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posted by on Monday January 09 2017, @08:49PM   Printer-friendly
from the second-amendment dept.

The love of guns in the United States has been well documented, as have multiple mass shootings across the country such as those in Orlando, San Bernardino, Newtown, and Virginia. The ease of access to guns in American society comes at a shocking cost.

As of September 2016, almost 11,000 people have been killed as a result of gun violence. Despite this high death toll, mass shootings in America show no sign of disappearing.

The Stateside obsession with guns can appear baffling to UK observers unfamiliar with its origins. So just how did this gun culture become so deep-rooted in the American psyche?

BBC source: Why Are Americans so Obsessed with Guns?

Wikipedia: Gun politics in the United States


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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday January 10 2017, @12:25AM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Tuesday January 10 2017, @12:25AM (#451777) Homepage Journal

    Which of them were the major center of goods and profit that the colonies within current US borders were for the British again? Oh, right, none of them.

    --
    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
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  • (Score: 1) by tekk on Tuesday January 10 2017, @07:40AM

    by tekk (5704) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday January 10 2017, @07:40AM (#451929)

    You mean like Canada, the world center of the incredibly lucrative fur trade which was the reason the British beat the French up over it in the first place?

    Or maybe India, not like any valuable products were extracted from there. No sir, haven't heard of tea (literally the reason the subcontinent was conquered) or exotic spices or anything like that.

    Those Caribbean holdings probably weren't worth anything either, right?

    The British had plenty of holdings that were on the same rough level of value as the US, and I would argue that India was worth more than the US, all of which managed to separate from the empire without a civil war.