Chicago has no firearm registration, allows concealed carry, does not require firearms to be secured in the home (only where minors are present), and whether a permit is required to purchase (aside from FOID) is hard to determine depending on where you look. So if this is an example of 'the toughest gun laws in the US', it's no wonder they are in the predicament they are. The reality is that Chicago firearms laws have in fact been relaxed over the past 5 years.
Another linchpin of your argument which is ridiculous is that laws within one state are the be all and end all of firearm ownership within that state, regardless of whether they neighbour states with far less stringent laws and easier access to firearms illegal in other states. How hard is it to drive to the next state to get the guns you want? In fact there is undoubtedly a lucrative market in this.
Example -
Just days ago, a Chicago man was sentenced to nearly three years in prison after pleading guilty to helping purchase 43 firearms from gun shows and individuals in Indiana to sell on Chicago's South Side.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-chicago-gun-laws-not-as-strict-as-gop-candidates-claim-20151008-story.html
And...
Chicago's gun laws are not as tough as the candidates claim, and there are some major loopholes that make it relatively easy to get guns, including our proximity to Indiana, a state with virtually no gun restrictions, according to Bloomberg.
There are no gun stores in Chicago, so where are the guns coming from?
About 60 percent of guns recovered in connection with an arrest in Chicago from 2009 to 2013 were from out of state, 24 percent were from Indiana and 22 percent were from parts of Cook County outside the city where gun laws are looser, according to a study conducted by Philip Cook, a Duke public policy professor and economist who works with the University of Chicago Crime Lab.
http://chicagoist.com/2015/10/08/_gop_presidential_candidates_donald.php
While you're here, this was good for a laugh...
The end-run around concealed carry came when aldermen imposed a requirement that Chicago restaurants that serve liquor ban firearms or lose their city licenses. Reilly said his downtown ward includes 1,100 liquor license holders who have “legitimate concerns” about allowing their patrons to bring loaded firearms into their establishments.“Even during the Wild West, when everyone and their brother was carrying a loaded firearm on their hip, many saloon keepers knew well enough to keep these guns and bullets out of their establishments because nothing good could happen,” Reilly said.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel said it “doesn’t take a masters or PhD” to know that guns and booze don’t mix. He’s not concerned that a National Rifle Association that opposed the Brady Bill and the assault weapons ban would be threatening to sue — again.
“It wouldn’t be a surprise to me that they would be in favor of making sure that people are allowed, to both drink and have guns. I do not think that’s in the interest of the city of Chicago.
https://web.archive.org/web/2013091...-aldermen-approve-contradictory-gun-laws.html
I think you'd find the need for a license, ban on certain semi auto rifles, NFA items like sawn off shotguns and short barreled rifles, no open carry, the requirement for concealed carry firearms to be unloaded and stored in transit (and the 16 hour course required for a CC permit in the first place) is fairly restrictive compared to most places in the US. Also the fact that any law enforcement agency can object to you getting your license to start with. On top of that the 3 day waiting period for handguns and 1 day for longarms.
"Concealed carry is prohibited on public transportation, at a bar or restaurant that gets more than half its revenue from the sale of alcohol, at a public gathering or special event that requires a permit (e.g. a street fair or festival), at a place where alcohol is sold for special events, and on private property where the owner has chosen not to allow it (and, unless the property is a private residence, has posted an appropriate sign). Concealed carry is also not allowed at any school, college or university, preschool or daycare facility, government building, courthouse, prison, jail, detention facility, hospital, playground, park,
Cook County Forest Preserve area, stadium or arena for college or professional sports, amusement park, riverboat casino, off-track betting facility, library, zoo, museum, airport, nuclear facility, or place where firearms are prohibited under federal law."
While I'm on that, almost every mass shooting in the US (real mass shootings in the FBI sense) has been in a 'gun free zone'.
People always go on about out of state firearm sales, but then how come New York and California have higher incidence of gun homicides with strict gun control laws, yet the same isn't true for most of the higher gun ownership \ laxer gun control states? Possibly factors completely unrelated to gun control? Less gun control in Chicago probably won't do a great deal either way, apart from perhaps empowering more people to be able to defend themselves.
Quoting Democrat politicians like Rahm Emanuel hardly makes your point either.
@
Repacked; actually our laws could be a lot better, in regards to allowing self defense as a genuine reason and not having a registry which does nothing at all (apart from keep bureaucrats in jobs), and allowing regular license owners to have semi automatic longarms.
https://www.melbourneinstitute.com/downloads/working_paper_series/wp2008n17.pdf here is a paper about the relative ineffectiveness of our gun laws being the cause of less firearm homicide.
The NRA is fairly politically neutral and they have a track record of being involved in civil rights back to the 1950s and donates to Republicans and Democrats (but more democrats are in favor of more regulation). You need to stop drinking the kool aid of the Aussie media about the issue.