pokermind wrote:Simple fact the Constitution was designed to protect the rights of the minority from a capricious majority. As one of the founders said, "Why should we trade one tyrant two thousand miles way for two thousand tyrants living a mile away?"
If we want to make decisions based on what the founders wanted... the founders wanted to protect the people from the government turning tyrannical by (among other things) giving the government no standing army of any real significant size and making the militias comprised of that armed citizenry the *primary military force of the nation*. Reasoning that if your primary military force is a citizens militia it's kind of hard to turn tyrannical over said citizens.
And that citizenry being armed came coupled with just a few other requirements. It was absolutely NOT "Hey, if we just hand guns out to everyone tyranny is defeated forever because guns are tyranny repellent! Hooray!". That first half of the 2nd amendment used to actually be paid attention to contrary to modern mental gymnastics used to try to pretend it doesn't exist as anything other than decoration.
So please don't appeal to the intentions of the founders when trying to defend a position in favor of unrestricted rights to bear arms that comes coupled with essentially *zero* discipline or organization or responsibility being imposed upon those bearing them. That has nothing to do with what the Founders had in mind.
Back a while when Islamic extremists attacked a shopping center in Utah they were stopped by an armed citizenry, but not in France,
Oh please, I'm pretty sure France will trade it's many many thousands of extra still breathing citizens that it's policies on the matter have given it over the US over a once in a blue moon event in which an armed citizenry could sometimes possibly prevent a handful of deaths.
PeterZ wrote:I ran a quick regression analysis on the state data. I regressed the per capita murder rate against percentage gun ownership and population density.
I'm very sorry you wasted your time. But as I already said earlier... in the very post you were responding to in fact:
"Cities (or even states for that matter) are not islands unto themselves, using them to try to figure out the impact of gun laws is an exercise in futility.
Cities have no border controls. It doesn't matter if you make guns illegal in one city if people can drive an hour and go buy one then bring it back in with no checks performed.
There is a slightly higher ability to regulate by state because simple distances involved act as a kind of quasi-barrier... but not much of one. if you want real effect you need controls around the are you're trying to regulate. Which means you need federal action."For example, let's say you're trying to establish a no guns area in a much more local setting. Let's say, Around one part of a room. Your job is to keep any guns from getting inside that part of the room.
Approach 1: You establish checkpoints at the entrances of the room and make sure no guns get in.
Approach 2. You draw an imaginary circle around the part of the room you're responsible for, declare "hey everyone, no guns allowed in here", and then dump a hundred guns into the rest of the room and walk away and never check anyone crossing your imaginary line.
How long do you think it is before you have guns *all over* your gun free zone in both these cases?
Approach 1 is the National level. There are border controls.
Approach 2 is the city and state level. There aren't any border controls.
So, is someone expecting approach 2 to be an effective test case to use to monitor the effect of areas with "gun control" vs areas without gun control going to get meaningful results? (Ignoring the sample size limitations). No, no they are not.
On the other hand approach 1 is a much more effective test case. You get actual regions of real controls compared against actual regions without controls.
And if you missed it we've seen that chart too.
http://static2.businessinsider.com/imag ... s-guns.pngBut hey, if you want to look at comparative population densities of *that* chart feel free.
(Spoiler, Europe has really quite high population densities. And yet...)