It is the US population that now faces the best funded and equipped (by a looooong way) armed forces in the world, and they are pretty numerous too. In the extremely unlikely event that any armed group of US citizens attempted a serious insurrection (by which I do not mean parading around with assault rifles and dark glasses looking threatening) their chances of surviving what the government could throw at them would be vanishingly small.
Meanwhile, in terms of homicide, more people per 100,000 get killed by guns in the US than by all other causes. See my post:
Chap wrote: ↑Fri Sep 03, 2021 4:01 pmAs we saw earlier in this thread, US homicide rates per 100,000 population are four to five times those in comparable advanced European countries where gun control is much stricter. But how far might that be the effect of the extreme ease of killing people with a gun, as opposed to using a knife or some kind of blunt instrument?
This chart is quite interesting:
(See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_viole ... ted_States)
Clearly, there are quite a few countries whose rates of non-gun homicide are not greatly less than those in the US. But in the US there is this huge dose of extra killing by lovely quick effective 'pull it and plug'em' guns. A dose of killing much greater than in other countries.
Doesn't that look like the extra special factor that keeps the US homicide level so high is the guns? Why, so it does.