If you notice a few posts above, I stated clearly the problems are as much or more cultural as physical. But it is not a fact that the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun...it's a fact in that one of this week's shootings, it was a good guy with a pepper spray. But that's not really relevant. Saying "the only way to stop a bad guy..." is just a slogan that offers no real value. How about keeping the bad guy from getting the gun? Are you ready to just toss in the towel and say "bad boys will be bad boys?" What "laws don't work" argument applies to firearms that wouldn't apply to anything else for which there are laws? Besides, it is by no means proven, in either upper or lower case, that laws and regulations don't work. Look at the real statistics about places (in the US) where there are more stringent laws. Of course, there have never been any laws that don't have violators. And looking for different laws, or different enforcement of current laws, or better application of current law is by no means "doing the same thing."Roland Deschain wrote:Sounds legit. However, why do you people refuse to acknowledge the fact that the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun, is a good guy with a gun. You all prattle on about "the guns" while refusing to acknowledge the breakdowns in society and the criminal element that is usually responsible for gun violence. Time and again it is PROVEN that laws and regulations, staying within the 2nd amendment" DO NO work. Yet, you continue to call for more laws and regulations. Why? Have you not figure out that you are all the epitome of the definition of insanity...continuing with the same actions while expecting different resultO Really wrote:Well, generally we're trying to talk about firearms and how to reduce the amount of firearm violence in the US, which is way more than any comparable "civilized" nation. If we were talking about cancer, we wouldn't bring up heart disease that also kills people, as an argument not to try to reduce cancer deaths. If we were talking about automobile deaths, we wouldn't bring up bikes and motorcycle deaths as an argument not to try to reduce automobile deaths.
So your argument really is that the only way to reduce gun violence in the US is to arm everybody? Seriously?