-No, I’m not surprised that handguns account for most gun crimes. It’s only logical that easily concealed, easily obtained, and easy to transport firearms would be used in most gun crimes.
-As for handguns themselves, I’d be far more supportive on a general ban on them due to their disproportionate risk to public safety, little value for legit civilian use, and little to no value as a military weapon than the silly restrictions/bans people are trying to put forth on rifles or the size of an external magazine.
-The strictest gun laws not working only really makes sense if we assume that such places operate in a vacuum. One would think that dry counties don’t have a major issue with alcohol or drunk driving since you can’t buy alcohol in them. Yet said counties do have issues with alcohol because while you can’t buy alcohol in them, you can drive to the county line and buy alcohol from the liquor store that for some odd reason just happens to have been built just inside the wet county. Strict guns laws really only work if the are consistent across the board (Chicago’s laws, for example, being the national norm), uniformly enforced, and enforced with particular care at the borders.
-Yes, feel free to point me in the right direction concerning the criminal usage of the heavily regulated automatic firearms in comparison to the much less regulated usage of semi-automatic firearms and how this comparison supports your argument that laws and regulations really don’t have any impact on criminal behavior.