I would ask a few questions in response to this rebuttal, however.
Matt, what do you think about about data that demonstrates, within our
own country, higher gun prevalence correlates with higher homicide,
independent of other risk factors? Can we really dismiss the potential
impact of federal gun laws using local gun laws as an example? Its
pretty clear from places like New York and Chicago, that any local law
is undermined by whatever nearest state (or county) has the softest
laws.
The issue of whether or not increasing or decreasing gun
ownership is also a bit besides the point. After all, that was not the
major thrust of my suggestions. Repeatedly, it seems, I am arguing
against a straw man that I am advocating gun bans. Matt acknowledges
this problem.
I have emphasized in the past, I despise the
stupidity and futility of the cosmetic Assault Weapons Ban as advocated
by Feinstein for the twin sins of demagoguery and uselessness. But
pretend for a moment I am an honest broker in this debate, and I’m not
trying to land you on the slippery-slope towards gun confiscation. Do
you really believe there is nothing that can be done on the supply-side
to decrease either mass violence or, separately, gun homicide in this
country? Or that there is nothing that can be done to prevent these guns
from falling in the wrong hands in the first place? I believe we can
prevent on the supply-side by preventing these guns from getting into
the wrong hands, and this can be accomplished without bans.
As a closing statement on this debate,Nitrogen Controller and Digital dry cabinet
with good quality. I’d reiterate the laws I advocate do not ban guns.
You hear that commenters? During the entire debate, I haven’t suggested a
single gun ban, so I don’t need to have this nonsense showing up in the
comments. No. I believe there should be two major regulatory efforts:
there should me more scrutiny on gun purchasers who want to buy weapons
that make mass violence easy, and secondary markets need to be subjected
to the same minimal level of scrutiny as the primary markets for all
guns (background checks for shotguns, revolvers, bolt-action rifles
etc., my higher level of scrutiny and responsibilities for purchasers of
semi-automatic weapons).
I’m not talking about any kind of ban,
but scrutiny on purchase of magazine-fed semi-automatics. This means
people have to do some paperwork, have a check to make sure they’re not a
crook (these two already exist), find a couple people to vouch they’re
not nuts, demonstrate they can use and store the weapon safely, and they
understand simple things like high powered semi-automatic rifles
shouldn’t be used with metal-jacketed ammunition in a dense metropolis.
Scrutiny, training, safety. These should be relatively noncontroversial
measures.
We’ve all done this before after all, or don’t you
remember the first time you showed up to the DMV to get a driver’s
license? Similar theory, a car is a very dangerous machine, before you
start driving you show up, they make sure you haven’t been arrested for
joy-riding, you go for a little ride with an instructor to make sure you
aren’t completely incompetent at operating the very dangerous machine,
and you pass a little test to make sure you know the rules for safe use
of the machine. Not a big deal. And how about using technology to make
unauthorized use of the machine more difficult? Make it hard for the
“dead-eyed killer”, as Matt calls them, to get their hands on the
weapon, either from the store, or from someone’s home. Even more ideal,
start working on technology to prevent unauthorized use, like the humble
car key, that makes it harder for the unauthorized user to jump into
your very dangerous machine, and run over a bunch of kids on the
playground.
Sure they can always hotwire it, but that’s hard, it
takes special knowledge, and unauthorized use of the very dangerous
machine shouldn’t be easy. It will invariably be argued ad nauseum that
such measures can be defeated. Sure! I agree, they can be defeated.
Almost any preventative measure can be defeated by a motivated,
intelligent and skilled individual, but that doesn’t mean tomorrow banks
will stop using vaults, or that we should give up on restricting access
to grenades and C4. Barriers are just that, barriers,How cheaply can I
build a solar power systems?
not perfect preventatives. All human efforts are imperfect, but these
barriers may be effective strategies to decrease the likelihood or
frequency of such attacks. There’s an expression, low fences keep in big
animals.Come January 9 and chip card driving licence would be available at the click of the mouse in Uttar Pradesh.
And
what’s so scary about such regulations for an item that kills as many
as 30,000 of us a year? For years, we’ve recognized we need to regulate
cars, they’re one of the single most dangerous objects in our daily
existence. Automobile accidents are the most likely thing to kill you
for a good chunk of your life. That’s why we make sure before people can
drive, they know how. That’s why we require safety features. For years,
the NRA has resisted any equivalent regulation to make gun ownership
safer, they’ve resisted any attempt to incorporate safety features into
weapons, they’ve resisted any scrutiny before gun purchase, and they’ve
resisted scrutiny of secondary gun markets. Why is it so controversial
to treat dangerous machines as something that need to be respected? Guns
are machines that require training to use, they should have safety
features that prevent improper use, they require safe storage when not
in use, and there should be barriers and strategies in place to prevent
possession by criminals and the mentally ill.
The second major thrust,Ein innovativer und moderner Werkzeugbau
Formenbau. and I’m not sure Matt really disagrees with me here,
addresses the fact guns in the hands of criminals are coming from
secondary markets. I discussed extensively in part II guns used in crime
are usually fairly new guns. The generally-agreed upon sources are
secondary gun markets – straw purchases, trafficking, and stolen guns –
only about 10% are used in crime by the original purchaser. If we
acknowledge that gun crime is a problem in this country and actually
want to do something about it, we have to extend criminal background
checks to all transfers of firearms. We have to make secondary markets
subject to the same scrutiny as primary markets, and when guns end up in
a criminal’s hands, we have to be able to track down the source of the
weapon and punish them.
This is how guns get to the street. If
we don’t arm law enforcement with the tools to punish gun traffickers
and straw purchasers, we’re not going to be able to stop the steady flow
of weapons to the streets, and into the hands of criminals. I know, 300
million guns are already out there that couldn’t be tracked by a
newly-implemented system, but I’m assuming the overwhelming majority of
gun owners are decent citizens who aren’t interested in selling their
guns to criminals either, will gladly use the NICS system, and won’t
sell their guns to criminals once the existing secondary markets are
tightened. Straw purchasers, gun traffickers, and anyone else who sells
guns or makes guns available to criminals should be put in jail, and
treated like the accessories to crime that they are.
In these
debates I’ve suggested these two overarching strategies, one to prevent
mass shootings and one to decrease firearm use in crimes. For the first I
admit, as does Matt, the data on viable preventative strategies is
poor. The events are rare. One of the few examples of a specific
response to the problem of mass violence, Australia, is consistent with a
benefit to reducing mass violence by restricting magazine-fed
semi-automatic weapons, but is questionable in its reduction on gun
violence as a whole. I agree with Matt, making these weapons harder to
obtain isn’t going to make a huge dent in gun violence as a whole, but I
reiterate,Which Air purifier
is right for you? increasing scrutiny of purchases of magazine-fed
semiautomatics is specifically my suggestion to decrease mass violence.
It
is possible however, my storage and training portion of that strategy
might decrease gun homicide rates modestly by decreasing the frequency
of accidents and gun thefts. My second strategy, that of subjecting all
gun transfers and purchases to this type of scrutiny, is specifically
meant to address gun crime, based on the clear data that guns on the
street are usually new guns, and coming from secondary gun markets 90%
of the time. If we dry up the flow of guns to the street we are likely
to accomplish two goals. We may decrease gun homicides, and we will arm
law enforcement with the tools to track down and punish those that
supply weapons to criminals.
Neither of these strategies should
prevent any law-abiding citizen from obtaining any weapon that is
available to them today, at the same time, they obstruct the flow of
guns to criminals and erect barriers to those that might commit mass
violence.
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