• Dave.
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    fedilink
    61 year ago

    Logistically, it’s impossible. Even without the 2nd amendment we don’t have the capacity to do it. There’s no way to collect and dispose of them.

    Australian here, you know what I hear when this argument gets trotted out?

    “I have a yard full of prickles and it really hurts when I step on them but there’s just too many prickles to even think about trying to get rid of them. Even just the ones from the front porch to the letterbox. Oh, how it hurts when I step on one! But it’s just too hard.”

    Everything starts with small steps. Start doing the small steps. Otherwise you’re just parroting The Onion’s seminal news story on gun violence, and they were being sadly satirical.

    • @jordanlund
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      -21 year ago

      The most successful gun buyback in US history took 4,200 guns off the street.

      https://www.hcp1.net/GunBuyback

      399,995,800 to go!

      This is why small steps are pointless. We have to change the constitution to take significant steps, but even doing that, gun owners WILL NOT surrender voluntarily.

      So now what? We’ve repealed the 2nd amendment, now we take out the 4th amendment on illegal search and seizure and go house to house searching for guns? Knowing that gun owners are armed and won’t give up peacefully?

      You want a civil war because that’s how you get a civil war.

      • Dave.
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        fedilink
        21 year ago

        Again with the, “oh we tried that, it didn’t work”

        My answer to that is, “try harder”.

        And all the rest of your extrapolatory bullshit I’ll just ignore.

        Mass shootings cost your communities so much. Price your buybacks accordingly. Work on your gun laws. Work on fixing your mental health system.

        Don’t just say, “It’s too hard.”

        • @jordanlund
          link
          01 year ago

          That’s the thing, they don’t work at the volume needed to make a difference.

          What happens is 2 things:

          1. A bunch of inoperable guns get turned in for cash which is then used to buy more guns.

          2. Gun owners evaluate the cash value of their guns and decline to turn them in since they aren’t being paid fair market value.

          https://www.thetrace.org/2023/04/do-gun-buybacks-work-research-data/

          "The most rigorous studies of gun buyback programs have found little empirical evidence to suggest that they reduce shootings, homicides, or suicides by any significant degree in either the short- or long-term. 

          This isn’t surprising, experts say. “Even under the assumption of optimal implementation, only a tiny fraction of guns in a given community are going to be turned into gun buyback programs,” Charbonneau said. “It’s unlikely that research using standard statistical methods will be able to identify the causal impact of buybacks on firearm violence.”

          An analysis by The Trace earlier this year found that more than 16 million guns were produced for the U.S. market in 2020 alone, and somewhere between 350 and 465 million guns may be in circulation nationwide. Meanwhile, even the most successful gun buyback events collect only a few hundred guns at a time. For example, over a nearly two-decade period, New York City’s gun buyback initiative collected just 10,000 firearms."