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I think the argument goes, the more weapons out there period the easier it is for people to smuggle them into the hands of criminals.

You can't just build a handgun in your basement; you need a tool and die machine, know-how, etc. In other words, a factory.

If you live in a state where it's relatively easy to buy a handgun and the registration requirements are limited and so on, you're going to find it a lot easier to procure one on the black market than say, here in Canada where you need to take a course and file a report every time you want to take it out of your house.



Making a modern semi-automatic requires some expertise, but making a zipgun that can shoot a bullet or two and is accurate enough to hit someone in the same room as you isn't that hard. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Improvised_firearm


I've always felt the difference in attitudes towards guns in Canada versus the US is more about culture then it is about laws.


Culture tends to impact laws, but that wasn't the parent's point.

The general availability of a given product in a given area affects said products availability in said area's black market.

In this case, more guns in circulation = more guns on the black market. This isn't to say that all black market guns originated from the legal (market), but supply does trickle down.




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