So the problem with a survey like this is that it does not break out among the scenarios I listed:
1) Rural, minimal police, minimal government, large plots, no collective security.
2) Dense, urban, heavy policy, significant government, right housing, extensive collective security.
Indeed, it focuses on the latter. Virtually all of the addresses, photos, and stories talk about cities, or at least towns.
I don't want to over-post so I'll answer the other comments too:
1) Violence does not require more than "very few humans" to "like committing violence." The point of security isn't to protect against the typical individual but the violent outlier.
2) Most violent individuals aren't sophisticated. What's more, one instance of violence has little impact. Serial violence does. If an individual robs one house, that's not enough to live off of. If an individuals robs houses regularly, in an area with guns, they will be shot. That's a pretty good deterrent.
For gun safety to move forward, both sides need to understand each other, and everyone needs to address the major issues of gun advocates, such as:
1) Day-to-day safety (on the scale / in the settings I described)
2) National safety (if Jan 6th had worked, and we had a coup; if China invaded; etc.)
3) Rule-of-law (we do have a 2nd amendment, and changing that would require an amendment)
Otherwise, it's simply a push of more guns versus less guns, with idiotic laws being shoved through opportunistically on both sides.
1) Rural, minimal police, minimal government, large plots, no collective security.
2) Dense, urban, heavy policy, significant government, right housing, extensive collective security.
Indeed, it focuses on the latter. Virtually all of the addresses, photos, and stories talk about cities, or at least towns.
I don't want to over-post so I'll answer the other comments too:
1) Violence does not require more than "very few humans" to "like committing violence." The point of security isn't to protect against the typical individual but the violent outlier.
2) Most violent individuals aren't sophisticated. What's more, one instance of violence has little impact. Serial violence does. If an individual robs one house, that's not enough to live off of. If an individuals robs houses regularly, in an area with guns, they will be shot. That's a pretty good deterrent.
For gun safety to move forward, both sides need to understand each other, and everyone needs to address the major issues of gun advocates, such as:
1) Day-to-day safety (on the scale / in the settings I described)
2) National safety (if Jan 6th had worked, and we had a coup; if China invaded; etc.)
3) Rule-of-law (we do have a 2nd amendment, and changing that would require an amendment)
Otherwise, it's simply a push of more guns versus less guns, with idiotic laws being shoved through opportunistically on both sides.