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Just how restrictive are Mexico's gun control laws? While the reporter notes about 1,000 guns a month are sold legally in the country, around 1.3 million are sold a month in the United States. That's an astronomically higher figure, yet the murder rate in Mexico is well over twice that of the United States.
"60 Minutes" doesn't care about those numbers, though, because the point of their report is to blame the United States for the flow of guns into Mexico. As their narrative goes, because Mexico has such strict gun laws, it must be America's fault that the cartels have fully automatic rifles and machine guns. Of course, those two things are largely outlawed within the United States as well, with only heavily vetted individuals allowed to own them. That's really beside the point, though. //
At the end of the day, nothing is gained by restricting law-abiding citizens from owning firearms. Criminals do not follow gun laws. They don't kill simply because they have access to certain types of weapons. If it wasn't an "assault rifle," it'd be a sawed-off shotgun or a car bomb. The root of the violence in Mexico is not the importation of American-made firearms, however many guns that may add up to. It's the corruption and fecklessness of the government that has allowed the cartels to flourish.
Until that changes, Mexicans and the rest of the world will continue to suffer. If "60 Minutes" weren't such a joke of a news program, they'd have focused on that instead of trying to blame normal Americans for something they have no part in. //
trapper
14 minutes ago
"More guns, less crime". Because guns in the hands of normal law abiding citizens deter crime. This has been demonstrated by John Lott and others again and again.