- 28 Feb 2024 04:19
#15305800
Here's a hypothetical for those of you who support lots of gun control restrictions.
Let's just suppose hypothetically here that all gun deaths were single homicides, where there was only one victim in the incident.
Supposing that was the case, would you still be demanding more gun control?
(In other words, are single homicides all by themselves enough reason for you to want more gun laws?)
Let's think about this for a moment.
Someone who would murder someone else with a gun is a murderer, they are capable of murder. If someone is a murderer and they want to kill a single victim, they hardly need to have a gun to be able to do so, now do they?
Now, I'm not going to argue that not having guns would not reduce the murder rate at all, but I do question how much it would actually reduce the murder rate.
If you decrease the murder by a gun rate, the rates of murder by other things are just going to increase.
I think it's fair to say a would-be murderer is a murderer, and you can't know who they are until they kill somebody.
Even assuming taking away a gun stops them from carrying out a killing, it's just going to delay them and they'll likely just carry out a murder a few years later.
That's not really going to do much to help decrease homicide rates.
A few statistics from the U.S.:
Something like 86% of gun homicide incidents only involve a single victim, and incidents where 4 or more people are killed at the same time account for less than 0.6% of total gun homicides (most years).
Two other threads:
essays on disarmament in history (posted in Libertarianism, 19 Nov 2020 )
Those who sell guns to criminals should not be held responsible for crimes committed (posted in Conservatism, 16 Apr 2023)
Let's just suppose hypothetically here that all gun deaths were single homicides, where there was only one victim in the incident.
Supposing that was the case, would you still be demanding more gun control?
(In other words, are single homicides all by themselves enough reason for you to want more gun laws?)
Let's think about this for a moment.
Someone who would murder someone else with a gun is a murderer, they are capable of murder. If someone is a murderer and they want to kill a single victim, they hardly need to have a gun to be able to do so, now do they?
Now, I'm not going to argue that not having guns would not reduce the murder rate at all, but I do question how much it would actually reduce the murder rate.
If you decrease the murder by a gun rate, the rates of murder by other things are just going to increase.
I think it's fair to say a would-be murderer is a murderer, and you can't know who they are until they kill somebody.
Even assuming taking away a gun stops them from carrying out a killing, it's just going to delay them and they'll likely just carry out a murder a few years later.
That's not really going to do much to help decrease homicide rates.
A few statistics from the U.S.:
Something like 86% of gun homicide incidents only involve a single victim, and incidents where 4 or more people are killed at the same time account for less than 0.6% of total gun homicides (most years).
Two other threads:
essays on disarmament in history (posted in Libertarianism, 19 Nov 2020 )
Those who sell guns to criminals should not be held responsible for crimes committed (posted in Conservatism, 16 Apr 2023)