by J. André Faust (Sept 13, 2025)
Gun violence once again dominates the headlines. While I won’t focus on any single incident, the timing underscores a simple truth: the United States is in a very different place than other democracies when it comes to firearms.
So then, why does the United States appear to have little or no gun control compared to other democracies? The answer lies in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects the “right to keep and bear arms.” For many Americans, this is more than a law — it is part of their national identity, rooted in the Revolutionary War, the distrust of government power, and the belief that citizens should be able to defend themselves against both criminals and tyranny. That makes gun ownership a constitutional right, not a regulated privilege. As a result, sweeping restrictions are politically and legally difficult, and rules vary widely from state to state. By contrast, countries like Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia treat gun ownership as a privilege granted by law, not an inalienable right.
At a Glance
The infographic below tells the story clearly. Where Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia treat firearms as a regulated privilege, the United States enshrines them as a constitutional right. That difference shapes every outcome.
Comparing the Rules
| Category | United States | Canada | United Kingdom | Australia |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ownership status | Right | Privilege | Privilege | Privilege |
| Licensing required | Some states only | YES | YES | YES |
| Semi-auto rifles | YES | BANNED (mostly) | BANNED | BANNED |
| Handguns | YES | RESTRICTED | BANNED | RESTRICTED |
| Public carry | YES (varies) | NO | NO | NO |
| Guns per 100 people | 120 | 35 | 5 | 14 |
The legal framework explains the contrast: the U.S. has more guns than people, 120 per 100 residents, while Canada has 35, Australia 14, and the UK only 5.
Homicide Rates
| Country | Firearm Homicides (per 100,000, latest) |
|---|---|
| United States | ~4.3 (CDC, 2021) |
| Canada | 0.72 (2023, Statistics Canada) |
| United Kingdom | <0.2 (typical year) |
| Australia | <0.2 (typical year) |
By international standards, the U.S. homicide rate is striking: roughly ten times higher than other high-income countries with strong gun control.
Suicides vs Homicides
| Country | Gun Suicide Rate (per 100,000) |
Gun Homicide Rate (per 100,000) |
Share of Gun Deaths by Suicide |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | ~8.0 (CDC, 2021) | ~4.3 (CDC, 2021) | ~54% |
| Canada | ~1.2 (StatsCan, 2020–23) | ~0.7 (2023) | ~75% |
| United Kingdom | <0.1 | <0.2 | Majority suicides |
| Australia | ~0.8 | <0.2 | Majority suicides |
In Canada, about three out of four firearm deaths are suicides, but the overall gun suicide rate is still far lower than in the U.S. The U.S. leads both in homicide and suicide by firearm, reflecting the sheer number of guns in circulation.
Conclusion
The contrast is clear. Countries that treat firearms as a regulated privilege see fewer guns, fewer shootings, and fewer deaths. Canada shows that even when most gun deaths are suicides, the actual suicide rate by firearm remains far lower than in the United States. The U.S., by enshrining guns as a right, has chosen a different path — and lives with the consequences. The question is whether the American definition of freedom is worth the price paid in blood.
Sources: Statistics Canada (2023); CDC (2021); Commonwealth Fund (2024); RAND (on Australia’s NFA); Public Safety Canada. Figures simplified for clarity.

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