@Jwocky-- My good friend, you know well that I am among those Dumb Democrats who believes in gun control. First let me thank you for the blessing:
And otherwise, God may preserves your naivité.
Well, maybe not so much.
I suppose since I am going to remain a Dumb Democrat, and therefore hopelessly naive, that assigns me to a category of being dumber than a rock when it comes to looking at the world's problems. In my naivite', I am going to continue to look for solutions to the culture of killings that exists here in the United States. Not other places, who have their own cultures of killings. I can't do anything about them. I guess that makes me just a tiny bit less naive because I understand one size does not fit all. I also understand that no other nation has a Constitution with a Second Amendment written like we do that has the implications that it does. So, I think that makes me a tiny bit less naive, there, too. I also understand that there is a powerful industry that has an enormous stake in manufacturing guns of all kinds and that, using a very literal and particular interpretation of the Second Amendment of the U.S. is willing to push the edge of that envelope to the advantage of their ability to maximize their profits. I assume at this time, they are doing quite well, as are all the downstream companies that exist to support the maintenance of those guns post-purchase According to the advocate National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), the economic impact of the firearms and ammunitions industry is a significant producer in the American economy:
Along with the jobs, wages, and income, there is also the tax revenue the industry pays to the various levels of government:
Statistics courtesy National Shooting Sports Foundation
http://www.nssf.org/impact/Since I'm dumber than a rock, I fail to see the value of this economic impact, nearly $43 billion a year assuming the NSSF wouldn't fudge their numbers (now they wouldn't do that as a Trade Association, would they?) Well, actually their numbers are pretty good. The Christian Science Monitor, known for it very reliable reporting, put the gun industry total at $31.8 billion at the end of 2012
http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/2012/1217/US-gun-industry-is-thriving.-Seven-key-figures/31.8-billion, so that with everything that has happened since, the NSSF number is probably in the ball park. Oh, sorry, I just said the value of their economic impact. So, I'll just be hopelessly naive and point out that any serious attempt to structure a systemic change in the United States' gun culture and economics is going to have to look how to get the industry on-board with those ideas. Oh, dang. That was supposed to be hopelessly naive about gun control.
Okay. Naive. Naive. Okay...wait...nope that won't work. Not naive enough. Dang. Ya know, being a Dumb Democrat is really hard because I keep coming up with stuff that is less than stupid as a rock.
You see, here is the
down to the foundation problem with the whole premise of the "Dumb Democrat" faulty logic. It assumes that, and my dear friend, has shown, that all ideas for solving the the problem of the number of killings with guns in the United States suggested by Democrats, therefore, the dumb ones, are either
(1) wrong because they are hopelessly naive and can never find a solution, or (2) wrong because they are suggested by a dumb Democrat and therefore are hopelessly naive and can never find a solution, or (3) wrong, because, whoever is smart and tuned into all the relevant factors is sitting on the solutions. Since we are dumber than a rock, when we say either/or we can mean 1+1 = 3.
So, if you are to believe JWocky, there is someone out there, not the Dumb Democrats (of which I am one), none of you who are in the category of needing God's blessings of being hopelessly naive, who knows the way to stop the killings, only that person, or persons is not speaking up.
If you were to believe the National Rifle Association here in the U.S. and many of our politicians who receive millions in political contributions from them, as well as the lobbying of a shadowy group called A.L.E.C. that, though they deny it, is well known to write many of the bills submitted by Republican legislators (now not all get passed, by any means), the solution to the killings is the overwhelming arming of the American populace. They even have a nice slogan for it: The only way to take out a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun. Or something close to that. Now, I happen to know that JWocky has some strong opinions on that and why it is even dumber than me, the Democrat.
But, in the end, what we who are the Dumb Democrats have been waiting for a good 40 years and especially the past 20 is for a Smart Republican to step up with an idea for ending the killings (since we're dumber than a rock and hopelessly naive and therefore, pathologically incapable of even imagining a solution, or so we've been told) that we all in one voice yell "YOU'RE RIGHT! THAT'S IT! LET'S PASS THAT BILL RIGHT NOW AND END THE KILLINGS NOW!" We've been waiting for that Smart Republican, because, by inference, they are all very smart and none of them have a naive bone in their bodies, so what the heck are they waiting for? People are dying. Kids are dying. Lives are being cut short. Families are enduring tragedies that stay with them for generations.
Now, even those of us who are dumber than a rock and twice as naive as the most naive person who needs JWocky's prayers, know that the most seemingly perfect solution, the most brilliantly written piece of Smart Republican legislation (although, if it is truly from a Smart Republican, it should) will not reduce the killings to zero.
For those you who live do not live in the United States,this may stun you, but this is a situation not unique to this forum thread. In fact, it is the current status quo in the debate (not that it is a debate; it's more like Fox News, the Wall Street Journal, the NRA, plus Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, Laura SomebodyICan'tRemember and a number of conservative websites, plus the Republican caucuses in both the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate ("Caucus" is the fancy word for "club" we use referring to the political parties) and whole bunches of states with Republican governors and state legislators...well the list goes on, who, oh yeah, and sometimes the United States Supreme Court, except this past week when they kinda weren't so much...These tend to be the biggest players who don't want to change the status quo versus the rest of the country--the polls be damned). Now, do they like the killings. No, they don't. But they are, how shall I say it? They have created a philosophical and political wall around the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and interpreted it in the way they want it to read (it doesn't have to be read that way at all). When they do the math to change the status quo, there is nothing they can do to change the status quo because they, and here is the assessment of this really dumb as a rock Democrat: they believe their own mythology about the Second Amendment more than they value the lives of those who have been and will be killed by firearms. And so as long as that belief system remains immutable, the slaughter in the United States will continue. But then, I'm far too naive to have any actual insight into the structure of the problem, doubly so being a dumb as rock Democrat.