tyro.. if you get 10,000 or so gun homicides a year... most of em being dead criminals and at the same time you prevent upwards to 3,000,000 crimes a year with firearms... well yuo do the math.. I say it is you who is focused on a microcosm.
tyro is gunman 26 (or 42) after listening to barry manilow for 6 months straight.
toad.. missspellings make me furious.. someone should regulate em,..
dowding... population is the key... the more crowded the less freedom you have... our large population centers in America vote for less freedom every time. Most of America is more rural and as such... your gun laws don't work here.
beetle... who is "we" in reference to the wild west? Are you saying that if england allowed people to shoot burglars then it would be the wild west? Much better that they simply hide in cages until the burglars finish cleaning out the house eh? somehow... that doesn't strike me as "freedom".
In their landmark study, John R. Lott, Jr. and David B. Mustard found, "allowing citizens to carry concealed weapons deters violent crimes and it appears to produce no increase in accidental deaths. If those states which did not have Right to Carry concealed gun provisions had adopted them in 1992, approximately 1,570 murders; 4,177 rapes; and over 60,000 aggravated assaults would have been avoided yearly....[T]he estimated annual gain from allowing concealed handguns is at least $6.214 billion....[W]hen state concealed handgun laws went into effect in a county, murders fell by 8.5 percent, and rapes and aggravated assaults fell by 5 and 7 percent." ("Crime, Deterrence, and Right To Carry Concealed Handguns," 1996.)
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"Concerns that permit holders would lose their tempers in traffic accidents have been unfounded. Worries about risks to police officers have also proved unfounded....National surveys of police show they support concealed handgun laws by a 3-1 margin....There is also not a single academic study that claims Right to Carry laws have increased state crime rates. The debate among academics has been over how large the benefits have been." ("Should Michigan keep new concealed weapon law? Don't believe gun foe scare tactics," Detroit News, 1/14/01.) "Whenever a state legislature first considers a concealed-carry bill, opponents typically warn of horrible consequences....But within a year of passage, the issue usually drops off the news media's radar screen, while gun-control advocates in the legislature conclude that the law wasn't so bad after all." (David Kopel, "The Untold Triumph of Concealed-Carry Permits," Policy Review, July-Aug. 1996, p. 9.)
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Violent crime has decreased every year since 1991, while 17 states adopted and 13 states improved RTC laws. RTC states have lower violent crime rates, on average: 22% lower total violent crime, 28% lower murder, 38% lower robbery, and 17% lower aggravated assault. The five states with the lowest violent crime rates are RTC states. (FBI)