A Land Without Guns: How Japan Has Virtually Eliminated Shooting Deaths

gore0bsessed

Time Out
Oct 23, 2011
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A Land Without Guns: How Japan Has Virtually Eliminated Shooting Deaths

In part by forbidding almost all forms of firearm ownership, Japan has as few as two gun-related homicides a year.
A Tokyo "gun" shop owner, who mostly sells air rifles, displays one of Japan's relatively few licensed rifles. (Reuters)

I've heard it said that, if you take a walk around Waikiki, it's only a matter of time until someone hands you a flyer of scantily clad women clutching handguns, overlaid with English and maybe Japanese text advertising one of the many local shooting ranges. The city's largest, the Royal Hawaiian Shooting Club, advertises instructors fluent in Japanese, which is also the default language of its website. For years, this peculiar Hawaiian industry has explicitly targeted Japanese tourists, drawing them away from beaches and resorts into shopping malls, to do things that are forbidden in their own country.

Waikiki's Japanese-filled ranges are the sort of quirk you might find in any major tourist town, but they're also an intersection of two societies with wildly different approaches to guns and their role in society. Friday's horrific shooting at an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater has been a reminder that America's gun control laws are the loosest in the developed world and its rate of gun-related homicide is the highest. Of the world's 23 "rich" countries, the U.S. gun-related murder rate is almost 20 times that of the other 22. With almost one privately owned firearm per person, America's ownership rate is the highest in the world; tribal-conflict-torn Yemen is ranked second, with a rate about half of America's.

But what about the country at the other end of the spectrum? What is the role of guns in Japan, the developed world's least firearm-filled nation and perhaps its strictest controller? In 2008, the U.S. had over 12 thousand firearm-related homicides. All of Japan experienced only 11, fewer than were killed at the Aurora shooting alone. And that was a big year: 2006 saw an astounding two, and when that number jumped to 22 in 2007, it became a national scandal. By comparison, also in 2008, 587 Americans were killed just by guns that had discharged accidentally.





A Land Without Guns: How Japan Has Virtually Eliminated Shooting Deaths - Max Fisher - The Atlantic
 
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Bar Sinister

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Jan 17, 2010
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Do you have a point or are you simply trying to draw the thread off-topic with a non sequitur? The fact that organized crime exists in Japan has very little to do with the small number of gun deaths in that country or were you referring to the fact that the article describes protests and civil actions aimed at the Yakuza?
 

skookumchuck

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Jan 19, 2012
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Do you have a point or are you simply trying to draw the thread off-topic with a non sequitur? The fact that organized crime exists in Japan has very little to do with the small number of gun deaths in that country or were you referring to the fact that the article describes protests and civil actions aimed at the Yakuza?

What part of death is death is a problem for you?
 

The Old Medic

Council Member
May 16, 2010
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Even where firearms are effectively forbidden, there are still some firearm deaths. And, the Japanese also use other methods to kill each other, much more frequently than many other countries.

The bottom line is: If you seriously want to kill others, you WILL find a way to accomplish this. No law will stop you.
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
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No - Japan is a highly civilized and rigidly structured society- Not as rigid as they were before WW2 but it is still ingrained. Recall the videos of the Tsunami where after there was no looting- no massive crime wave. That is just a small part of how Japanese react to disaster and live their lives.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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If you really want to discuss Japan's homicide stats, and so on. You might not like what you'll have to face.



Well, how about you post the stats you have, because the stats I found for homicide rates are 4.8 for the u.s. and .36 for Japan and just under 2 for Canada. Looks to me like the american gun culture doesn't lend well for homicides compared to a lot of other countries.