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1. iugtmk+0e[view] [source] 2025-09-10 20:21:34
>>david9+(OP)
I have become something of a statist over the years and I apparently annoy a whole lot of people, when I argue for not upsetting the status quo much further. Needless to say, this obviously is not a good thing if you share that perspective with me. This is actual political violence. And it has little to do with guns. If someone really wanted to get to the guy, one would. The issue is further societal deterioration in basic standards.

Let me reiterate. Violence is not the answer for one reason and one reason only. Once it starts and everyone joins, it will be very, very hard to stop.

edit: be

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2. ikrenj+uj[view] [source] 2025-09-10 20:45:24
>>iugtmk+0e
this has everything to do with guns. the more guns in society the more gun violence there is. is not rocket science
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3. themaf+qk[view] [source] 2025-09-10 20:49:17
>>ikrenj+uj
In the USA: There are more suicides than murders every year. The ratio is typically 2:1. The "deaths due to gun violence" statistic includes suicides. It's not exactly that plain and simple either.
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4. ceejay+Uk[view] [source] 2025-09-10 20:51:43
>>themaf+qk
Access to guns makes suicide attempts much more likely to succeed. You're describing a related aspect of the same problem.

https://www.kff.org/mental-health/do-states-with-easier-acce...

"Firearms are the most lethal method of suicide attempts, and about half of suicide attempts take place within 10 minutes of the current suicide thought, so having access to firearms is a suicide risk factor. The availability of firearms has been linked to suicides in a number of peer-reviewed studies. In one such study, researchers examined the association between firearm availability and suicide while also accounting for the potential confounding influence of state-level suicidal behaviors (as measured by suicide attempts). Researchers found that higher rates of gun ownership were associated with increased suicide by firearm deaths, but not with other types of suicide. Taking a look at suicide deaths starting from the date of a handgun purchase and comparing them to people who did not purchase handguns, another study found that people who purchased handguns were more likely to die from suicide by firearm than those who did not--with men 8 times more likely and women 35 times more likely compared to non-owners."

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5. themaf+7o[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:04:12
>>ceejay+Uk
I would think addressing the reasons people commit suicide leads to a better society. I would think that simply removing a popular tool for them only hides a symptom of a broader problem.

The other break in your statistic is people who own guns and commit suicide, and people who own guns and have a family member steal them to commit suicide. The later is far more common. Which suggests that part of the issue is unrestricted access to firearms by children in the home of a gun owning parent.

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6. ceejay+0p[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:08:35
>>themaf+7o
> I would think addressing the reasons people commit suicide leads to a better society.

Sure. But one of those reasons is "I feel very bad and I have access to a gun".

"The rate of non-firearm suicides is relatively stable across all groups, ranging from a low rate of 6.5 in states with the most firearm laws to a high of 6.9 in states with the lowest number of firearm laws. The absolute difference of 0.4 is statistically significant, but small. Non-firearm suicides remain relatively stable across groups, suggesting that other types of suicides are not more likely in areas where guns are harder to get."

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7. mgh95+Lw[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:39:09
>>ceejay+0p
> Sure. But one of those reasons is "I feel very bad and I have access to a gun".

This is perhaps one of the worst ways of looking at it. People kill themselves slowly by many means, including alcoholism, smoking, risky activities (reckless driving, etc.). These are grouped broadly under the term "Deaths of Despair" (see: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8221228/). It may be more informative to look at other countries, such as Russia, Norway and Finland, which have incredibly high rates of alocholism leading to a high rate of deaths of despair.

There are many ways to reliably kill yourself. Guns are just the quickest. A serious discussion on the topic cannot avoid this fact.

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8. ceejay+Px[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:43:24
>>mgh95+Lw
The faster the method, the less time there is to change your mind. An alcoholic can go to rehab. A smoker can take up vaping. The guy with a shotgun wound to the face… is in a spot of bother.
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9. mgh95+mA[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:53:14
>>ceejay+Px
Yes but addressing it as far as "can go to rehab" misses the point: deaths from chronic fatty liver and its complications or lung cancer are dramatically elevated in these countries. It is quite literally "too late". The problem needs to be addressed much earlier.
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10. ceejay+cB[view] [source] 2025-09-10 21:56:42
>>mgh95+mA
I can buy a gun and use it in a matter of hours. Less - potentially seconds - if I already own one.

I cannot give myself chronic fatty liver disease or lung cancer that quickly. I think you know this.

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11. mgh95+ZC[view] [source] 2025-09-10 22:04:52
>>ceejay+cB
I do but why is the argument you presented is about how guns are the cause of the deaths. The deaths of despair occur with or without firearms. The focus on the firearms par of "firearm suicides" does not reduce suicides.
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