Guns, Republicans and "manliness": We all suffer from the right's mental health crisis - eviltoast

Republican men seem massively troubled about their masculinity — and that’s literally causing death and suffering

  • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    The real question is what solutions would actually do something about it, most proposed are innefectual or ripe for abuse. Very seldom is one actually meaningful and not too dangerous. Frankly, the only one I can think of would be making private sale go through NICs, but it could be implimented better than all the proposed plans I’ve seen so far in a way that makes both people upset and happy at the same time (which is what a compromise is, let’s be real.) Frankly I also think the improved social services would have more to offer us in regards to this problem anyway. Any other laws I’ve heard proposed are either entirely meaningless (like assault weapons bans, reloading mags is trivial) or way too easily abused (like mental health checks, which could [would] be weaponized against the trans community in a heartbeat).

    • Daft_ish@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Truth told, I don’t know the answer. Sorry. I can believe in a society that doesn’t allow the proliferation of weapons to people with criminal intent and still not know the exact mechanism to get us there. Frankly, it has to start with a cultural change where everyone agrees enough is enough because we will never strong arm a nation of millions into saying, “meh, nevermind about the guns actually.”

      In my mind it starts at the lowest levels of our society. If we could give communities the support to take care of each other at the most basic level then they could possibly take responsibility for not allowing travesty to happen again and again.

      It’s a numbers game really. Say you subsidize the poorest neighborhoods across America. Sure there will be pockets of greedy people trying to hoard those resources but if done correctly there will be communities that stabilize and flourish. If quality of life improves for maybe 2/3 of the communities your trying to impact then overall you will start to drive violent crime down statistically. Ok, what about the money pits you just invested in and show no improvement? Sunk cost. America is big you move those resources somewhere else and see if something takes root.

      Like I said I don’t know and am just kinda rambling.