Nice chart for DC. Obviously the murder rate was on the way down well before Heller. Pre-Heller, it was illegal for anyone in DC to have an assembled firearm or all of the parts available to assemble a firearm in their residence. It was also illegal to possess any unregistered ammunition anywhere, including in your home. MPDC was charged with registering ammunition and I know for a fact that no private citizen was ever allowed to register ammunition in DC during the 80's and 90's. Essentially no one could legally own either a firearm or ammunition and keep them in their home inside the District. Obviously, criminals owned both as the crimes committed with firearms statistics proved. What wasn't as obvious were the significant numbers of residents who owned and kept both in their homes despite the violation of DC laws. The police were not about to go house to house and search for firearms or ammunition. If for some reason the police were in a dwelling and firearms or ammunition were found, they were taken. Depending on the circumstances it could be booked as found and marked for destruction or the owner could be cited, and the firearm and ammunition booked as evidence and destroyed after disposition of the criminal charges. Either way, no one got their stuff back.
The most vulnerable people, lost their stuff and often wouldn't replace it. Criminals never cared as they could and did replace anything that was taken from them. Taking guns from people in DC was much like "body counts" in Vietnam. No matter how many you took, it seemed as if there were two or three, or four to take their place. The politicians would crow about how many guns were taken off the street and the killing continued. The politicians would blame lax gun laws in Virginia and the few guns that were traced mostly went back to home robberies throughout the mid-Atlantic states. It really felt like trying to dig a perfectly round hole in a sand pit. NOTE: post-Heller DC is not much better for firearm and ammunition ownership, but there are still plenty of guns and ammunition in lots of home, rich and poor throughout the District.
I mostly agree with the quote you used but would modify it with this, "all laws are enforced with the threat of violence." I include taxes with this phrase as I believe most people pay their taxes, not out of a sense of altruism toward their country but because of the implied consequences for not paying taxes. If anyone but the government walked up to you and said, "give me 10% of your stuff now, or I will take all of it by the end of the year," we would call it extortion. Donald Trump was wrong when he said that he was smart and that is why he doesn't pay taxes. Trump pays his taxes to CPAs and lawyers who lobbied Congress to set up a system where those same CPAs and lawyers are necessary to reduce or eliminate the amount of taxes he pays.
Beware the person who tells you that you absolutely have to have something. You can be relatively certain that whatever it is, that person is the person who has it for sale.





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