Don't see connection between an accident and gun control. What's your point? We don't stop flying because of a crash, we don't outlaw cars because of a drunk drivers, we certainty don't give our right to protect ourselves because of your video. Get real. Besides that no matter how "YOU feel" or what "YOU think" our right is protected and no court or legislature can chance that!
HS
If you really think your right is "protected," how do you explain the number of people who say expanded background checks are a good idea. You post is just another example of the expression of a passionate position by a small minority. What you are running up against is the general awareness of the culture of violence in the USA.
Harry Bradford, and Howard Steven Friedman writing in the Huffington Post, and the Brady Campaign, and Washington Post provided detailed statistics regarding the firearms industry including the following:
The firearms industry created $31 billion in economic activity in 2011.
An estimated 270-300 million guns are owned by Americans
An estimated 45 million Americans own handguns
87% of the children killed in the 23 wealthiest nations were American
80% of the gun deaths in the 23 wealthiest nations were American
The U.S. ranks number 1 in the world in terms of guns owned per 100 people (at 88.8). In comparison, Canada is 114 and Sweden is 70.
Eleven of the 20 worst mass shootings in the advanced countries in the past 50 years took place in the United States.
The rate of gun-related deaths per 100,000 individuals in Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom is 0.1, 0.5, and 0.03, respectively. In the U.S., the overall rate is 2.98. And that overall rate doesn’t tell the full story. In some cities, the rates are five to ten times that number. The fatality rate in Los Angeles is 9.2, in Miami it’s 23.7 and in Detroit, Michigan the rate is a staggering 35.9 deaths per 100,000 residents. According to data assembled by the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIJP), about 85 people in the U.S. are killed every day in firearm-related incidents.
Of the 34 countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the countries with the five highest homicide rates are, in order: Mexico (highest), Chile, Estonia, the United States and Turkey (fifth highest).
On average in the U.S., 97,820 people are shot every year and approximately 268 every day.