Right. The typical gun crime is committed with a pistol- and the problem with outlawing pistols is that they're very good self-defense weapons because you can carry them easily. Taking them away from the criminals, even if that's possible, means saying to all the private citizens that they have no right to carry weapons for self-defense.Broomstick wrote:It is already forbidden for US civilians to own automatic weapons outside of a few very specific (and expensive) exceptions. Essentially, civilians can't own automatic weapons in the US, so that's already in effect.Tritio wrote:The Duchess is entirely correct about my lack of understanding about the necessity of guns for self defence (against people and dangerous wildlife) in a large country. I didn't think of it from that angle. However, that could be covered by restricting gun sales to non-automatic weapons of a certain ammunition capacity (as others have suggested) and this would prevent or reduce the lethality of gun crimes.
Many, if not most, locations also restriction ammo capacity - so that, too, is already in effect.
I can't recall any sort of gun crime in my lifetime involving automatic weapons (my parents dimly remember such a time, but that was pre-WWII). The guns typically used in crime do not have extended capacity magazines. So I'm not sure how you come to the conclusion that those "changes" (which are, essentially, already in effect) will "prevent or reduce the lethality" of gun crimes.
Do keep in mind that "gun crime" doesn't always involved someone getting hurt - more often, a gun is used to threaten violence and/or gain compliance.
As in quite a few other countries around the world, that is not seen as a good thing in the US. Insisting on it and scrambling to find ways to make it happen is a stupid policy goal. It would be like searching for ways to privatize the health insurance system in (for example) Germany. It would be possible. You could do it, but why? It would make many Germans hate you and not really improve matters very much.
How foolish would I look to you if I went "well, the German health care system is public, and that's bad, so the Germans should do this that and the other thing." And you said "the Germans don't want to do that, and trying to do that would alienate a lot of German voters." And I said "well, they should do this and that anyway, but maybe we should compromise on the other thing..."
If you can't adjust your policy proposals to the fact that different places have different needs and cultures, you have no business trying to talk policy in the first place.