Anyway, giving guns to people to reduce crime is not solving the source of the problem, the crimes.
It might not change the nature of criminals, but it might change at least the way they would proceed. In Brazil, as criminals know people are mostly defenseless, they don't burglar your house. They just wait for you to come back from work, point a gun at you, and rob you with the convenience of you telling where things are, giving your bank card for some withdraws while others watch you and so on.
In places where lots of people have guns, criminals tend to prefer furtive burglaries, when nobody's at home.
We could argue about it all day long, each side will probably find sources and statistics data that prove our point of view.
Off-topic, but that's why the human action should be studied praxeologically, not empirically.
A big majority didn't dream of becoming a criminal, but circumstances in life brought them at that point. It's not news that poor neighborhood have a higher crime rate than richer ones. Schools makes wonders long-term to reduce crime, but the effect of guns on crime rate is debatable.
Here you are just saying poor people tent to be more criminal. Hooray to prejudice!
I wonder if all these hackers stealing from bitcoin owners are also from poor families who lacked education...
I don't believe the level of income or education influences a person moral values. What it does influence, is how criminals will act. Those who have criminal intends but lack education, will probably resort to violent crimes, as that's all they know how to do. Smarter immoral people will resort to elaborate scams, cybercrime, creating "new religions", political career etc, that is, ways to take other people's money that are more efficient, call less attention and are much less risky - sometimes not even ethically/legally criminal, but immoral for any person capable of understanding what's going on.
Summarizing, IMHO being poor/uneducated doesn't influence the chances of being immoral, it just influences the kind of attitudes and immoral person will have.
Yeah, I agree than in certain countries in the world, I would prefer having a gun with me. But it's only a short-term solution, that only provides me self-defense in an hostile environment.
It's not just self-defense in dangerous situations. An armed society is also a strong dissuasion against some types of crimes. The idea is that you never really have to pull the gun.
In my country, we worked to provide free education and free health care to any citizen
There's no such thing as a free lunch.
These services are financed with money stolen from the productive sector. That's just another disguised, massive crime. If massively increasing theft is your technique to reduce criminality rates, you're doing it wrong.
That the guy who need to steal or sell drug to survive is going to stop?
There's nothing wrong with selling drugs, it should be allowed. And nobody needs to steal to survive.
But I really think you should put energy to make a society where your citizens can feel safe without a gun.
Ok if you want to dedicate effort to that. But you should realize societies cannot be engineered.
And if you live in a society where you're more afraid of the corrupted police force or the governement than criminals, get a cellphone instead of a gun.
Why not both?
Anyway, I know I'm against the majority here, and I simply taught that you could find interesting of having a complete opposite point of view of somebody who lives in a society where guns are irrelevant.
It's perfectly fine to have one's opinion on that matter, and not wanting a gun. The problem is that normally those who advocate gun control want to impose their opinions on others, by forcing them not to have guns.