pbi said:
But, acknowledging that fact, I would not abandon any of those instruments completely, just because it doesn't act as a panacea. So, I restate my support for reasonable restriction on firearms owners.
What do you consider to be a "reasonable restriction"?
pbi said:
But I think it is also true that it is an inanimate object which has huge potential power to kill and injure people, and is a favourite choice of people who want to do that quickly and effectively, or at a distance, or at a rapid rate.
Oklahoma City. 19 April 1995. Alfred P Murrah Federal Building. Rental truck, 7000 pounds of stolen and home-made explosive and acetylene tanks. 168 dead, 680 injured. 325 buildings destroyed or damaged. 86 cars destroyed or damaged, mainly burnt. Approx US$652 million total damage.
New York City, Washington DC, Shanksville Pennsylvania. 11 September 2001. World Trade Centre, Pentagon, and field. Boxcutters and four airliners. 2996 dead, over 6000 injured. Approx US$10 billion total damage.
Kunming, China. 1 March 2014. Kunming Railway Station. Eight attackers with knives. 31 dead (plus 4 attackers killed by police), over 140 injured.
Nice. 14 July 2016. Truck. 86 dead, not including the lowlife driver, and 458 injured over 1.7 kilometres.
No gun? No problem...
A determined and imaginative attacker will find a way, and will be hard to detect (or police will ignore signs and warnings), and hard to stop.
Many mass-murderers plan extensively and prepare in detail, often over a very long time.
pbi said:
On the other hand, screaming just as loudly, are those who apparently think that if you support some kind of gun control you must be an unpatriotic, latte-sipping, bicycle riding snowflake progressive who serves the Deep State and eats tofu. Also BS, as I know.
Extremists aside, people are tired of being scapegoated, attacked by self-serving/wilfully ignorant politicians, media, and "celebrities" and expected to suffer greater and greater restrictions and confiscations that benefit nobody, other than criminals whose jobs become safer.
The people being scapegoated are the most law-abiding segment of society. The homicide rate for licensed firearms owners in Canada is one-third that of the overall rate, yet we are the principle target of the law. We must, among other things, report a change of address to the police within thirty days or face criminal charges (max two-year sentence, if I remember correctly). There are a couple of hundred people with firearms bans who are
not so tracked.
https://crimeresearch.org/2015/02/comparing-conviction-rates-between-police-and-concealed-carry-permit-holders/ shows that, between 2005 and 2007, the Texan police conviction rate for felonies and misdemeanours was ten times that of Concealed Carry Permit holders, and the rate of convictions for firearms violations was seven times higher. There are some links down the left-hand side that are also worth reading.
https://www.theblaze.com/news/2016/01/28/comedian-goes-undercover-to-test-out-the-gun-show-loophole-watch-how-gun-sellers-react-to-requests
Comedian Goes Undercover to Test Out the ‘Gun Show Loophole’ - Watch How Gun Sellers React to Requests
"With the debate over gun control in America raging on fiercer than ever, conservative pundit and comedian Steven Crowder (Born in Montreal, by the way) decided he would conduct an experiment to see if it really is as easy to purchase automatic weapons as some liberal politicians and celebrities have claimed.
"Crowder visited several weapon vendors at a gun show and attempted to buy a gun without a license, resulting in a hilarious failure that he recorded on a hidden camera. He then featured the undercover stunt on his web-based series Louder With Crowder."
pbi said:
One more question: what are the relative rates of gun related homicides in countries which have more restrictive regulations such as Canada, the UK, Australia or some Western European countries? And can gun control be credited with any effect on those figures, or are other factors involved?
Rates vary between countries for many reasons, generally societal/historical. "Gun control" is really not a factor. In some cases, homicide and other violence rates increase slightly when more restrictions are introduced. US experience shows that the introduction of concealed carry and "shall-issue" laws leads to reductions in all violent crime categories. John Lott's book "More Guns, Less Crime" represents the most thorough study into those effects and has been updated since its initial publication. There's a good interview with him at http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/493636.html that explains a lot about his research.
Many studies are bogus, either intentionally or through using flawed methods and/or data. Many are funded by antigun groups or conducted by people who just do not understand firearms and crime.
Be wary of studies that talk about "gun deaths" and "gun suicides", etcetera. Those terms are intentionally misleading. If a drop in "gun deaths" coincides with increased restrictions (and correlation does not equal causation; many other factors must be taken into account but are often not), other means of homicide or suicide may have been substituted. One must look at
overall homicide and suicide rates. If those remain the same, then there has been no real effect. If all forms of homicide and suicide are following the same trend (which tends to be moving downward, with some blips, in most developed countries), then there has been no real effect. Dead is dead, regardless of the implement used.
Also beware of short timelines. One must look at trends over several decades. There have been graphs put out by antigun groups showing declines following impositions of restrictions, with the date of the imposition as the start of the graph. The several years of decline previous to the date of imposition are omitted. Were they included, it would be obvious that the post-imposition rate was simply following the same natural downwards trend that it would had nothing been done.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/12/08/for-gun-control-supporters-japans-high-s
For Gun Control Supporters, Japan's High Suicide Rate Is Much Less Interesting Than Its Low Homicide Rate
"Based on data from the World Health Organization, Japan's suicide rate last year was 18.8 per 100,000, compared to 12.4 per 100,000 for the United States. National government data show an even bigger gap: 20.1 vs. 12.6. If "there is good reason why gun restrictions would prevent suicides" (as opposed to merely encouraging the substitution of one method for another), why is Japan's suicide rate so high? It's the sort of question you'd expect a journalist to address (or at least mention) if he were honestly interested in exploring the consequences of gun control, as opposed to making a case for it by cherry-picking the most helpful data."
While this is a valid comparison, it is not quite that simple (nothing ever is when examining firearms legislation and its effects). Japanese police have some philosophical differences from their western counterparts. There is a resistance to conducting autopsies, and failure to identify and apprehend a murderer is dishonorable. Many homicides are, therefore, attributed to suicide, which does not have the same stigma in Japan as it does here. The Japanese suicide rate is indubitably much higher than the US one (and Canada's, which used to be slightly higher than the US one; I've not checked for a while, though), but it does not appear possible to determine the precise rate.
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2018/02/swiss-guns/553448/
The Swiss Have Liberal Gun Laws, Too
But they also have fewer gun-related deaths than the U.S.
"The country’s cultural attachment to firearms resembles America’s in some ways, though it has no constitutional right to bear arms - it has the third-highest rate of private gun ownership in the world, behind the United States and Yemen. Yet Switzerland has a low rate of gun crime, and hasn't seen a mass shooting since 2001..."
I could comment on this article in some detail, as there are some imprecise statements within, but it is not a bad article. Note that it talks about "gun crime". Overall rates are much more important and indicative of reality. Switzerland has much lower rates of all violent crimes regardless of means. Rates differ between native Swiss and recent immigrants from certain areas as well.
http://reason.com/archives/2016/03/22/australias-gun-buyback-created-a-violent
Australia’s Gun 'Buyback' Created a Violent Firearms Black Market. Why Should the U.S. Do the Same?
"Clinton and Obama tout a 1996 "gun buyback" that was actually a compensated confiscation of self-loading rifles, self-loading shotguns, and pump-action shotguns in response to the Port Arthur mass shooting. The seizure took around 650,000 firearms out of civilian hands and tightened the rules on legal acquisition and ownership of weapons going forward.
"As a result, concluded one academic assessment, "Suicide rates did not fall, though there was a shift toward less use of guns, continuing a very long-term decline. Homicides continued a modest decline; taking into account the one-time effect of the Port Arthur massacre itself, the share of murders committed with firearms declined sharply. Other violent crime, such as armed robbery, continued to increase, but again with fewer incidents that involved firearms."
"A largely peaceful country remained peaceful, with alternative weapons sometimes adopted in place of guns by those who weren't so well-intentioned.
"What the law couldn't do - what prohibitions can never accomplish - was eliminate demand for what was forbidden. And demand has an inescapable habit of generating sources of supply. If that demand can't be legally satisfied, it will be met through black market channels."
"In Australia, part of the supply of banned firearms comes from defiance of the original prohibition. The Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia estimates compliance with the "buyback" at 19 percent."
"Other researchers agree. In a white paper on the results of gun control efforts around the world, Franz Csaszar, a professor of criminology at the University of Vienna, Austria, gives examples of large-scale non-compliance with the ban. He points out, "In Australia it is estimated that only about 20% of all banned self-loading rifles have been given up to the authorities."
"But that defiance was mostly on the part of peaceful civilians who just didn't want to bend their knees to politicians, and it was 20 years ago. What about the bad actors supposedly targeted for disarmament by the government?"
Australia has no adjoining country that has a high rate of firearms ownership, yet still has a smuggling problem. There was, and remains, a very high non-compliance rate with Canada's firearms legislation as well. Drug - especially marijuana - prohibitions may or may not be more ignored.
Prior to Trudeau I's legislation of 1978, there were several estimates, by varied means (import/export numbers, ratio of restricted to non-restricted firearms purchased compared to the number of restricted firearms in the registry), that put the number of privately-owned firearms somewhere between fifteen to twenty-five million and the number of owners between five and seven million. Those numbers would have been expected to increase between then and the Chretien/Rock legislation of 1995, yet only seven million firearms were entered into that registry, and there are just over two million licensed firearms owners today.
https://cssa-cila.org/rights/ten-myths-of-the-long-gun-registry/
A very thorough Australian study. Methods are all laid out:
http://melbourneinstitute.unimelb.edu.au/downloads/working_paper_series/wp2008n17.pdf
"The 1996-97 National Firearms Agreement (NFA) in Australia introduced strict gun laws, primarily as a reaction to the mass shooting in Port Arthur, Tasmania in 1996, where 35 people were killed. Despite the fact that several researchers using the same data have examined the impact of the NFA on firearm deaths, a consensus does not appear to have been reached. In this paper, we re-analyze the same data on firearm deaths used in previous research, using tests for unknown structural breaks as a means to identifying impacts of the NFA. The results of these tests suggest that the NFA did not have any large effects on reducing firearm homicide or suicide rates."