people use cars as weapons all the time, any statement otherwise is just silly, and its funny to see you bag on cars > guns you do gun death % > lead content in something
How often does this happen? How often is it in the news that someone plotted the murder of his wife by waiting for her and then running her over? How often do people get into arguments, storm away and get in their car and prepare to run the other party over? Compare to getting in an argument and drawing a gun?
I apologize for the lead analogy, but I was just responding to the 0.00248% figure. If you use such numbers to represent "smallness," "insignificant amounts" are always open to interpretation. I used the example of lead analogy to show that if you were looking at lead testing, you want parts per billion. I don't know what's acceptable for gun deaths, but in all cases where you look at parts of a whole for things we accept as "evil" and "unwanted," aiming for lower targets is not a bad thing.
they dont only end lives, they have tons of legal usefull purposes, also, the constitution says you cannot take away firearms, so its a moot point, now act like its 1781 and GTFO
Guns serve other purposes, correct, but the purpose of a gun is to kill. You can use it to train at the range or to do whatever you want, but you shoot it on the range so you're familiar with it when it comes down to using it to protect yourself. People say it's used to deter crime. Again, the consequence of a gun being able to kill someone is its power in deterrence. I'm not saying GUNS == DEATH. I'm saying that the purpose of them is to kill. Proper use can result in no deaths or limited deaths. I didn't say we should take them away at any point.
also of note violent crime in the UK was up in 2009 and 2010(no 2011 figures out yet) while it was down in the US(and has been decreasing steadily since the early 90's) so lets not pretend like the UK is some bastion of logic and devoid of criminal activity
And what's the point of that? Violent crime climbs and falls throughout the years. How can you say this change isn't part of normal variance? Or that it's due to gun control laws being passed? 13,000 murders in 1 year versus 13,001 the next doesn't likely indicate an increase. The change is likely negligible. [/quote]
you are exploiting a loophole because automotive homicide isnt a reportable figure, but I assure you it happens. I work in the business and people use cars as weapons all the time, so much so that in the mid 2000's vehicular homicide was created as a crime code nationally, so its OBVIOUSLY a problem.
If you look up vehicular homicide, Wiki says:
In general, it involves death that results from the negligent operation of a vehicle, or more so a result from driving while committing an unlawful act that does not amount to a felony. In the Model Penal Code there is no separate category of vehicular homicide, and vehicular homicides that involve negligence"
It's usually the result of negligent operation of the vehicle. Driving while commiting an unlawful act. Essentially if you put it in terms of guns, it's something like second or third degree murder. Most cases of vehicular homicide are cases where people are fleeing from the cops and run over someone by accident. That's not the same as someone shooting another in vengeance.
In CA, vehicular homicide includes DUIs driving recklessly. Is this the same as someone who wants to mow down a theater full of people? I don't think so.
Furthermore, if what you say is true, vehicular homicide was not established til the mid 2000s. How long have cars been out? Yeah. If it's THAT big of an issue why was it just established?
Look, people can talk all they want about guns and how we have background checks already, and how more controls won't necessarily change things, but one thing that has got to stop is the comparison of guns to cars. Totally different things.
It makes far more sense to compare homicide rates in countries or homicide rates as a result of gun control laws, but bringing cars into the argument is absolutely absurd.