What I am arguing is that the government be allowed to create practical legislation regulating the distribution of firearms. Before someone gains a gun license their backgrounds should be checked and if they have a history of violent behaviour they should be rejected. I believe gun training should be mandatory before a license is given and why not treat it like a driver's license. I believe that creating an atmosphere where legal gun ownership is a responsibility, not a right, will have a beneficial effect on the welfare of the people as opposed to the detrimental effect not taking these actions has.
Just recently in my hometown the head of police asked the town council to ratify a new noise and cruising law. His quote was "your right to free speech ends at my ears." Oliver Wendell Holmes he's not, but I do think that he is a good representative of well intentioned fascists.
I live in a rural area of Virginia which is a very pro gun state. Almost everyone I know has one or more firearms, and there are very few restrictions on owning them. However, the high number of guns coupled with a lack of gun regulations HAS NOT lead to a wave of murder or chaos. I haven't locked the doors at my house until recently, and that is simply because my landlord doesn't like to knock. I don't lock my car doors, and when a murder does occur it is almost a shock. Drugs are a really bad problem here, and there is a very real, very scary oxycotin culture which has destroyed many lives and has helped to increase crime, but armed robbery and gun violence in general is a very rare occurance. The system functions well enough here, and I don't see any need to introduce tons of new laws to solve a problem that doesn't exist. Maybe it is very different in your area, but I doubt that even banning and trying to confiscate guns would control crime in the highest crime areas in america.
I know that crime underwent dramatic drops in New York City and other urban areas, yet I do not credit tough new anti gun laws for those drops. Besides making law enforcement of the existing laws more effective, it appears that improving socioeconomic factors led almost all of the decrease. I think that gun licenses are a solution in search of a problem, and that it is just another oppertunity for government to intrude on people's lives. The Pentagon decided that hey we have the money, we have the technology, lets track every aspect we can for average americans. I have no trust in bureaucracies.
Two weekends ago my cousin had to fly because of his job. They flew from Cincinatti, to Memphis, to Mobile. On the way home they were in Memphis, and Northwestern (north worst) Airlines experienced a computer glitch, and claimed that my cousin and his coworker had flown for free. Then they were rude and provided poor customer service till my cousin and his coworker missed their connecting flight. When they got angry, the woman told them to calm down or she would basically report them as terrorists. This is an example of a completely out of whack bureaucracy, but I'm sure there are others, and I know that the government provides poor customer service on a continuing basis. Except the government has power to REALLY screw with people's lives. Things that are much worse than missing a connecting flight.
Crime and incarceration rates in Europe and Japan are much lower than in the US, and I think it has little to do with guns. Maybe it is the culture, norms, and mores. I don't know,but I think we should find out what it is, before a bunch of well meaning politicians go off half-cocked and implement tons of new laws that don't work. Everyday we lose a little bit of freedom if we just sit back and let the government do what it wants.
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