Moth_Monk said:
Yep this thread had to get posted.
Although it only occurred to me after reading some of the pro-gun Americans responses in comments sections/threads to you-know-what
The question is this: I live in the UK, where firearms are illegal, even the police do not have them, and the rate of gun crime is SIGNIFICANTLY lower than gun crime in the US. I have not even heard what a gun shot sounds like outside of TV and video games - think of that. With this being a fact, how can you people who are pro-guns; that don't like the idea of guns being made illegal, even rationalise why it would be a bad thing?
The only reason for thinking guns are needed, as far as I can tell, is if you think you need to kill somebody for some reason with them.
Captcha: hunky-dory
I <3 Captcha's irony.
I don't personally believe that completely banning guns is necessary, so much as creating MUCH harsher regulations regarding them is.
I hate the usual "People need guns to defend themselves from evil dudes" line of justification, as it is laughably overused and over-idealized these days. For example, I'm glad no one in that Colorado theater had a gun, or tried to defend themselves with it if they did. Can you imagine how many more people would have died if you had two or three people shooting at each other in a dark, smoke-filled theater full of confused, screaming, panicking people?
However... a person saving their own life by using a self-defense weapon does happen occasionally, when the right circumstances line up, and banning guns altogether would result in at least a few deaths that might have been prevented otherwise.
Really though, the amount of leniency allowed in US gun-ownership laws has gotten to the point of being ludicrous. NO civilian-legal handgun needs to hold more than 6 rounds (I only set it that high because so many people own revolvers). I believe civilian shotgun laws limit it to 3 shells (and if not, they should), which is alright I suppose. Hunting rifles and assault rifles need a hard ammo-limit too. Something like 3 to 6 rounds. The fact is, most shooters get taken down, or start to run themselves, when they blow through their initial ammo, as they are fairly vulnerable during a reload cycle. Honestly, I'd even support some sort of mechanism made mandatory on all civilian magazines that makes them harder to reload. Like a latch you'd have to flip or something. Just something that keeps it from being a seamless one-step process.
There is no sane justification for 30-round assault rifle clips to be civilian legal. There's no sane justification for 30-round extended pistol clips to be civilian legal.
The 2nd amendment as a blanket statement for unlimited gun-rights is just silly these days. Its original purpose was to allow the people of the US to form militias and to be able to rebel if a government got out of hand. That is laughable these days, in the age of missile-spewing UAV's, AC-130 gunships, M1 Abrams MBT's and various other armored vehicles. All the civilian-legal guns in the country could not do a thing, and any armed insurrection would be crushed unless it had large-scale military backing. The 2nd amendment's original purpose is now impossible, and bringing that purpose up as justification is just silly (some people actually do bring up the "If we don't have guns, how can we protect ourselves from/potentially overthrow the government?" argument still).
But, I've rambled long enough. While I am against banning guns altogether (partly due to personal views, and because of the legal, cultural and logistical nightmare it would be to do so in the current US), I do feel that serious and hard-hitting gun-ownership reform is very important. You can own a pistol, that's fine, but you don't need a 30-round extended clip. You can own an AR-15, but you don't need a 30-round magazine to hunt deer.
Also, repeal "Stand your ground" nation-wide, because seriously, fuck that law. It's stupid, and broad, and easily abused if people actually know the letter of it.