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ashling

(25,771 posts)
Sat Mar 2, 2013, 10:13 PM Mar 2013

Fear factor: The cycle that drives assault weapon sales

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/03/02/fear-factor-the-cycle-that-drives-assault-weapon-sales/


The cause of gun control in the US is lost unless we address the underlying anxiety that makes people feel safer armed

The future of guns in our society may be better understood if we knew more about what they mean to people and why people buy them.

Fear is a major factor for many firearm purchases. Recent trends in gun sales suggest that many citizens are becoming more fearful: Gallup poll data suggest that Americans are more fearful, at near-record high levels, about big government, compared to big business or big labor. This fear overlays the long-term public fear of crime and terrorism.
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Fear factor: The cycle that drives assault weapon sales (Original Post) ashling Mar 2013 OP
"Fear" would seem to be the wrong word. Maybe "worry". ManiacJoe Mar 2013 #1
Of course. Igel Mar 2013 #5
Fearful of other gun owners. cbrer Mar 2013 #2
Fear, or out-and-out paranoid? TheCowsCameHome Mar 2013 #3
Perhaps "fear" of a ban on rifles, handguns, & shotguns in popular configurations aikoaiko Mar 2013 #4
I was at a store that sells ammo today, everything but shotgun shells was doc03 Mar 2013 #6
The common man is driven by five things... valiberal26 Mar 2013 #7

Igel

(35,300 posts)
5. Of course.
Sat Mar 2, 2013, 11:36 PM
Mar 2013

Then again, the article talks of fellow Americans as though they were somehow some strange species not fully investigated. That let's you know that they're operating from ignorance.

"We" understand others if we bother to communicate with them, hobnob with them, and think of them as our fellows and equals. Considering how many hundreds of thousands of "those people" there are, possibly millions of them, you'd think they could find one that would speak of themselves in a moderately self-introspective fashion. Instead they figure it's better to pay an outsider.

Whenever an outsider tries to characterize the motives and goals of a group, they usually put things in their own terms and frame them in terms of their own values for their own goals, not that of the group under study.

And some outsiders think that a few minutes' work can reveal greater insights than those in the group itself have. Next up: Narcissistic Personality Disorder among Reporters and Media Writers.

 

cbrer

(1,831 posts)
2. Fearful of other gun owners.
Sat Mar 2, 2013, 10:30 PM
Mar 2013

Although guns were invented due to fear, and have been steadily refined since then.

But regardless, I'm not getting rid of the means to fend off armed (or not) lunatics.

doc03

(35,325 posts)
6. I was at a store that sells ammo today, everything but shotgun shells was
Sun Mar 3, 2013, 12:04 AM
Mar 2013

completely sold out. People are nuts.

 

valiberal26

(41 posts)
7. The common man is driven by five things...
Sun Mar 3, 2013, 01:39 AM
Mar 2013

Fear, wealth, opportunity, religion, and choice. Lack of one or all of those leads to drastic actions on his part; in this case the fear of not being able to purchase an assault weapon leads him to purchase them in bulk. While civilian disarmament is the goal; its not one to be accomplished openly. The more talk there is of restricting firearms, the greater the demand for them... Similar to the debacle when Hostess was closing and there were to be no more Twinkies; people swarmed the stores to stock up on Hostess products when they thought they'd never be able to buy them again.

A ban on the sale or ownership of assault weapons is the wrong approach to getting them out of the hands of the public; not til we can repeal the Second Amendment. If you want to remove firearms from the civilian population, then here is how you go about it.

Now in the BATFE, or ATF, there is an office that was created for the express purpose of helping those convicted of Federal felonies regain their right to own firearms. Well Congress passed a law stripping that office of funding; and legally bars it from ever receiving funding; thus ensuring felons cannot legally own firearms, while still allowing the process to still be in place.

To legally manufacture or sell firearms and ammunition you must apply for a certain Federal Firearms License, or FFL. Without an FFL, you cannot sell more than X amount of firearms or ammunition; lest you face Federal prosecution. There is an office within the ATF that handles this particular paperwork... Strip it of funding and bar it from ever receiving funding. Like with the office handling restoration of firearms ownership, the process is technically still there, but it'll never happen for those who apply for an FFL. See where I'm going with this?

Sure, you'll still have those millions of firearms, and billions of rounds of ammunition floating around. But unless those owners put those weapons into long term storage, eventually they will wear out, be used up, or simply rust to the point that they are no longer useable. Guns are mechanical devices, they require a certain amount of upkeep to remain functional; and ammunition does have a shelf life. If spare parts, new weapons, and new ammunition is no longer sold to civilians; then its simply a matter of time before the existing supply is no longer useable; (even taking into consideration it would be a matter of generations, perhaps even centuries). Yet we must all bear in mind that this is a long-term venture; Rome wasn't built in a day.

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