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I'll disagree slightly that guns are weapons. Firearms can be weapons, as your definition pointed out, it's the use which makes an object a weapon. A spoon can most certainly be a weapon, as can any other household object!
Here is one accepted definition of a gun btw:
A gun is a weapon designed to discharge a projectile.
And of course a gun is a weapon. It was *designed* as such. What is the history of a gun? Quite different from a spoon.
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The UN documentation - 60% of all homicides... that's taken from countries all over the world including places almost lawless like certain places in south africa, places in south america etc. It even states the lowest is 19%, highest 77%. So I don't see what exactly your point is? That lawless places with no gun control have a high murder rate with firearms...?
Yes. So, in the hands of the uncontrolled, that is what a gun becomes. Again, not a spoon.
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In the UK figures are somewhere around 3,000 people killed a year by knives, approximately 50 by guns. My point was that the tool to commit the crime might change, but the crime will still be committed. It's the person, not the tool that is the problem.
No, the correct statistic is to show me the number of people attacked by a gun firing vs. stabbing with a knife (or a spoon for the far extreme left) and show me the mortality rates. Guns will be *much* higher... because that's what they are designed for.
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Your last point about the highest rate of gun related injuries - but what context? Were those injuries from home defence, accidental wounding, trapping your finger in part of the gun mechanism, shooting at a range and recoil spraining your wrist...?
Again, what difference does it make? A gun injury is still an injury and much more serious than those from--yep, a knife (or spoon)--per incident.
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But yes I agree, regulation is needed and it needs to be done by experts in firearms, not slimy politicians looking to score points with voters by throwing around slogans and marching on some crusade in the name of children when really it's just to advance their own political and financial agenda.
Not sure what you mean by "done". Laws are passed by lawmakers, the politicians we vote for. But yes, the regulation needs to be *informed* by all stakeholders--those opposing guns as well as those pro-gun. The parents of those kids definitely get a say.