I think it's fair to say it's a combination of availability and socio-economic issues. It's dishonest to accept one & discount the other. E.g. Canada seems like a pretty chilling place on the surface but the gun-crime rate is significantly higher than in equivalent European societies. Why? Porous borders with the US. Let's not mention Mexico...
If we did look at Europe, although the gun-crime rates are lower, everyone and their nan has an AK out East. Coppers are armed in le France/Belgique -- but not here in the UK. Why? Social prosperity and the English Channel.
Either way, gun culture is so entrenched in US society (as an pro-gun outsider) that, at this point, further federal gun control is both pointless and un-feasible. I know I'd be strapped..
Is there still an ammo shortage btw?
EDIT: lol. Moldova.. I hear it's basically heaven on Earth.
Curious as to how many people are shot by police officers in the line of duty? And are these numbers included in these figures when talking about gun violence etc.? (This would obviously skew the results a bit).
Let me get this straight. So gun control is going to stop criminals, who by definition disobey the law, from getting guns?
I totally agree on Canada and Switzerland low crime rates. Well, Canadians are great people in general (and almost everyone having a weapon should also be taken into consideration).
As for Switzerland - everybody serves in the army, from the last clerk to the Prime Minister, and EVERYBODY legally owns a gun and EVERYBODY comes to boot camps for a couple of weeks each year, so they know how to shoot and hit the target. I really think only a complete idiot would try to rob a household in Switzerland, when inhabitants are home. Or rob someone in the street. Or rape a girl with a Beretta in her hand. Thus such low crime rates.
I don't know where you get the idea that almost everyone in Canada owns a weapon (Bowling for Columbine maybe?). Guns per capita is about 1/3rd of that of the US and the majority are owned by people who live in rural communities who use them for sustenance hunting and for protection against the likes of bears and mountain lions, and who also tend to own more than one gun. The average city dweller does not own a gun in Canada. It's almost unheard of.
Again, I don't know where you're getting your info from. Despite what some people think, everyone doesn't own a gun in Switzerland. The sale and possession of ammunition is tightly controlled and there are strict rules in place for transporting weapons. 29% of households contain a firearm of some sort, compared to 43% in the US. Women therefore aren't packing Berettas around in their purses (only 10% of households actually contain handguns for that matter compared to 18% in the US).
So gun ownership is much higher in the US, yet the crime rates remain much higher too. So the correlation between gun ownership and low crime rates doesn't pan out like you say it does. The Canadians and the Swiss have low crime rates because they don't suffer from the same social and economical issues the US suffers from.
Yeah, because laws are awesome at keeping people from Fucking.Make a law that requires x amount of household income before being allowed to have a child.
Boom, 90% of gun problems solved.
Let me get this straight. So gun control is going to stop criminals, who by definition disobey the law, from getting guns?
I don't know where you get the idea that almost everyone in Canada owns a weapon (Bowling for Columbine maybe?). Guns per capita is about 1/3rd of that of the US and the majority are owned by people who live in rural communities who use them for sustenance hunting and for protection against the likes of bears and mountain lions, and who also tend to own more than one gun. The average city dweller does not own a gun in Canada. It's almost unheard of.
Again, I don't know where you're getting your info from. Despite what some people think, everyone doesn't own a gun in Switzerland. The sale and possession of ammunition is tightly controlled and there are strict rules in place for transporting weapons. 29% of households contain a firearm of some sort, compared to 43% in the US. Women therefore aren't packing Berettas around in their purses (only 10% of households actually contain handguns for that matter compared to 18% in the US).
So gun ownership is much higher in the US, yet the crime rates remain much higher too. So the correlation between gun ownership and low crime rates doesn't pan out like you say it does. The Canadians and the Swiss have low crime rates because they don't suffer from the same social and economical issues the US suffers from.
Well in America you're already fucked really because there are so many guns about, banning them now wouldn't really solve anything.
It definitely works in Europe though.
It is very difficult to acquire a firearm here, criminal or not.