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Students Discuss Gun Laws & Mass Shootings

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Guide November 16, 2025, 9:37 PM

πŸ‘‹ Welcome, everyone!

Our topic is Gun Laws & Mass Shootings. We'll be discussing this statement:

Stricter gun control laws would not help stop mass shootings.

  • Harper agrees with the statement.
  • Lillian disagrees with the statement.

My name is Guide, and I'm here to support your discussion. If you need anything, start your message with β€œHey Guide” πŸ€“

Harper November 18, 2025, 7:22 PM
Okay, so i believe that stricter gun laws wouldn't stop mass shootings because the shooters we're talking about can or are already willing to break the biggest law of all, murder. Someone that determined isn't going to suddenly stop just because a new rule says they can't have a certain gun.
Lillian November 18, 2025, 7:28 PM
Yes, they are willing to break the law, but stricter gun laws would be something that will have a slow but steady impact on gun regulation, and it will limit people's access to guns. They might be willing to break the law, but if getting access to a gun were harder, it would more than likely discourage them from shooting up places because they have to go in search of ways to get the gun
Lillian November 18, 2025, 7:30 PM
If there is easy access to something, it prompts the use of that resource, but difficult access to a resource will discourage its use
Harper November 18, 2025, 7:34 PM
I get the point about access, but mass shooters usually don't struggle to get guns in the first place, even in strict-law states, because they pass background checks or get guns illegally. Making access harder mainly hits the people who follow the rules, not the ones planning a whole massacre. If someone is already willing to kill, a tougher process won't stop them which is why we should focus on mental health, threats, and early warning signs because it would have a bigger impact than adding more restrictions.
Guide November 18, 2025, 7:34 PM

Harper, how do you respond to Lillian's point that difficulty of access itself acts as a deterrent?

She's not just arguing that stricter laws would stop all shooters β€” she's suggesting that making guns harder to obtain would discourage some potential shooters who might otherwise act impulsively or opportunistically.

Your argument focuses on the most determined individuals who will find a way regardless. But does that account for shooters who act on impulse, or those who might be deterred by additional barriers?

How do you square your view with the possibility that not all mass shooters are equally determined or resourceful?

Harper November 18, 2025, 7:42 PM
Lillian, you made a fair point with how difficulty of access acting as a deterrent, but most mass shooters aren't on sudden impulse, their attacks are planned long in advance, so extra barriers don't stop them. And for the small number who are impulsive, there were usually clear warning signs long before they ever got near a gun. That's why focusing on identifying dangerous behavior early would prevent more shootings than trying to restrict access to the weapon itself.
Lillian November 18, 2025, 7:59 PM
You made a good point with most actions being planned, but in general, trying to profile behaviors won't be a good enough in preventing mass shootings, as most people don't connect the signs till it happens. You can't be on the watch 24/7 thinking I'll monitor this one person's behaviour as they give off mass shooting tendencies. Behavior approach will not be effective, stricter gun controls will at least tackle the impulse shooters and make it harder for people who don't need to carry guns to have guns.
Guide November 18, 2025, 7:59 PM

Lillian, what about Harper's point that warning signs exist before shootings?

You say people "don't connect the signs till it happens" β€” but is that because the signs aren't there, or because we're not acting on them?

If warning signs are often present but ignored, doesn't that suggest we could prevent shootings by improving threat assessment and intervention, rather than only restricting access to guns?

How do you weigh the effectiveness of behavioral intervention against gun restrictions?

Lillian November 18, 2025, 8:05 PM
The effectiveness of behavioral intervention against gun control will be less effective long-term, but behavioral effectiveness + strict gun regulations will be more promising in creating a safer environment. If gun laws are in place, behavioral interventions can be used to determine who needs to get guns rather than just a background check.
Lillian November 18, 2025, 8:07 PM
In a system where behavioral interventions are in place, how would those checks or observations take place in a way that could reduce mass shootings ?
Harper November 18, 2025, 8:11 PM
Stricter gun laws don't automatically make behavioral intervention easier or more effective. Background checks already exist, and more mass shooters still pass them because they have no criminal record. So even with tighter regulations, the same people would slip through unless we fix the deeper issue: that the warning signs are ignored or not taken seriously.
Harper November 18, 2025, 8:14 PM
Behavioral intervention doesn't mean monitoring everyone 24/7, it means acting on the red flags that are already visible in almost every case: threats, violent posts, disturbing behavior at school or work, police reports, etc. There are always signs. And to add on, you're saying both approaches together would work best, but that actually supports my point: behavioral intervention is the part that identifies the actual dangerous person. As previously states, stricter laws mostly affect people who follow them and if we strengthen threat assessment and respond to red flags as soon as we notice, we can stop impulsive and planned shooters long before they touch a weapon. Stricter laws alone won't do that
Lillian November 21, 2025, 5:48 PM
It's not about making behavioral interventions easier or more effective, but more about stricter gun laws being more effective than behavioral interventions, as internventions aren't foolproof and are subject to human error. Warning signs could get missed, reports aren't always made, the process is very slow/inconsistent, and Interventions alone will only focus on most red flags being caught ON TIME and acted on appropriately, which is very unrealistic.
Guide November 21, 2025, 5:48 PM

Harper, Lillian is challenging a key assumption in your argument.

She's saying behavioral intervention is inherently unreliable because it depends on humans catching and acting on warning signs consistently β€” which rarely happens in practice.

How do you respond to the claim that relying on behavioral intervention is "unrealistic" because warning signs get missed or ignored? If the system for identifying threats is already failing, why would strengthening it work better than restricting access to weapons?

Harper November 21, 2025, 6:10 PM
Lillian, I understand your point about human error, but that problem exists in gun laws just as much as in behavioral intervention. Background checks, reporting systems, and law-enforcement follow-through also fail because people make mistakes. The key difference is that behavioral intervention is the only approach that actually identifies who is dangerous, since most mass shooters show obvious warning signs long before they ever try to get a weapon. Stricter gun laws still can't stop someone with no record, and even the strongest policies, like red-flag laws, depend on noticing and acting on those warning signs in the first place.
Lillian November 21, 2025, 6:43 PM
I see your point too, as human error affects both gun laws and behavioral intervention, but behavioral intervention is mainly based on human detection, while Gun laws don't need to predict danger, they simply make it harder for anyone, including first-time offenders with no records, to quickly access very dangerous weapons.
Guide November 21, 2025, 6:43 PM

Lillian, how do stricter gun laws address Harper's point about shooters with clean records?

You say gun laws "make it harder for anyone" to access weapons β€” but Harper's arguing that most mass shooters pass background checks precisely because they have no prior record.

If the law can't distinguish between a law-abiding citizen and a future shooter with no criminal history, how does restricting access help in those cases?

Lillian November 21, 2025, 6:58 PM
Stricter gun laws aren't put in place to distinguish between a future shooter and a law-abiding citizen to be effective, but to reduce overall access to the most lethal weapons. Mass shooters pass background checks, but limiting access to guns makes it harder for potential mass shooters to carry out their plan effectively. A point you made earlier was that most mass shooters don't act on impulse, which is why gun laws are more effective, as there would be more steps and delays to getting access to a gun, which would give more time for red flags to be noticed as they grow impatient. Tightening the conditions of access to guns is what tries to slow planned violence from being executed, especially with those who would want to be potential shooters, as the rigor of getting a gun could dissuade them.
Harper November 21, 2025, 7:03 PM
But stricter gun laws still don't address the core issue im pointing out: even if access is harder, the system still can't tell the difference between a normal first-time buyer and someone planning a shooting, which means the dangerous person still eventually gets through unless the warning signs are caught. Adding extra steps or waiting periods doesn't stop someone who's planning for weeks and months, it just lengthens a process they were already prepared for. And the idea that delays "give more time for red flags to be noticed" actually supports my argument because it means behavioral intervention is the part that truly prevents the violence. Overall, laws alone cannot filter out people with clean backgrounds who slip through EVERY time.
Harper November 21, 2025, 7:04 PM
Slowing access isn't prevention by itself; it ultimately creates a window for intervention to work. So, if intervention is what ultimately identifies the threat, then strengthening that system is what really stops future shooters.
Lillian November 21, 2025, 7:16 PM
And what I'm saying is the alternatives you're giving me still aren't effective, you could try to prevent it, but the preventative methods you are suggesting, even when strongly invested in, are not something that is done as easily as said. Gun laws would be put in place to potentially discourage a group of people, making it harder for people who don't need to carry guns to get them. Intervention identifies a threat, but it is not foolproof, which is why gun laws still need to be put in place. Gun laws will be used as regulation, you can't just have prevention methods without having regulatory means. Gun laws will be regulatory means while behavioral interventions are more of a preventative method.
Guide November 21, 2025, 7:16 PM

As you've reached 100% progress on this assignment, I'll leave you with one more thought to consider before class: Does Harper's argument require that we choose only behavioral intervention, or could stricter gun laws serve as a complementary regulatory baseline even if intervention is the more effective prevention tool?

Harper, Lillian: It was a pleasure facilitating your discussion on Sway. You've practiced clear, constructive disagreement with sophisticated perspective-taking and a notable convergence in your opinions. Nicely done!

Harper November 21, 2025, 7:21 PM
Hi!!! I just want to say that both of our ideas were very efficient, and I do agree with you about how we should use both to help stop the mass shooter! Have a great thanksgiving break!
Lillian November 21, 2025, 7:31 PM
Thank you, you too!!!

Understanding Quiz

Lillian
When you suggested that making guns harder to obtain might discourage potential shooters, how did Harper counter this point?
Justification
She stated that most mass shooters already find guns easily in strict states by passing checks or obtaining them illegally.
She argued that making guns harder to get only deters law-abiding individuals, not determined attackers.
She claimed that background checks already prevent most shooters from acquiring guns.
She asserted that increasing penalties for gun crimes would be more effective than access restrictions.
When Guide asked how you account for impulsive shooters who might be deterred by tougher access rules, what was Harper's main response?
Justification
She said most mass shooters plan attacks well in advance, and the few impulsive attackers show warning signs long before obtaining a weapon.
She argued that stricter laws would prevent impulsive shooters better than any intervention strategy.
She insisted that impulsive shooters are too rare to affect policy decisions.
She claimed that only mental health screening could deter impulsive attackers.
When Lillian argued that relying on behavioral intervention is unrealistic because warning signs get missed or ignored, how did Harper respond?
Justification
She said human error also undermines gun laws and that interventions uniquely identify dangerous individuals via red flags.
She acknowledged errors in interventions but maintained they are still better than gun restrictions.
She agreed that gun laws and interventions equally fail and thus advocated for no policy changes.
She proposed replacing interventions with automated surveillance to eliminate human error.
According to Harper, what is the main value of adding extra steps or delaying access to guns?
Justification
It punishes potential shooters with longer wait times to discourage criminal intent.
It creates a window for behavioral interventions to identify and stop threats.
It discourages law-abiding citizens from purchasing firearms impulsively.
It automatically filters out dangerous individuals through more rigorous checks.
When Guide asked you to address the possibility that not all mass shooters are equally determined or resourceful, what assumption of Harper's argument was being challenged?
Justification
That the most determined individuals are representative of all shooters.
That mental health strategies are less effective than gun laws.
That background checks are failing due to system errors.
That red-flag laws can replace the need for interventions.
Harper
When you argued that stricter gun laws wouldn't stop determined shooters, how did Lillian counter your claim?
Justification
By pointing out that stricter gun laws work by making access to guns harder and thus deter some shooters.
By insisting that only mental health interventions, not gun laws, can truly prevent mass shootings.
By arguing that background checks alone are sufficient to stop all potential shooters.
By suggesting that loosening gun regulations would reduce illicit sales and thus prevent shootings.
When you suggested focusing on mental health and warning signs instead of stricter laws, how did Lillian respond to the viability of that behavioral profiling approach?
Justification
By asserting that behavioral profiling is vastly more effective than any gun law restrictions.
By arguing that behavioral profiling is unreliable because warning signs often go unnoticed and monitoring constantly is impractical.
By stating that behavioral profiling should replace background checks entirely to reduce violence.
By claiming that early warning signs are too rare to justify preventive interventions in practice.
When you argued that human error affects both interventions and gun laws, how did Lillian distinguish between the two approaches?
Justification
By contending that behavioral interventions do not involve any human judgment and are fully automated.
By claiming that interventions are legally prohibited and cannot be implemented anyway.
By emphasizing that gun laws do not require predicting who will be dangerous but simply reduce access for everyone uniformly.
By arguing that gun laws are enforced by artificial intelligence, eliminating human error.
When Guide asked how stricter gun laws address shooters with no criminal records, how did Lillian respond?
Justification
By stating that clean-record shooters would be flagged by background checks anyway under stricter laws.
By arguing that stricter gun laws directly identify future shooters based on mental health screenings at purchase.
By insisting that making guns illegal for all civilians would eliminate mass shootings entirely.
By explaining that stricter gun laws aim to reduce overall access to deadly weapons, adding steps and delays that may dissuade or slow planned attacks.
When Guide challenged your assertion that stricter gun laws wouldn't deter any shooters, what key distinction did he highlight?
Justification
That the Second Amendment categorically prohibits any form of new gun regulation, making deterrence irrelevant.
That not all mass shooters are equally determined; some impulsive offenders might be deterred by additional barriers to access.
That mental health services are primarily responsible for preventing mass shootings and must be prioritized over laws.
That gun manufacturers should directly fund all mass shooting prevention programs to maximize impact.

Survey results

Opinion Changes

Students rated the following statement: Stricter gun control laws would not help stop mass shootings.

Strongly
disagree
Moderately
disagree
Somewhat
disagree
No idea
Somewhat
agree
Moderately
agree
Strongly
agree
Lillian
-1
Harper
-4
Pre-chat opinion
Post-chat opinion
Moved toward agreement
Moved toward disagreement
Optional open feedback
"How did this Sway chat affect your confidence discussing complex issues with people who hold different views from you?"
Lillian: β€œIt was very effective”
Partner Ratings
Statement Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree
Guide's contributions improved the discussion β€” β€” β€” β€”
Lillian Harper
Guide treated me and my partner with equal respect β€” β€” β€” β€”
Lillian
Guide supported both sides of the discussion equally β€” β€” β€” β€”
Harper
My partner was respectful β€” β€” β€”
Harper
Lillian
My partner was genuinely trying to understand my perspective β€” β€” β€”
Harper
β€”
My partner had better reasons for their views than I expected β€” β€” β€”
Harper
β€”
It was valuable to chat with a student who did NOT share my perspective β€” β€” β€” β€”
Lillian Harper
It would be good if more students and classes used Sway β€” β€” β€” β€”
Lillian
Sway helped me articulate my thoughts/feelings better β€” β€” β€” β€”
Lillian
Word Counts
AI Guide
478 words
10 messages
Student
Harper
734 words Β· 15 messages
Student
Lillian
787 words Β· 17 messages