There is fear of slippery slopes on both sides of this conflict (of interest).
Yes, on the pro-gun side, you have folks worried that they wont be able to purchase a weapon for basic farm use (Yes kids, you need at least 1 rifle, and 1 hand gun to properly manage a farm. No, Really. Unless the city humans want to fork out assloads of money for extended and prompt animal control out into the boonies---where farms are--- this will remain the case. It's a simple fact, much like not needing a gun inside a city limits unless you are a cop.) without having to file absurd numbers of conflicting forms, and hiring a lawyer, because government's preferred solution in terms of regulation is onerous paperwork, and penalties.
On the gun-control side, you have people fearing that "Multiple Recidivism Armed Robbery Charlie" is going to somehow abuse the system to obtain a gun. (Never mind that he could just, you know--- ROB a farmer when the farmer isn't home, and steal the guns in question. He could rob a cop too, for that matter. Premeditation is a common practice in burglary, as is profiling victims for max return on risk.) As such, they are super duper gung-ho on stopping any sensible exemption or process for weaponry needed for vocational use, and many times outright ignore or deny the needs of private citizens to be able to purchase weapons in this capacity. (Instead, using a distorted and incorrect mental picture of a world where a police department or the military are the only buyers in this capacity-- ignoring rural farm types altogether. ) They are madly in love with the prospect of making it "Technically legal", but "Functionally impossible" to get such weaponry. (Which is the end game the previous group wants desperately to avoid.)
Is there some sensible local solution that can be found for this problem? I am quite sure that there is.
The problem is that both parties to the conflict of interest have mutually exclusive goals, and demonize the other party. Neither side actually WANTS a sensible solution. They want *THEIR WAY*.
Ask me?
The best way to combat "Charlie" is through fixing poverty, not banning guns. People become "Charlies" because they are doomed by a system that simply put, does not care about them, and actively harms them. EG, you need a job for insurance, but there are no jobs. You need a job for money, so that you can afford a place to live, and food to eat, but there are no jobs. (Or, the jobs are insufficient to meet base needs). The state/society does not give a fuck; and has not for several generations. This has created a culture of multi-generationally impoverished people, who actively detest the rules of society, and rightly (at least partially, if not in the correct ways of thinking about them) views them as being causal to their circumstances, which they view as inescapable. This lead to desperation, and yes--- VIOLENCE, THEFT, and LAWLESSNESS. Banning his access to weaponry only reinforces "Charlie"'s worldview about law enforcement, law in general, and society and his place within it. It adds to the problem, and does nothing to solve it, except make the symptoms less pronounced (Because guns are a big equalizer in terms of effective power.)
If our officials were actually, you know-- SERIOUS-- about reducing violence, including gun violence, they would be out there trying to make it harder for the rich to exclude the poor from everything that generates wealth, would be seeking legitimate solutions to the looming mass unemployment that the AI age is going to cause, and be bending over backwards to fix the multi-generational contempt of law that has sprung up from the decades of obliviousness of their peers.
But no. "Just take away the guns! Problem solved!"
No. No it isn't, not by a long shot.