Short answer: I voted no.
Long answer:
Being from the Baltimore area, I know what guns can do and the fear they install.
The vast majority of the shootings I've heard or experienced have ended in fatalities. So what bothers me is when I hear the comparisons made between deaths caused by vehicular accidents, drowning, or other such accidents and gun homicides. I feel that there is a certain pathology concerning firearms aside from mechanical function (guns require only a pull of a trigger, are impersonal weapons, allow for a relatively quick method of suicide, etc.) that is diminished when such comparisons are formed.
As an aside, take, for example, the psychopathology of weapons like firearms. I feel there is something unique in firearms that canââ¬â¢t be adequately compared to knives, blunt tools, etc. I would agree with the statistic that cites self-defense as the most common reason for acquiring a gun; everyone I know who owns a gun echoes the same sentiment. Those sentiments refer to the potent psychological effect ââ¬â see: ââ¬Åweapons effectââ¬Â ââ¬â of guns. Guns change the power dynamic drastically; give someone a gun and they instantly go from being a victim to the one in control. There is a lot of research into the psychological aspect of firearms, particularly in young males. A few interesting reads:
http://al.nd.edu/new...research-shows/
http://faculty.knox....sto-aggress.pdf
http://www.psycholog...1999/98abb.html
If you are against gun control and preach personal responsibility accountable ownership, etc., then this is probably more your alley:
http://www.saf.org/j...igger-happy.pdf
That said, I donââ¬â¢t feel stricter gun control is the answer. In short, from the data I've looked at and from what I've read, evidence for the effectiveness of gun laws is pretty spotty. Gun laws just scratch the surface. There isn't enough to convince me, personally, that gun laws will go much deeper than that (save for what Mr. Jazzy alluded to when he said that as long as there are people and there are guns, there will always been the threat of shootings).
However, I think there is enough evidence to suggest that there is a direct correlation between gun availability and crime. So controlling the amount of guns can be helpful. In addition, I feel that so-called assault weapons are the ones under abundant scrutiny when there is evidence to suggest that concealable handguns are a far greater menace. Backgrounds checks are already in place, but the fact that the majority of guns used in crimes like mass shootings are purchased legally suggests that guns have a way of finding themselves out of the hands of so-called law-abiding owners and into the public. The gun culture here doesn't help either as any attempt to impose some form of regulation on guns is met by the usual political reverie and even more excitation to cling to guns and prevent the evil democrats from taking away [our] guns.