While we're here- is your area done with COVID?
Yes, they have the potential, but again, not on their own. OTOH, many people are potential shooters- what prevents them doing it?
How many people could be saved if a nutter with a gun starts shooting and it's not a gun safe zone, so an armed person stops them? That happened not long ago in Indiana-
Elisjsha Dicken, 22, gestured to other shoppers to flee "as he engaged and closed in on the suspect", say police.
www.bbc.com
In gun free zones, everyone is a target and there's nobody to stop it- why would a shooter want to go somewhere that has armed people if they want to kill?
Fortunately, a cop was there to stop the first knife attacker in Australia.
Done with COVID? Do you mean is it still circulating? Or, has everyone just moved on and are pretending it doesn't exist anymore?
People are still getting it, but it isn't nearly as virulent as earlier variants. I had my second bout in February and it was like a very mild cold. While there are some people wearing masks in public, it's pretty rare.
I get the logic presented by some that the answer to bad guys with guns is more good guys with guns. We occasionally hear stories where the bad guy was stopped by a good guy with a gun. But, where it gets more complicated is that the gun owned by a good guy is also a potential crime gun. It good get lost or stolen. It could be taken from the good guy by a bad guy in a confrontation. In other words, having more good guys carrying sounds like a good idea until you consider all the ramifications.
Then there are the "good" guys who were good right up to the point that they became bad or - at best - very stupid.
Common mistakes, uncommon reactions in 4 separate shootings | AP News
The guys responsible for Ahmaud Arbery's death weren't criminals until they chased him down and killed him.
I dare anyone to say George Zimmerman was being a good guy with a gun when he killed Trayvon Martin. Same with Kyle Rittenhouse. In fact, Rittenhouse was too stupid to be accepted by the Marines.
Woman Who Shot at Home Depot Shoplifters Sentenced to 18 mos | TIME
The above incidents range from gross stupidity to underlying malevolence. All shooters were in legal possession. Even with the best of intentions, carrying a firearm can encourage people to initiate or intervene in confrontations where better judgement might have suggested other actions. Call it 9mm bravery...
Then there's this:
Many mass shooters acquire guns legally (axios.com)
The big picture: From 1966 to 2019, 77% of mass shooters purchased at least some of the weapons used in the shootings legally, per
data compiled by the National Institute of Justice, a research agency of the Department of Justice.
- Many mass shootings in the U.S. after 2019 have also underscored the same reality.
- Illegal purchases were made by just 13% of mass shooters, per the data, which also notes that 32.5% of mass shooting cases could not be confirmed.
- More than 80% of the assailants responsible for K-12 shootings stole their guns from family members, per the National Institute of Justice.
So no, I don't agree that putting more guns in circulation will help. While there are incidents where the "good guy with a gun" saved the day, when I look at the big picture, I see a cure that is worse than the disease.
Yes, you have people breaking the laws on your side of the border, so it's up to Canada to handle that part. Again, you're blaming the guns and not people- they don't waltz across the borders under their own power- it takes two to tango and someone in Canada is apparently willing to dance- are you saying the ones on the Canadian side are being forced to buy or take them? Not likely, so they ARE complicit.
AFAIK, the law enforcement agencies who can work on both sides of the border are the FBI and US Marshalls, but the ATF probably can, too. Whether Canadian Law Enforcement or the government will allow them to operate without being involved is another story.
Yes, we have to address the issue on our side of the border. But, the bad guys here are being helped by bad guys on your side and the vast quantity of firearms available in the US. We can't address that. We should start a "war on guns", because the war on drugs was so successful?
Coincidentally:
3 from Brampton charged with alleged weapons trafficking in U.S. | CBC News
Those bad guys from Brampton had help from bad guys in the US.
You're right- legislation won't help. The only way to stop this is to get people to change their behavior or to lock up the offenders. If it makes them and their families sad, too effing bad- who told them to be criminals, anyway?
I agree somewhat - I think legislation won't help. But, only because it's too late - there are already too many firearms in circulation.
Getting people to change their behaviour? There will always be bad, stupid and crazy people. You address that problem by restricting access to firearms. However, when there are so many in circulation, bad, stupid and crazy people find a way...