Montegriffo wrote:
The problem in the US is not that people don't want gun reform it is that the pro-gun lobby is louder and more powerful than those who think it will make a difference. Politicians are bought off with donations from manufacturers and the likes of the NRA.
Banning donations from gun lobbyists might be a good place to start.
NRA is not powerful because of donations from manufacturers. Gun control lobby groups exist too, getting insane amounts of money from a few extremely rich individuals, like Bloomberg, and a lot of Hollywood.
NRA is powerful because they're able to activate their members. 5 000 000 paying members, and the membership is not cheap.
Simply put; the people wanting guns, want them more than the people not wanting guns, want them gone.
I'm totally in favor of keeping money out of politics, as far as it's possible. But NRA would STILL be extremely powerful. They would probably be more powerful, since they're much better at rallying the troops, so to speak, than the gun control lobby groups.
People in favor of gun control will put this whole ordeal behind them in a few weeks, and focus on other, more pressing matters; #metoo, kony2012, or some stupid shit Trump do or say. Meanwhile, the gun nuts will go shooting together with other gun nuts, have a good time, and keep writing their congressman or whatever.
It's event triggered activism vs a culture of well organized people who never rests. A few weeks after a mass shooting, people still like their hobby, and the ones not partaking, have a life other than fighting them. It will lose steam, until the next mass shooting, and then it'll repeat itself, and lose steam again. While the gun rights activism never loses steam, as it's more of a way of life.