Muhaddin Mire, a paranoid schizophrenic, claiming to be a Muslim terrorist, tried to behead Lyle Zimmerman, a Jewish American who has lived in Britain for 15 years, on the London tube on December 5th. last year. Zimmerman believes our gun control saved his life. So when will other Americans get the message on gun control? http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/uk/kicked-unconscious-his-head-almost-cut-off-it-s-bizarre-how-untraumatised-i-feel-1.2720270 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-36944250
Be prepared for responses with lots of heat and very little light.
Unfortunately, the question of the proper role of firearms in civil society is not one where the evidence is unequivocal. There are heavily-armed dangerous societies (e.g. Somalia), there are heavily-armed safe socities (e.g. Switzerland), there are lightly-armed safe socities (e.g. Japan), and there are lightly-armed dangerous socities (much of Central America).
Given how inconsistent the data is, one can find trends and correlations to support almost any claim on the subject.
Whenever one takes a position which favors the infringement of an individual's human rights, one should expect 'flack.' For most of us 'gun nuts (actually, I own no firearms),' this is an issue of principle: does a person have the right to defend him/herself by whatever means may be used against him/her by an attacker? I contend that s/he does. YMMV.
I applaud your courage, though, for addressing the issue. :-D
One example doesn't prove a thing. That is not relatable on a grand scale, good story as it may be.
I happen to be in favor of gun control, but not because of one person's experience. I think if we cannot see the writing on the wall by now, we will just shoot ourselves into oblivion.
I happen to be in favor of gun control, too! I think our leaders should do precisely that: lead by example. When government disarms itself, the citizens, too, shall disarm.
Until then, 'gun control' should mean controlling one's gun(s).
Show me gun control that affects criminals, not law abiding citizens.
@Nimitz -- And pre-US-invasion Iraq had in AK-47 in every household. It was still a totalitarian dictatorship.
The evidence of history strongly suggests armed civilians can only withstand the power of established government armies if one or both of the following happens:
A) At least part of the government military joins the rebel side
B) The rebels are financed/equipped by an outside government who perceives its geopolitical interests are served by supporting the rebellion.
Otherwise, the record of governments squashing rebellions like bugs (especially in the era of the military-industiral complex) is extremely lopsided.
Well, that is just pie-in-the-sky talk. Sure that would be so "nice" and all, but there is a problem. Who is going to go first?
By that logic, you favor getting rid of laws against speeding, robbing liquor stores, falsifying tax returns, murdering your neighbor, etc. because there isn't 100% compliance with those laws either, right?
I support private ownership of firearms (within what I consider a reasonable framework), but the "criminals don't obey gun laws" argument used to oppose any incremental change in the legal framework is simply bogus.
Yes. It comes down to the people and society in a given area that make it good or bad.
The US is not an island. Open borders on both north and south. Anyone can bring truck loads of guns and drugs into the US because there are to many miles of border to watch effectively.
Also, we have rights that the government does not have the power to take away. If they could they would not be rights.
Good and evil reside with the individual and society as a whole based on how we raise our young.