Daryl wrote:All the fancy graphs and cherry picked stats don't alter one simple statistic.
Of all the developed countries one has much looser gun laws and many more guns; and this same country has amazingly higher gun homicide rates.
In a simple comparison with a similar culture (Australia- English speaking, similar other laws, a pioneering past, similar individual average wealth, and free press) the US has about 30 times more, not 30% but 3000% more. Other countries have similar comparative rates.
http://www.scccj.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/0124207_homicide_scotland_10-11.pdf
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/murder-rates-nationally-and-state
Why compare us to Australia? Why not Scotland? They had 37 homicides per million in the population in 2010-2011 and a miniscule number of gun homicides. The US had 47 in that period.
If we take away guns assuming that was the principal cause of homicides, why would we end up as peaceful Australia and not as the far less peaceful Scotland?
The answer lies in the data you prefer to ignore in favor for your prejudice. You don't like guns and attribute most of the ills of US society to that regardless of evidence to the contrary. We in the US view our responsibilities differently that you, even those Americans that do not like guns view our responsibilities differently. This has been discussed ad nauseam. Guns are not the root cause of homicides, suicides and accidents in the US as the data shows. At best the data show a lack of conclusive proof one way or another. Either way, there are far more direct correlations to the causes of violent crime than firearms.
This discussion of guns in society has arrived at the point religious conviction. We, all of us in the discussion, are unpersuadable on the issue regardless of the data presented. All that is left is trolling each other. I'll refrain from commenting further.