Let’s be honest here: a gun is not a tool. It is a weapon. A gun serves no purpose other than shooting things, it can’t really be used for anything else. I mean, I guess you could use it to hammer in nails or something, but a hammer would do a better job, is cheaper, and you’d likely damage the gun doing that. Again, not saying no one should be able to have a gun ever, but to assert that a gun is a tool is just disingenuous.Wow, so much happening here. Full disclosure, I am a responsible fire arm owner, so I am more on the pro gun side. I am not good at picking out multiple quotes so please bare with me.
As for the earlier arguments regarding tightening up gun laws having an effect on the up rise of gun ownership, this is true. It was mentioned earlier that doing nothing as an immediate reaction to gun violence would prevent the increase of gun ownership. You only need to look at what is going on here to see that this comment is correct. When government says something (gun related) will be taken off the shelves, a spike of purchases happens in fear of the product not being available in the near future. This is not THE answer, but a start for those who want less guns sold.
https://www.thechronicleherald.ca/n...els-of-assault-style-rifles-in-canada-317428/
Silencers (suppressors)
Silencers / suppressors were invented over 100 years ago. I don't know what it was officially called then but suppression is the functioning act. I'm not sure if anyone here has fired a weapon with one of these on, but trust me when I tell you, it is not silent. The majority of the noise comes from the ignition of the gun powder and all of the energy forcing the projectile out one way. Not recommended, but if you were to have a bullet (9mm or 45) discharge when not in a chamber, you would hear more of a snap. Think of the old caps on red paper when your were a kid but a little louder of course. I've seen (and heard) it happen.
https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences-and-law/law/crime-and-law-enforcement/silencers
I don't claim to know the albeit answer in regards of gun violence. I do think that our current laws regarding ownership in Ontario are reasonable. I would like to see some things change in favor of gun ownership. I would also like to see MANY things change in regards of criminal prosecution when convicted of gun violence. Correction; in any violence. Also in illegal ownership. The punishments IMO should be more hard than they are now. We do not need access to automatic firearms as there is minimal control, so the argument for sport shooting or hunting can not be made. Semi-auto guns fire one projectile per pull of the trigger. There is control involved.
A gun is just a tool. Yes a tool that can be used for hurting and killing. But so was / is slings, sling shots, spears, knives, swords, bow and arrows, cross bows etc. None of which is banned or illegal. I agree with @wigglee that at some point we need to decide when does a "tool" have too much destructive power and should not be accessible for public use. Or a "civilian" version made for use. If guns are the threshold, then lets destroy all of them and remove their existence from this world. If it meant that now one would die of violence, I would gladly just stick to archery or cross bow for sport....until that becomes the next tool to attack as an evil item.
Its unfortunate but there will always be violence from whack jobs and those suffering from mental illness. There is a lot of public attacks in other countries such as Japan and England as an example where fire arms are not as easily accessible. The "Tool" of choice there now a days seems to be long knives (such as machete) and vehicles. No one is calling for a ban on these items.
Sorry for the long read, but that's just my two cents.
A knife is a tool because it has many uses. Cooking, opening packages, grooming, clearing brush, whittling, the list goes on. Also, it’s much harder to kill someone with a knife than it is with a gun, because you have to get close and your target has a much better chance to fight back. It’s also very unlikely that you’ll be able to kill anywhere near as many people with a knife than you would with a gun.