such a funny time for this discourse again ☕

  • buttnugget@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    100%. There is no question that the original constitutional amendment is barely applicable to modern technology. Also, plenty of countries have guns and don’t shoot each other up all the time.

    • mikesizachrist@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I really dont know, but i dont think other countries have such an ease of access to guns as we do here. Still, it’s clearly a mental health/culture issue

        • mikesizachrist@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          Im no expert but they have significantly less ease of access to guns. According to chatgpt:

          Switzerland

          Cultural context: Firearms ownership is tied to militia service—most adult men serve in the military and may keep their service weapon at home.

          Ownership:

          Citizens can own firearms, but permits are required for purchase (background checks, no serious criminal record, no history of addiction or dangerous mental illness).

          Automatic weapons and certain high-capacity firearms are restricted.

          Carrying guns:

          Very tightly restricted—permits for concealed or open carry are rarely issued.

          Guns are generally kept at home, not carried in public.

          Ammunition:

          Service members may keep their rifles but must return military ammunition; private ammo requires separate purchase/permit.

          Registration & oversight:

          All gun sales are registered with authorities.

          Federal and cantonal (state-level) governments oversee firearms closely.

          Gun deaths:

          Switzerland has a relatively high rate of gun ownership (approx. 27–30 guns per 100 people).

          But gun homicide and mass shooting rates are very low, partly due to strict regulation, cultural responsibility, and fewer social/economic drivers of violence.