I hope this isn’t out of context, also I don’t want to “own the libs” or something here, I’m actually interested.

    • Lemming421@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Right? That’s like saying “why are people against this man going free? (Besides the murders)”

      If you think a few lines of text written by some rich white guys a couple of hundred years ago is more important than the scores of dead children, not to mention everyone else killed by guns, both homicide and suicide, then I think there’s something deeply wrong with you.

  • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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    8 months ago

    Statistics generally show that people with guns in their house are much more likely to be fatally shot. Suicide is a big factor, as are domestic disputes. It seems that generally, there are points in many people’s lives of extreme emotional anguish or rage, and if they have access to a firearm at that point they will use it, with deadly consequences. On the other side of the equation, successfully preventing harm with a firearm is comparatively more rare. In other words, owning guns causes more harm than it prevents.

    At a societal level the same picture more or less bears out: the more guns available in a community, the higher the incidence rates of gun violence. This is true independent of crime levels, income, or demographics.

    It therefore seems desirable to attempt to reduce the number of guns in private ownership. For the United States, that’s quite a complicated task, and I don’t see any realistic path to a gun-free society. Especially not with ~50% of the country opposed to such a goal. Probably the first step would have to be to increase public support for gun control, otherwise all efforts are futile.

    • skulkingaround@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      Fwiw, some of the lowest crime areas in the USA have some of the most lenient firearms regulation. New Hampshire for example had something like 27 total homicides in all of 2023, including ones not involving a firearm. Most of those were domestic disputes. The crime rate there is absurdly low even when you compare it to the small wealthy European nations everyone likes to circlejerk about. NH has one of the highest rates of gun ownership in the USA, and allows carrying without a license and no registration or anything needed to purchase.

      I know that’s just an anecdote but it does beg the question of whether guns have a causal relationship to crime rates or simply a correlation. I am inclined to believe it’s overwhelmingly the latter and only a sprinkle of the former, based on the research I’ve done.

      To extend that, gun control is worse than useless if what you care about is saving lives and reducing crime. The effect is minimal at best, and performative more than anything else. Every tax dollar and minute we spend on gun control could have a far greater payoff if we directed it toward addressing the root causes of these tragedies. Instead we just use guns as a scapegoat, pass restrictions on them, then pat ourselves on the back while kids continue to grow up in crippling poverty and adults are left with no support systems to turn to when life shits on them.

    • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      Did you know that people who own legos are much more likely to step on lego bricks?

      And I know it’s a shock but people with elecricity in their homes are at a MUCH higher risk of death by electrocution and electrical fires.

      That isn’t a good argument, no matter what it’s for/against.

      • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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        8 months ago

        Further, suicide should be a human right.

        Agreed that’s what euthanasia is for. But sort of an irrelevant point in a discussion on gun control, wouldn’t you agree?

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Literally every town bullshit. This is propaganda which is utter nonsense. It’s like saying people with pools are more likely to drown in them. It uses suicide statics to try and back up it’s claim, which doesn’t work because DGUs happen at a far higher rate than suicides.

    • DABDA@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      On the other side of the equation, successfully preventing harm with a firearm is comparatively more rare. In other words, owning guns causes more harm than it prevents.

      Super quick DDG search, I haven’t vetted these links but in general it’s understood that firearms are used defensively far more than they are used for harm - but the exact numbers are extremely difficult to measure. There’s an issue of reporting and recording the incidents, as well as the obvious conflicting motivations from each side citing their own numbers.

      I don’t think you can definitively make the statement that they cause more harm than they prevent.

      • CommunicationOk3492@feddit.de
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        8 months ago

        If you read your linked articles and surveys you will see, that they’re even arguing against your argument.

        Just to quote some stuff:

        David Hemenway, who led the Harvard research, argues that the risks of owning a gun outweigh the benefits of having one in the rare case where you might need to defend yourself.

        “The average person … has basically no chance in their lifetime ever to use a gun in self-defense,” he tells Here & Now’s Robin Young. “But … every day, they have a chance to use the gun inappropriately. They have a chance, they get angry. They get scared.”

        “If we don’t even have a minimum standard, not for training, but for performance validation for our law enforcement,” he says, “how in God’s name is anybody going to say, ‘Well, just because you have a gun in your pocket, you know how to use it in self-defense?’ You don’t.”

        End quote

        And some of the other stuff seems very biased:

        The largest and most comprehensive survey of American gun owners ever conducted suggests that they use firearms in self-defense about 1.7 million times a year. It also confirms that AR-15-style rifles and magazines that hold more than 10 rounds, frequent targets of gun control legislation, are in common use for lawful purposes, which the Supreme Court has said is the test for arms covered by the Second Amendment.

        The online survey, which was conducted by Centiment in February and March of 2021, was based on a representative sample of about 54,000 adults, 16,708 of whom were gun owners. Georgetown University political economist William English, who commissioned the survey as part of a book project, presents its major findings in a recent paper available on the Social Science Research Network.

        End quote

        I mean, a survey for owners of guns… Of course if you own a weapon like that, you will tell everyone that you use it for self defense. And probably enough people who say they did that, just lie…

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 months ago

          I haven’t clicked his links, but assuming he’s linking you to the Harvard study, that study in an effort to debunk Kleck and Lott’s figures used by the CDC estimated “a more realistic DGU/yr at 100,000.” Well, being that there are 60,000 total gun deaths/yr in this country including suicide, I’m inclined to believe that based on the raw numbers they do in fact get used more for defense than to kill oneself or others, as 100k>60k.

          • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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            8 months ago

            This is a naive comparison, as you are not counting the many cases where people use guns to harm others without killing them. There are on the order of 500,000 fatal and nonfatal violent crimes involving a firearm committed every year in The United States.

            • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              8 months ago

              I haven’t seen anything corroborating those numbers, however even in that case if we include defensive display in our DGU numbers (which the Harvard study entirely discounted on the basis of “we have no real way of knowing those numbers,”) that raises the DGUs as well. Thing is defensive display is by far and wide the most likely defensive use, it is when a person is able to drive off the threat just by showing (drawing, pointing, etc) the firearm on/at the attacker. Harvard is right that there’s no way to get an accurate report on how many because they’re often not reported to the police, as that takes a lot of time and effort that could easily be shrugged off with a “eh I’m fine, didn’t have to fire, fuck it.” An example is this video. Though this clerk did likely report it especially given the accompanying video evidence, many in his position (especially not on the clock or camera) don’t report.

              Some estimates of dgu/yr including those defensive displays are as high as 3mil/yr. I think that’s probably a little high, but I’d wager they’re in the ballpark of 500,000 dgu/yr as well.

              Though this is the “we need more good people carrying able to defend themselves” part, because although the number is growing still only 25% of people carry, and even most of them don’t do it every day. Can’t defend with what you don’t have. Statista says there’s 1.2 mil violent crimes in 2022, if guns are indeed i .5mil of those, that leaves .7mil where a defender with a gun would have had an outright advantage over the attacker.

              In the end what we need to do is address the underlying socioeconomic issues that most often cause the violent crime. Even if we Thanosed all guns away there’s still the matter of .7mil violent crimes and now 100,000-500,000 people can’t even do anything to protect themselves against them. Addressing the causes would have a more measurable impact and wouldn’t deprive anyone of their rights unduly.

              • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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                8 months ago

                In the end what we need to do is address the underlying socioeconomic issues that most often cause the violent crime.

                100% agreed with you on that one. Unfortunately I don’t see any consensus coming on how to effectively do that.

                • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  8 months ago

                  Well it’ll be harder to do, for sure. But I think it’s the right way to do things, peace through force is a hollow victory at best.

              • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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                8 months ago

                I appreciate you challenging my numbers, but you’re not being very helpful finding actual sources. I found a report from the bureau of justice statistics that says 478,400 total cases of firearm violence in 2011. I see it trending upward from 2008-2011 as well, though that’s probably a consequence of the financial crisis.

                • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  Firearm violence = a firearm was involved. It doesn’t even have to be fired.

                  In 2007-11, about 23% of all nonfatal firearm victims were physically injured during the victimization (table 9). About 7% suffered serious injuries (e.g., a gunshot wound, broken bone, or internal injuries), while 16% suffered minor injuries (e.g., bruises or cuts). Of the nonfatal firearm victims who were injured, 72% received some type of care, with about 82% receiving care in a hospital or medical office. The victim reported that the offender had fired the weapon in 7% of all nonfatal firearm victimizations. The victim suffered a gunshot wound in 28% of these victimizations (not shown in table).

                  Literally firearms just being around in an altercation = firearm violence.

        • DABDA@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Like I stated, I didn’t vet any of the links - they were the first results on DDG for “defensive gun use statistics.” My point was that you can’t make a statement like “owning guns causes more harm than it prevents” unless you can back it up with more than just a gut feeling. I also acknowledged the difficulty in getting exact numbers partially because of “conflicting motivations from each side citing their own numbers.”

          More related reading from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_violence_in_the_United_States#Defensive_Gun_Violence

          If we’re going to make factual declarations based solely on feelings then obviously the real problems with guns are caused by evil spirits corrupting our souls because we’ve strayed from God’s path.

  • MuchPineapples@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    With a knife (or other manual weapon) you have to be trained, lucky or prepared to kill even a single person, with a gun any person can shoot a whole school. It’s too much power for some people. Plus you add range to weapons, making it even more deadly and unpredictable (collateral damage, crossfire, etc).

    If you set those cons against the pros of “it’s fun to sometimes target practice” then it’s clear the better option is to ban them, like most countries do. Most people aren’t against the actual mechanical contraption known as guns, they’re against the fear a shooting can happen to them, their loved ones, or other innocents.

    And in terms of protecting yourself from people who do have guns: guess what, in countries where guns are banned 99% of the bad guys also don’t have them.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    If we are being honest, for most people, it’s emotion over anything else. There are plenty of statistics looking at gun ownership rates and crime and suicide. I don’t think many people would disagree with the sentiment that society would be better off if guns had never been invented.

    Disagreements arise on two main points, I think. The first is whether or not the cat is out of the bag, so to speak, on guns. There are allegedly 300 million guns in the US. I have no clue if that’s accurate, but personally, I think only very invasive government action could measurably reduce gun ownership rates. If the average gun owner owns, for example, 3 guns, passing laws or somehow getting them down to 2 guns doesn’t actually change ownership rates. Personally, I don’t know anyone who has gone from being a gun owner to not being a gun owner. With the rise in technology like 3d printing and a general rise in home manufacturing capability, the ability to make your own guns is only going to get easier. Automatic rifles were manufactured before widespread belief in the germ theory disease; they aren’t high technology. I think that is something that countries without legal gun ownership are going to have to reckon with in the not so distant future.

    The second point is whether the right to own guns is worth the harm they cause. As a society, we put up with a bunch of things that do great harm. Cigarettes are a prime example; they kill 15 times more Americans than cars do. Auto manufacturers have more or less forced Americans to buy cars to survive, so we put up with those deaths, but cigarettes arguably provide less “benefit” than guns. Despite this, we’ve basically decided it’s worth allowing tobacco sales. Most people who own guns see the downsides, but think that they are outweighed by the benefits. Many non-owners disagree. This is a philosophical question, so there is not a correct answer.

    There’s also a class component to this, I believe. For many working class Americans, guns are the only appreciating asset they own. Many working class Americans also see gun ownership as a thumb in the eye of the wealthy; it’s seen as one of few things that give power to the working class that they can hold over the wealthy. This is complicated by the fact that politics around gun control are completely flopped around in this country. Gun control is a conservative, right-wing, authoritarian action. Private ownership of firearms by the working class is left wing. Despite this, the political parties in America, who are both right wing, have flopped around on this issue. Your average working class republican voter would not believe that their gun ownership is left-wing solidarity, but it is.

    Lastly, the reason I say that it’s all based on emotion is that every time you hear someone say “common sense gun control”, they are usually making their point on vibes, not evidence. Very little crime in the US is done with “assault weapons”, and no crime is done with assault rifles, yet these categories draw the most concern. There are laws aimed at all sorts of cosmetic features. Some laws have even targeted safety features. Suppressors are seen as a necessary courtesy in some countries, but in America, they are difficult or impossible to get.

    • HessiaNerd@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Most people who own guns see the downsides, but think that they are outweighed by the benefits. Many non-owners disagree. This is a philosophical question, so there is not a correct answer.

      I live in the sticks. I have a mountain lion living close to my house, I’ve seen it many times. We also have coyotes all around and I have small children. I keep my guns secured, I also have trigger locks. It’s not likely I will need to use violence against these neighbors but if I do, I need a gun to survive. This is not philosophy.

      • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        You have no way of knowing the exact threat posed to your kids by that mountain lion. Yeah, you can look up stats on mountain lion attacks, but at the end of the day, those aren’t going to make you feel any better about a mountain lion being around your kids. Having guns in your house is also a risk. Again, though, you can only really look at statistics, and you can’t know how they apply to your specific situation.

        Beyond those risks/benefits, there’s even more intangible ones. What’s the risk/benefit for someone in Eastern Ukraine, or Gaza, or some other current or future occupied region, or victim of a repressive government?

        That’s what I mean about it being philosophical: there’s just no way to quantitatively determine whether it’s good for you to own guns or not. It really just comes down to doing what you think is best

      • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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        8 months ago

        Even in countries with the strongest gun laws farmers/hunters/mountaineers/etc etc can still have their hunting rifles and etc, it’s just that there are rules around it you can’t buy it from the supermarket with your weekly groceries.

      • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        But for the 99% of everyone else who don’t deal with mountain lions and coyotes on a frequent basis, children are being killed every day by guns.

        Your mountain lions aren’t even close to the same level of threat as the millions of people with guns causing thousands of preventable deaths every year. Mountain lions are avoidable. A gun shot isn’t.

        • HessiaNerd@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          So are my children less valuable than other kids? Or is there not a one size fits all approach, no black and white solution?

          If you look at the stats, a majority of gun deaths are suicide (54% is the number I pulled up just now but it fluctuates, I want to say I’ve seen it as high as 60%).

          Rather than focusing on banning ARs, let’s focus on red flag laws. This protects the suicidal as well as the what I think is second biggest category (having a hard time finding stats), victims of domestic violence. Rolling them out in more places, and improving the laws and enforcement where they are.

          Also safe storage laws. If you own a gun and you have a child that will be near that gun, you damn better have it secured at all times. This shouldn’t be controversial.

          • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            So are my children less valuable than other kids?

            Of course that’s not what I mean.

            But everything you describe are just bandaid solutions that won’t solve the problem.

            Getting guns, all guns, out of the hands of citizens will help reduce suicides, protect domestic violence victims, and effectively eliminate the deaths resulting from misuse of firearms because they won’t have them in the first place.

            The exceptions should be certain hunting rifles only if you meet extremely stringent criteria and remain limited to a certain number of round purchases per year. Those requirements could very easily include stipulations about dangerous wildlife in your area.

            • HessiaNerd@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Getting guns, all guns, out of the hands of citizens

              I don’t think this is

              • realistic
              • necessary
              • desirable

              There are about 50k deaths a year due to guns. That is a lot and we should try to prevent as many as we can. But consider this. There are about 300 million guns legally owned. That’s 0.0167% of guns involved in a death.

              Interesting this isnt that different than car statistics ~40k deaths with 260 million cars owned.

              Now no cars without special dispensation doesn’t sound like the worst thing to me, but it also doesn’t sound realistic or all that great without like transporter technology.

  • Delphia@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Because when the constitution was written there were 4 million “Americans” there are now 331 million.

    When the constitution was written, it took 30 seconds to reload a single shot musket that had a maximum effective range of 100 yards. An AR15 can dump a 30 round magazine as fast as you can pull the trigger, be reloaded in 3 seconds, can hit targets out as far as someone can realistically see.

    The problem with the rights is that they no longer function as intended. When they were written 20 civilian men with muskets was not significantly less dangerous than 20 soldiers with muskets, the idea that the people could stand up to a tyranical government was sound. Its not anymore. I dont care how well organised your anti-govt militia is the ATF or FBI could fuck you up without much trouble if you wanted to try them.

    I say this as someone who thinks going shooting is enormously fun, I love the engineering, science and talent involved in it as a pursuit. But those “rights” mean mass shootings of innocent people dont even make the mainstream news half the time.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 months ago

      The problem with the rights is that they no longer function as intended. When they were written 20 civilian men with muskets was not significantly less dangerous than 20 soldiers with muskets, the idea that the people could stand up to a tyranical government was sound. Its not anymore. I dont care how well organised your anti-govt militia is the ATF or FBI could fuck you up without much trouble if you wanted to try them.

      This is actually an argument for why We The People need civilian A-10 Thunderbolt 2s, HIMARS, and Javelins, etc, not an argument for why we shouldn’t have rights anymore.

    • shotgunpulse@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The idea was obviously that the citizens would have the same gear as the government. Many soldiers even bought and brought civilian rifles when the government’s rifles were getting outdated.

      The fact that FBI and the ATF could fuck people up doesn’t mean the people should be disarmed, rather it says those agencies should be dissolved IMO…

    • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Look how with all of our sophisticated technology, we lost the war in Vietnam (and the surrounding countries we did war crimes in), and we lost the war in Afghanistan. Greater technology doesn’t always win, so even the level of arms we can legally obtain could still win a war.

      The other thing to consider is that at the time the constitution was written, a single shot musket was not the pinnacle of weapons technology a private citizen could own. You could have a fully armed warship. It’s not a good argument to lean on the intention of the founding fathers, because at that time, you could privately own a ship capable of leveling a coastal city. Personally, I think their opinion doesn’t matter, anyway, cause they also intended for slavery to exist.

    • Garbanzo@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      the idea that the people could stand up to a tyranical government was sound. Its not anymore. I dont care how well organised your anti-govt militia is the ATF or FBI could fuck you up without much trouble if you wanted to try them.

      The Taliban and the IRA would disagree with that assessment

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      That’s like saying the 1st should be abolished because they didn’t know about the Internet. It’s a terrible argument.

  • AirDevil@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    To preface, I understand it’s part of the US Constitution so I know it’ll never go away completely.

    I’m not a fan of citizens being able to own a tool whose sole purpose is to kill. It’s marketed as defense, but the underlying reason is because a gun is a tool with the power to kill. Guns have become so small and portable that an individual can conceal one and can end people’s lives at will. I’m not comfortable with that power going unchecked.

    I also believe 2A’s original intent is not feasible today. A small group of people with muskets cannot overthrow an oppressive state or local government.

    I understand the sub this is in, but just wanted to offer my sincere 2¢

    • Zeppo@sh.itjust.works
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      Guns are also very effective for threatening people, even if nobody gets shot. There is a legitimate use as a power equalizer for self defense, like if someone breaks into a house and there’s an old dude in a wheelchair with a shotgun, they’ll probably turn around and leave. But also it enables strongarm robberies.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Of course, in this case defense means to kill the attacker before they kill you or greatly injure your body. Technically more accurately the intent is to “stop the threat,” because “still alive but no longer a threat” is an acceptable outcome, but ykwim.

      Also a small group of people with muskets could take on the government when the government also had muskets. The “2a intent” argument isn’t an argument for why rights should be restricted, this is an argument for civilian owned HIMARS and Javelins and all that fun stuff.

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Vietnam/Afghanistan/Iraq all would like a word.

      Also every time a peoples government turns on them, the people are disarmed prior. This is a continuous event in history.

      You also have a very closed minded view of how a revolution works. For whatever reason you seem to think it’ll be the 14 gravy seals fighting…it won’t be. It’ll be gorilla warfare and it’ll be bloody and violent. If we couldn’t control countries that don’t even look or speak like us, how do you think it’ll work out when people who look like you and speak like you are your targets. You also have a large portion of the ground troops who are straight up 2A supporters and wouldn’t be the ones siding with the gov.

      This is all hypothetical anyways, as it’s gotta take a lot more than talk to happen. People need to be hungry, jobless, homeless and not have a ton left to live for. So long as their money still spends at McDonald’s and their iPhones power on. Nothing is going to happen.

      Downvotes don’t do anything on Lemmy…lol

      • Digitalprimate@lemmy.world
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        You’re getting downvoted and to be honest I’m not sure where you stand on the issue, but you are spitting truth about what it takes to take up arms against your own countrymen.

        • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Most people don’t understand the level it takes to get to a civil war, and once you do reach that level, it’s not going to turn out like how anyone thinks it will.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    Besides shootings? You’re kidding right? That’s like asking “why don’t people like cancer? (Except for the chemo and death part)”

  • Skipcast@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    The rest of the world is completely fine without Guns for Everyone™. With that said though it’s kinda too late for the US to reign in on gun availability because there’s already a shitton of guns everywhere so only law abiding people would turn in their guns. (talking out of my ass but it makes sense to me)

    • DABDA@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearms_regulation_in_Switzerland

      Firearms regulation in Switzerland allows the acquisition of semi-automatic, and – with a may-issue permit – fully automatic firearms, by Swiss citizens and foreigners with or without permanent residence. The laws pertaining to the acquisition of firearms in Switzerland are amongst the most liberal in the world.

      There’s also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimated_number_of_civilian_guns_per_capita_by_country showing that while the US has a disproportionate amount of guns it isn’t actually alone in civilian ownership.

      • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        To highlight, you’re only allowed to shoot them at gun ranges and are only allowed to carry them to and from the gun range, stashed away in a bag. You can’t even pop into the grocery shop on the way. And people actually stick with that.

        • themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          And people do go to prison when they don’t stick to that. It’s effectively just like if you were allowed to shoot guns at a range, but you had to leave it there when you’re done.

          • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Also every gun owner I’ve met there seems to agree the rules are sensible. Nobody is complaining they can’t open carry or shoot beer bottles in the woods. And at the ranges themselves safety is the very first thing ok everyone’s mind and it shows. Liberal gun laws can work if the owners are responsible. Also, if citizens are reasonably well off and taken care of, violence in general is less likely. Compare, for example, with stabbings in the UK.

            • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              If we actually focused on our citizens here in the USA, there wouldn’t be the level of gun violence we see. Trying to take away firearms or even tell people when and were they can use them is next level stupid. It’s just going to have more people in prison and create more cycles of harm.

              • Aliendelarge@lemmy.worldM
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                8 months ago

                In addition to your points, Ipretty strongly agree with the various ideas that all of the bans, gun free zones, and other firearm villification just serves to glorify them to those that would do the rest of us harm. Its a terrible feedback loop that especially seems to impact the rare but terrifying mass killings we’ve seen over the years.

  • scoobford@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago
    1. Violent crime. Guns are used for crime a lot. So much so that when you weigh their criminal uses against their criminal uses, it can be easy to decide they aren’t worth it on the macro scale.

    2. Suicide. People who attempt suicide via jumping or something similar very often realize what they’ve done and bounce back. You can’t do that if you’ve shot yourself in the head. While you’d think a suicide is a suicide, a less lethal method of suicide is better for society as a whole, because survivors often get their shit together.

    3. Crazy people. Especially those of us who live in cities encounter unhinged people who just start shit for any or no reason. We want the stakes to be lower, so that I can tell the Karen screaming racial epithets at my neighbor in the middle of the night to go the fuck home and let me sleep, without worrying they’re going to try and murder me.

    4. Accidents happen. Much like “responsible drivers”, " responsible gun owners" are less common than you think, and everyone thinks they are one. This is why institutions usually insist on things like mag safeties, that private owners detest. It’s because statistically, a good number of people are just stupid sometimes.

    5. People are literally just scared of them. They’re dangerous.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    They don’t consider it a right.

    Seriously, that’s what it comes down to. You either believe that the right to keep and bear arms is a human right, or you don’t. A right can not, and should not, be restricted.

    But who decides what is and isn’t a right? Well, in the case of the U.S., it was written into the primary source of law for the country not long after that source was put into action.

    Anything since then is a series of arguments about what that document “means”. So far, the argument that the right to keep and bear arms being a human right rather than a right only of the state has been upheld. That’s called the individual mandate iirc, though there may be other terminology in play.

    Now, I’m not getting into a debate here, I despise rehashing the same bullshit over and over again. There’s a shit ton of good arguments and bad arguments made by people on the two main sides of the issue (and there are actually more than two sides, but the loudest voices end up drowning out others), so you can find those if you really want.

    Being real, most of the hot button issues come down to a group of people believing that something is a right, and others believing it isn’t. Abortion? It’s about the right to body autonomy vs the belief that body autonomy is not a human right that is inviolable. There is a section of those that don’t believe it is a right that believe so because they also believe that the little thing inside has rights that trump the rights of the parent; but there are those that aren’t part of that section that still don’t believe it’s a right and thus can be regulated accordingly.

    I obviously do consider firearms to be essential to a human right, that being the right to defense, what with the whole comment starting with they. That being said, as soon as firearms cease to exist entirely, and/or everyone, including every police force and armed services are disarmed before citizens, I’d be willing to concede that firearms are no longer essential to that right. But the right to arms is a human right, regardless of what form of arms exist. If we went back to archery and swords, those would be the weapons essential to that core right. Which, to me, is the important part, that core right rather than the form that right takes.

    Fwiw, idgaf about lib vs con bullshit. I’m so far left that the typical US liberal thinks I’m dangerous. I’m not far left, but I’m a damn sight further left than the usual people involved in this issue.

    • bi_tux@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      I’m so far left that the typical US liberal thinks I’m dangerous.

      *insert leftwing group* and 2A go like me and beer

    • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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      I agree. It’s also by extension a right to personal protection independent of, not neccesarily against, the government.

      I use to be a volunteer firefighter so us and the local police have worked together on various scenes and though we aren’t super tight I feel I can trust them to do their duties as cops safely and effectively.

      That said I know what the realistic response times are. I also know that there have been break ins in the neighborhood, including attempts to get into my home. So among other basic security measures I have guns to protect my family and I during the time between a 911 call being made and the cops arriving. I also carry when I can. It’s not about being macho.

  • BaldProphet@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    Honestly, I think it’s mostly fear. There are practical reasons to own a gun and be familiar with its use and maintenance, but there are people who have varying levels of fear of weapons on a spectrum from simple discomfort to full on hoplophobia. The same people seem to be generally uncomfortable with being responsible for their own safety, and prefer to live in areas where government agencies are at hand to deal with any kinds of emergencies they may have.

    It’s the “don’t do this, get an adult” mentality extending into adulthood. Once you’re an adult, the next level of authority to shunt personal responsibility onto is the government.

    • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Honestly, I think it’s mostly fear.

      Rightly so, because you could get shot just for coming across some idiot who’s having a bad day.

      There are no “practical” uses for a gun that come up often enough in people’s lives to outnumber the needless death from misuse, or purposeful murder.

      Since 2007, there have been less than 500 justifiable homicides per year in the US. And that includes all means of defense. So it’s a myth that gun owners are somehow more responsible for their own safety. People just aren’t using guns for self defense. You know what they are using them for? Murder.

      So the people who defend gun ownership are the ones shunting personal responsibility to protect themselves and their communities.

      https://www.statista.com/statistics/251894/number-of-justifiable-homicides-in-the-us/

      • Jackie's Fridge@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Along the lines of “fear” I would also add that ubiquitous gun ownership is a large reason for the militarisation and overzealous violence in American police departments. Since anybody could be bristling with guns, the police approach many situations armed for the worst. This makes nobody safer.

        • BaldProphet@kbin.social
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          8 months ago

          Anybody could be bristling with guns since long before the militarization of police in America.

      • BaldProphet@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Nah, man. The police have no obligation to protect me, and even if they did, they can’t get to me fast enough.

        Private weapon ownership (of guns or any other weapons) is inseparable from the human right of self-defense.

  • grayman@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    In no particular order…

    1. Many men are total pussies and would never consider self defense to the point of killing someone something they would do.
    2. Somewhat contradictally, people don’t trust themselves with a gun, so therefore, they don’t trust others with guns.
    3. Feminism. Feminism raises mothering to a societal level. Women want everyone to be protected and safe via the a motherly govt overlord. Women intrinsically desire equal outcome. That requires communism. So any means to achieve that. Like authoritarianism.
    4. The rise of Marxism and authoritarianism. Many people want to be told what to do. That only works on a broad scale if the people who refuse are unarmed.
    5. Ignorance. Cognitive dissonance. Narcissism. Lack of critical thinking skills. Inability to set feelings aside and consider things logically.
    6. Brainwashing. There’s about 3 generations that have grown up with commie public schools telling them guns are bad. I’ve converted quite a few democrats from gun fear to fun by just taking them shooting and covering the $40 worth of ammo they use up.
    • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍@midwest.social
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      8 months ago

      OK. There’s no way you’re not a troll, but (2), I take issue with. I own guns and am pro gun control, and (2) is bullshit because I’m the only person I trust with one. The rest of you crayon-eating assholes, I wouldn’t trust with scissors.

      I also take issue with (5), because it’s only dumb bastards who are unable to understand basic math enough to notice that, globally, murder rates are highly correlated with firearm (and especially, handgun) ownership.

      (6) assumes that a reasoned position is a result of fear, which is because that’s how you react to the world, and so believe this is true for everyone. It’s ok; it’s a common failing of the human character, but you’re in luck, because it’s easy to mature out of.

      I own guns, but if we get reasonable gun control laws in this country, I’ll be OK with it because all y’all obviously don’t know your ass from your elbow and keep shooting each other. I’ll be ok also because I haven’t made guns my identity, and I have other hobbies.

      You gave the troll away when you threw feminism in there. That was too over-the-top baiting, and it came out of nowhere. However, the dig at Marxism was pretty well played, given how many far-left there are on Lemmy. That was chef’s kiss.

      • bi_tux@lemmy.worldOP
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        8 months ago

        I could debate this with you, but you don’t even understand the mastermind above, because you’re an evil freedom hating commie

      • grayman@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        You exemplify #5 and are apparently a boot licker since you support gun control. Probably red flag laws too! Disgusting!

        If you understood this basic math you speak of, you’d know that literally no govt ever lays down arms next to it’s citizens. Gun control is control of the populace. Nothing less. How can you say with a straight face that you support only the govt having firearms when the last 100 years have shown humanity what happens when govt has too much power. Every country that has taken away firearms has had not a decrease in violence but am increase! Are you aware that home invasions are higher after confiscation? Other violence too, but let’s just consider the horror of having armed invaders in your castle, raping and hurting your family.

        I am no troll. I am an absolutist. As recently ruled, illegal immigrants have the same inalienable rights as a citizen to the entirety of the bill of rights. The felon that has served his time and deemed safe to release into society absolutely gains all his rights upon release.

        You claim we - who is we? The liberal (in the true sense of the word) gun owner? - keep killing each other. Who is killing whom? The gangs and the criminals. So you DEMAND that the innocent be disarmed? How stupid! How can you claim logic and reason yet make such a statement! Only a fool argues that sheep remove their teeth when the wolf bites!

        And feminism is anti liberal (again, the true sense of the word). Feminism is the worship and the belief of superiority of one sex over another. How bigoted and ignorant. Feminism destroys the family unit, peaceful society, and is antithetical to biological predispositions that allow man and woman live in peace and happiness with one another. I can already see your pathetic response that women deserve equal rights to men. Please tell me this: What right does a man have today that a woman does not?

        If I am a troll, it is because I mistook this sub for one where gun rights are respected. I see that some believe this is the place to complain about guns, not support them. How sad and pathetic.

        I wish you no harm. Only that you are cleansed of this brainwashed set of ideals that do nothing to support the ideal that all men (and women - as I’m sure you don’t understand English grammar enough to know that means both sexes) are allowed to defend themselves any way necessary to preserve their life and liberty.

        • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍@midwest.social
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          8 months ago

          It’s a sub for people who are interested in guns, whether they own them or not. What it isn’t is a crack-job 2A extremist circle-jerk. Plenty of folks here support the 2nd amendment. Some, like me, think it’s an anachronism from a time when a civilian uprising had a snowball’s chance in hell against our modern military. Hell, you don’t have a chance against our paramilitarized police force, much less any branch of our armed forces. But, still, the amendment is there, and we have to work with that, and the consequences of “militias” trying to kidnap or assasinate elected officials. Which I’m sure is what the founding fathers intended when they added that amendment 🙄

          • grayman@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Again, the ignorance here is astounding. Read history. Farmers have defeated militaries. Guerillas are still an effective force against militaries. Are you aware what’s going on in Asia with printed plastic guns?

            By your logic, it’s normal to have a car sub filled with r/fuckcars users that like the artistic look of cars. How stupid.