carguychris
New member
IMHO both of these arguments are defensive in nature, better for preaching to the converted than reaching the unconverted.jdc1244 said:...you explain that the problem isn’t the availability of guns or the specific types of guns that are available; rather, the problem is the propensity for violence in American culture, that we are an inherently violent society, where violence is sanctioned as a legitimate form of conflict resolution.
You then explain that most of the gun crime and violence are the consequence of mental health issues, that we have failed to afford citizens access to comprehensive mental healthcare detection and treatment, and if that comprehensive mental health treatment were readily available, much of the gun crime and violence wouldn’t occur.
If we accept that American society is inexorably violent, and that this problem is intransigent, then it's easy to argue that the best solution is to take as many weapons out of circulation as possible, thus ensuring that fewer people get killed. This is perhaps the most common argument for strict gun control in the U.S. from the 1960s to present!
Furthermore, this argument fails to explain why vast demographic swaths of the U.S. population are overwhelmingly peaceful despite high gun ownership rates, and its underlying premise is contradicted by violent crime rates having been much lower before WWII when gun-purchase regulations were very lax compared to today (re: 44 AMP).
The mental-health argument is also a very slippery slope. Many people with mild mental health issues pose minimal danger to themselves and others, while some of the more severe disorders are hard to identify and treat, often because people with such problems are hesitant to seek treatment. If society enacts punitive measures, such as prohibiting people with mild mental disorders from possessing firearms, it's likely to stigmatize the mild cases while driving the really dangerous ones further underground. Additionally, recall that mental-health diagnoses have a distressing habit of varying with predominant cultural mores (e.g. homosexuality was long considered a disorder), and have often been used to beat down politically unpopular groups if not oppress them outright.
Last edited: