methosb wrote:Can none of your seriously say that there is one thing wrong with the gun laws in the US? That nothing is even remotely too lax?
I mean, an example I can think of is a friend of mine in the US who has a gun just sitting in a draw in her bed side table. That is just mind boggling to me, anyone can get access to it. It doesn't surprise me in the least when I see yet another report of some little kid finding their parent's gun and accidentally shooting themself when people can just leave guns around the house.
The data from the CDC website indicates that there are about 40 to 50 accidental shootings of children under the age of 10 in the U.S. each year. Of these, you can count on one hand the number of incidents where a child accidentally shot himself or another child. Almost all of these accidental shootings are done by irresponsible adults.
Having a loaded gun in the house has benefits as well as costs. Of course, the costs are accidental shootings of children. The benefits are thousands of lives and many of millions of dollars in property losses saved each year as a result of homeowners successfully defending themselves in their homes.
Washington D.C. has a law, which is currently under appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, banning people from keeping guns in their homes unless they are dismantled and locked up. Since this law went into effect more than 30 years ago, the violent crime rate in Washington D.C. has been climbing steadily. The violent crime rate in D.C. is now worse than any of the 50 states.
Since gun bans went into effect in the UK and Canada, the burglary rate in both countries has soared. It is substantially higher in both countries than in the U.S. Even worse, the percentage of 'hot' burglaries, i.e., where someone is home when the burglary happens, is well over 50 percent in the UK and Canada, vs. the U.S., where it is less than 13 percent. In the U.S., burglars spend considerably more time casing a target residence to make sure that no one is home, for the simple reason that they don't want to get shot.
No one can get access to your friend's gun unless they first get access to her bedroom. If she's home, it allows her to protect herself from someone gaining unauthorized access to her bedroom, as well as all of the bad things that can happen to her in such circumstances.