What do you propose then?
Do you have gun crime statistics like the one you posted broken down by state or by population region?
States with the highest homicide rates:
The ten most restrictive states for guns are:
1. California
2. New Jersey
3. Massachusetts
4. New York
5. Connecticut
6. Hawaii
7. Maryland
8. Rhode Island
9. Illinois
10. Pennsylvania
It seems there's only a weak correlation between ready access to guns, and violence. But most states with stiff gun control laws have lower rates of homicides. If Nick's claim is correct, it would indicate that cities will have very little luck with stiff gun laws, if the state does not have them. Neither Chicago nor Los Angeles made the top 30 this year:
http://www.neighborhoodscout.com/top-lists/highest-murder-rate-cities/
Of course. DC, Chicago, LA, where hand guns were "illegal" have by far the worst crime. Detroit and here in the StL rank with them.
Places with no gun control have very little crime.
Another thing your country should do is get rid of locally elected judges. It's a disgrace.Chad has executed 10 members of Islamist militant group Boko Haram by firing squad, a day after they were sentenced on terrorism charges, security sources said on Saturday.
Yes. But I'm just pointing out that it's all 'stories'. Ours, theirs, whomever. Reality is a story we've assembled in our heads. There's no getting around it. And the story itself is a kind of bias. Honestly would dictate that we keep that in mind.We can chose to live by a number of different things, but once we abandon reason, then we are prey to anyone with a story to tell.
We hear those stories occasionally, but they are very rare. I suspect the NRA has the stats, but they aren't going to do anything to draw attention to them, because the number is so low compared to the humber of innocent people killed by guns every year.Where are all the stats on how many peoples lives were saved because they had a gun, and how many homes protected from intruders, etc..
We hear those stories occasionally, but they are very rare. I suspect the NRA has the stats, but they aren't going to do anything to draw attention to them, because the number is so low compared to the humber of innocent people killed by guns every year.
Good question, though.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/06/13/24-7-wall-st-states-most-gun-violence/71003050/Suicide is the leading cause of gun-related deaths across the country in recent years. Of the 33,636 firearm deaths in 2013, more than 21,000 were suicides.
I lived for many years in inner-city Chicago. And most of the years I lived there hardly a week would go by that at least one innocent citizen was shot and killed by some idiot with a gun. Usually it was more. And maybe once or twice a year someone would successfully thwart a killing by a gunman, with a gun. A store owner might pull a gun out and chase away a thief, but only if the thief was unarmed, or under-armed, or scared. Which wasn't often. And almost never was there an instance of a citizen protecting himself with a gun, from a thief with a gun on the street. The sad truth was that the people who were doing all the killing were mostly gangbangers and drug addicts who didn't care much about their own lives, such that they could be scared away by a victim with a gun. And in an altercation involving guns, a gun fight, it's usually the more aggressive and careless that comes out alive, because they don't rattle or hesitate.They aren't rare, its just rare that they make it to the news.
Your auto-defensiveness is amazing! You'll say and believe anything to keep from admitting that you might be even a tiniest bit wrong about anything!
I only want them out of the hands of criminals, drunks, dope heads, ragers, stalkers, lunatics, and blind people. Everyone else can have all the guns they want. So long as they are licensed, educated, trained and tested for the guns that they own and use.My Father kept a man from robbing and harming us when i was a child with his shotgun, im not wrong about this, local news is at best the only places youll see where people held off a crime with a gun, because loonies like you, want them out of our hands.
Most cops want gun control and regulation. By an overwhelming majority. They know exactly how guns effect society.Ask some cops about how often it happens sometime.
In Chicago there was a weekly free paper called the Reader. It had a section that listed crimes by neighborhood. So each week you could see what crimes happened and where. It's true that the smaller crimes didn't make the bigger papers. But nearly every killing did, and certainly every defended potential killing did, because those are popular news.Why would it make it to the news unless it was on video and or someone was killed?
I only want them out of the hands of criminals, drunks, dope heads, ragers, stalkers, lunatics, and blind people. Everyone else can have all the guns they want.
Your assumptions are wrong. Far more people are killed with guns than defend themselves against being killed with them. But I have every confidence that you will not accept this fact of reality, because you are one of those people who must defend your beliefs no matter what.
Which, of course, is completely irrelevant to the discussion at hand: the ratio of people defending themselves with guns, against gunmen, to the number of people killed by gunmen.Ive already given the evidence that the vast majority - overwhelming in fact- of gun deaths are suicides.
You do this all the time - making everyone else look up the stats, which you will then ignore and dismiss, anyway. So I'm not going to bother, because it's a waste of my time. You can look them up yourself if you actually want to know what they are … which you don't, or you already would have.Where is your evidence that more gun violence happens than guns save lives and where is your evidence that "most" cops think we shouldn't have guns?
Well, as interesting an anecdote as that is, it sheds no light whatever on the question at hand.Oh and here is a reality check for you, when the guy was breaking into our house in the middle of the night - my mom had to call the cops 4 times, it took nearly an hour and they finally came when my mom said if this guy makes it into the house, my husband is going to kill him.
Which, of course, is completely irrelevant to the discussion at hand: the ratio of people defending themselves with guns, against gunmen, to the number of people killed by gunmen.
of course you need to look up the stats to support your claims, its not my job to look them up for you.You do this all the time - making everyone else look up the stats,
which you will then ignore and dismiss, anyway. So I'm not going to bother, because it's a waste of my time. You can look them up yourself if you actually want to know what they are … which you don't, or you already would have.
Well, as interesting an anecdote as that is, it sheds no light whatever on the question at hand.
I lived for many years in inner-city Chicago. And most of the years I lived there hardly a week would go by that at least one innocent citizen was shot and killed by some idiot with a gun. Usually it was more. And maybe once or twice a year someone would successfully thwart a killing by a gunman, with a gun. A store owner might pull a gun out and chase away a thief, but only if the thief was unarmed, or under-armed, or scared. Which wasn't often. And almost never was there an instance of a citizen protecting himself with a gun, from a thief with a gun on the street. The sad truth was that the people who were doing all the killing were mostly gangbangers and drug addicts who didn't care much about their own lives, such that they could be scared away by a victim with a gun. And in an altercation involving guns, a gun fight, it's usually the more aggressive and careless that comes out alive, because they don't rattle or hesitate.
I know you and many others absolutely love the righteous fantasy of shooting the bad guy, but when the moment comes, most of you will end up dead. Because the criminals are more aggressive, they're younger, and faster, and wilder, and they just don't care.
Well, as interesting an anecdote as that is, it sheds no light whatever on the question at hand.
Most cops want gun control and regulation. By an overwhelming majority. They know exactly how guns effect society.
you are one of those people who must defend your beliefs no matter what.
Most cops go their whole career without ever having to draw their sidearm. And those are cops: people who's job it is to rush to any potential violent altercation. So the idea that people are successfully defending themselves with guns all over America, and that somehow these instances are magically not being reported on by anyone but paid NRA mouthpieces, is absurd, just on the face of it.
All those years I spent in Chicago, the vast majority of people killed by gunmen were either rival gunmen, themselves, or were bystanders caught in the hail of bullets between two rival gunmen. And neither of these qualify as even being possible candidates for this supposed hoard of self-defenders. In the first case it's criminals killing other criminals, and in the second case it's just being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Babies shot in their cribs, in their homes, by bullets that pass right through the walls of their house.
Another popular way to be killed in the city by gunfire was to be drinking heavily with your idiot buddies, until one of them gets enraged over some complete nonsense, and in a moment of drunken stupidity grabs his gun and pulls the trigger. Or if it's not the alcohol, maybe it's a rager on the expressway who think you cut him off, and shoots at you from his car. That's happened a number of times in Chicago. Or there's always the perennial rejected boyfriend who decides in a moment of grandiose despair that if he can't have the girl, no one can.
These were the things that got people shot and killed while I was living in Chicago, and hardly any of these instances were defensible by having more guns in the hands of more people. Which is exactly why most cops, especially in big cities, support gun registration and control.