Now who is being fallacious with that bolded statement?
As you and both agreed on, violence, deaths, and crimes are way to complex to point to any one item and state changing that one variable will solve all the problems.
Would removal of all guns from law abiding citizens stop all gun deaths? No. Would it have a significant impact upon deaths in general due to violence? Maybe and maybe not.
Oh and Dcal, you are still wrong. You said suicides are more than twice all the other gun related deaths combined. 55% which was 2005 numbers show you wrong. Also, with crimes the way they are, I still wonder how many criminal deaths get ruled too easily as suicides when they are not. Police have come a long way in forensics, but suicides can still be "faked." How many? Certainly not a whole lot, but I wouldn't think 3-10% of suicides being misclassified isn't out the ballpark. Once a death is ruled a suicide it is rarely looked over criminally unless there is a major outside force with plenty of money and political backing to do a private investigation. Which has happened before and found suicide cases in the past misclassified.
Sorry about the tangent there. The point with the suicides I was making is that while America has a propensity to use firearms for suicides, the removal of firearms does not guarantee that suicide rates would decline. It may initially and I would be surprised if it did not. However, I also believe it to be disingenuous to think that measure would keep suicide mortality rates low forever. Again, I point to other countries such as Japan. They have very low gun ownership and some of the strictest gun control laws in the world. They also have very high suicide rates. Those with suicide idealization usually commit successful suicides there despite rarely ever using a gun to do so.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate
Infact, many countries with very strict laws against gun ownership have very high suicide mortality rates. South Korea, China, Japan, Brazil, and what not all have higher rates than the US. Damn near all 33 countries that routinely have higher suicide rates than the US have very strict gun control laws.
So would removal of guns stop suicides in general in the US? Looking at world averages, historical data of gun ownership in the US versus suicide rates, and other factors I would give that answer as a definitive no. I do think it would cause a small dip for sure for a short period of time, but I doubt it would remain so. There are far too many factors that bring about why people commit suicide and pointing to people owning guns being the reason that suicide rates occur in this country is laudable.
As for other forms of violent deaths caused by guns... removal of firearms from law abiding citizens wouldn't change those at all. It hasn't stopped murder rates or violent crimes in other countries with strict gun control laws. Even after decades or even centuries of such measures.