Actually, Gref, quick Google search says "Of the 10 most dangerous snakes in the world, 8 are Australian." In most places I've lived and gone camping, wildlife actually isn't much of a danger at all. Bears are the biggest danger, but they won't come near if you make enough noise, and they don't tend to live close to farmland. So...needing guns to defend farmland is...probably more of a southern hemisphere thing. (The rest of the deadlies are mostly native to Africa and South America, I think?)
True enough, but seeing as how I had a rattlesnake in my back yard a week ago...it's still a point to be made.
I went with moderate, though my ideas on what constitutes moderate is pretty broad. Shotguns, okay, they're used for hunting. Rifles, sure, but try to keep it to bolt action, you don't need a semi-auto rifle to shoot a deer and bolt actions have the benefit of being harder to kill a lot of people with(not impossible, at all, but.). Pistols, okay, they make solid self-defense weaponry against wildlife and are a lot more convenient than the other two. Avoid all forms of heavy duty ammo, etc, you get the idea.
But if you try to just keep guns away from specific people without a general ban, only some broad sweeping stuff(like the "don't let felons walk off with guns from a store" laws we have) will have a real effect. Past that, I think the returns are too diminishing.
Serial number registration is a good idea, but it strikes me as too after-the-fact. Sure, you'll probably find out who killed someone-or at least, whose gun did-but that doesn't stop them from getting shot, or guns getting shuffled around out of proper channels. Nothing wrong with it, but I don't think it's going to
prevent much, sadly.
CK's idea is pretty good, though. Not so much for the ignorance, but for the snap decision. If you make a gun actual effort, people are going to think twice. There are a rather amazing amount of stabbing deaths, last I heard, and it's not because stabbing is a more pleasant, cleaner, more effective, or, er, anything, way to kill than shooting is. It's because a person already had a knife. If you make guns actual work to get, only the people that actually have a purpose or a serious hobby involving them will have guns.
It's probably too late overall, though. I can't fathom how many guns are in the US, and many are far under the radar, getting passed through families or given to other people or being sold person to person without paper trails, etc. Barn door, etc., at least until old guns hit a point where they can no longer fire, any new laws are going to be low impact at best.