I'm late to the thread, but definitely #1. The only policy that has ever been shown to deter mass murder is concealed-carry laws. States that allowed citizens to carry concealed handguns reduced multiple-shooting attacks by 60% and reduced injury and death from the attacks by nearly 80%.
Mass murders at "gun-free zones":
- The deranged student killing 32 people in Virginia Tech before killing himself
- The Amish school shooting in 2006, where the killer murdered five little girls before killing himself
- Columbine in 1999 where the two guys killed 12 people before committing suicide
- Two students in Craighead County, Arkansas, killing five people, including four little girls, before deciding to attempt to escape
- Dunblane, Scotland, in 1996, when an adult shooter killed 17 and then committed suicide.
There was no one to stop any of these people. I'd love if we lived in a society where this never happened, but it's the less than 1% of people with easy accessibility to guns that engages in rampant killings. The remainder of the (over) 99% of people seem to get along just fine. It's not as if we're going off shooting everybody just because we have guns. The fact that guns can kill human beings is the whole point and the reason why they're good at deterring violent criminals. Compare the above situations with school shootings where a
law-abiding citizen had a gun at the scene:
In 2001, the shooting at the high school in Santee, California. The student began shooting at his classmates and the school activated its "safe-school plan", which unfortunately did not involve anybody having a gun at the school. The school sent in an unarmed trained campus supervisor to stop the killer. The killer shot the "trained campus supervisor". Luckily, a San Diego policeman who was armed was bringing his daughter to school that day. He stopped the killer (with a gun) and held him at bay until more police could arrive.
Only two died. I say "only" simply because it could have been worse.
In 2002, an immigrant student in Virginia started shooting classmates at the Appalachian School of Law. Two classmates in another part of the building retrieved guns from their cars, approached the killer, and forced him to drop his weapon, while a third classmate tackled him until police arrived.
Three died.
A student at Pearl High School in Mississippi had already shot several people at his high school in 1997 and was headed for the junior high school when the assistant principal retrieved a .45 pistol from his car and pointed it at the gunman's head, ending the slaughter.
Two died.
A student attending a junior high school dance at a restaurant in Edinboro, Pennsylvania, started shooting, but the restaurant owner pulled out his shotgun, chased the gunman from the restaurant, and captured him for the police.
One died.
Again, I wish these situations never happened or that they'll never happen to me (or my family). Some people choose to look at the entire world with rose-colored glasses and choose blissfully ignorant over the reality of the world. However, I'm never going to take that chance, which is why I'll be armed. It's a "just in case" scenario for the small fraction of people that choose to break the law and go off killing other people. I'm not going to become a victim just because they decided to break the law. Even if all firearms were banned, criminals would still gain access to them, and then I'm ****ed. I'm going to protect myself and my loved ones. I'd question anybody's love for their family who
wouldn't choose that option. Baseball bats and dogs are nice, but no match for a maniac with a gun.