- Joined
- Jul 8, 2020
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The two biggest differences in the US that make any real restrictions on effectively being able to combat gun violence are the sheer number of firearms already in possession in the US and the culture that has been cultivated and irreversibly tied to the constitution about rights to gun ownership. The fastest way to see widespread armed conflict on US soil that potentially culminates in the closest thing we can get to civil war would be to pass sweeping reform on gun control laws. In order to really make a difference, you would have to impose mandatory gun buyback programs to get guns off the streets and out of possession of citizens. The lack of gun ownership in other countries is why gun violence is so much lower than in the US. That won't sit well with a very well-armed minority. We saw what a minority with no evidence to back their cause did on January 6th with their actions at the US capitol building. Imagine if the government were to completely validate all their conspiracies. The fringe extreme right-wing individuals who think the government is out to get them would be able to rally the less extreme to their cause, and I don't think the result would be pretty. We have seen in recent history a few incidences of individuals getting into armed standoffs with law enforcement over the loss of constitutional rights, real or perceived, in the Bundy standoff in 2014.
It's hard to set aside strong emotions, especially when both political camps are so adept at manipulating emotions and skewing facts in order to further their agendas to win elections and secure more seats in each branch of the federal government. I am surprised that so many physicians and would-be physicians are unable to step back from their emotional responses and objectively look at the facts. The biggest argument I'm seeing is "I bet you'd be saying something else if it was your kids." That's probably true for most people because that would certainly evoke a more powerful individual emotional response. The facts make it really hard to justify any changes in gun ownership laws that would be able to make a real difference in outcome. In 2019, according to the FBI, of the 10,258 homicides by firearms, only 364 of those were by rifles. AR-type rifles like the ones used in these mass shootings are included in that number. The sweeping gun reforms that would be even remotely conscionable to the right-wing half of the nation wouldn't realistically prevent all of these deaths, because again there are already mountains of rifles out there. Even in the best-case scenario and we are able to completely prevent all of those deaths by high capacity and high rate of fire rifles, those who are set on committing murder and as much loss of human life as they can before going out in a blaze of glory gunfighting police will have other options with which to accomplish their goals. I don't see any realistic way to institute change on the national level that can prevent people from shooting up schools, churches, malls, or other crowded areas.
In a perfect world, we would have politicians that care about the issues and want to accurately represent the constituents that voted them into office, as the system was designed. Unfortunately, we have big tech, big pharma, big oil, big __insert_whatever_lobbyist_that_opposes_your_political_views_here__ all getting in the way and muddying up our representative democracy. We also have inflammatory media on both sides that polarize each political camp beyond reason, so nothing actually ends up getting done because they vote for more and more radical representatives that bicker and fight and filibuster instead of coming together and having real debates based on evidence and common sense. The system is muddy, the people are divided, and neither side can convince the other to go against their deepest moral beliefs, so we get to enjoy political debates between some of the people that most of the country is least excited about electing to lead them for the next 4 years.
It's hard to set aside strong emotions, especially when both political camps are so adept at manipulating emotions and skewing facts in order to further their agendas to win elections and secure more seats in each branch of the federal government. I am surprised that so many physicians and would-be physicians are unable to step back from their emotional responses and objectively look at the facts. The biggest argument I'm seeing is "I bet you'd be saying something else if it was your kids." That's probably true for most people because that would certainly evoke a more powerful individual emotional response. The facts make it really hard to justify any changes in gun ownership laws that would be able to make a real difference in outcome. In 2019, according to the FBI, of the 10,258 homicides by firearms, only 364 of those were by rifles. AR-type rifles like the ones used in these mass shootings are included in that number. The sweeping gun reforms that would be even remotely conscionable to the right-wing half of the nation wouldn't realistically prevent all of these deaths, because again there are already mountains of rifles out there. Even in the best-case scenario and we are able to completely prevent all of those deaths by high capacity and high rate of fire rifles, those who are set on committing murder and as much loss of human life as they can before going out in a blaze of glory gunfighting police will have other options with which to accomplish their goals. I don't see any realistic way to institute change on the national level that can prevent people from shooting up schools, churches, malls, or other crowded areas.
In a perfect world, we would have politicians that care about the issues and want to accurately represent the constituents that voted them into office, as the system was designed. Unfortunately, we have big tech, big pharma, big oil, big __insert_whatever_lobbyist_that_opposes_your_political_views_here__ all getting in the way and muddying up our representative democracy. We also have inflammatory media on both sides that polarize each political camp beyond reason, so nothing actually ends up getting done because they vote for more and more radical representatives that bicker and fight and filibuster instead of coming together and having real debates based on evidence and common sense. The system is muddy, the people are divided, and neither side can convince the other to go against their deepest moral beliefs, so we get to enjoy political debates between some of the people that most of the country is least excited about electing to lead them for the next 4 years.