C
curlycool89
Guest
Most of the rest of the world would disagree.I’m still not sure that its a valid argument for disarming a free and independent people.
Personally, I fell no less free because I can’t own a gun. I don’t see a need.
Well, it certainly sent a blow to the whole “Manifest Destiny” craziness.Scroll forward to 1812, when the U.S. attempt to seize Canada was soundly defeated. Win one, lose one, eh?
My calculations for Canada say around 0.5 per 100K from those numbers. Or 6 times less then the US.If you want to compare gun crime across the western world the figures speak for themsleves:in the United States in 2009 there were 3.0 recorded intentional homicides committed with a firearm per 100,000 inhabitants; for comparison, the figure for the United Kingdom, with very restrictive firearm laws (handguns are totally prohibited, for example) was 0.07, about 40 times lower, and for Germany 0.2. The number of people killed by firearms per year:
1.United States - 11,127
2.Canada – 165
3.Germany – 381
4.France – 255
5.Australia – 65
6.United Kingdom – 68
7.Japan – 39
I can’t decide which one to go with: inferiority complex or compensating for something (as if the Hummers and truck-balls didn’t already give that one away).Guns are part of America’s culture; they help to define who we are.
I’m so sorry that you guys have’t discovered grocery stores yet.When the first Europeans arrived in the new world back in the 15th century, those early explorers had guns because they needed guns to survive. They needed guns to hunt for food and to defend themselves.
We use to be the world’s leader in beaver fur trade in Canada. Now, we’ve moved on.
And then subsequently lost the War of 1812 to French farmers, barely trained militia, and the Six Nations.The American Colonists who fought in our revolutionary war against the British, fought for the most part with privately owned firearms. (And managed to defeat what was then the most powerful army in the world!).
Guess what? Neither Canada nor Britain have tyrannical governments either. And we even managed to do it without guns!It was then written into the U.S. Constitution that the people have a right to keep and bear arms. This was intended as a defense against a tyrannical government. Note that the United States does not have a tyrannical government. Why? Because the citizenry have guns.
Your example is not persuasive, nor proof of anything. Actually, my contrastive example says that guns had absolutely nothing to do with it.
I’m sorry that you have yet to tame the Wild West.As the westward expansion began in the 1800s, again guns were necessary for both survival and defense.
It’s compensating for something, isn’t it?Guns are so deeply ingrained into the American psyche that it would be impossible to eliminate them. It would certainly not be as simple as saying “OK. Everyone turn in your guns. You can’t have them anymore.”
Heck, I can even throw out psychobabble for you: Being in possession of a firearm reinforces someone’s power and independence, it reinforces their masculinity. Take the guns away, and Americans feel impotent. They have reduced their masculinity to possession of an inanimate object.
Someone with a gun would have been totally useless in this situation. They were in the same dark theatres and everyone else, they probably would have just ended up shooting more innocent people. There is no proof whatsoever that someone with a gun would have made any difference, and suggesting that it definitely would have is a fallacy.
- There is a saying in America that goes “When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.” Colorado has a concealed carry law but Cinemark, the company that owns the theater, does not allow guns on their premises. So there was no way that theater patrons would have been able to defend themselves once the shooting started. The outlaw shooter obviously didn’t care about to no-gun policy.
How well trained are they are close-urban situations where they are caught off-guard and unaware? Unlike Captain America, regular soldiers are not superheros. There’s no definitive proof to say that they would have made any difference.There were several military people in the theater who no doubt were experienced using guns in high stress situations. They could have easily neutralized the shooter.