There seems to be a thought by some that criticism of the US gun culture is an attack on all things American. Bollocks.
Nah, but I do find it irritating when someone bases their view of our culture based on what they see come out of Hollywood, and then steadfastly refuse to be confused by any evidence to the contrary.
Every time I've been in Europe (and mostly the UK) people ask me silly questions like how many horses do I own (???) and how many guns do I have (uh...one UNFIREABLE one???). The assumption is pretty clear in my experience and that of others who have spent time abroad: people unacquainted with the U.S. mostly have a very bizarre view of what it's like here. They seem to think most of us are armed in some way, and that's laughably untrue.
Now, YOU don't do that, and most of the RF denizens don't. But then, you've been here with us talking for a while, so small wonder if you know better.
An example, here in NZ most folk know how to shoot. We have access to rifles, shotguns etc because people here like to hunt and because farmers, among others, often need to have access to firearms & folk are licensed before they are allowed access to weaponry. Do we have regular massacres at schools across NZ? Nope. Why I wonder (rhetorically)?
Here in the U.S. most people do not know how to shoot. In rural areas, more people do.
Ah, don't wonder rhetorically! My completely uneducated guess? Well, actually it's more like a couple of questions about NZ:
1. How's your mental healthcare system compared to ours?
2. The U.S. has historically bent waaay backwards in favor of personal liberty. Even to the point where people who are mental are often not kept monitored or contained in anyway because they won't consent to it (I've written about my cousin in another one of these threads). I believe it's worth discussing whether our emphasis on personal liberty has gone too far in some ways.
3. How's your crime rate and how lawless are things generally? We've developed into a culture where increasing numbers of people think if something isn't nailed down, they're "entitled" to it. Things that would've got you roundly condemned and shunned by your friends and neighbors when I was young are now not even considered noteworty, and certainly not immoral or criminal. (Paradoxically, other things have improved, but that's another thread.)
Because handgun usage is severely limited here, you must be a licensed handgun owner and be a current member of a handgun club. So before the US members of this forum declare us somehow benighted and incapable of understanding, we do.
As I mentioned in a previous post, handguns are my greatest concern, because the problem is usually not hunting guns. There are people who can justify having one for personal protection in their home, but we have no means to ensure that anyone actually knows how to use them properly, and I'm not sure it's very possible for us to do much about that.
And as I also mentioned, we have this little problem in our Constitution that makes it rather hard to make too many demands on gun owners generally. We have limits on our "right" to bear arms, obviously, or it would be legal to own all sorts of things, like a Stinger missle, but it isn't legal to own that.
We can potentially make some demands on, say, handgun owners, at least in some cases, but it's a sticky wicket to demand licensing for all gun owners. It would similar to, legally speaking, demanding people be licensed and registered according to which religion they choose to follow.
There are a lot of things it probably isn't legally possible to do here unless we first have an amendment to the Constitution that tones down the 2nd Amendment in some way. And getting an amendment passed is very very difficult to do.
To my knowledge, this is not a problem other countries have to deal with when they make decisions about what is legitimate gun ownership.
That's something few non-Americans I've had a discussion with on the subject seem to even be aware of, much less understand.
But until y'all understand that key difference, then you don't understand why it's not as possible for us to just do what you've done as easily as you think.