I agree with your assessment, including for my home country of Canada. There should be gun freedom and fewer restrictions on self-defense. If you remember, I'm the fellow who cited a wall-of-text that cited Sir William Blackstone :)
That said, I have to note that the United States has a cultural advantage when it comes to gun safety - two related ones, in fact, and they're both important ones:
- The typical law-enforcement officer in the U.S., particularly the country sheriff, is pro-gun-freedom. I don't think that's the case in my home country of Canada. I haven't seen any hard stats, but my impression is that Canadian cops tend to favour gun control. As for your own country, you'd know better than I on where the cops stand on this issue.
- Large organizations like the National Rifle Association are suffused with people who are knowledgeable about gun safety & are glad to share their knowledge. They're the folks who''l be glad to teach you when to shoot, when not to shoot, and which gun practises make you a stupid idiot.
The two obviously relate, as at least one of the members of a local NRA chapter is likely to be a LEO. So it's easy to get a professional opinion as to good/bad practices and the legalities.
Obviously, these practices comprise "self-regulation" in the old-fashioned Neighbourhood-Watch sense. They're the main reason why states with the looses gun laws tend to have low crime rates. I've read thread after thread after thread with pro-NRA folks discussing not only what gun you should buy but also what's a bad shoot - and what are good practices. Not so much in my home country of Canada, in large part because of the gun control.
If the gun laws are loosened - moreso repealed - a similar culture would have to arise, with a similar self-responsibility ethic.
Thanks yes for sure. If it ever happened (which it won't) it would need to be done responsibly with proper training and organisations to educate people.
Very well put @nxtblg - one thing I would say is that nobody knows how they are going to function (as opposed to react) when in a real situation, holding a gun, adrenalin, fear, panic, hair trigger ... you can train for it but as the footballers say, there is no replacement for match practice.