Which is close enough for an anonymous internet discussion board :-)
Population density makes a HUGE difference in attitudes towards guns. Get into cities and you're talking not just about gun ownership, but about career criminals, gangs, drug-ravaged communities AND well organized and well armed police forces.
Exactly. There is a greater need for self-defense in cities. Yet by and large these are also the areas that have the strictest gun-control laws and the prevelent "ew, guns are filthy" mentality.
In rural communities, the police support keeping guns in the hands of citizens, knowing they may be a half-hour or more in responding to an urgent call. In cities, the police support keeping guns out of the hands of the gangs and criminals and known troublemakers, knowing that they can be there to intervene within minutes of an urgent call, but those few minutes will be futile if the perp is packing.
Police response time can be a half-hour in urban communities as well. This is assuming that you have time to call the police and give them your address and a description of what's happening.
However, keep in mind that even in "rural" areas, most of the population lives in some sort of community. In fact, South Dakota's ten largest cities hold 42% of the state's population and those are all above 10,000 people or so, with Sioux Falls being the biggest at 140,000.
I used to live in Beadle Country, South Dakota. 1,265 square miles with about 16,000 people living on them. However, the county seat, Huron, has a population of 11,000 living in 8 square miles. So even in a rural state like South Dakota, most of the population is living within a town with blocks of houses, stores, malls, factories, etc. Response time of the Huron PD was only a couple of minutes.
So even in rural states, most of the population lives in a community with a police department patrolling the streets.
Another difference - even these days, in rural communities doors are left unlocked. In urban communities, locked doors are kicked in. And what is stolen, right after the TV, computer and jewelry, is guns. The fewer gun owners, the fewer stolen guns.
There are a couple of problems with that. One, you're punishing people for the actions of others. Two, the fewer gun owners, the more likely so-called "hot" (occupied dwelling) burglaries and home invasions are. I don't recall the location of an article that was posted here in the Gungeon a few weeks ago, maybe a few months ago, but I believe it was comparing US to UK "hot" burglaries and home invasions, and the UK rate was something like three times the US rate. Something like 40% of UK burglaries are on occupied homes and only 13% of US burglaries are. But that's just me trying to remember what some article said, and I hate comparing different countries' crime states because of methodology problems, so I'm not going to put a whole lot of emphasis on it unless somebody knows where the article is.
But my point is that if "hot" burglaries go up, that will mean more assaults, kidnappings, violence, sexual assault, and even murders per 100,000 burglaries, and it might even increase the burglary rate.
Third, even in crime-ridden cities, violent career criminals are only a tiny fraction of the population, and they use guns a smallish minority of the time. The gun ownership rates of any urban area would have to take a very drastic and very long-term drop before there was even any hope of maybe drying up the the circle of guns in criminal hands a little.
Fourth, I really don't buy the "you have to give up some of your rights to be safe" talking-point. I don't buy it from the Repubs when they rape my electronic privacy away to fight 'terrah! terrah! terrah!' (or habeas corpus, or right to an attorney, or right to a trial, or right to face your accusers, or right to see the evidence against you, etc.). And I don't buy it from the Dems when they say that to make me safer I have to give up my guns.
Well, not give them up, but face arbitrary restrictions on what I can buy or deal with regulations that are about making politician look and feel good about themselves.
A huge chunk of the problems that people are trying to tackle vial gun control can be solved faster and more completely by pushing our traditional American, liberal values. Fair trade, not free trade. A tariff-based trade policy. Stronger unions. Returning manufacturing to America. A truly progressive income tax that would balance the budget and pay off the national debt. Univeral single-payer health care. Legalization of recreational drugs. Weening us off of the oil economy. And better schools.