s been a very long time since I last hunted. The biggest threat I pose now is to those paper targets at the range.

sarisataka

(21,211 posts)
42. Tradeoff...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 02:18 PM
Jun 2016

The CDC report in 2013 acknowledges

defensive gun uses by victims are at least as common as offensive uses by criminals, with estimates of annual uses ranging from about 500,000 to more than 3 million (Kleck, 2001a), in the context of about 300,000 violent crimes


Is a trade of 300k additional violent crimes victims worth reducing a percentage of 30k deaths? (assuming all 30k deaths would become zero is simply fantasy)

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
49. Here's the thing
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:13 PM
Jun 2016

How many of those defensive uses were against other people with guns, and how many less defensive gun use would there be if America got rid of 300,000,000 guns?

There's LOTS of countries with poverty and crime and LOWER murder rates than America, that have no guns.

What DOESN"T exist is countries with hundreds of millions of loaded guns like America and really low murder and gun violence rates.

sarisataka

(21,211 posts)
53. You do realize
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:17 PM
Jun 2016

A defensive gun use is a legal action in reaction to a crime? Reducing DGUs alone simply increases crime at a 1:1 ratio?

Or do I misunderstand and you are opposed to self-defense?

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
56. no
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:23 PM
Jun 2016

Because I live in a country now with no guns, and guess what, no defensive gun usage, and a much lower murder rate and a much lower suicide rate.

If the person you're defending yourself against doesn't have a gun, you don't as often need a gun to defend yourself. And of course a criminal without a gun is MUCH less likely to break into a house full of people. Those sorts of crimes barely register in Europe, because of the scarcity of guns.

And of course, don't forget that plenty of people pull a gun only to have it turned on them by a criminal. Or stolen and then used in a crime. Or be used accidentally (or deliberately) by a family member.

Having lived away from guns for over a decade, and being much much safer, and knowing my kids will NEVER see a gun ... well... let's just say I know what's possible.

sarisataka

(21,211 posts)
63. I am not only speaking
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:40 PM
Jun 2016

Of murder, but all violent crime. Robbery, sexual assault, attempted murder by means other than gun... you may very well have a decrease in murder rate but how much of an increase in these other areas do you consider acceptable?

Actually countries with low gun ownership, such as England, experience higher per capita robberies of occupied homes simply because the criminals know the homeowners are not armed. A cricket bat is sufficient to give the criminal superiority over the occupants.

If neither person has a gun, it is simply strength versus strength. Criminals having an acute sense of self-preservation typically choose targets that they have a physical superiority over. That leaves the victim at a disadvantage even versus and unarmed attacker.

We often hear about the "criminal just takes the gun" but never seem to see any statistics supporting that claim. Do you happen to have any?

Many things are possible. However we must start with reality. The United States is a nation with high crime rates and high gun ownership. A change in the first may change the second, however a change in the second does not necessarily mean any change to the first.

gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
71. I live in a country now with no guns,
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:04 PM
Jun 2016
With a confirmed firearm possession rate of 5.6 private guns per 100 population,19 civilian gun ownership in Ireland has yet to reach one-third the rate of 17.4 firearms per 100 people calculated across 15 countries of the European Union.20 In a 2007 UN survey, 12.4 per cent of Irish respondents reported that they, or someone else in their household owned a firearm or an air rifle.21

It has been estimated that as many as 150,000 unregistered firearms might also be in private possession in Ireland,22 suggesting a total civilian stockpile of 393,000. If true, this would yield a rate of 9.1 private firearms per 100 population, both legal and illegal.19

http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/cp/ireland

If the person you're defending yourself against doesn't have a gun, you don't as often need a gun to defend yourself.
not true when you look at disparity of force. Someone in a wheelchair against the bare fists of a college middle linebacker would need a gun. So would anyone defending against someone with a machete.
And of course a criminal without a gun is MUCH less likely to break into a house full of people.
Yet that is most Australian murders

Those sorts of crimes barely register in Europe, because of the scarcity of guns.
Actually, home invasions are more common in other countries than the US because they are afraid of getting shot. According to the Wright Rossi study, criminals are more afraid of an armed victim than the police. BTW, there have been scandals of officials doctoring statistics, especially in the UK.

Having lived away from guns for over a decade, and being much much safer, and knowing my kids will NEVER see a gun ... well... let's just say I know what's possible.
Yet, Ireland has about the same murder rate as Vermont and Wyoming did in 2010. 60 percent of Wyoming homes have at least one privately owned firearm.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_violence_in_the_United_States_by_state
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_intentional_homicide_rate

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
78. lol
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:04 PM
Jun 2016

Lot's to unpack here:

First, Ireland is largely rural. And almost all of those guns are shotguns owned by farmers. I have NEVER seen a handgun in Ireland and this year there's a GANG WAR in Ireland that has resulted in a BLOODBATH which basically means 6 people have been shot.

This has resulted in calls for a special police task force, because in Ireland when 6 people get shot the country is outraged. In America that happens every two hours and people like yourself just shrug.

If America's biggest problem was the odd elderly person being beaten to death by linebackers, it'd be an incredibly safe country. See you're willing to trade thousands of dead kids a year for some illusory sense of safety.

The Australian had 516 gun deaths the year it banned guns. Last year it had 230. Imagine saving more than 15,000 people a year in America. But I know I know... elderly people attacked by footballers means thousands of kids have to die.



http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/compareyears/10/total_number_of_gun_deaths

Actually those kind of crimes AREN'T more common in the Europe.

United States has ranked in the top 11 for violent crime > rapes per million people since 2003.

http://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Violent-crime/Rapes-per-million-people

It's got much more violent crime:

EU: 283.3
US: 386.9

http://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Assault-rate
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_the_United_States

And a higher robbery rate than most of Europe:
http://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Robberies

Imagine in the US had the same murder rate as Vermont. If it did no one would be calling for guns to be confiscated. But Vermont is such an outlier in America that it's statistically noise.

On the OTHER hand the Irish murder rate is HIGH for Europe. It's not anomalously low.

Ireland - with it's 6 gun deaths in its gang war is seen as violent by Europeans. Not America violent - but European violent. Literally there's no accidental shootings here. No kids finding guns here. No mass shootings here. No school shootings. And that's the same for all of Europe.

Let's put that another way.

US murder rate: 4.5 murders per 100,000 people
https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2013/crime-in-the-u.s.-2013/violent-crime/murder-topic-page/murdermain_final

Ireland murder rate: 1.1 murders per 100,000 people
France murder rate: 1.2 murders per 100,000 people
Germany: 0.9
Austria: 0.5
Switzerland: 0.5
Spain: 0.7
Croatia: 0.8
Denmark: 1.0
UK: 1.0

etc etc etc

You might say that American society is just more violent - all the more reason not to have 300,000,000 guns.

gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
84. in Europe,
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:50 PM
Jun 2016

gang war usually means machine guns.

The Australian had 516 gun deaths the year it banned guns. Last year it had 230. Imagine saving more than 15,000 people a year in America. But I know I know... elderly people attacked by footballers means thousands of kids have to die.
Not true either. Technically, Australia doesn't have any federal gun laws. Before the National Firearms Agreement, every state had some type of licensing and some had registration. The Howard government blackmailed the states to go along with what he wanted, which included banning most semi automatic and and pump action long guns. Guns are not entirely banned. In fact, there are more legal privately owned now than then. The Australian Federal Police has no clue how many illegal guns there are. We do know that one out of ten confiscated are basement made machine guns.

If you look at your graph, the largest drop was before the NFA went in effect. Unless you believe in retrocausality........... Also, while the gun suicide rate did drop, there is no evidence the NFA had anything to do with it. However, the suicide rate did not drop.
Out of the 15 peer reviewed studies on the effects the NFA had on Australia's murder and suicide rate, none of them say one had anything to do with another.

Yet Germany, Switerland, and Austria are high gun ownership rate countries. France is medium like New Zealand. Out of the countries you list, Austria has the laxest gun laws. In fact, their gun laws are laxer than Maryland, New Jersey, and New York.

No, we are not more violent. We just have more gangs. UK is actually more violent, and you are still comparing the US with countries that have less in common with us than South America.

You really are bad at this.
 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
55. The US has the highest per capita gun ownership rate in the world
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:21 PM
Jun 2016

Yet there are numerous countries with very high ownership rates -- guns in the millions -- that do not suffer from the murder rates that the US does (suicide and murder simply should not be lumped together when talking about gun deaths because they have very different causes and solutions). For example, Canada, Norway and Sweden all have about 31 guns per 100 residents but don't have near the same level of murders.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
46. And there you go, almost as if from a script...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:09 PM
Jun 2016

Last edited Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:47 PM - Edit history (1)

You are happy for thousands of kids to continue to die each year so that you can have access to a gun.


And there you go, almost as if from a script, attributing a sentiment to me which I have not expressed, because I find your solutions unacceptable.

Did Katie teach you that?

I am an anti-gun extremist aka a normal person everywhere but America.


Because every country other than America bans all guns? Like I said before, your grasp on the subject matter is weak at best.

You obviously can't stop crime...


So your solution is to make possession of a gun...a crime?

Do you even read what you write?

...but by removing 300,000,000 guns off the streets...


You mean removing them from peoples homes and gun safes, right? So dishonest.

I see no harm in that tradeoff.


Of course you don't. You're an anti-gun ideologue extremist.

Because I value 30k Americans live a year more than you having a gun.


Me having a gun doesn't cost 30k lives annually. The bad decisions of individuals does.

You keep barking up the wrong tree.


Has it ever occurred to you, that if your cause was just and righteous, you wouldn't have to engage in dishonesty or have to falsely attribute to others sentiments that have not expressed, or misrepresent the positions of others, to win the argument?

Because it has occurred to me and everyone else.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
54. here's the thing
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:19 PM
Jun 2016

you don't have to say you're happy for all those kids to die, because your actions say all anyone needs to hear. You think that the status quo is grand, and have no interest in any meaningful gun control.

Americans - en masse - that includes you - can't be trusted with guns. We know this because of the hundreds of thousands of gun deaths. It's a shame that you have to lose your deadly toys, but you do, if you want to stop 30K people a year dying.

You guys are so coddled in US society that you ACTUALLY BELIEVE that you're not part of the problem, but outside of America people look at you like your basically part of ISIS, playing your part in helping keep guns legal, no matter how many toddlers have their heads blown off... for freedom bro.

I am an anti-thousands of kids being shot and dying a year for no good reason ideologue. You're a thousands of kids dying can't be solved because America so keep your hands offa my toys ideologue.

As far as I can tell I'm also the only one with any sort of idea about how to low the gun death in America to say 2000 a year instead of 30k. Background checks and loophole closing won't come close to that, and that's all your type will support...

On the plus side, if you want a good stock tip, invest in children's coffin manufacturers, because your fellow gun owners are driving demand through the roof!

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
62. When confronted falsely attributing to others...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:39 PM
Jun 2016
you don't have to say you're happy for all those kids to die, because your actions say all anyone needs to hear. You think that the status quo is grand, and have no interest in any meaningful gun control.


When confronted falsely attributing to others, sentiments they have not expressed, your reaction is to double down and do it again? Color me shocked.

Tell me more, carnac.

Americans - en masse - that includes you - can't be trusted with guns. We know this because of the hundreds of thousands of gun deaths.


Wrong. We know that Americans - en masse - CAN be trusted with guns, and that its a tiny minority that causes the problems.

That's not opinion, that's fact.

It's a shame that you have to lose your deadly toys, but you do, if you want to stop 30K people a year dying.


The people doing the killing AKA people making bad decisions, obviously don't want to stop the 30k people a year dying.

It therefore matters not whether I or anyone else not doing the killing give up our guns or not.

You guys are so coddled in US society that you ACTUALLY BELIEVE that you're not part of the problem, but outside of America people look at you like your basically part of ISIS, playing your part in helping keep guns legal, no matter how many toddlers have their heads blown off... for freedom bro.


I can't help it if people outside America are wrong. And frankly, I don't give one single solitary fuck what people outside of America, particularly the ones that have to show ID to buy plastic dining utensils, think of it.

I am an anti-thousands of kids being shot and dying a year for no good reason ideologue.


No, you're an anti-gun ideologue extremist trying to cammoflage your extremism in in the blood of innocents, while attacking other innocents.

You're a thousands of kids dying can't be solved because America so keep your hands offa my toys ideologue.


Nope. I'm sure it can be solved, but it can not and will not be solved the way you suggest.

As far as I can tell I'm also the only one with any sort of idea about how to low the gun death in America to say 2000 a year instead of 30k.


As far as I can tell, you are only interested in gun bans, no matter what they would or wouldn't achieve.
 

Marengo

(3,477 posts)
90. I've lived outside the United States, and you are full of shit...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 08:33 PM
Jun 2016

Never once did I encounter anyone who suggested guns owners are like ISIS. In fact, where lived and worked, many expressed an interest in the shooting sports and wished they could participate. Especially the better educated young folks. However, firearms possession is forbidden.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
93. Not literally
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:13 PM
Jun 2016

Saying the words "like ISIS". But extremists who kill 10s of thousands of people - including endless children - annually. That I have heard from dozens of people. That Americans are lunatics when it comes to guns (and politics). And that they have no idea how Americans can just stand by and watch all that death and shrug - or offer solutions which are so weak and meaningless.

There are some shooting sports around Europe but it would be the equivalent of bow hunting in the US. Most people don't know bow hunters. Most people don't have bows. It's a sport but it doesn't impact society.

I have lived in Ireland and the UK and traveled all over Europe for work, and - after being bewildered by our politics and our love of war - the third most common thing people want to talk about is all the gun violence. It's part of what Americans are known for: violence.

EdwardBernays

(3,343 posts)
99. That same argument
Sat Jun 4, 2016, 05:53 AM
Jun 2016

Has been used against me hundreds of times by gun nuts - who have reminded me multiple times in this discussion alone that my views are not mainstream in America - as a way to attack their validity.

My response to that has been: they aren't mainstream in the US but if we're gonna play "what's more mainstream?" then my views are certainly more mainstream everywhere BUT America. They're like universal health care. Or access to education. Americans are waking up to the first two and one day they'll wake up to meaningful gun control.

 

friendly_iconoclast

(15,333 posts)
108. Two words in re the value of public opinion: Proposition Eight
Sun Jun 5, 2016, 01:08 PM
Jun 2016

In your opinion, should the various courts have deferred to the views
of the majority of California voters, as expressed in that election?

 

Marengo

(3,477 posts)
98. Dozens of people in one region is not the world, so don't try to pass it off as that...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 10:25 PM
Jun 2016

Ahhh, yes, the sainted Europeans, well the western anyway. A subject very dear to my heart. Encountered a good number when I was living and traveling in Asia. As a group, a majority were self-righteous assholes openly contemptuous of Asia and its people. Some oblivious of the roles their predecessors played in inflicting colonialist misery on that continent. Ha! Had one prime specimen, a German, who claimed that life in the German concessions in China was so much better for the Chinese there as the Germans were such capable colonial administrators. There were those whose behavior and interactions with the local people were not dominted by their sense of moral and political superiority, but sadly they seemed the exception.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,593 posts)
75. I'm a bit confused
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:35 PM
Jun 2016

In another thread/topic you resisted the idea of segregating criminals from others in society over possibly rehabilitating them. I infer that you think people have some basic rights including life and liberty that make respecting those rights a primary purpose of government where ever possible as much as possible.

In the US our penal system apparently lags behind some in the world in its ability to rehabilitate criminals. As I've said before, I can accept that the system needs work prioritizing a budget to fix broken people but, until they are fixed, not segregating them is just asking for trouble.




Now on to the other matter. Self-defense is absolutely a right. Whatever adjective you want to add (human right, natural right... yes, all of the above) works for me. So along with respecting the general rights of those we've charged, tried and convicted to be fixed, the rest of us have the right to defend ourselves. Confiscating the most efficacious tool for that purpose is just as wrong as locking up the all of convicts and throwing away the key.


Trying to "confiscating them all" will:
- not work
- create millions more criminals that, as you note, our system already doesn't deal with correctly
- motivate some folks to liquidate their investments unwisely

If my suggestion to sentence violent offenders to life w/o parole is unreasonable in the short run, your idea of "confiscating them all" is completely absurd and counterproductive.

Botany

(72,592 posts)
6. After Sandy Hook Republicans passed laws that make it easier to have more guns around
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 07:28 AM
Jun 2016

My city, Columbus OH has 12 times more murders w/guns in one year then the
country of Japan.

HereSince1628

(36,063 posts)
8. Inner city Milwaukee keeps electing pro-gun Sheriff who asks constituents to buy guns
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 07:38 AM
Jun 2016

learn to use them, and protect themselves because protecting them is beyond him and his department.

around these parts we seem to get the world we vote for... "Milwaukee girl, 5, shot dead sitting on grandfather’s lap, watching TV: cops"



gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
18. because they know Milwaukee city police can't
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:32 AM
Jun 2016

and they know it. In a recent poll in DC, the support for returning to the ban was strongest in all white affluent areas like Georgetown and weakest in poor areas.
If Milwaukee is anything like Chicago, the gangs own the cops and the city council. This child wasn't killed with grandpa's pistol by negligence, it was a gang hit. If you think people who retail heroin and cocaine can't get or make guns, there is a job waiting for you at the Creation Research Institute.

Ikonoklast

(23,973 posts)
9. Crimes done with firearms, as well as all violent crime is at the lowest it's been in decades.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 07:39 AM
Jun 2016

Almost at a historical low overall in this country.


It is far from a national crisis.


Not one statistic the FBI or any other organization that tracks criminal activity supports that there is a national crisis of gun violence in this country.

 

Indydem

(2,642 posts)
10. Don't you dare bring facts to this!
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 07:48 AM
Jun 2016

Facts will not be tolerated!

There is hyperbole! AND a letter from a famous victim!

Facts are irrelevant.

Botany

(72,592 posts)
13. In 2015 we had 258 mass shootings*
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 08:09 AM
Jun 2016

* Shootings were 4 or more people are killed and or wounded.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/23/us/americas-overlooked-gun-violence.html?_r=0

358 Shootings
462 Dead
1,330 Injured
Dead and injured include suspects and victims. A New York Times analysis of 358 shootings with four or more casualties in 2015.

Botany

(72,592 posts)
16. What's the historical trend?
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:05 AM
Jun 2016

I give up. I am sure the 1,792 dead and wounded along with their famalies
and friends really care about historical trends?


Nuclear Unicorn

(19,497 posts)
19. Is that what it's really about? Deaths? Or is it just guns you don't like?
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:34 AM
Jun 2016

Because people die from other things as well.

Botany

(72,592 posts)
23. I have hunted and owned guns for years thank you very much.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 10:02 AM
Jun 2016

2 20 guage pump shotguns, 1 .22 HR bolt action, & 1 30-30 winchester.

I am sick of the blood, the NRA, and the gun humpers.

beergood

(470 posts)
97. "2 20 guage pump shotguns, 1 .22 HR bolt action, & 1 30-30 winchester. "
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 10:24 PM
Jun 2016

doesn't that make you a gun humper. besides that 30-30 winchester is more powerful than an ar-15 and can be reloaded faster than a CA compliant "assault weapon" with a bullet button.

Ikonoklast

(23,973 posts)
24. One person every three days dies from towmotor accidents in this country.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 10:04 AM
Jun 2016

39 are injured enough every day to be classified as "reportable accidents".


No one cares.


gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
58. those are fake statistics from Reddit.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:26 PM
Jun 2016

BTW, there has never been a mass shooting using the FBI's definition in Wyoming, let alone in my city in Sweetwater County. That one is probably someone going nuts with a airsoft, since the last gun homicide was a couple of decades ago, and the only murder this year was a stabbing.
http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2015/10/foghorn/shootingtracker-com-owner-admits-site-is-pure-propaganda/

Ikonoklast

(23,973 posts)
20. The NYT got those numbers from a subreddit called "Guns Are Cool". They are not actual statistics.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:50 AM
Jun 2016

They are not actual crime statistics used by any branch of government or the FBI, you know, the actual people who are mandated by the government to track this stuff , they are from one person who created that subreddit.


Reddit user BillySpeed includes kids shot with a BB or airsoft gun as "mass shootings".

One guy in his mom's basement.

I laugh at how gullible the NYT is anymore.


*On Edit: Those "statistics" also includes suspects shot or wounded by LEO while the suspect was in the act of committing a crime.

Unless you want to accuse LEO of "mass shootings", these "statistics" are all but nonsense.

Ikonoklast

(23,973 posts)
22. Can I make stuff up, and you'll believe it if I get the NYT to print it?
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:56 AM
Jun 2016

Because you are believing something that is not based in reality.

beergood

(470 posts)
95. "Those "statistics" also includes suspects shot or wounded by LEO"
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:54 PM
Jun 2016

remember this duzy

'He's a terrorist!' Outrage as anti-gun group names slain Boston bomber as one of VICTIMS of gun violence during rally memorializing Sandy Hook massacre

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2344866/Anti-gun-group-names-Tamerlan-Tsarnaev-VICTIMS-gun-violence-rally.html#ixzz4AZjzSwJs
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
32. So basically a very tiny segment of gun-related deaths.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 12:43 PM
Jun 2016

462 for "mass shootings" agaisnt c. 20k suicides and c. 10k ordinary homicides.

Mass shootings are horrible events...but are not even close to being the big problem with misuse of firearms.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,593 posts)
27. I can think of a few...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 10:59 AM
Jun 2016

...Clyde Barrow, St Valentine's Day and recently (1997) the North Hollywood bank robbery.
While there are no convictions, the incident with Larry Cooper in Northern Idaho is open to conjecture.

gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
85. not always.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:51 PM
Jun 2016

In Australia they make them from scratch. the easiest homemade gun is the single shot zip gun, the second easiest is the open bolt machine gun.

 

Kang Colby

(1,941 posts)
92. No CNC necessary.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 09:03 PM
Jun 2016

Just steel tubing, and some high school shop class level metal working. Criminals all over South America and Australia have gotten pretty good at it...full auto, open bolt, smoothbore.





 

Marengo

(3,477 posts)
100. As I recall, Clyde stole most of his BARs from National Guard armories...
Sat Jun 4, 2016, 03:31 PM
Jun 2016

You know, the same kind of place some folks around here want all personally owned firearms stored.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,593 posts)
105. I think you're just being overly critical...
Sat Jun 4, 2016, 04:27 PM
Jun 2016

...if everyone's firearms are stored at an NG armory except when in use for things like hunting, competitive events, practice and defensive carry and everyone has armory access as needed so as experience the use and enjoyment of their property, it might be nice to have a place to meet people and make friends.

 

Marengo

(3,477 posts)
110. Interesting perspective, plus there would be the advantage that no controller...
Mon Jun 6, 2016, 08:18 AM
Jun 2016

Would come anywhere near the place.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
57. A crisis that the SCOTUS exacerbated and encouraged with
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:25 PM
Jun 2016

the DC v Heller decision that overturned SCOTUS precedent on the Second Amendment by choosing to effectively delete the entire first clause of the Amendment so that the so-called originalists could arrive at a decision that was never intended by the Founders.

The 30,000 gun deaths a year are merely collateral damage.

And the NRA and the weapons manufacturers prosper. Truly the American way.

I have lived here for many years and still cannot understand the fascination, bordering on obsession, that some Americans have for gun possession.

gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
59. Heller did not overturn any SCOTUS precedent.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:27 PM
Jun 2016

and the first clause is not the operative part of the sentence.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
60. You are incorrect on the first claim,
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:30 PM
Jun 2016

there is no SCOTUS precedent pre-Heller supporting an individual right to carry.

Second, the first clause determines how the second clause is to be read. It sets the stage for the second clause.

I know that many of the gun types like to believe/pretend/argue that Heller merely reaffirmed existing precedent, but wishing does not make it so.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
64. Wrong.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:42 PM
Jun 2016
Second, the first clause determines how the second clause is to be read. It sets the stage for the second clause


Wrong. The preamble to the bill of rights sets the context for the whole thing.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
66. The Second Amendment refers to "a well regulated militia".
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:51 PM
Jun 2016

If the Founders had intended that the right to carry be an individual right they would not have needed to reference the militia, which is referenced elsewhere. They could have simply said that all American s have a right to keep and bear arms.

Justice Scalia was determined to find, or more properly create, an individual right. So he created one by effectively deleting words that contradicted his intent.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
69. It makes a reference...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:59 PM
Jun 2016
The Second Amendment refers to "a well regulated militia".


It makes a reference, but the militia is NOT what the second amendment is about. Proof of that is contained in the constitution itself, where congress is granted power over the militia. Amendment 2 doesn't say "the right of the militia", it says "the right of the people".

If the Founders had intended that the right to carry be an individual right they would not have needed to reference the militia, which is referenced elsewhere.


That's like...your opinion man.

They could have simply said that all American s have a right to keep and bear arms.


They did just that. They just didn't use wording that you approve of or agree with. How many state constitutions, written in the same era by folks with the same mindset, would you like me to quote?

Justice Scalia was determined to find, or more properly create, an individual right. So he created one by effectively deleting words that contradicted his intent.


Incorrect. Even the dissent is counter to your opinion here.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
72. An interesting argument that you attempt to make.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:08 PM
Jun 2016

The Founders intended the militia to be the defense for the new nation, thus the need for a well regulated militia. And the right to keep, meaning store, and bear arms, which means bear arms under orders.

There was no provision for a standing army. Only a well regulated militia.

Because Scalia crafted a decision that supports what you already want to believe his decision becomes the proof that gun enthusiasts need to show original intent.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
73. Theres no attempt about it.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:22 PM
Jun 2016
The Founders intended the militia to be the defense for the new nation, thus the need for a well regulated militia.


The founders authorized congressional control over the militia in the constitution. What we are discussing is the second amendment which is contained in the bill of rights, which is a distinctly different document with a distinctly different purpose than the constitution.

And the right to keep, meaning store, and bear arms, which means bear arms under orders.


That's your opinion, as to what that meant. Plus, the right of the people (not the militia) to keep and bear arms already existed, and was not granted by the second amendment. The second amendment protects it.

Because Scalia crafted a decision that supports what you already want to believe his decision becomes the proof that gun enthusiasts need to show original intent.


Again, that's your opinion. You ignore that even the dissent in Heller runs contrary to your premise:

The question presented by this case is not whether the Second Amendment protects a “collective right” or an “individual right.” Surely it protects a right that can be enforced by individuals.


Multiple presidents have said its an individual right, including Obama, multiple congresses have said its an individual right. Over 3/4 of the American people say its an individual right, and even the dissent in Heller says its an individual right.

The collective rights theory is dead, whether you know it or not:

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
80. The collective rights theory is only dead until the SCOTUS rules again.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:08 PM
Jun 2016

It was alive until Heller and can easily be overturned again by another activist court that respects precedent.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
87. Again, this is your own very flawed perception.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 06:04 PM
Jun 2016
The collective rights theory is only dead until the SCOTUS rules again.


That wont happen, since nobody is going to take a case to a supreme court known to be hostile to the second amendment.

It was alive until Heller and can easily be overturned again by another activist court that respects precedent.


It was alive, only in the minds of anti-gunners. The claim that the second amendment restricted government only where the the militia was concerned is absurd on its face. Doubly absurd when one considers that government was granted specific powers over the militia in the constitution. Tripply absurd when one considers that the right clearly belongs to "the people", not just "the militia".

The only 'activist' court, is one that would overturn existing precedent, which the Heller decision did not do. Folks like you are just pissed that the gray area that you used to enjoy exploiting is gone.


But whatever helps you sleep at night...
 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
77. C'mon
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:00 PM
Jun 2016

The Second Amendment plainly states that the right to keep and bear arms "shall not be infringed." It doesn't say the right of the militia to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

Georgia supreme court in 1846:

Nor is the right involved in this discussion less comprehensive or valuable: "The right of the people to bear arms shall not be infringed." The right of the whole people, old and young, men, women and boys, and not militia only, to keep and bear arms of every description, not such merely as are used by the militia, shall not be infringed, curtailed, or broken in upon, in the smallest degree; and all this for the important end to be attained: the rearing up and qualifying a well-regulated militia, so vitally necessary to the security of a free State. Our opinion is, that any law, State or Federal, is repugnant to the Constitution, and void, which contravenes this right, originally belonging to our forefathers, trampled under foot by Charles I and his two wicked sons and successors, reestablished by the revolution of 1688, conveyed to this land of liberty by the colonists, and finally incorporated conspicuously in our own Magna Charta!


If you think that the Second Amendment has run its course because the militia is no longer viable and that was the only reason for the Amendment then get Congress and the states to repeal the Amendment on those grounds.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
79. I trust that I do not have to explain that the SCOTUS is
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:06 PM
Jun 2016

the ultimate judicial authority, not any state Supreme Court. This Georgia ruling that NRA types are prone to quote has no bearing on the SCOTUS. And no bearing on the Federal Constitution.

Read the entire Amendment, including the half that Justice Scalia dismissed as "merely prefatory", and explain why, if the Founders had merely wanted to codify an individual right, they did not simply state that. Any attempt to separate the militia issue from the Amendment, as Scalia did, is done to ignore the original intent, not enhance it.

 

TeddyR

(2,493 posts)
82. I understand that the Supeme Court
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 05:26 PM
Jun 2016

Is the ultimate arbiter on the Constitution. I also understand that when interpreting the meaning of the Constitution that courts look to prior rulings, although the Georgia Supreme Court ruling is in no way binding.

The first half of the amendment is prefatory. It in no way limits the operative clause that prohibits "infringement" on the right to keep and bear arms. And (we may have had this discussion before) the "people" in the 2d Amendment is the same "people" referenced in the 1st and 4th, which undoubtedly protect individual rights. Why would the 2d be any different? Do you think that Madison, et al. would use "people" in the 1st, 2d and 4th Amendments but in the 2d only the "people" really means the "militia"? The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed is pretty clear to me.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
88. They did...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 06:09 PM
Jun 2016
Read the entire Amendment, including the half that Justice Scalia dismissed as "merely prefatory", and explain why, if the Founders had merely wanted to codify an individual right, they did not simply state that.


They did simply state that, just not in words or language you like...or understand correctly, or you wouldn't have asked.

gejohnston

(17,502 posts)
65. I'm correct on both counts.
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 03:46 PM
Jun 2016
there is no SCOTUS precedent pre-Heller supporting an individual right to carry.
there is no precedent saying they didn't either. There fore, precedent wasn't overturned. BTW, Brown overturned precedent. It sounds like you don't know the relevant cases or know what the term "precedent" actually means.

Second, the first clause determines how the second clause is to be read. It sets the stage for the second clause.
No it doesn't, and no legal nor literary analysis supports your claim.

I know that many of the gun types like to believe/pretend/argue that Heller merely reaffirmed existing precedent, but wishing does not make it so.
Actually it does. I take it you are equally ignorant of Natural Law Theory, which the founders were big fans of.
 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
70. The crisis your interlocutor refers to...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:03 PM
Jun 2016

The crisis your interlocutor refers to, is not being able to ban guns.

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
74. I wish they would take seriously my theory of the turn-around heat-seeking missile...
Fri Jun 3, 2016, 04:23 PM
Jun 2016

MSM is in an ungraceful position. One of its chief articles of faith is that more guns=more crime. And they are the custodians of the gun-control outlook, charged with propagandizing for the controllers. Yet, when they do so now, in conjunction with anti-gun pols, the result is:. More guns (we all remember the lines). Rock meet hard place. Yeah, that is a crisis.

 

DonP

(6,185 posts)
109. The only "National Crisis" where it's half of what it was 20 years ago
Sun Jun 5, 2016, 02:45 PM
Jun 2016

Kind of hard to gin up all that faux moral outrage, with violent crime half what it was in 1990, still falling and at a level not seen since the '60's.

Your challenge is struggling to keep the public ignorant of the actual facts on Defensive Gun use, the results of the 2013 CDC gun control study and trying to stem the Tsunami of concealed carry licenses in all 50 states.

The more people know, the less likely they are to support gun control it seems.

Of course you'll always have 3 or 4 hard core types in your own Group. So there's that.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
111. Half of what it was 20 years ago, yet they're pushing twice as hard...
Mon Jun 6, 2016, 03:02 PM
Jun 2016

Half of what it was 20 years ago, yet they're pushing twice as hard for things which the reduction can not be attributed to.

That kind of destroys the contrived Cockamayme justifications they come up with for doing it, and lays bare their intent, motivations, and goals, for all to see.

 

DonP

(6,185 posts)
112. That's sheer desperation you see from them
Mon Jun 6, 2016, 05:24 PM
Jun 2016

Even with Bloomberg footing all their bills, they still can't get anything done.

They have spent so much of their time demonizing the "Evil NRA" and creating personal memes (fewer gun owners all the time; 90% agree with us; epidemic of school mass shootings; there are no background checks; gun show loophole, et. al.), they totally missed the millions of dedicated new gun owners they helped create each year by demanding bans, a new AWB, local regulation etc.

Funny, the one thing they do have a clear constitutional path to try is repeal of the 2nd. But bring it up or suggest they start circulating petitions and they all kind of fade away then come back with another laughable meme; "Well, we just need one more SCOTUS justice to make the right decision".

They know damn well if they tried to repeal, they'd get laughed out of court and every state legislature where they tried it. I don't even want to guess at how many seats it would cost and how long we'd be out of any kind of power in DC if they did.

Ultimately they are guilty of the worst thing any group (or candidate) can do ... believing their own press releases.

pablo_marmol

(2,375 posts)
113. If I said that LYING about our "epidemic of violence" was a full-blown national crisis......
Tue Jun 7, 2016, 10:56 AM
Jun 2016

.......I'd be wrong. But I'd be closer to the truth than this bullshit.
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