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Gun politics

Around the world firearms policy tends to revolve around what degree of control should be enforced upon the private ownership and usage of firearms, and to what extent private ownership of firearms influences crime and the balance of power between the individual and the state.

This article discusses these policies in a general sense. For more specific dicussion of policy in specific locales, refer to these articles:

Gun politics in Canada
Gun politics in the US
Gun politics in the UK
Gun politics in Australia

Table of contents
1 Approaches
2 General discussion of arguments
3 External links

Approaches

In summary, those who support greater restrictions on firearm ownership believe some subset of:

Those who maintaining or extending the private ownership of firearms believe some subset of:

General discussion of arguments

Balance of power

Advocates for citizens having the right to bear arms often point to
totalitarian regimes that passed gun control legislation as a first step of their reign of terror. The sequence is said to be gun registration, followed some time later by confiscation. Nazi legislation is the most famous example of this sequence, but it also occurred in Marxist regimes.

This does not indicate that gun control laws will always lead to totalitarianism. Many places, such as the United Kingdom have had such laws for many years without becoming totalitarian. However, it should be noted that registration of firearms in many democracies has led to confiscations of formerly legal firearms and the outlawing of the ownership of firearms to various degrees.

Some persons oppose registration of guns or licensing of gun owners because if captured, the associated records would provide military invaders with a means for locating and eliminating law-abiding (i.e. patriotic) resistance fighters. Location and capture of such records is a standard doctrine taught to military intelligence officers.

Weapon ownership is classically a right of a sovereign. In the U.S., citizens theoretically are sovereign, though their sovereignty is expressed collectively. Most countries which successfully pass gun control laws do not consider their citizens sovereign. This may be a root in the different attitudes of European and U.S. citizens on gun-control.

Self-defense

main article at guns and crime

Both sides actively debate the relevance of self-defense in modern society. Some scholars, notably John Lott, claim to have discovered a positive correlation between gun control legislation and crimes in which criminals confront citizens - that is, increases in the number or strictness of gun control laws are correlated with increases in the number or severity of violent crimes. While these findings are hotly disputed, a November 2003 study released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that, after a comprehensive study of all known scientific evidence about gun control legislation, it was unable to determin any measurable benefit at all from gun control laws, although the authors caution that, even after decades of such laws and studies of them, further study is needed.

The efficacy of gun control legislation at reducing the availability of guns has been challenged by, among others, the testimony of criminals that they do not obey gun control laws, and by the lack of evidence of any efficacy of such laws in reducing violent crime.

External links





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