Comment on Concealed Handguns Create a Climate of Fear, Gun Industry Research Reveals
ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day agoAgain no matter which you choose to go by, it’s hard for me to call it “low.” I suppose to a point that’s subjective, but even your lowest number, 60k, is on par with our total gun deaths/yr including accidents, homicides, and suicides. So, if it’s low than that’s low too.
Jiggle_Physics@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
You gloss over the context of where most of that number comes from. It doesn’t come defending yourself against some third party who has targeted you for some form of victimization. It comes from people reporting how they used their gun to intimidate someone who they were arguing with, as defending themselves with a gun. Mostly people close to them. Which normal people don’t actually consider a valid reason to say they defended themselves from crime.
ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
I mean most kidnappings are from family or friends, not strangers. Most rapes are from family and friends, not strangers. It’s not outside of the realm of possibility to actually have to defend yourself against family or friends. In fact if it follows the trend it’d be more likely than having to defend yourself from strangers. Hell my friend’s house was broken into and he was pistol whipped by a masked dude, and everyone in the house said the same thing, “It was [Name Redacted], I would recognize that voice anywhere.” He had been our friend, y’know, until the armed home invasion. None of us had a gun at the time though unfortunatly, but had they one and it was used, it would have been used to defend against said “friend.” Not a stranger, a “friend.” Another friend in that same neighborhood pulled up to another mutual friend to (admittedly) sell him 2oz of weed, and that mutual friend stabbed him. That’s two people who were supposedly “friends.” The one that happened to me at walmart was a stranger, but as the data and my empirical evidence suggest, actually having to defend yourself from someone you know is more common, so, yeah I’m not surprised by that and never argued the opposite. My argument was that regardless of one’s familiarity with the attacker, DGU happens at a higher rate than “low.”
(Home invader did time in prison for robbing a gas station with a shotgun after this. Idk if he’s out now or what, that was the last I heard of him. No clue what became of stabby either, but stabee is doing fine now, took up a trade.)
Duh “most DGU stems from escalating arguments,” if an argument gets heated enough that someone needs to defend themselves however, they still need to defend themselves. Sure “letting the argument get to the point where uncle Steve pulls a knife” is “socially undesirable,” but if uncle Steve pulls a knife, he’s still pulled a knife. Whether or not you find it “socially undesirable,” if it happens then it happens. Not everything that takes place on this earth is “socially desirable.” While you should take steps to deescalate the situation, those don’t always work, maybe Steve likes meth (which is also socially undesirable, yet prevalent), whatever the reason, if they don’t work and Steve pulls the knife, as far as I’m concerned it’s more socially undesirable for me to be stabbed, uncle or not.
Jiggle_Physics@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
It is called a crime, and if you read further into what harvard talks about this.
ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com 21 hours ago
See the more I read the more I question, they don’t seem to even understand the threshold for legal use of deadly force, most of these would be technically illegal, even for some where the defense itself was above board.
If you’re the one escalating, that is illegal. Can’t legally have guns and drugs at the same time. Gang activity often involves crime while not being illegal itself. Romantic disputes would be legal if the partner immanently threatens your life, then good, otherwise illegal to use gun. Store robberies is above board, as long as they’re armed. Using deadly force to protect against unoccupied vehicle theft is illegal, against armed carjacking is legal. Unarmed burglaries would be illegal, you’re allowed to use normal force (mace or fists) not deadly force. Home invasions is legal, IF you’re in a state with castle doctrine, if you’re in a state with a Duty To Retreat law, you’re required to surrender the house if possible.
Their methodology here, to include things that are straight up crimes as “defense,” is questionable. Furthermore they seem to be using the same methodology questioned in the Kleck and Lott numbers, phone surveys, but when they do it it’s ok:
So we’ll just ignore that people 12-17 can’t legally buy nor carry a gun which would undeniably skew the numbers this way anyway (their parents can buy them one, they still can’t carry, and just how common do you think it is for parents to buy their kids guns?) The Kleck and Lott study’s voracity is called into question due to the self reported and unverifiable nature of the phone survey, basically “people could be lying.” Meanwhile 12-17yos always tell the truth? Horse hockey.
And “intimates” never lie either.
Only what like 45% of people even own guns? And of those that do a significant portion just have a shotgun in a safe for hunting. DUH, more people use “what they have.” Bet the guy defending himself with a baseball bat wouldn’t have turned his nose up at the AR15 beside it, given the opportunity.
This study is no better than the Kleck and Lott study, and 60k is still more than “low.”