Financial Damage of Colorado Killer

this was my original quote:Quote from zdreg:

nobody on this thread has offered any statistics that proves that murders and shootings and the crime rates are lower in states with tough gun control laws.

the response to date has been zero. certain posters changed the subject by comparing countries.
 
I gave you the PRECISE reason why its not lower in most US states. So, what is your point? Because the health care system in none of the US states is reasonable its not worth it to think about a reform to make it more affordable given its an order of magnitude more expensive (but not necessarily better) than in many European countries??? That is your line of argumentation???

Quote from zdreg:

this was my original quote:Quote from zdreg:

nobody on this thread has offered any statistics that proves that murders and shootings and the crime rates are lower in states with tough gun control laws.

the response to date has been zero. certain posters changed the subject by comparing countries.
 
Ummm...LOL, what would you expect from ET or any other board that doesn't require a shred of knowledge to get banging on a keyboard :D.

Quote from oldtime:

But I will say this, most people who reply to threads I start are total idiots.

Thanks for the reply
 
especially from someone with such impressive average per day post count....

Quote from the1:

Ummm...LOL, what would you expect from ET or any other board that doesn't require a shred of knowledge to get banging on a keyboard :D.
 
DID YOU KNOW? In one year on average, almost 100,000 people in America are shot or killed with a gun.

In one year, 31,593 people died from gun violence and 66,769 people survived gun injuries (National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC)). That includes:

12,179 people murdered and 44,466 people shot in an attack (NCIPC).

18,223 people who killed themselves and 3,031 people who survived a suicide attempt with a gun (NCIPC).

592 people who were killed unintentionally and 18,610 who were shot unintentionally but survived (NCIPC).

Over a million people have been killed with guns in the United States since 1968, when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated (Childrens’ Defense Fund, p. 20).

U.S. homicide rates are 6.9 times higher than rates in 22 other populous high-income countries combined, despite similar non-lethal crime and violence rates. The firearm homicide rate in the U.S. is 19.5 times higher (Richardson, p.1).

Among 23 populous, high-income countries, 80% of all firearm deaths occurred in the United States (Richardson, p. 1).
Gun violence impacts society in countless ways: medical costs, costs of the criminal justice system, security precautions such as metal detectors, and reductions in quality of life because of fear of gun violence. These impacts are estimated to cost U.S. citizens $100 billion annually (Cook, 2000).

Interesting.
 
Quote from amazingIndustry:

I gave you the PRECISE reason why its not lower in most US states. So, what is your point? Because the health care system in none of the US states is reasonable its not worth it to think about a reform to make it more affordable given its an order of magnitude more expensive (but not necessarily better) than in many European countries??? That is your line of argumentation???

i was asking for statistics not opinions.
 
Quote from zdreg:


nobody on this thread has offered any statistics that proves that murders and shootings and the crime rates are lower in states with tough gun control laws.

Canada is a state. It has tougher gun laws. It has much lower rate of shootings and gun-initiated murders.
 
Quote from Random.Capital:

Canada is a state. It has tougher gun laws. It has much lower rate of shootings and gun-initiated murders.
or, you could go the other way, check out Mexico
 
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