this post was submitted on 08 Sep 2024
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Data is Beautiful
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That's how you don't do infographics.
I found it easy to follow - much easier than typical graphs.
It's confusing. Usually such a pic means a single stream of possibilities branching, so to say. Here multiple branches are for the same data point.
They could at least make them different colors, which would be the components of the initial color if combined. I think I've even seen such a graph.
Would you mind elaborating? What's your issue with it?
That guns being available to the general public, including some of the most deadly ones, inherently do A LOT more harm than good. This doesn't even cover the police arriving and shooting the good guy with a gun thinking he is the bad guy, or good guys with guns shooting each other. The fact that guns are allowed to the general public in US is complete lunacy.
I disagree, they would do a lot of good if part of any weapons being available (not just guns, but FPV drones and ammo for them, anti-tank and anti-air missiles, small mortars, and so on), but not for crime levels. The benefit would be in improving political stability (no, it wouldn't help MAGA and such, because they don't really want a violent takeover, they want an administrative takeover and then unpunished violence against those who can't defend themselves).
When only rifles are available, it doesn't help that end at all - you can't fight the government or the invading army or some terrorists with just rifles.
So I agree that one has to pick a lane here. If we understand private weapons' ownership as that well-organized militia to protect against tyranny yadda-yadda, then that includes a lot of stuff. Drones with grenades at least. If we don't and, say, the national guard is that militia, then allowing just pistols and rifles lacks the advantages, preserving the harm.
Invading army can just walk in unarmed after everyone kills eachother