Originally Posted by Malorn
Also worth pointing out - Illinois and Chicago in particular have among the most strict gun laws in America, yet they have an out of control violence problem with gangs and shootings with a murder rate an order of magnitude higher than other parts of our country.
Meanwhile, the State of Utah enjoys fully automatic weapons and the lowest violent crime in America, rivalling Canada and many European countries.
If you think gun control will reduce crime you're a very stupid person.
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How many people live in Utah and what's the population density again? Let's see!
2.8 million people, the 34th most populous state of the US, 95% white and a funny population density:
So you're saying every state is demographically and geographically exactly like Utah?
And what's the unemployment rate in both areas? Illinois is an industry dependent state, Utah is not dependent heavy industry. So they're not
really comparable. If you look at Europe, you got all sorts of high pop density's with next to no crime, certainly no major gun crime.
Guess where the densest population area in Europe is? Netherlands, Belgium and western Germany. Which should have made it hardest on us to control gangs, right? Thing is, our gangs don't have easy access to weapons. Not from within the nation, not from nearby nations. We don't have the same violent gang culture like the US does, simply because it's not possible. Are there illegal guns? Yes, but they have to be imported from the Balkans.
Where exactly do your gang crime weapons stem from? If you can buy the weapons in a state next to you with no issues and no questions asked or import them en mass with ease. Meaning severe ease of illegal importation issues, it's almost pointless having strict weapon laws to control gang violence if the remainder of the country doesn't help you ban weapons.
Oh and btw, Chicago allowed people to keep their guns if they already bought them pre-1982. Meaning it's a state that tried a compromise with a gun freeze, not a gun removal and guns per populace are relatively high still. Meaning they never really disarmed despite of new weapons being very hard to get.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/article...o-arizona.html
Note that they made a list of gun deaths per 100.000 residents and then added an indication of facilitation by the state itself. It would be nice if it indicated a facilitation by surrounding states too. Turns out the least deadly states have some of the strictest laws.
And as you can read here, most of those gun crimes in strict gun states are weapons obtained cross-state. Basically:
states like Utah are the problem of strict gun law failure, not the solution.