So you're taking "guns = bad" as a foregone conclusion? The number of crimes prevented by guns (i.e. by victims defending themselves with guns either through use or threat of use) is much greater than the number of crimes committed with guns.
"If someone has a gun and is trying to kill you, it would be reasonable to shoot back with your own gun." — The Dalai Lama, (May 15, 2001, The Seattle Times) speaking at the "Educating Heart Summit" in Portland, Oregon, when asked by a girl how to react when a shooter takes aim at a classmate
Actually, that's not true. If you're using the source I think you are, it's utter statistical nonsense; a tiny survey source, and one where - for example - one woman claimed to have defended (defended was also left very open to debate in that study) herself with a gun 12 times. IIRC, using the same logic as that used to conclude self defense, about 25% of Americans have been abducted by aliens.
EDIt; i.e. you'll need to cite a source here.
Of course it is fair to defend yourself from harm. That's never been in debate here. However, giving a population easy access to lethal weapons isn't IMO a particularly sensible way to protect from harm, because all it can ever do is
increase the capacity for the population to hurt each other. Hell, it even helps terrorists - the IRA used to buy and ship lots of their weapons from the US.
No, not in the slightest. But any killing or serious assault has to be investigated in order to ensure it was self defense.
So, won't that discourage people from defending themselves, out of fear they'll be persecuted*?
The general trend today seems to be to turn the populace into helpless sheep completely dependent on Mommy Government to take care of them in every situation. Whatever happened to being self-reliant?
*Yes, that's the word I meant.
I doubt any situation leading to the need to maim or kill in self-defense will have the time to consider 'am I going to be charged for this'. The purpose of these laws are to prevent you, say, beating away an attempted mugger and then chasing them down with a baseball bat and bludgeoning them to death. Reasonable force being the key thing to bear in mind.
Self-reliance does not equate to removing the role of police in maintaining an ordered society; being the victim of a crime does not give carte blanche to commit a worse crime in response; we all have a basic responsibility towards such things as civil order.
That does not, I hope you'll note, entail we can't defend ourselves or are expected to 'submit' to crime (although it is the better option if your life is in danger, simply by dint of personal health > cash), but what it does mean is that people have to take a degree of responsibility for their actions, and those actions need to be
fairly judged, or we'd be able to kill anyone who looked at us funny and then claim 'self defense'.
This is akin to the same principles, I think, as the requirement that any shooting by a police officer requires an outside force to automatically investigate the circumstances.
As an example, there was a big furore about the right to self-defense about burglars in the UK, and the clarification of the law. Most people took this as some sort of 'burglars charter', that outlawed self-defense. however, that was utter rubbish; the tiny number of convictions for (to paraphrase) assualt in 'self defense' included such cases as a guy who waited in his business premises, set a trap, beat up the burglar, set him on fire, and then threw him in a pit.