Thanas wrote:Broomstick wrote:Thanas wrote:Today, the typical German family does not have guns. How was this accomplished? The Nazis feared an armed uprising and limited gun ownership. The basic core of this law is still used today and is one example of how enforcement and fines can reduce gun ownership rates.
No offense, Thanas, but while I can applaud the successful disarming of the German population and its resulting much lower rates of gun crime and accidents, I'm hoping we won't require the equivalent of Nazis and/or WWII to achieve similar goals in the US.
What now? They used the legal system to enforce this goal, no thuggery involved.
I'll take your word on that, as I've already disavowed knowledge of the specifics, but saying “the Nazis managed to do it” isn't necessarily the strongest selling point whether they did it nicely or via “thuggery”. Frankly, I doubt very much hunting rifles or sidearms would have prevented a Nazi rise to power, or allowed a successful uprising against them, as the disparity of capability between a WWII era army and gun-owning civilians was already too great. Which is yet another reason I roll my eyes when the locals here trot that out as a support for letting people build their own arsenals - it's nonsensical when you look at the facts.
Which applies even more so today – militia groups who think their current stashes would have any significant impact against a genuinely oppressive US government are laughable. If the Federals decided to launch the US military against them they're fucked, plain and simple. So the notion that a “well armed militia” would be able to overthrow an oppresive or corrupt government has been roundly defeated by advancing technology.
The rest of your post is pretty much "American attitudes and society are so starkly different from anywhere else and any other situation in history that any attempt at reform will fail". Which is an argument that is just hilarious.
I think I rather plainly stated that I
had no knowledge of how many of those factors were in existence elsewhere. I was speaking ONLY of the US, and I was NOT comparing it to elsewhere. Maybe, instead of another “hrurr, hurr, Americans sure are fucked up” post you might counter those points with how such factors were dealt with in other locations.
You think Prussia of all states was less militant than the USA?
Frankly, I have no real knowledge of Prussia other than as one of the Germanic states that later coalesced into Germany as whole. I wouldn't presume to know the culture and laws or detailed history of Prussia. There is a meme in the US that all the various stripes of German
are more militant than the US, or prone to it but frankly I don't believe in that sort of ethnic determinism.
I'm not sure why you think I should be as conversant with German history as you yourself are. It might be wonderful if I was, but I can't possibly know everything about everything. I thought I made it plain in my prior post that I
didn't know much German history.
Anyhow, I'm not sure how the Prussians electing Nazis to power is relevant to their willingness to give up their guns. Did they do that because there were in favor of and trusted the Nazis, or because they were big on maintaining public order and thought gun control would further that end without it being relevant to their favoring of the Nazis, or something else?
If there is a problem of enforcement than your bureaucracy and police force is hilariously incompetent.
I'll have to agree with that, especially after living in/near Chicago most of my life. The existence of an inept police force, however, is another reason Americans want to keep their guns. There are inner cities where you can't trust the police to show up in less than 15-20 minutes on a good night to stop that person breaking into your house while you sit watching TV, so of course people want a means to defend themselves and their families independent of that “hilariously incompetent” police force. This is definitely a concern of those inside of large cities who are in favor of lax gun laws. The attitude is much rarer in municipalities with a competent police force. If Germany does not suffer from such islands of festering decay that's wonderful for Germany but it doesn't solve the problem in the US where we
do have such problems.
Really, at that point the argument becomes one for rooting out corruption and incompetence in the police, and funding truly effective law enforcement. While it won't convert the zealots it would remove one of the concerns that keeps otherwise pro-control people in the "I need a gun for myself camp". Remove one of the social factors - incompetent police - that feed the perceived need for guns and you reduce the need. With reduced need the argument for rational gun control becomes more powerful.
Cure some of the social problems in this nation and imposing reasonable regulations becomes easier. But I realize that's not quite as simple as yelling "ban the guns!"
If there is a problem of attitude, that can be fixed if enough effort is applied to it.
Would you be so generous as to propose possible ways to fix such attitudes?
Guess what other principle was at times heavily entrenched, had powerful lobbies and massive popular support? And guess what changed that political situation?
If you're referring to slave ownership it required a 4 year war that, arguably, resulted in more dead Americans than the death toll from all other conflicts the US has participated in
combined. It also resulted in such charming devices being either invented or refined as the concentration camp and the land mine. Pardon me if I find such extreme measures unpalatable.
I agree that the current US death toll from guns is unacceptable, however, forcible removal of guns from the populace will, under present circumstances, result in armed resistance. This will result in an even greater death toll. I'd really rather look at
other ways to deal with the problem. No doubt that is because I am much more likely to be caught in the crossfire than you are, Thanas.