Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑August 6th, 2021, 9:03 am If guns did not lead to violence and death in RL, I would not be so opposed to them. My opposition is a simple pragmatic response to the misery and devastation caused by guns.
LuckyR wrote: ↑August 7th, 2021, 1:18 am The reason I ask is that gun related accidents happen almost exclusively to gun owners. Bad for them, but they presumably weighed the risks and benefits of gun ownership and made their choice. Very few non gun owners suffer from gun accidents.I don't disagree with any of this, but it only offers details to support the basic theme, that the existence of guns leads to gun deaths and injuries. Deaths and injuries that would not take place if there were no guns. I don't think these details have a significant effect on this discussion?
Similarly, gun related suicides are exclusively among gun owners. Again, bad for them but minimal impact on the nongun owner society.
Homicides, of course is where guns become dangerous to non gun owners. However among homicides, most are restricted to certain neighborhoods. Neighborhoods where legislators don't tend to live. The exception to this trend is mass shootings. Mass shootings, while miniscule in overall gun death numbers garner out of proportion media attention mainly because they commonly involve middle and upper class victims who 1) run the media and 2) don't live in areas that they would otherwise likely be a homicide victim. Thus why these incidents commonly bring calls for gun reform, while crazy high homicide numbers on the South side of Chicago (and similar neighborhoods) don't.
Bottom line, money talks, on both sides of this issue.
"Who cares, wins"