Nosmo King
Gold Member
In a thread which the OP tells the tale of a road rage incident gone tragic. Who in this situation would have not been shot if the gun wasn't there? The gun took this situation down the rabbit hole. If she had any other tool, would anyone get shot?Firearms have nothing to do with violent crime, blame the person not the firearmIt tells me that you reach conclusions rather easily. Do you really think guns make the difference between rural and urban crime?In rural America firearms out number people many many, times over... And the most lax gun control laws.What percentage of the population actually owns a gun? What percentage of the population owns more than one gun? Your stats don't point that out.Thank God for Second Amendment remedies
A woman was trying to shoot someone in a road rage incident, police say, but shot her husband instead - CNN
Nicholas Cole is in intensive care after being shot in the head during a road rage incident Saturday.
Unfortunately, police say it was his wife, Erica, who accidentally shot him.
According to the Cullman County Sheriff's Office, there was a road rage episode on Highway 69 in Dodge City, Alabama, about 6:45 p.m. Saturday. It carried over to a home on County Road 160 in Bremen.
During the incident, an altercation occurred in which, the offender, Erica Cole, attempted to shoot a second party but shot her husband, Nicholas Cole, striking him in the head," Cullman County Deputy Brad Williams said in a statement.
Americans use their legal guns 1.1 million times a year to save lives.....and as more Americans over the last 26 years have owned and carried guns...our accidental gun death rate has gone down, not up........lives saved, tragedies stopped........
600 million guns in private hands, likely more......320 million people ......
Accidental gun deaths? 486
Accidental car deaths? 38,659
Fatal Injury Data | WISQARS | Injury Center | CDC
2017 accidental gun death.....486
Guns....486
Cars....38,659
Far less violence than urban America… That should tell you something
There is still rural crime. Domestic abuse, assault, rape, and, regretfully, the opioid epidemic.