Related.
(Done by Block Eraser/Gigatoast previously of KYM.)
>Not making a joke about downloading bear arms
If this could be a thing, then you'd have to consider what may end up happening in the US anyway, a country with citizens that already has relative ease in getting firearms: the banning of firearms.
Unregulated:
Hahahahahaha.
In the unlikely case (or short-term case) that printing guns (or anything that can cause damage at an unreasonably fast pace) is unregulated by governments, I think people in countries outside of the US might print out guns (if they could afford the printer and materials) more for kicks than for any actual use. I'm sure there would be an uptick in violent crime, but I think the culture of these countries (and better mental health services) wouldn't lead a massive increase in firearm deaths.
I think the most danger would come from very young children who print guns and fire them accidentally without their parents ever knowing (like the first time a kid stumbles on something mildly arousing by accident, except instead of shooting off your pecker, you shoot your pecker off.)
So I'd expect most Western countries would keep that in check simply through culture. But it's hard to predict: violent games are popular elsewhere.
- Do people play those games, because recreational use of firearms is so restricted,
- i.e., People don't go hunting or to firing ranges, because they don't have access to guns.
- or is it more because it's known for a fact that the game is just a game, and the objective is only fun in the context of the game?
- i.e., People don't go hunting or to firing ranges, because they don't have a real urge to use firearms in real life.
Without regulation, the appeal of violent video games would likely become evident. People would begin to participate in safer activities with firearms if people really just wanted to use firearms, or they'd print them out at the advent of the ability to print them and then forget about them.
The US is more gun happy in general, in possession and use. There is a culture where firearms are embedded into the lifestyles of Americans with regards to aggression and self-defense. But with that said, I don't think the use of firearms would increase or decrease. You can get guns here pretty easily. The only reason you couldn't is if you couldn't pass a background check.
Now it's hard to say if gun violence rates would increase, stay the same, or even decrease:
- Increase: Easier access to gun, people can use them in intentional and unintentional ways to harm themselves or others
- Stay the same: Everyone who wanted a gun already had one and was generally using them safely, and those who wanted a gun just gets them more easily but uses them just as safely.
- Decrease: People can more readily defend themselves against attacks of any sort and the knowledge of this deters criminal use of firearms.
I think all of these are just as feasible as the others, so…I'd say there wouldn't be any change in any firearm-related statistic.
I think the difference would be in what kind of firearm people could get. Assault weapons are still hard/illegal to get in the US, but people do want them. In this instance, more people have access to and own assault weapons, but most people don't intend on using them against people aggressively.
Regulated:
I suspect other countries wouldn't allow the technology to exist commercially anyway, because of what could happen. And I suspect that the citizens wouldn't be upset about the guns so much as not being able to print other things like automobiles, furniture, games, computers, toys, dakimakura, etc.
In the US, I suspect that it would also be a highly regulated practice and wouldn't be available to the public at large. It might be made available to certain entities, but at the least restrictive, I think you'd have to apply for a permit to have such a detailed 3D printer. That would basically become no different than applying for a gun license and having a background check run on you.
I think you'd also see any print job of that level of precision and size be sent to an entity to ensure that certain firearms/products aren't being printed by someone who isn't cleared to print them. In the same way Internet Service Providers can tell what you look at online, perhaps residential printers would send a report of what you print to someone to make sure what's being printed isn't suspicious or illegal. I figure by the time you can print usable guns automated recognition of materials in such a medium would increase so that computers could tell what was being printed by whom and send an alert/notification to someone that could take action on it.
I think how quickly and easily guns can be produced should also be considered.
- You can technically make a homemade bomb, but it may take some time and know-how.
- In the same vein, you could technically print a gun, but it might take a lot of time for it to print out all of the details of one.
By the time an angry, violent person decides to print out a gun and actually have the gun ready to go, they may have already calmed down and come to their senses.
Also, just like you need paper and ink to print, you'll need the proper materials to actually print a gun. Short of stuff you can't get legally/easily, it may be easier and even less expensive to just buy a gun via normal means (specifically in the US.)
Edit: I'd also like to point out that a thought experiment is meant to think about what would happen if something was the case. It's basically being deconstructivist to say that the proposed situation is impossible.
That's not the point. What if, by whatever Hand of God, it is?
Think, people. This is supposed to be fun.