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RE: Come and Take It!

in MemeHive2 years ago (edited)

Many deadly poisons are (or can be made by mixing) household chemicals. Fertilizer has been used to make bombs. Black powder can be made at home.

Guns are not "weapons of war" by default. The obstacle erected to prevent people from buying guns do not promote safety. Crime does not correlate with firearm ownership rates or types of firearms available.

Appeals to fear and popularity are irrational. Do you know what the real trend has been in violent crime over the past 35 years? It was dropping before the Clinton gun ban in the 90s. It continued to drop after Bush allowed that law to end per its sunset clause. It has dropped as states relaxed restrictions on carry. It remains high in two key areas: 1. impoverished neighborhoods with gangs and a black market in drugs, and 2. "gun-free zones."

No misdeeds by others can ever justify anyone infringing on peaceful people. Should crypto or cash be banned because they are "preferred by criminals"? No. Same for firearms, even machine guns. "But what about the children" is the exact same argument used by these book-banning Karens who prefer state violence as a solution to their fears.

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He's not going to listen. He's just going to keep brow-beating you until you make some kind of concession. I thought he was a useful idiot, but now, I'm starting to think that he's just another narcissistic moral busybody. Arguing with such people usually feels like this after a while:

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I'm absolutely willing to listen.

I totally understand why people would want to own single shot rifles for hunting, but I don't understand why someone might need to own a firearm that can fire 60 rounds a minute.... especially now that we know so many innocent children have died in school shootings to those types of weapons.

If there is a real reason why citizens need those weapons that is more important than the lives of those school children I'd love to hear it.

Your failure to understand is irrelevant. Your are building a false choice when you present either owning modern firearms or protecting children. You are also deliberately ignoring the violence necessary to enforce these arbitrary edicts and the dearth of evidence that firearm freedom is the root cause of violence in society.

Why are your fears more important than my liberty? Why do you advocate government violence against peaceful people as a solution to your fear?

He completely missed the point of my arguments as well. When I informed him that countries which restrict access to firearms tend to have a lot of knife crime, he deflected to "gUnS dO mOrE dAmAgE tHaN kNiVeS."

When I informed him that his statistics are lies by omission, he said they weren't misleading.

When I informed him that the majority of gun crime in the US is committed with handguns, he expressed support for banning them as well, not just semi-automatic rifles. Apparently he really liked my brief explanation of Russian gun laws, and fully supports implementing them in the US. I don't. Russian gun laws are a wee bit restrictive IMO, but I could at least live with them, unlike British or German gun laws.

Are more children killed by knives in Japan or England than by firearms in the USA?

Obviously knife crime will rise in the USA if common sense gun regulations were introduced, but I imagine the overall numbers of school children affected by violence would be lower. Is that not a fair assumption?

That assumption is not remotely fair, and you basically admitted that your solution is bollocks anyway: "just keep banning implements until citizens have nothing left to kill each other with, and don't ever address why they want to kill each other in the first place... because that's hard, banning stuff is easy."

I'll put it this way: I hate football, and I hate football hooliganism even more. Should we ban football to stop football hooliganism, or should we figure out the underlying reason that football fans are so truculent?

Look, if pouring resources into mental health services, police reform, low-income communities, etc all reduce gun violence in America, without having to change any gun laws, then great. Let's get it done. Whatever it takes to prevent so many children dying needlessly.

The problem is that the solutions never seem to get implemented either. No one wants to pay higher taxes, or decrease military spending, to pay for those services.

So yes, I'd like to see:

  • Common Sense Gun Regulations
  • Increased spending in Mental Health services
  • Police Reform
  • Increase resources into underserved communities

to help decrease the violence in the United States.

The quickest win, to me, is the gun regulations. It would likely have an immediate positive effect, where the other solutions may take years, decades or generations to really improve. Very happy to be wrong on that.

One of the stats often included in "gun death" statistics is suicide. Japan has a far higher suicide rate than the US despite the absence of guns. You can't legislate away the root problem.

That's not correct:

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In your original post you treated banning books, guns and weed as equally insane. I agree that banning books and weed doesn't solve many problems, and is more likely to cause more problems in society.

My objection to your statement is that guns are in a very different category, and that common sense gun regulations would reduce problems like school shootings. I'm not advocating for banning guns at all... but I do think something needs to change to solve the uniquely American problem of school shootings. I think the real solution is a number of things, including increased mental health services and resources for underserved communities, and I'm willing to be convinced otherwise, but I haven't seen anything yet that leads me to believe that common sense gun regulations would not decrease school shootings in the USA.

I don't advocate for government violence against peaceful people.

Is a child in the United States of America more likely to be killed by a firearm wielded by a US citizen... or by government violence?

Aight, Ima post this again:
gun monopoly.webp

Also, have you ever heard of the "public school to prison pipeline"?

When Australia banned semi-automatic rifles and handguns in 1996... how many people were killed in that process? Was it more than the 35 dead and 18 injured massacre that prompted the regulations?

I have heard of the public school to prison pipeline. The USA needs to do a lot more to help its population avoid poverty. The USA is the world's richest country but for a huge slice of its population the opportunities are bleak. I would love the USA to put more resources into helping those communities. It would likely lift the economy of the entire country.

What are the leading causes of death of children in the United States of America?

It's not poison. It's not bombs either.

At what point is the "cure" (guns) for "government violence" worse than the disease (children being killed by firearms)?

What would it take to change your mind on gun regulations in the US? What percentage of school children affected by gun violence will it honestly take to change your mind on this? 100%?

People who want common sense gun regulation and people who want to ban books are not making the same argument. The people who want regulations on guns are trying to solve the very real problem of children being shot in classrooms. Too many children are being murdered in their classrooms in the USA. That is a real problem that requires a solution.

Book banning is just religious people trying to enforce their views on others. They are very different arguments... the similarity is that children are involved in both scenarios.

How many "firearm-related deaths" are suicide or gang violence as opposed to school shootings? How does a ban address the root problem? How many instances of war, genocide, and police brutality will it take for you to change your mind about governmental legitimacy? We are facing a mental health crisis and a police state crisis. Blaming guns and demanding new laws is scapegoating, not taking serious responsibility. Your faith in political solutions is religious.

Honestly, I think there is a ton of work to be done in the USA to solve the violence affecting children.

I would absolutely love to see more resources devoted to mental health services, to housing, to solving rampart drug-use, etc. I absolutely want to see far more accountability for police in the United States. Police are absolutely a huge problem in this country, especially in their actions towards underserved communities.

If an increase in mental health services decreased gun violence in the United States, great, amazing, let's do it. If putting more resources into communities reduced violence, then awesome. I'm all for that.

To me, common sense gun regulations are part of the overall solution, and I might be wrong here, but they also seem like the easily place to start... the quickest win as it were, especially with buyback schemes that have been successful in other countries.

There is a problem with the amount of gun violence in the USA that I think needs to be solved.

Right, now you're starting to get it. The problem, however, is that the quick and easy solution is rarely the best.

First of all, judging by the rates of violent crime in your own country, I think it's safe to assume that the 1996 gun buyback didn't actually do anything. I sincerely doubt that gun buybacks in general are actually effective, even if the violent crime rate decreased afterwards. Correlation does not equal cause.

Second, the problems usually start in the public school system, which is why I mentioned the "public school to prison pipeline," in reference to the fact that the Prussian model (which American schools are based on) is an absolute failure, and @jacobtothe could explain why if you don't already know, because I can't be arsed to explain at the moment. I was spared from that experience, fortunately, otherwise I may very well have turned into a murderous psychopath... okay slight exaggeration there, but maybe you see my point.

Third, consider what I told you about the average school shooter, and bear in mind that not only are these (usually) boys abused at school, they are also neglected at home. Parents who don't want to raise their children stick them in public school and don't help them with their problems. Some people shouldn't be parents, simple as, but I don't think the government should be making the determination of who can or cannot be a parent; as before, Russia has this problem too, as @taliakerch routinely mentions.

Common sense gun regulations are part of the solution though.

Australia has 3 firearm murders per 1,000,000 people and the USA has 32.

I don't think that's correlation. That's because firearms are not easy to get in Australia which is part of those reforms. The buyback scheme got 650,000 firearms out of circulation, that has an effect on violent crime.

The murder rate in Australia is 1.3 per 100,000 people and in the US it's 5.

There are obviously a whole lot of factors that contribute to this. The Australian tax rate is really high, and a lot goes into services for mental health and low-income communities, but one of those factors is the inaccessibility of handguns and semi-automatic rifles.

The problem isn't with public schooling per se... it's with the resources that go into low-income areas. Lots of public schools have minimal violence, but when you have entire communities with very little opportunity, then violence increases.

Absolutely agree with your third point. The introduction of abortion laws and the outlawing of lead paint in the US had a significant impact on lowering crime 20 years later. The US is a great case study on this because the different states enacted different laws at different times so you can see the actual causation.

Hopefully reducing neglected children is something that countries and states get better at over time with family planning and health services... but if there are children that are neglected, you definitely don't want them to have easy access to high-powered weapons.

Judging by your reaction to my explanation of Russian gun laws, I'd say you call those "common sense," so what does the following data tell you?

From 1990 until 2022, the "intentional homicide rate" (which is different from "murder rate" for strictly legalistic reasons) in Russia spiked from 14 to 33 per 100,000 people in 1994, then dipped down to 23 in 1998 before going back up and spiking again at 31 in 2002, and it has declined every single year since then. According to the Russian government (NOT a reliable source of information), the murder rate in 2022 was 3.7 per 100,000 people. However, according to independent studies, it was 12 per 100,000 people back in 2014 (the most recent year I was able to get an independent study from), at a time when the Russian government reported only 8 per 100,000 people. In other words, despite Russia's gun restrictions and relatively low rate of firearm ownership (approximately 9%), the murder rate is either comparable to or roughly double that of the US. The only source of information in English that contradicts the trend and reports an increase in 2022 is a single article in The Moscow Times, which claimed that Kommersant reported 296 additional murder cases from 2021. That same article mentioned that this data conflicts with official reports from the MVD (Ministry of Internal Affairs). Feel free to read the report for yourself, but it's all in Russian.

The last time that the Russian government confiscated civilian-owned weapons en masse was in 1941, not to combat gun crime or put down a rebellion, but to supply the woefully under-equipped Red Army. In fact, to the best of my knowledge (and as before, @apnigrich can fact-check me), Russian gun laws, at least those with respect to what citizens are allowed to own, have remained virtually unchanged since 1924, the year that Iosif Stalin took over.

Granted, comparing data from only three countries isn't statistically significant, but the point is that I'm completely unconvinced that getting rid of guns would do anything for the US, even if people complied with a confiscation order (which is exactly what a mandatory buyback is). Curiously, when looking up this information, the same independent study reported that although the murder rate in Russia is more than double that of the US, the rate of rape is 17 times higher in the US than in Russia. I know that's not relevant, but I thought that was interesting.

17 times?!?!? That is... extreme.
I wonder if means rape happens less often, or if rape is less reported in Russia.

33 people murdered for every 100,000 people is absolutely huge. Very brutal.

This data tells me there are a number of factors at play; poverty, education, police response, resources, access to weapons, etc etc. Common sense gun regulations aren't the only piece of the puzzle... but I do think they are an important piece.

The US does have a precedent for this... in 1994 they passed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act that lasted for 10 years and only applied to the purchase of new semi-automatic rifles during that time (weapons already owned were not affected).

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You can see that when there were fewer mass shootings in the US between 1994 and 2004, and then a rise in mass shootings from 2005 to 2017.

I'm not an expert and I might be completely wrong, maybe common sense gun laws would not impact the USA in any way, but to me this problem seems big enough to try something to solve the problem. If the concern is that common sense gun regulations will do absolutely nothing, then do the same thing as in 1994 and have the act automatically expire... but at the moment the problem just seems to be getting continually worse, so the US needs to try something.

Calling something "common sense" doesn't meant it's actually common sense. That is dishonest debate.

It's not my intention to have dishonest debate. I'm using that phrase because its widely used in the US media. If there's a better phrase to use I'm happy to adopt that.

My use of 'common sense gun regulations' is to differentiate from banning guns. "Banning guns" as a phrase is too confusing... which guns, which accessories, etc etc.

By 'common sense gun regulations' I'm talking about things like permits/licenses, tracking all gun sales, gun registries, requirements for gun lockers, no licenses for people convicted of violent crimes/domestic abuse, etc etc. Instead of writing that all out each time, I used that phrase, but again, it's not my intention to be dishonest, I'm trying to be more exact.