Yes Dan, I can see your point of view about wanting to be prepared "in case". And you are 100% correct that there are horrible, violent people in Canada too! The pig farmer is a classic, disgusting example of humanity gone bad. I have another disgusting example, much more personal to me....
My best girlhood friend's sixteen year old sister Laura, was a lone clerk in a family owned store when a man, freshly released from prison, came into the store & shot her in the head, killing her instantly. He took some cash & scratch tickets totalling $97 & destroyed a family. He had gotten the gun when he had broke into someone's home earlier in the day & stole it.
Now I get the whole the mantra, "Guns don't kill people, people kill people" & I understand that this was just a random act of violence that poor Laura just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. By your thought processing Dan (I'm inferring here so forgive me if I'm wrong), if Laura had had a gun or if another customer had had a gun, they might have shot the robber instead of ending a beautiful young girls life. I get that scenerio & believe me, it would have been preferable in this case.
However, my logic still goes by the numbers. The number of voilent crimes anywhere near where I live is small...& I live in a larger city. Frankly, the number of violent crimes anywhere in Canada is low! Yes we have rapes, home invasions, purse snatchings, occasional bank robberies, etc but it is still a very small porportion. And the number of shootings is VERY small, maybe a few a year? Why? Because the average person does not own, have excess too or carry a gun.
I guess my thought is that IF people had more excess to guns, there would be more shooting, more of a chance for innocent people to get caught in the cross-fire. My thought is that more guns leads to more accidents, more possible bravado scenerios by people pushed to their limit or intoxicated, more random killings, more violent crimes, more thefts of guns by those not in control, etc.
I do wonder sometimes though if the real issue is not so much whether or not the average American feels they must or should own a fire arm or is it that the average citizen just wants to maintain the RIGHT to own a weapon?
It is an interesting debate & I certainly respect your rights & opinions Dan. Thanks for enlightening me.