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Okay, now look at the two links you posted.
Nothing jumps out at you?
Put your emotions aside and think critically and rationally.
Okay, now look at the two links you posted.
Nothing jumps out at you?
Put your emotions aside and think critically and rationally.
Do you have better sources?
i said this in the other thread, but i think it should be a requirement that all law abiding citizens carry a firearm and are trained to use it. that's the only way to equalize the bad guys having guns.
there is no way to eradicate all of the guns that are already in circulation and stricter gun control laws do not work in preventing gun violence. it's already been proven.
Yes, there are better and more recent sources. I'll get them up.
But I wasn't referring to the links you posted being wrong.
Is there anything that jumps out at you when you look at those two lists side by side.
Yeah we are the only country in the top 10-20 on both lists. This further proves my point. Gun laws in America are a joke. They don't work and they should be addressed. In all those other countries that are high on the guns per capita list have very strict laws and regulations on guns and bullets, we don't.
In South Africa, owning a gun is conditional on a competency test and several other factors, including background checking of the applicant, inspection of an owner's premises, and licensing of the weapon by the police introduced in July 2004. The process is currently undergoing review,[1] as the police are at present, not able to adequately or within reasonable time, process either competency certification, new licenses or renewal of existing licenses. Minimum waiting period frequently exceeds 2 years from date of application.
To purchase a firearm in a commercial shop, one needs to have a Waffenerwerbsschein (weapon acquisition permit). A permit allows the purchase of three firearms. Everyone over the age of 18 who is not psychiatrically disabled (such as having had a history of endangering his own life or the lives of others) or identified as posing security problems, and who has a clean criminal record (requires a Criminal Records Bureau check) can request such a permit.
To buy a gun from an individual, no permit is needed, but the seller is expected to establish a reasonable certainty that the purchaser will fulfill the above-mentioned conditions (usually done through a Criminal Records Bureau check).
We have 7 times more guns than South Africa, yet 20 times less homicides.
Here is the law there summed up:
Much stricter than America.
Now, let's look at the other side:
We have double the circulation of Switzerland, yet Switzerland is not even found on this source you posted.
Here are the gun laws for the Swiss summed up:
NO different than the United States.
So, do the laws work?
Both countries require you to have a reason to have a gun. There isn't this idea that you have a right to a gun. You need a reason. And then you need to go back to the permitting authority every six months or so to assure them the reason is still valid.
Everyone in Switzerland serves in the army, and the cantons used to let you have the guns at home. They've been moving to keeping the guns in depots. That means they're not in the household, which makes sense because the literature shows us that if the gun is in the household, the risk goes up for everyone in the household.
South Africa is a country that's been constantly filled with internal conflict, and bad goverment for the last 50 years. That's not a good comparison.
As for Switzerland, your "facts" are misleading at best.
Washington Post
Not the same as America. Switzerland is a small country that doesn't have the same social or economic problems as America. Again not a good comparison.
So, according to the bold, the problems are NOT the guns?
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You can make it illegal to possess weapons. You can make it harder for law abiding citizens to get weapons.
Until you address the other issue, things won't change.
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You can make it illegal to possess weapons. You can make it harder for law abiding citizens to get weapons.
Until you address the other issue, things won't change.
This is only half the problem. Most of these "massacres" don't come from people who are economically disadvantaged, they come from mentally unstable people who had easy access to guns.