let me just get some NRA-flavored humor in here:
40 Reasons To Ban Guns - Arguments Made By Liberal LawmakersGermany has one of the most ethnically homogeneous nations, and one that is sorely embarrassed about its past (to the point where it banned anything Nazi related. Grow up Germany).
Please don't mention Germany. We have so many mental and cultural issues it's not even remotely comparable to anywhere else.
You'll have to forgive me, I generally take these discussions from an academic approach, citing studies and providing evidence for my claims. I know that doesn't work for everybody.
One of your studies used data supplied by the Brady Center, the other one is from the DoJ and I've seen that one interpreted in any number of ways, at least half of them implying the opposite of what you saw in it.
There's statistics out there to prove any given point, and I honestly can't bring myself to put overly much trust in them. Especially when the government is pushing all available levers to get stricter gun laws on track, or when the statistics really do use data supplied by a vehement anti-gun group.
Factor in the hundreds of different ways to read and present any single study, and it's pretty damn hard to trust any information coming from those.
People are dumb and not to be trusted.
Sure, I too am all for taking away the rights and liberties of those dumber than me, and making them reliant on public institutions for basic necessities like protection.
Anecdotal evidence of guns used in self-defence is invalid.
Anecdotal evidence proves that people can't be trusted with guns.
Biased or biasedly-interpreted studies and anecdotal evidence both are unlikely to lastingly convince anyone to change their views.
I'd like to take a stance base on principle here and state that it's alright for idiots to try and use tools and/or weapons and end up injuring themselves - as Cinth put it, you can't legislate away stupidity. And people harming themselves are people who, in doing so, may learn a valuable lesson or may become a valuable lesson to others. Handling dangerous tools is dangerous, proper preparation and training are important, but anyone who wants to carelessly endanger themselves are, in my word, welcome to do so.
People who carelessly endanger others and end up causing them harm are, even in a libertarian's fantasy society, guilty of criminal negligence if not even homicide, and ought to be punished according to the laws of the society in which they made such a mistake. Thus people are discouraged from macing careless use of dangerous tools by the example set by those who came before them.
And yes, some people are too dumb to get that. Again, you can't legislate away stupidity, and you shouldn't cut everyone's liberties just because a few people are dumb enough to abuse them.
At least not without, at the very least, regular testing every 6 months to see if the person even knows how to handle the gun safely and can fire it with even remote accuracy.
This is an interesting point. Practically speaking I would be perfectly fine with that, since that would not effectively put any limits on me. But politically and morally we come back to the issue of putting a basic right - self-protection - at the mercy of state institutions.
Granted, for Germany I'd take a system like that with tears in my eyes and my heart bursting of unexpected joy.
But for (pro-gun) Americans, it'd probably be a bad deal.