And yet fire is used to murder about 130 people a year in the US, compared to 12,000 or so for firearms.
No, this response was to your "Mad Nutter" mass killing thing. I honestly think you are trying to confuse the issue. In fact you switch and swap a number of other times [edit: between the mass killing argument and the general criminality argument]. I'll only address this one. There is a difference between the typical criminal use of a firearm and the rare mass killings that get all the media attention. You seemed to make that distinction and I have addressed each individually.
You said this:
Offhand, can you name the mass shootings carried out with sawn off shotguns? I can name several where handguns were used, but can't think of any with sawn offs.I said this:
I can name two individual mass killings involving a match and a can of gasoline that each eclipse the Brady bunch published fact sheet totals for firearms mass killings with a list going back 20 years. The deadliest school mass killing involved dynamite. The deadliest home grown terror mass killing involved diesel fuel and fertilizer. The London tube bombers used bombs. The Spanish train bombings used bombs. 911 involved airliners and box cutters. We can add alcohol related vehicular homicide to the list if we move mass down to 3-5 victims. Serial killers seldom use a gun in their crimes, yet pull up a Virginia Tech body count with greater frequency.Lets look at those totals (The brady figures are actually a bit incomplete, so I made some additions and even included international incidents)

* The McDonald's shooting - On July 18, 1984 21
* 20 Aug 1986 Edmond, OK, USA 14
* 06 Dec 1989 Montreal, Canada 14
* The Louisville, Kentucky, September 14, 1989 7
* The San Francisco Pettit & Martin shootings - On July 1, 1993, 8
* 13 Mar 1996 Dunblane, Scotland 17
* 28 Apr 1996 Port Arthur, Australia 35
* 29 Jul 1999 Atlanta, GA, USA 12
* Colombine - April 20, 1999 -- 12 victims
* 27 Sep 2001 Zug, Switzerland 14
* 26 Apr 2002 Erfurt, Germany 16
* Virginia Tech 32
202 in 22 years. Just the US figures: 106
Average number of people killed by lightning per year in the US: about 200. Over 22 years: 4,400
The notable Arson Incidents (though plenty of smaller ones result in mass killings):
* Happy Land Social Club -- 87
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Land_Fire* Dupont Plaza Hotel fire -- 97
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dupont_Plaza_Hotel_fireNow, I have said in the past that either of these incidents eclipse the Brady figure, but as noted their attention to detail on this issue is no stronger than in general for the group. My additions don't really change the fact that the most successful mass killers do not use guns. Once you get away from the big incidents firearms still come up short:
Dr. Kleck also states that "Oddly enough, mass killings are actually less likely to involve the use of guns of any kind than homicides involving small numbers of victims. For all murders and non negligent manslaughters covered in Supplementary Homicide Reports (about 90% of all U.S. killings) for the period 1976 to 1992, only 48.3% of victims killed in incidents with four or more victims were killed with guns, compared to 62.3% of those killed in incidents with three or fewer victims. This is mainly due to the large share of mass killings committed with arson, which is rarely involved in ordinary homicides." http://www.guncite.com/gun_control_gcassaul.html
George Harrison, Beatle. Attacked in his house in Britain by a deranged man with a knife. Harrison was stabbed several times before he and his wife overpowered the man. Harrison spent a few days in hospital and made a full recovery.
John Lennon, Beatle. Attacked in the street by a deranged man with a gun. Shot and killed.
You make a big deal out of Kleck's research and then you trot out something as pointless as this?
The statistics aren't on your side, here. Far more people are victim of an armed criminal than use a gun to defend themselves, far more are killed by a criminal than kill the criminal whilst defending themselves.
Well have to agree to disagree. I'll take the findings of the 13 studies (of varying quality certainly but some by clearly anti-gun sources like Time and the LA Times) that show a minimum of 770,000 DGUs over the one you support that is, at best, flawed in its own right.
Plenty on armed ones, too.
Which ones are those again?
The fact is successful insurgencies always have access to military weapons, not sporting rifles and handguns. Handguns in particular are practically useless in a military context.
That's why no modern military fields a handgun, I suppose. Why SOCOM decided 9mm didn't have the punch they wanted. While similar criticisms can be found for the combat use of the Beretta platform in Iraq. What about all those Enfields used by the taliban against the Russians where the reach of a 303 beat the 7.62X39. Once you remove the ability to use non-violent riot control methods you force the supporters of tyranny (military, police and civilian) to look a bit closer at their commitment to what would be, at best, a shaky cause. Once you have to kill large numbers of YOUR people and the collateral damage is YOUR people you may question the regime a bit.
No. I assume criminals have the initiative. If you are behind the counter of a shop, you have no idea when or if a criminal is going to walk through the doors. The criminal outside knows exactly when, though.
I posted a link showing dozens of real world examples where your position fails. The criminal, in my unknown house in the middle of the night is not at an advantage. An assassin trying to kill one person with a detailed plan perhaps -- that focus group of Reagan and Lennon again. That is not your average home invader or stickup man though. In fact, lately there seems to be somewhat of a rash of self defense shooting going on that end badly for the criminal.
You bring up the Police thing. Now, the police, by the very nature of their jobs seek out criminals on a daily basis. Across the US, in 2004:
Seventy-two local, state and federal officers died from traffic-related accidents while 57, about one-third, died from shootings, the organizations said. A variety of causes led to the other deaths.
There were 368 justifiable homicides committed by police that same year. It sucks that desperate criminals kill police, but the police seem to come out on top 6 times as often and you do hear very mixed reports on the level of common firearm training possessed by many officers.
No, I want to take the tools of violence away from the criminal.
Just how will you do that? The only response you really need to make frankly. How will you take the firearms away from the criminals. How will you do a better job than, say, taking the drugs away from the drug dealers?
Charon