The issue at hand is guns and should they be taken away from the general public.
It's not my issue. I'm speaking to making ownership more responsible/increasing gun safety AND reexamining what restrictions on ownership are reasonable in terms of impacting the efficacy of them as an instrument of mass murder.
The general public, the vast majority of whom had never used an automatic weapon, let alone committed a crime with one, were denied the privilige of owning an automatic weapon.
And the restriction made anyone owning that sort of weapon appreciably more difficult, which limited the opportunity.
Now, did that stop all the gangsters from having automatic weapons? Nope.
It would be great if it did, but I don't believe anyone is suggesting that as an outcome. Australia, by way of example, toughened gun laws after a mass murder incident in Port Arthur that left 35 people dead. It didn't end gun related crime and violence, but it did significantly impact it in the years following the new laws. Studies conducted between 1995 and 2006 noted that firearm homicides fell 59%, without a rise in other forms of homicide. Suicides by gun dropped 65%. Home invasions didn't increase, despite a fear by some that fewer guns would lead to bolder criminals on that front. Lastly, in the decade before Australia changed its gun laws the country had seen eleven mass shootings. In the more than twenty since it has witnessed none.
They still have them. So, the only effect of the law was to remove the ability to own an automatic weapon from law abiding people who had never used one of these weapons in the commission of a crime. In other words, the punishment of the innocent by removing a portion of their rights was the government's response to the crime wave of a very small part of the population.
Denial of an increased chance for mayhem isn't a punishment any more than insisting we wear seat belts is a punishment of responsible drivers for the misdeeds of others.
That tactic is still going on. Those who would break the law by the already illegal act of killing someone still can easily obtain firearms illegally, and the response to this criminal activity is more punishment of those who would never commit murder in the first place by removing their constitutionally protected right.
One of the reasons firearms are easy for criminals to possess is because they're infinitely easier for almost anyone to own and the instruments made to increase their use as something more than personal defense are equally abundant and cheap. It's a bit like having tough gun laws in one town and surrounding the town with places where there's little control. At that point the laws are more about sentencing than impacting anything in terms of use.
See, you would, if you got your way, punish me by removing my right to own a firearm,
No, I wouldn't. I'm actually a gun owner and life long shooter, qualifying as an expert marksman in my ROTC days. I'm for intelligent regulation, registration of firearms and the removal of certain types and instruments that increase their lethality weighed against reasonable use. Say bump stocks and silencers.
The problem isn't the firearm. The problem is the person who has no respect for human life
No, the problem is a bit of both, though we know from empirical observation that we can retain the right to own and use guns legally, with increased safety for everyone while dramatically reducing their use as instruments to deny the rights of others, supra.
You would much rather punish me than really solve the root cause of the problem.
If you believe that you're bringing it to the conversation in assumption and haven't read much of what I've been saying on the point. Hopefully this helps.