This doesn't at all address any of the points raised, but I'll retort just for shyts and giggles just because I've already been through this tired talking point.
Will Brazil, long having some of the strictest gun control in the world and one of the highest murder rates, finally liberalize its gun laws? - Crime Prevention Research Center
Gun laws in Brazil - Wikipediawhich allows the Federal Police to analyze the given reasons for owning a gun, under which "self defense" is not considered a valid reason because there are allegedly sufficient public police officers to maintain nationwide security.
Thus, disarmament is effectively happening in Brazil, as are massive gun confiscations, notwithstanding its refusal by Brazilian people (at the referendum of 2005). Some argue that this will increase gun homicides. Other research shows that there is a decrease in firearm deaths correlating with disarmament. However, 2012 marked the highest rate of gun deaths in 35 years for Brazil 8 years after a ban to carry handguns in public went in to effect.
Brazil's Gun Violence Problem Is 'Made in Brazil' | HuffPostThe facts on the ground tell a very different story. Between 2010 and 2014, at least 39,150 firearms were seized in Rio de Janeiro. According to military and civil police records, 3,989 firearms were collected in the first five months of 2015. Of these, roughly 80% were handguns. Just 223, or 5%, of all the collected weapons consisted of semiautomatic rifles and machine guns.
From Rio de Janeiro to Sao Paulo, revolvers and pistols are most commonly used in crime - over 90% of all reported gun-related incidents according to the civil police. What is more, about two thirds of all seized guns were previously legally registered to civilian owners, highlighting the murky continuum linking the legal and black markets.
All people did when the ban went into effect in that country was sell their guns off to criminals for a high price and that's not even considering the amount of illegal weapons that enter Brazil from other countries.
And before you try to say that I can't compare our fellow continentians of the Americas, in Brazil, to the US, because of socio-economic reasons, you should know that the same disparity applies in a comparison of the US to Australia, seeing as it has a vastly superior justice system(lower incarceration and recidivism rate), public health care(including mental), public education, wealth distribution, housing systems, employment rates, and public social safety nets and the US falls way short on those categories on all fronts, ESPECIALLY if you're talking about the black community in the US.
The US has a lot of money, but it does not look like a developed country
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/uk/06/prisons/html/nn2page1.stm
Recidivism rates
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