Sylvus wrote:I believe that if there were much fewer (or no) handguns in existence, there would be less violent crime. Do you agree?
This is the fundamental point where we're talking past one another. Yes, I agree. Now I'd pose a question to you: Would implementing gun control measures, in a manner which comports with what is realistically possible, yield a country with "much fewer" handguns?
Sylvus wrote:2. Gun control measures in the United States have been implemented in piecemeal fashion, not usually on the sweeping national level that other countries have seen.
Part of the reason for this is that the United States has a federal government while many of these "other countries" have far more centralized systems of government. I don't really know anything about gun control law specifically, but I'd imagine there would be significant constitutional problems to overcome (even ignoring the second amendment) before gun control would even be a possibility on the national level.
I agree that sweeping, national gun control measures would be much more likely to reduce the number of handguns in society significantly enough to have an appreciable effect on violent crime rates. I do not, however, know if it's feasible-- not just because of a failure of political will, but because it may be the kind of thing that our governmental structure is simply incapable of doing.
Sylvus wrote:3. Other countries that have much more restrictive gun control laws almost unanimously have only a fraction of the gun homicide rates that the United States has.
Again, the comparisons are inappropriate, because the United States is vastly different than the countries in question in many respects, not just gun control laws. You can say that all the other factors which lead to violent crime are irrelevant, but they're not. The differences between intranational and international comparisons have already been discussed. You can't rely solely on international comparisons without controlling for all the other variables that affect crime rates, which you've made no effort to do.
Sylvus wrote:4. There are more handguns, legal and illegal, in the United States than in any of our peer countries.
Again, the point I'm trying to make is that they're not really our peer countries. The United States lies somewhere halfway between Western Europe/Japan/Canada/Australia etc and China/Russia/India etc.
Sylvus wrote:and the old "they should continue to be legal because they are".
As far as I'm concerned, this is a totally valid argument. Maintaining the status quo is never a justification. There is, however, a burden on those who want to change the status quo to demonstrate why that change would be positive. In absence of such a demonstration, those who support the status quo can simply say: "I like guns. There's no reason to believe that any steps that could feasibly be taken to restrict their ownership would have any positive consequences." And that is a wholly sufficient argument, at least in a policy sense (in a broader, philosophical sense, it might not be adequate).
Sylvus wrote:I'm also looking to avoid trying to derail the conversation with other factors about economic problems causing crime and emotional problems causing crime, as with the Va. Tech shooter, and so forth. Yes, there are always a number of factors that influence any problem. Ignoring one factor that could help a problem simply because it isn't a panacea seems kind of ridiculous to me.
No one is dismissing gun control because it isn't a panacea. People are dismissing gun control because we think it would be, at best, totally, 100% ineffective, and at worst, counterproductive. The reason that other factors are being raised is because they provide plausible explanations for violence beyond guns, making more reasonable the contention that attacking guns is an ineffective way to attack the problem.
Xatrei wrote:Xatrei posted something about gun control on a larger scale with less of a piecemeal approach over a longer period of time possibly working, which is pretty much exactly what I've been talking about the whole thread, which seems like a pretty good argument against your fifth item.
And I responded to it, laying out what I thought the outlines of the debate that follow ought to be. I can cut and paste that one here too, if you want.
Syvlus wrote:I agree with everything you said there other than that it's not the fundamental issue. I don't think there is any evidence that has been presented so far that points toward anything as the fundamental issue, or says that gun control is not it.
And this would be a very logical subject for argument, notwithstanding the fact that you think the point is irrelevant.
Sylvus wrote:I'm not sure why you posted who you voted for, that means absolutely nothing
Why, because you made a big sweeping generalization that tied those who oppose gun control to being Bush supporters, and also, to being idiots. I wanted to clarify that not all those who oppose gun control are Bush supporters, although you can make up your own mind on the idiot point.
Sylvus wrote:I just think that if it were a prohibitively difficult to obtain a handgun, those numbers would (eventually) drop.
Yes, and the question is whether gun control measures would accomplish this. The way I see it, there are two distinct questions: First, is it possible to implement gun control measures, either via the federal government or via interstate cooperation, that would be sufficiently comprehensive to dent the handgun rate? Second, would the likely immediate raise in violence, which would occur due to the short-run reasons presented by the anti gun control folks here, be strong enough to thwart the gun control regime before the long-run effects of lowering the number of guns in society occurred?
I understand that you want reasons FOR handguns here. I don't have such reasons. I don't own a handgun or any gun and never plan to, so I can't respond to that specific desire of yours. Nevertheless, I feel like this topic is/has become broader than simply a search for reasons why we ought to have guns. If that's all you want to talk about, and you don't think there's the maintain-the-status-quo-in-absence-of-reasons-for-changing argument is meaningful, then OK, I guess you ought to ignore me.