Two factors explain this discrepancy – one, misclassified shootings; and two, overlooked incidents. Regarding the former, the CPRC determined that the FBI reports had misclassified five shootings: In two incidents, the Bureau notes in its detailed write-up that citizens possessing valid firearms permits confronted the shooters and caused them to flee the scene. However, the FBI did not list these cases as being stopped by armed citizens because police later apprehended the attackers. In two other incidents, the FBI misidentified armed civilians as armed security personnel. Finally, the FBI failed to mention citizen engagement in one incident.

Never let your government disarm you. They dont have your interests at heart.

  • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.net
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    1 year ago

    Apples to oranges. Australia doesn’t have the same society as us- nowhere near the levels of drug problems and drug cartels, and they are more likely to treat addicts like patients who require treatment than criminals who should be punished by locking them up with even more violent criminals. Australia has WAY better mental and phyiscal health care and better protections for workers. It’s much closer to a socialized society than the USA is.
    As a result they have significantly different problems, specifically, they DON’T have anywhere near the same level of drug problems and violent crime. Their culture doesn’t glorify violence as much as ours does, and we don’t have that mixed in with a much more ‘FU you’re on your own’ type socioeconomic policy.

    THOSE changes are why much of AU is a safer society. I strongly advocate for making many of those changes in USA. Specifically- health care should be a human right (including mental health care), we should treat drug addicts like patients not criminals, and we should otherwise reform our society for the benefit of the people rather than the benefit of the corporations in the economy.

    • MC_Lovecraft@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      At this point you are arguing that gun reform can’t work simply because Americans are special. You are incorrect, and your position isn’t supported by anything other than propaganda.

      • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.net
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        1 year ago

        Don’t be obtuse. I’m arguing that because America is different than Australia, what worked there isn’t guaranteed to work here, and that the causes of our gun issues run a lot deeper than guns. Therefore, rather than taking a simpleton answer of ‘it worked for them it’ll work for us!’ it makes sense to actually think about what are the underlying causes of our problems and if that solution will work or not.

        • MC_Lovecraft@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I am absolutely not the one being obtuse here. Nothing you have claimed here is supported by actual evidence, unlike the pro-gun control position, and I’m not prepared to base our gun policy on vibes alone. You can spend all day saying ‘that’s different!’ but the facts are not on your side.

          • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.net
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            1 year ago

            I’m not prepared to base our gun policy on vibes alone

            Okay now we’re getting somewhere. I agree entirely, public policy should not be based on ‘vibes’ or emotions of any sort, no matter whose vibes they are. In a ‘Free Country’, if you’re going to set a policy or restrict someone’s freedoms (especially Constitutionally-enumerated freedoms), you need a damn good reason and some proof that your policy will have the desired effect. My ‘vibes’ are insufficient and so are yours.

            So I as I see it, the answer, from real numbers, is pretty simple.
            Per FBI Uniform Crime Report, there are about 10k-12k homicides by firearm per year.
            I’ll take a moment to point out that rifles, which include the ‘assault’ rifles everyone wants to ban as well as other rifles, are used in about 200-350 homicides/year, which is less than half the 600-700 people who are punched and kicked to death. Not a huge threat there.
            But back on subject. 10-12k firearm homicides per year.
            In comparison, there are minimum of 55k defensive gun uses per year. A DGU is when a law-abiding person uses a legal firearm to stop or prevent a crime. The vast majority end with no shots fired- the criminal sees the gun and runs away.
            The exact number of such incidents is much harder to nail down, because unlike homicides, they aren’t centrally tracked. Many DGUs don’t get reported- the criminal runs away quickly so there’s not much to report; and there’s no central reporting or tracking as there is with homicide. Thus DGUs must be tracked by various statistical survey methods, leading to the a wide disparity in numbers. Anti-gun researcher Hemenway puts it at 55k-80k/year, pro-gun researcher Lott puts it in the millions. I say it’s probably somewhere in the hundreds of thousands.

            So I look at these two pieces of data. 10-12k firearm homicide per year, a large % of which is done by prohibited persons and/or illegal guns (which are already illegal). On the other side, 55k+ DGUs, the vast majority of it done by legal persons and legal guns.
            And I conclude if we enact anti-gun policy, it will affect the people who follow the law more than those who don’t; namely; it will reduce DGUs at a greater rate than firearm homicide. And that is not a good trade in my book.

            Curious to hear your thoughts?

            • MC_Lovecraft@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              My thoughts are that you are literally pulling a conclusion that the numbers don’t support out of your ass because you ‘feel’ the numbers are probably higher. The entire premise is flawed from the beginning anyway, because any situation where a person pulls a gun on a person without a gun is not a defensive use of a gun, and certainly doesn’t make anyone involved safer. Any interaction between two gun wielding individuals is similarly not a case of a good guy preventing violence. If neither had guns, neither would get shot. It is literally that simple.

              • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.net
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                1 year ago

                I said that given two biased partisan researchers who produce a high and a low number, I feel the reality is probably somewhere between them. That seems pretty logical to me. If you disagree, can you explain what you think the correct number of DGUs is and how you come to that conclusion?

                any situation where a person pulls a gun on a person without a gun is not a defensive use of a gun, and certainly doesn’t make anyone involved safer.

                This is easily disproven. Here’s one obvious scenario.
                Single mid-20s attractive female is legally armed with carry permit. She is walking home from work when she’s confronted by a would-be rapist who blocks her way and insists he comes with her. She draws her weapon and orders him out of her way. He immediately surrenders and does the whole ‘I’m sorry I didn’t mean nothing you don’t gotta overreact like that’. No shots are fired. She then leaves the area and continues home unharmed.
                That woman is safer and unharmed and unraped BECAUSE she carried her gun.

              • TonyStew@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                any situation where a person pulls a gun on a person without a gun is not a defensive use of a gun

                “You must defend from your assailants with an attack of equal or lesser hit points or it doesn’t count.” Am I allowed to pepper spray someone punching me? Or do I need to know what they bench first? Where do knives rank on the chart? And how does this system scale with multiple assailants?

                Any interaction between two gun wielding individuals is similarly not a case of a good guy preventing violence

                “You prevented nothing, sir”