• Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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    25 days ago

    To compare dead children to the cost of failing to check government power, we can reduce both to life-years lost:

    🔫 Current Cost: Child Firearm Deaths in the U.S.

    • ~2,000 preventable child gun deaths/year
    • ~60 life-years lost per death
    • 120,000 life-years lost annually
    • Over 30 years: ~3.6 million life-years lost

    🏛️ Hypothetical Benefit: Preventing Tyranny

    Assume a worst-case scenario:

    • Authoritarian collapse kills 10 million (based on 20th-century examples)
    • Avg. age at death: ~40 → ~35 life-years lost
    • 10M deaths × 35 = 350 million life-years lost

    Estimate risk:

    • Without civilian arms: 0.5% chance over 30 years
    • With civilian arms: 0.4% chance
    • These figures are speculative; there’s no empirical support that civilian gun ownership reduces the risk of tyranny—many stable democracies have strict gun control.

    In fact, high civilian armament may reduce stability:

    • Greater availability of weapons increases the lethality of civil unrest, crime, and domestic terrorism.
    • Armed polarization can accelerate breakdown during political crises, as seen in failed or fragile states.
    • States may respond with harsher repression, escalating rather than deterring authoritarian outcomes.

    📊 Expected Value Calculation

    • Without arms: 0.005 × 350M = 1.75 million life-years at risk
    • With arms: 0.004 × 350M = 1.2 million life-years at risk
    • Net benefit of arms: ~550,000 life-years saved (generous estimate)

    📉 Conclusion

    Even with favorable assumptions:

    • Civilian firearms cost ~3.6M life-years (due to preventable child deaths)
    • And prevent only ~550K life-years (via marginally lower tyranny risk)

    Bottom line: The ongoing cost vastly outweighs the hypothetical benefit, and high armament may worsen long-term stability rather than protect it.