Bruce Monkhouse said:
The point is did prohibition stop alcohol consumption? Those who want will get.....
George Wallace said:
You are big on statistics and studies; what is the percentage of 'legal' gun owners committing these crimes compared to 'illegal' gun owners?
I don't have those figures readily on hand, looking through a few reports so I can steer you directly to those numbers (they're very dense).
Most crimes committed with guns are committed with "illegal" guns, in the sense that the person committing the crime is not the legal owner. However, the larger problem is that a society awash in guns makes it easier for criminals to get their hands on them. This results in more gun crime, a fact that has been borne out by many studies.
There are also instances where someone with criminal intentions CAN get a gun legally, in the heat of the moment. A cash transaction at a gun show for example is entirely legal, and not traceable at all. So a mentally ill person as you alluded to above George, can go buy a Glock for $500 cash in a handshake deal. Is this not something that should be illegal?
Mandatory background checks, an assessment of mental health would go a long way in preventing gun crime, but we also need to look at ways to reduce the number of guns at large. This is ground that has been trodden over repeatedly, but the US is unique in advanced countries in having such a high gun crime rate. It's simply because it has a higher rate of gun ownership. Direct correlation.
Now, we can debate whether or not individual freedom trumps safety. That is a legitimate discussion. But it's becoming clear that the discussion can no longer be, " more guns make us safe." Mountains of data show otherwise. A gun in the home (legal or not) exponentially raises the chance of suicide, homicide and accidental death. I agree that guns don't kill people, people kill people. But in a well armed society, you turn a domestic spat into a murder, a moment of severe depression into a suicide, and a firing into a potential mass shooting.
Yes we need to invest in better care for the mentally ill, but that's also a form of government in our lives, and the pro-gun lobby is largely based on reducing that footprint. We can't have it both ways.