popper wrote:pancakes3 wrote:popper wrote:It seems to me that gun crime (the non-passionate kind, including suicide) could be drastically reduced with some simple common sense measures. I'd look at three categories of people that account for the overwhelming majority of gun crime. It shouldn't be difficult to come up with a plan to address each of these dangerous categories of people. I don't see why it couldn't be a bipartisan effort as well.
Persons who are mentally healthy yet have a criminal intent for profit or prestige
Persons who are mentally ill that have criminal intent
Persons who are mentally ill and don't understand or can't control their actions
In an ideal world with perfect information, sure. Maybe. But given that we don't live in a perfect world, it's not workable. The problem is from which direction we're approaching limiting arms from. We either:
1) Assume everyone is mentally healthy and responsible, and until proven otherwise, take gun access away from them.
2) Assume everyone is capable of murder with a gun, and allow people to apply for guns if they can prove that they are not mentally ill or otherwise dangerous.
Using a car analogy, we don't assume everyone is a safe driver, and after the accident happens, take access to cars away. We assume that everyone is not able to drive, and after being licensed (however rubberstamped) allow them to access cars.
It's this fundamental belief that everyone has a right to access guns until proven otherwise that's the source of the danger because it allows for, and even requires tragedies to happen before ex post facto actions are taken.
Just for the sake of argument, assume we will never be able to confiscate the many millions of guns currently present in the country. Further assume that you've been hired to come up with a plan to drastically reduce gun crime. How would approach the problem?
Laughably easy.
Impose a death tax on guns and ammunition, to increase the marginal cost to consumers of buying guns. Use the proceeds of the death tax to buy guns and turn them into electric guitars (or whatever).
Buyback programs don't work because there's a marginal propensity to own a firearm and if you don't do anything to influence that, all buyback programs normally do is replace old guns with newer guns. But if you ban guns (not practical) or put a death tax on them (more practical), the marginal propensity to own guns goes down and the number of guns in circulation can be reduced. All the people who still want to hold on to their guns are allowed to do so - the main effect is to discourage people from buying new guns, which, by the way, will prevent/discourage some of these impulsive "buy a gun and then go shoot up a school" crap.
None of the other typical Dem gun control things are at all useful. Banning ar-15s is completely useless. Background checks are a joke. Name me a current gun control legislation and I'll show you how dumb and useless it is. But a death tax would actually do something. And you can dial it up or down to try and balance benefits and costs of gun ownership.
I'll be transparent and say what I would do is impose a relatively low tax and then crank it up higher and higher, like we did with cigarettes. But not to seize all your guns, I couldn't care less, I don't want your guns, just to prevent suicide, mainly. If it reduces violent crimes committed with guns also that would be great, and if schools shootings dried up as well that would be a bonus.











