Though the one I am thinking of right now isn't appropriate for this board. Though I seen it used on a whole class to try to shock them into submission. When I found out how his statistic was found I become very aggrivated.
Is it black people? Whether or not it was, you should look into the history of gun control in the USA. It's lots of fun. While slavery existed, laws were passed in the south to prevent slaves from using guns to escape on the underground railroad. After the Emancipation Proclamation, states either kept old laws on the books (one kept their "needs written permission from their master to carry a gun" law, then made it so that a freeman was not legally his own master), or made new ones.
Less than a century later, Martin Luther King Jr. was "sectretly" very unpopular with a lot of the civil rights movement, because he owned a handgun, tried to get a concealed carry permit after his house was bombed (which was denied, because this was before shall-issue licensing), and was best buds with Chalton Heston. Most of the recent editions of a lot of books conveniently "forget" those little facts, though.
Bill Cosby once brought a crowd to complete, utter silence, after telling a story about his childhood, when lynch mobs in the streets were a reality, and his parents would carry rifles around so that they, their children, and their neighbors would be safe. He's got something like 3 or 4 different concealed handgun licenses.
It's pretty ridiculous, really.
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Many "gun crime" statistics work any firearm related into their dataset.
Actually, most of the crimes are simple possession. To "switch sides" for a moment, it's like the statistic that a lot of right-wingers like to cite about England. After England passed a complete ban on handguns, crime committed with a handgun increased by like 50% or whatever, and stayed high. Well, yeah, possession of a handgun became "crime with a handgun." It's like saying "after Texas reinstated their sodomy laws, crime committed by homosexuals increased by 50%."
Like I said, legislation has little to nothing to do with crime. If you don't cherry-pick your data set, there is
no correlation between gun control and real crime. An anti-gun person would select South Africa and Japan for their dataset, pro-gun would select Switzerland and New Zealand. The actual truth is in between those extremes.
Fixating on crime committed with an
inanimate object is idiotic at best, genuine fodder for conspiracy theorists at worst.
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Reminds me of a Dateline "Investigative Report" from the early 90s "evaluating" the NRA "don't play with guns" lectures for children.
That has less to do with the training itself, and more with the way children's minds work. They can't really grasp subtleties and contexts as well as adults, and a gun
in a toybox will be thought of as a toy gun. Even by adults, a lot of times. A Kel-Tec P3AT weighs under 8 ounces and is about 3.5" long, and it shoots the exact same cartridge, and holds the same number of rounds, as the Walther PPK. Put one of those in a toybox, and you probably can't fault someone for thinking it's a toy. The 90's was also the last decade where you could get cap guns made of
real metal.
Actually, most of the "pro-gun" people I know, with real world experience with them, are even more strict about "no toy guns" than the anti-gun ones.