Symmetry wrote:patrickaa317 wrote:mrswdk wrote:I thought we were talking about gun crime in the US, not open warfare with al-Shabab.
But for the sake of debate: no. I don't think that allowing ordinary Somalis to arm themselves would make Somalia safer, just like pouring guns into Syria would not make Syria safer.
Again, it depends who is getting them. More variables than just +/- guns and +/- violence. Holder's concept of fast and furious across the Mexican border definitely did not make anyone safer either. I'll agree that more guns does not always equal more safety. The two are not mutually dependent nor are they mutually exclusive.
Sym was the one that wanted examples, didn't specify where. Plenty of more localized examples of restrictive gun laws in places like Chicago where it is more violent than more passive gun laws such almost any place in the south if he was talking US soil.
Of course I wanted examples of increased gun ownership and relaxed gun legislation resulting in lower gun crime. I'm happy to discuss it anywhere, and I apologise for forcing you to dodge around the question. I should have been more direct.
I think PS has posted a bunch of examples of places where increased gun ownership led to reduced crimes (maybe not gun crimes). I think he also posted evidence that shows gun control laws don't actually positively affect gun crimes (e.g. Chicago, DC). I think the response to that is that if I lived in Chicago and wanted a gun to commit a crime, I could travel somewhere else relatively close to get said gun.