Gun violence strikes almost every society. But not all societies are equally
at risk. For example, in 2008, the United States saw more than 12,000 firearm-related
homicides. Japan saw just 11. What explains such differences? Do more guns necessarily
mean more violence?
These questions took on new urgency with the slaughter of 12 Americans in Aurora,
Colorado. In the span of minutes, a gunman shot and killed 12 people, wounding
58 others. He used three of the most popular firearms on the U.S. market. He
had purchased all of them legally.
The gunman's access to lethal weaponry has revived the gun control debate across
the United States, which has the highest rates of gun ownership in the world.
It's easier to buy a gun in the U.S. than in any other industrialized state.
Special interest groups like the National Rifle Association want to keep it
that way. So do many Americans, who cite the Constitutional right to bear arms.
They view gun control as a threat to a core liberty that defines the American
way of life.
Advocates of gun control see things differently. Rather than view guns as integral
to American freedom, they believe they're an obstacle to it. More guns, they
say, leads to more violence and crime.
Unfortunately, while both sides of the argument presume the moral high ground,
few rely on facts. That's not surprising, since the research is mixed. While
evidence suggests that more guns do coincide with more violence, it's not clear
that strict gun laws necessarily diminish gun crime. Moreover, anecdotal evidence
can be used to support both sides.
As the U.S. grapples with the Aurora massacre, where do you stand on the gun
control debate?
By Marlene
Spoerri
For more information see
Ezra Klein, "Six
facts about guns, violence, and gun control," The Washington Post,
July 23, 2012
Crime
Statistics > Gun ownership > Guns per 100 residents > 2007 (most recent)
by country, NationMaster.com
Max Fisher "A
Land Without Guns: How Japan Has Virtually Eliminated Shooting Deaths,"
The Atlantic, July 23, 2012
Photo Credits in Order of Appearance:
Mike
Petrucci
Sean
Ganann
Algr
terminal_illusion
Richard
Roberson [also for picture 7]
Tony
Bibbs
M
Glasgow
Gage
Skidmore
Highboom
doctress
neutopia
Jonathan
Mallard
James
Johnson
St0rmz
Pete
Souza/White House