A. Removing long guns doesn't prevent all suicides that were previously by firearm. Ridiculous assumption. It might prevent a small number that aren't willing to use another method. It might cause a small number of attempts to fail. But 100%? Silly.
A small number you say?
It’s true some people may attempt suicide by another method if firearms are restricted, firearms are still the most lethal method.
The internet says the case fatality rate is over 80% for firearms vs. <5% for many other methods (e.g., poisoning, cutting).
Therefore, restricting firearm access substantially reduces the likelihood that a suicide attempt will be fatal, even if substitution occurs.
Suicide attempts are often impulsive. Studies show people denied immediate access to firearms often delay or reconsider, and many do not attempt again or survive using less lethal means.
Restricting firearms creates a window for intervention, significantly lowering fatality rates.
Australia’s 1996 gun buyback led to a reduction in firearm suicides by 80%. That's not a small number. This demonstrates that removing access to firearms saves lives, even if not all suicides are prevented.
The scale of impact is huge. Even if banning long guns does not prevent every suicide, it addresses a far larger category of deaths than mass shootings.
I don't agree with going down that path but the logic is sound. To ignore it is to care less about the lives of people suffering from mental health illness than other citizens.
B. A suicide, while tragic, is not a multi-faceted public safety event causing danger to lives beyond the suicidal, it does not put the lives of responding law enforcement in danger
The risks to the lives of responding LEOs and First Responders is a great point.
Also a point, harder to commit suicide by cop without a gun.
Do think a the prohibition on automatic weapons and explosive devices is reasonable?
Depends. Statistically speaking automatic weapons are very rarely used in shootings, all of which being illegally owned when done so. Prior to their banning in 1978 there were no major shooting incidents with them. Statistically, for homicide in Canada hammers and fists are deadlier.
Professionally, I'd say theres an argument to be made that a shooter like yourself armed with a long rifle which your familiar with and a shotgun
can be just as deadly, if not more so, than some asshole getting their hands on an automatic gun blasting away on full auto.
Did you see that shooting in BC a little while ago where someone blasted away at someone else with a full auto? I thibk an AK? Didn't kill anyone.
All that said the prohibition on automatic weapons doesn't sound unreasonable to me. Same with explosives, even though there's easy ways to make it at home.
Should we ban house wives and house husbands from buying bleach, ammonia, and chlorine?
What about a bulldozer?