Originally Posted by
Kantian Pragmatist
I agree with you about these statistics in the US, but I reiterate that this phenomenon only occurs because guns are already nearly ubiquitous in our society. It makes no sense to ban something that's nearly everywhere. If it were possible to suddenly remove all the guns held by private citizens (and I don't think it is) things would be very different, and more like they are in the UK and Japan. And gun owners are pushing the position that gun ownership is absolutely permissible. I agree that it is and ought to be permitted in many cases, but I don't think felons should be allowed to own guns, I don't think automatic weapons ought to be allowed to be carried in urban areas, and I don't think private citizens should be allowed to make or buy armor piercing or tracer rounds. But more importantly, I think that these questions ought to be decided at the local level, with sensitivity toward local concerns and cultural beliefs. Guns are not necessary for any aspect of private life that I can think of, including hunting, since you can hunt with a bow, or even knives and swords. Given this lack of necessity, I see no way that anyone can argue that gun ownership or use ought to be absolutely permissible. But at this point, I think the only route to reduce gun violence is through gun safety education and gun exchange programs
Trying to use the insurgency in Iraq to support the notion that private gun ownership would give us the capacity to overthrow our government won't fly either. We've been in Iraq for over 5 years now, with an insurgency for nearly that entire time, and they haven't succeeded in running us out. Indeed, I think everyone here would agree that if the US is determined to stay, that insurgency will never succeed in running us out. That is the only metric we can use to support the notion that, if only citizens were allowed unrestricted access to own and use guns, they would have the power to overthrow their government.
By the way, I do want to state for the record here that I like guns. I like hunting and target shooting. And I'm a pretty good shot, if I do say so myself. I taught my younger brother to shoot, and when he joined the army, he was one bullseye away from some sharpshooting patch, despite the fact that his M16 had broken and he had to load each round by hand. (The test was to get a certain number of target hits in a certain amount of time) But I am also very much aware that a gun is a tool, and it is a tool designed to do just one thing, kill stuff. Just like I don't think everybody should be allowed to own and use any tool they wish, I don't think everybody should be allowed to own and use a gun. I put guns in the same category I put cars, and we require licensing and certification before we let people use cars.