We should talk about murder only cal, shouldn't we - or do you want to avoid that because guns are the weapon of choice when it comes to murder. It is a fact - why avoid it?
There is no reason to avoid the topic, but that isn't the issue that Scuttles brought up. The statistics, then the source of the statistics, and then the motivations of the source, really aren't significant when discussing the merit of the second amendment. So investing too much time in it only serves as a distraction.
And why would you remove gang killings - they are deaths, and some would be removed with gun control laws - drive by 'knifings' are difficult at best... Maybe they would go for bows and arrows...
Why would I "remove" gang killings? I would distinguish them. Because they represent a social problem, less one related to gun ownership. Gang members aren't using legal firearms, they don't have CCWs. And, historically, those gang statistics tend to be very specific and concentrated to a few major cities. They also TEND to be crimes committed against other criminals. There are innocent people killed as well, but depending on the source, those victims sometimes aren't included in that figure.
Again, I didn't say remove the figures, but distinguish them because it warps the perception of reality.
Ah, no cal - actually I know that piece you linked to very well....
Well enough to misrepresent it...
If you actually read the piece - it is a rather aggressive rebuttal of various surveys of how often gun owners use their weapons in a defense scenario -
I didn't source it because of the editorial tone of it, the Clinton Justice Department was ANTI-handgun. However, the Kleck survey was sourced in it.
Most notable has been a much publicized estimate of
2.5 million DGUs, based on data from a 1994
telephone survey conducted by Florida State
University professors Gary Kleck and Mark
Gertz.[13] The 2.5 million figure has been picked
up by the press and now appears regularly in
newspaper articles, letters to the editor,
editorials, and even Congressional Research Service
briefs for public policymakers.
But this further demonstrates why the whizzing match with statistics is a waste of time. I'll reference the Kleck surveys and you'll find some anti-gun statistic. Then we'll both complain about the methodology and agenda of the source. I can take issue with the method used NCVS study as well which would result in the figure being unrealistically LOW.
Regardless the number we use, if the handgun was actively used over 100,000 times a year using the low figure- that's a significant amount of safety. And there is no way to calculate specifically how greatly the FEAR of an armed potential victim prevents crime as well. But 100,000+ uses of defense vs. less than 10,000 deaths demonstrates a greater good.
I agree - but is one of the social issues the acceptance of gun violence as 'norm'? Do we need to accept all gun violence as the price we pay for individual freedom? Is some gun violence preventable without infringing our our ability to 'defend' ourselves, our family or our property?
You're trying to reframe this again.
VIOLENCE isn't to be accepted as a norm. The tool used to engage in such violent activity is secondary.
Do we need to accept gun violence as a price for freedom? That's absurd. First, it presumes that there would be no violence if law abiding citizens were restricted from owning these guns. Those same gang members and criminals committing the crimes with firearms will be preying on innocent regardless, and they'll find ways to get guns and weapons.
And "some gun violence" could easily be prevented if we destigmatized the gun in our culture and people were simply better educated when it comes to the most basic handling of firearms.