Viper1 said:
I was going to counterpoint a lot of your post but that will lead to a very cluttered and hard to follow debate. So instead, I'm going to leave a link to a pdf file. I hope that you'll take a few minutes to read it with an open mind. It has a lot of answers to the myths of gun crime in the US and the rest of the world and it's all backed up by official sources. It's 107 pages but you don't hae to read the whole thing. Check the table of contents and look at the data against what you've claimed in your post. It might surprise you that the US is branded as the Wild West of old but it's really not. Not do our lax guns laws lead to great gun crime. http://www.gunfacts.info/pdfs/gun-facts/6.1/gun_facts_6_1_screen.pdf
I will address the theater situation a little since it is obviously not going to be specifically covered in that pdf file. Had Holmes not legally obtained the weapons, he would have illegally obtained them. Assuming that he couldn't buy them legally would have prevented him from committing his attack is foolish. Nor is it wise to assume he commited the attack solely because he could buy them legally.
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I will definitely give that article a read when I get the time. Essentially, you are right. If he couldn't get them legally, he would have gotten his hands on them illegally. But the benefit to that is 1) the difficulty in attaining illegal firearms, and 2) the excessive price you would have to pay for an illegal firearm. Those 2 factors can deter away some would-be criminals. As for the really determined, instead of spending an exorbitant amount of cash on an assault rifle and shotgun (as James Holmes possessed), he may have gone for a handgun. So in essance, perhaps the crime couldn't be stopped, but instead of having 12 deaths and 70 wounded, you'll end up with a few. I mean, it sounds silly (the whole less deaths is better than many), but it is better!
I'll read your article later and see what it says, I am sure there is some interesting stuff in there.
Better yet, as per Chris Rock's stand-up comedy, he says something along the lines of keep your guns laws in place, just raise the price of bullets. If each bullet costs $5,000, then no one will walk into a theater and just spray them all over the place. He said it as a joke many years ago, but it is actually a smart soultion, although there will never be the day when a bullet costs that much, but y'know what I mean.







