blackshoe, on 2010-December-17, 07:57, said:
I think this answer epitomizes the cultural differences between the US and most of the rest of the democratic world. In many societies, the (non-universal) consensus would be that as long as some people will have handguns or assault weapons, society should focus on trying to eradicate or limit such ownership (apart from say police officers, security guards etc)in order to save lives. In the US, it seems to me that the idea that people owe society any duty takes a distant back seat to 'rights'. And it is in the interests of those who control the media and the governments to foster that attitude, because it preserves the notion that its ok for the wealthy to become incredibly rich while giving back almost nothing to society. Once you start believing that everyone in a society has a duty to society that is as anywhere near as important as their individual 'rights', matters like universal health care, a proper educational system for everyone, a regressive tax system and gun control become natural rather than alien concepts.
BTW, the notion that the proper response to someone pulling a gun is to pull one's own is rejected by the majority of police officers...their advice is to either run away if possible or to do as told.
Another factor ignored by the gun lobby is that in real life, as opposed to movies and television, the vast majority of even trained gun owners become terrible shots when faced with confrontation. I'm sure most here have heard stories of police shootings where dozens of rounds were fired at close range and few shots hit. I've interviewed and examined in court 'use of force' experts and they all agree on this reality. So the typical result of 'everyone' pulling their guns will be a lot of stray rounds and a lot of bystander casualties.
But, hey why let reality interfere with the myth of the wild west: macho fantasy is so much more rewarding than reality.